Treasure time and memories and struggle and toil more than money and stuff and safety and status.
And square up to the indelible truth that you will die one day.
And whether you'll be lying in a hospital bed surrounded by your loved ones or lying in a field surrounded by your comrades, you will not wish that you had been more guarded in your commentary or hadn't asked that cutie out on a date or had fewer children or received more fake accolades from polite society or spent more time working to make someone else wealthier,
shuffling about for the benefit of your replacements.
Live a little, fam.
All right, we are back a few days late and milking this unforgettable summer for every last ounce she can offer.
Mr producer, Hit It.
Welcome everyone
to episode 58 of Full House, the world's most summer appreciative show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole Bio fam.
I am, as always, your locker room speech delivering host, Coach Finstock, back with another who knows how long show dedicated to keeping our flame alive.
Before we meet the birth panel this week, though, big props to our friends down under at Roots of the Right.
I woke up at the crack of dawn today to join those fellows on their fine show, and we dissected Ernst Younger's short essay on pain for all the lessons it had to offer up to our side.
So check them out on Telegram at Roots of the Right, and we will flag that show when it's up.
We had a lot of fun.
I actually took the laptop down to the gazebo to do a little bit of outdoor podcasting, and it worked out great.
So I am back outdoors tonight.
You might hear a few crickets or cicadas off in the background.
If you do, hope it adds a little bit to the ambiance and is not too distracting.
Anyway, also, hearty thanks to our old pal, Blind Dad, and a donor who wished to remain anonymous for their generosity this week.
If you would like to be like Blind Dad, minus the obvious, of course, drop us a line at fullhouse show at protonmail.com or check us out at our site, fully-house.com.
All right, let's get on to tonight's birth panel and have a little bit of fun.
It's summertime, and we're in good spirits.
At least most of us are.
All right, first up, if he were a classic WWF wrestling star, I'd see him as the British Bulldog or maybe Rowdy Roddy Piper.
Sam, welcome back.
Thanks, Coach.
It's great to be here.
Hey, we went down to the big city recently and we stopped for some gasoline.
And my son, my young son, he was in the front seat passenger and I was gassing up.
And here comes this Negro walking down the streets, hot summer day, and he's got on this long sleeve kind of a sweatshirt with the horizontal red and white stripes.
And my son hangs his head out the window and he says, I found Waldo.
I told him we should have him on the show sometimes because he's got all kinds of jokes that he's always saying.
And then he could probably do a little routine, for instance.
And then he said to me, So two drums and a cymbal go over a cliff.
I'd be happy to have him on.
I've been a little bit wary about having minors on the show for obvious reasons.
I don't want to have them in too much hot water.
Junior asks if he can come on the show.
I'm like, I'd love to have you, buddy.
Yeah, that's probably a good consideration.
But yeah, but he's real quick-witted like that.
And it just made me laugh.
That's good.
I'm glad he just threw words instead of that one story you told about your ex-wife.
All right, take it after that lady.
And did you guys do WWF?
Did any of your boys get into professional wrestling?
Do you remember those 80s, 90s references?
Sure, sure.
Yeah, I've always been kind of a fan of it.
Not as devoted as some people, but I appreciate what it's about.
And it's always good for a laugh.
When the older kids were younger, we would actually, we all had like fake wrestling names, and the kids would wrestle each other, kind of mimicking all that.
Sure.
Yeah, I get what all that's about.
I was all about Hulk Hogan as a kid.
And later on in my teens, there was this sort of spin-off called Extreme Championship Wrestling.
Cut rate, but they came to South Jersey once and I went with my buddies, and Bam Bam Bigelow was there, sort of putting the cherry on top of his career.
Yeah, Tommy Dreamer.
Yeah, they had a bunch of some other big names.
But yeah, there was one quiet point in the match, and I was feeling my oats.
And I just yelled out.
He was really fat then, too.
He was out of shape.
And I just yelled out, Bam, Bam, show us your tits.
And the whole crowd started laughing.
And he noticed, too.
I was like half proud and half wanted to sneak out in case he like dragged me into the ring or something like that.
Yeah.
Well, back in the day, I saw Andre the Giant and Hulk Hogan in a battle royale.
Oh, man.
Classic.
Back in the 80s.
Yeah.
That stuff was great as a kid, man.
Rooting for Hulk over Andre and the Iron Chic and all that fake sort of Hollywood patriotism.
But it's all good fun.
Yeah.
All right.
Next up, if he were a classic WWF wrestling star, he would definitely be one of the Bushwhackers, or as he would prefer, the Ultimate Warrior.
Smasher, welcome back.
You old enough to even know what the Bushwhackers were vaguely, but I was never really into the wrestling.
That's okay.
Yeah.
I did real wrestling, and so that mindset kind of like infected my whole family, starting with my grandfather.
Right.
And so we were never really into it.
Yeah.
And you miss the golden era, in my opinion.
Yeah.
The Hulk and Andre and all those guys.
So that's all right.
But yeah, the Bushwhackers would check out the Bushwhacker video when they would come in.
Or maybe that's hacked.
Anyway, I remember.
All right.
Rounding us out tonight.
I'm just going to say, yeah, yeah, please.
Sorry.
I didn't mean to catch you.
Playing off your intro.
Yeah.
I'm here for a good time.
Not a long time.
Oh, yeah.
The king.
You're talking about the king.
That's what he says to his wife every two weeks.
All right.
And finally, tonight, if he were a classic WWF wrestling star, I'd peg him as Hacksaw Jim Duggan.
Probably a poor choice of words there.
Or maybe the million-dollar man, Ted DiBiase.
Moto, welcome back, buddy.
How's it going?
Everything all right with you, pal.
Um, it's good, you know.
Uh, market sucks, but hey, it is what it is.
Why does the market suck?
It's a like record, yeah.
Well, it's feeble.
How about that?
Shaky, yeah.
I predict a serious pullback soon, but yeah, big money is hoping for Biden, I presume, and putting their money behind him as as much as they don't like to, yes.
All right, we'll see what happens, but uh, yeah, you can you can feel the energy and the enthusiasm uh starting to ramp up as we go into election season.
And I'm like, remain maintaining my steely resolve to not get invested in this show.
But you know it, you know, it's tempting when it comes around.
All those years of uh rooting for one side or the other, gearing up to make your very important choice.
And uh, I'm just not buying it too jaded.
You say that, but you're gonna be fully into it.
You know, you are.
I don't, I don't, I don't, all right, we'll see.
We'll check in uh in November or something like that.
But where I'm sitting right now, uh, I'm just sort of yeah, Nigel Farage in the limo with the with the window rolling up.
Not my not my fight.
Yeah, good, good luck.
Yeah, I poured too much blood, sweat, and tears into 2015 and 2016.
They get all ramped up again.
I feel like getting used.
And obviously, there are a lot of guys who are into it and lesser two evils and all this stuff.
And the second term might be great, but I just don't think that's a good thing.
It's funny.
I actually, I actually came across a guy that was out at the liquor store and like had the Trump Trump 2020 shirt on, the 45 in the back, but he had the whole mega hat and everything else.
And the dude got told he had to wear a mask in the store.
No, he just, he's like, yeah, I'm not doing that.
He's just in his wife in instead.
He's like, you just got fit.
No, yeah.
And this guy was Joe Six Pack to the T.
Yeah, mask opposition and ramping up is, in my opinion, a proxy activity or opposition for other more important things that are going on.
I mean, however, like, I'll take a little bit of revolt anywhere I can find it, right?
Good to see a little bit of fight in the old Middle American radicals, as Sam Francis affectionately called them.
But it's, yeah, it's just like with, you know, remember the Tea Party, like they got all worked up over taxes and spending and stuff like that, and nothing happened.
And now it's over COVID.
However, I mean, there was a really spooky post on poll today that got passed around just talking about how absolutely this entire scenario is gearing up the populace to be more compliant and to do what they tell you.
You want to shop here, you got to do this.
And in the future, it'll be vaccines and things like that.
And if you oppose that, then you will be a public health menace, right?
You'll maybe even be worse than a racist if you're not down.
You're going to be one of those glue in the dark.
You'll be the glue in the dark white boy.
No, I mean, to a point, I get what they're saying.
But I'm, and this is just personally for now.
It's like, just put the damn mask on.
I mean, you got these retail workers.
They're stressed the heck out.
And they either know someone or they're related to someone that has literally lost their job.
They're probably wondering how the heck they're going to pay for their next meal.
It's like, why be that guy or gal that like just adds that much more stress than the life?
Put this put the dang thing on three to five minutes.
It's, I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I do those like curbside pickups for my shopping where like I order everything and they bring it out to me.
But if I'm short on something, I just go in.
I'm only there for three or five minutes.
Why do I have to be that guy that's going to just add that much stress to the life?
I mean, do you really think that the person standing behind the plexiglass feels good while they're standing there with gloves and a mask on?
Yeah, it's a little bit of a weird virtue signal to not do it.
But I also get it that it's a slippery slope and one thing leads to another.
Sam smashing you guys bending the knee.
Well, it's certainly not being enforced that I've seen because anywhere I go, I see a certain amount of people that are stridently not following any of the guidelines.
And there is clearly a sentiment out there to describe it however you wish that people say, I'm not doing this.
And there's a real resistance to just anything that the government is asking you to do.
Yeah.
I think it's I've picked up on that as well.
I mean, once you get past that one carrying that they stick at the door, yeah, like once you get past them, like whatever.
The anti-maskism, though, is really fake and gay, in my opinion.
Like it's basically no different than like chanting locker up.
It's an impotent outlet for your revolutionary tendencies, but you aren't actually standing up to the government.
Like you're not standing up to the status quo.
It's fake.
It's fake and it's gay.
And I understand the point, particularly if you're like in our thing, that you're kind of thinking about it as a revolutionary act.
But if you're a legitimate dissident, that's kind of different than being a regular like taxpaying retard normie that just is like, well, I chanted Locker up and I didn't wear my mask because I'm a patriot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm going to throw you off a bridge.
Yeah, it's like very empty, symbolic move, but yeah.
Yeah.
All the same, you know, all I do, I do get people being like, no, I'm not doing it.
I'm not, I'm not complying.
MP says that he loves being able to wear his skull mask every time he's in public.
It's a big, you know, what to everyone.
And yes, I have definitely worn the skull mask too.
And what a time to be alive when you're walking around the grocery store with a skull mask.
And everybody's like, what's that word?
I wear mine.
I wear mine.
Yeah.
I wonder if black guys will come up and give you a high five.
Like, yeah, mask, mask, gang.
All right.
Another thing that bugs me, their reasons for not wearing the mask are conspiratorial, right?
They're like, oh, they're just trying to control me.
But then 20 minutes later, you get them talking about the government, like, oh, the government's got cameras everywhere and they got face recognition.
So it's like, put on the mask, retard.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, yeah, people are sick of it.
So we don't need to beat the dead horse over the head with a mask or something like that to mix metaphors.
Yeah, my thing is just it's also hypocritical.
Like, just be consistent.
If you're going to not wear the mask, then shut the hell up about face recognition software.
Like, just be consistent.
But you got these people that are just like confused, stuck in like a post-industrial technological society getting beaten over the head with all of this weird liberal crap.
And so they're just confused.
They can't not contradict themselves.
And then they just act out in these weird, impotent ways that don't actually make any sense.
And it's just frustrating.
And it's not their, it's not their fault necessarily.
It could have been any one of us, but it's still frustrating.
Sure.
Well, I wanted to talk tonight at the top about pain.
And I'm not going to rehash Root to the Right, but I did read Ernst Junger's essay on that.
It has a lot of lessons for our side, for fathers, for husbands, for everybody, really.
And he himself, Junger, of course, is the author of Storm of Steel.
He was a decorated World War I veteran, wounded something like seven or eight times, awarded the Iron Cross, and all sorts of things.
But he was one of these guys that reminds me a lot of Twitter personalities, actually.
He was kind of a hard ass in the written word, and he played footsie with our ideas and with authoritarianism.
He was anti-democratic.
He was illiberal, but he was a conservative of the Prussian stock.
So he had that sort of an air of elitism.
And it's reflected in his writing, which is often brilliant.
But long story short, and he even had a dalliance with the Stauffenberg conspiracy to assassinate Hitler.
He was loosely connected to it.
And Hitler himself actually said, supposedly, don't touch Junger to spare him, either because he was a popular figure or he felt some camaraderie with him as a fellow wounded World War I veteran.
But the TLDR is that his thesis in this piece from 1934, which is very interesting, NSDAP had just come to power.
Clearly, the world was churning.
And his argument is what true superior can overcome it and not become somebody who just wails away and complains about it, but channels it as part of a will to power.
Now, Junger was race aware.
He drops red pills.
You would recognize things in there.
He describes the sort of interwar peaceniks as vegetarians living next to a camp of vegetarians living next to a camp of cannibals, which nails white swipples and offals to a T and especially reflects everything that's going on on the streets.
But regardless, his thesis is basically that sack up and recognize that it is not just about your body.
When you can transcend both physical as well as emotional pain to continue being strong, and of course, in his case, including being under immediate threat of instant grisly death and still carry out your duty and be strong, that is the true path to superiority and also the way that you have will to power, brah.
So I was thinking, like, what is, and, you know, who are we to compare ourselves to Junger?
Obviously, he went through worse than hell, arguably, on the Western front in World War I. Physical pain is one thing, smack yourself in the head, but dealing with emotional anguish and things like that is another.
And I'll just speak for myself that I almost want to say, I don't think I'm BSing here, that I perform better and see things more clearly and am more productive and stronger when I am under the gun, under pressure, forced to perform under some sort of anguish or stress.
Now, that I have not had to deal mercifully with the death of a very close loved one, the death of a child, the death of a parent, even the death of our beloved aged dog, which I have been slowly but surely prepping the kids that our dog is going to leave us sadly one day.
And this is where we might bury her on this sunny hill, and we will miss her and we'll move on.
But I think there's preparation to it and there's also, yeah, having that self-awareness to realize that pain is what we all go through as white people, as fathers, as husbands.
And we have to be prepared to deal with it and treat it as a part of life.
This system that we have, this emphasis on no pain whatsoever, whether you're getting soma through the TV or your phone, or you're getting medicated for pain, fibromyalgia, all that stuff are symptoms of a sick society that is trying to medicate away a natural human condition.
Now, I'll stop there.
All that said, that's stemwinder.
Sam, you have more life experience than all of us.
I want to say what's the most painful thing you've ever experienced, either physical or mental, and how the heck did you handle it?
And would you handle it differently knowing what you know now?
Yeah, probably emotional pain is almost always worse than physical pain.
That's, as you say, my many years of lessons, maybe that's a lesson I've learned.
Maybe somebody younger or with different experiences would say, ah, but this physical pain exceeds something else.
But I think that an emotional pain is worse than physical pain.
As for an example of that, I'm sure I could think of some different ones, but I will just use one that comes to mind as you were talking.
And losing a child.
Now, none of my children, once they were born, have I ever lost.
But a miscarriage can be very painful in an emotional sense because the baby is real and certainly has become real to you.
And then so you have a lot of hopes and dreams and expectations tied up with that.
The pregnancy is lost, the baby is lost.
You can't help but thinking that that child would be one years old, two years old, five years old.
What would they be like?
How would they interact with their brothers and sisters?
What would their favorite games or toys be?
I mean, all of those things are very painful to think about.
That's pretty painful just thinking about it.
Yep.
Yeah.
And in fact, just even talking about it, if I was to continue to talk about it, those emotions would begin to well up again.
So as far as to deal with it, I will offer a valuable tidbit here, which you may not, maybe, maybe you got to think about this one a little bit.
But the absurdity and cruelty of life, you might say, is that when there is loss or tragedy, things just keep going.
You know what I mean?
It comes time to, you get hungry.
It's time to make a meal, you know, but you don't even feel like eating.
You don't feel like doing anything that you would normally do when you're under the influence of a tragedy, you know.
But the absurdity of it all is that life goes on.
You have to go to work.
There's, you know, your cars broke down.
You got to fix it.
You know, and really the thing that I learned was you have to set aside those thoughts because just as now as I begin to recall a little bit of the circumstances of it, it's, you know, the pain returns and you can't live like that, you know, and certain things are so painful that you can't dwell on it.
You know, it's not good for you.
And so whether it's a relationship that is lost or a loss of a child or something like that, and there comes a time that you have to move on, which is almost obscene because the loss almost demands the respect of grief and things like that.
But there does come a time where you have to move forward.
Because you can't wallow in your own misery because that is essentially a selfish act, right?
It brings others down.
You have wives, kids to take care of much as you might want to.
And you would probably end up hating yourself and feeling worse as a result of it as difficult as it is to move on.
And I think that Ernst Younger has this type of lesson in his writing.
I read Storm of Steel, which is a great book, but it's part of all that type of thing.
All sorts of obscenity and perversity and tragedy happens in war as it did in that time.
You know, there's a guy walking right next to you gets blown away like for no reason at all.
You know, mistakes happen in war where if there's friendly fire incidents or whatever it is.
And if you get caught up in that and you think too much about it, it will really hamstring you and disable you.
Yeah.
And if he could, yeah, if he can go through hell for four years, all the carnage, all the friends, his own life almost losing and then going on to live to 103 and be celebrated.
He was too cool for school to join.
He basically served in Paris as like a captain and in a mail room and censoring letters and things.
So he talks a big game in 1934.
And then when push came to shove, they offered him positions as a politician to run for office.
And he said, no, no thanks and bragged about helping Jews in France and things like that.
But still stole a lot of lessons from him.
Thank you, Sam.
Yeah, I can hear the emotion in your voice, buddy.
And yep, good, good man.
Smasher, we're moving on to you, man.
You, of course, feel no emotions, so it is easy for you.
He has no feeling in his extremities, and he has no emotions.
So next, next.
All right, we'll move on to Moto.
No, go ahead, buddy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Pour it all out.
So I've got two quotes, both Nietzsche.
And one is kind of downstream from the other.
So I'll start with this one.
To live is to suffer.
To survive is to find some meaning in the suffering.
That's one of my favorite quotes.
I think about it a lot.
And it's how I deal with a lot of the stuff that you never outwardly get to see.
And the quote that's sort of downstream from that is, he who has a why to live can bear almost anyhow.
They certainly play off of each other.
I mean, they're both really, really similar, but I think they have slightly different meanings.
But they're two of my favorite quotes, and they are things that I tell myself all the time.
Of course, I do have small emotional outbursts when I get particularly angry, but you almost never see me as anything but happy or angry.
And that's, of course, by design.
I don't know.
I can always tell when you're a little bit off kilter.
And I just mean that as like, you know, irritated or bugged by something, but you do put on a smiley face like the Joker and Soldier Through it.
Well, you also know me quite well, so it's easy for you to pick up on that.
But yeah, I don't know.
It's just Those quotes, and I mean, I've got six million quotes I could read you.
But those, I think, really sum it up.
I try to put everything into perspective.
I try to be as objective as I can, and I compartmentalize everything.
You know, I've got 100,000 hats, and when the time comes to like switch, I just put on the different hat.
And so the emotions associated with hat A get hung up on the rack with hat A.
And later on, when nobody's around, I can put hat A back on and be sad and lonely or whatever it is and work through it.
But I just compartmentalization is how I manage, I guess.
And knowing that my life is not my own, not only do I have children, but I am a proud white man fighting for the survival of my race.
So I don't have time to feel sorry for myself except for in moments where I can do absolutely nothing for anybody and I can take that five minutes to feel sorry for myself.
But then I have to grab my purse and get up and get marching again.
Amen.
Once a soldier, always a soldier.
And I was thinking for the audience, we don't know, of course, exactly the spectrum of ideology of where our audience is, right?
Whether they're all fully on board or maybe getting some guilty pleasure by listening to some edgy dads who maybe have good optics or aren't all the way out there, or they're, you know, borderline normies first getting exposed to this stuff.
And the thing with white nationalism or white advocacy or opposing the people who would see us destroyed, of course, is that there is virtually no material or polite society reward or career paths or accolades and things like that, aside from within our own thing, which is still, of course, small compared to society writ large.
But take that into consideration.
I mean, we are not dummies.
We are well-read.
We are educated.
We are men of the world.
We've seen many decades, many countries, and many struggles.
And I wouldn't give it up at gunpoint because it is right and it is true.
If after many self-introspective moments and, you know, questioning this and questioning that, if I thought we were wrong in the slightest, if I thought we were off track or a member of a cult or something, the easiest thing in the world would just be to wash our hands of this and go about our day.
And be like, well, I don't need all that trouble, right?
But because we can deal with the pain, because we are confident in our cause, and because when we are lying in that hospital bed or on that field, we really don't want to, whether you believe in an afterlife or not, you really don't want to have regrets that you were, I won't say a coward, but maybe a shirker, or you missed your opportunity to stand up and do something.
And also, real quick, a lot of people, not hundreds, but not too much smaller than that, have been reaching out and saying, I won't take credit for it.
We maybe played some small part saying, no, I want to stand up and get involved.
Thank you.
Where do I go?
And Mr. Producer says it would be so nice to be wrong about all this.
Yes, so true.
Sam, go ahead.
We must be inspired by some higher purpose.
And I'll just offer this one scripture St. John said in his first epistle, perfect love casteth out fear.
Expand on that.
Perfect love cast without fear.
Well, when you're feeling attacked, when you're feeling down, you know, it's the love for the things we stand that enables us to overcome that thing.
Sure.
Go ahead, Smash.
Yeah, I've got two things.
Well, to my Twitter bio, actually, Sam, you'll appreciate this quote.
Without a sign, his sword the brave man draws and asks no omen but his country's cause.
Kind of in line with the same idea.
Yes.
But I've got two things.
I've got a smasher moment of weakness that I'll give up.
Well, I've never.
Yeah.
I was, I made my way into hashtag Goon Twitter the other day, which is a lot of pipe-hitting military men that are kind of semi-woke political sphere of Twitter.
And so I was just kind of interacting a little bit, scrolling around, checking out what people were talking about, seeing if there was anybody I knew.
And it hit me that, you know, I was there having a good time.
And I willingly gave that up.
One, to save my own skin, admittedly, because had I stayed in the military, I'm sure it would only be a matter of time before I got myself into trouble.
So, of course, I was like, I should probably bug out now.
But, you know, that stuff was a lot of fun.
It was incredible.
And it's all I ever wanted to do growing up.
Hold on, Smasher.
Moto, mute your shit.
What's going on already?
Is it that loud?
I'm sorry.
Yeah, it's really loud.
Just mute yourself when you're not talking, buddy.
We're going to go to you next and asking about ask about losing a loved one.
So yeah.
So prep your shit and let's we'll let Smasher finish.
And yeah.
All right.
Sorry about that, Smasher.
Carry on.
No, you're good.
And so, you know, that's all I ever wanted to do growing up.
And when I finally got to do it, it was incredible.
And then to have to make that hard decision of like, well, you know, do I go with this awesome, prestigious career choice that I could actually quite literally have never potentially told anybody about?
Or do I go do this thing that's going to basically see me ostracized from polite society?
But if we win, you know, that's pretty cool.
And obviously, I've made my bed and I'm more than happy to go jump on it, lie in it, procreate in it.
But it's a king-size water bed, let it be known.
Yeah, it's an inflatable mattress at this point.
It's the couch, let's be honest.
It's a couch I pulled off the side of the road.
But yeah, so that was my kind of moment of weakness the other day.
Just kind of, you know, it doesn't often flare up, but sometimes I do get some major FOMO, especially if somebody reaches out and gives me a phone call.
And she's like, hey, what's up, man?
Are you all good?
Yeah, what are you up to?
Well, you know, we're doing this thing in this place, and you didn't hear that, and whatever.
Right.
Yeah.
And for the audience, we're not fanning our own balls or seeking your approval or, oh, these guys are, you know, so great for committing to this.
Because if you're listening to this, chances are you're already in it and you want to or you're already involved to the extent of your ability.
And we're not urging people to go dox themselves or go do something stupid.
We're not sadists.
We're not masochists, but we are honest.
And we are going to share what it's like to be in the cause with you, hopefully for your benefit to encourage you because it's right and not because it's easy.
Yep.
Moto.
I got one more.
And it's short.
It's just physical pain.
My take on physical pain.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Go for it.
I've been in a lot of physical pain.
I broke my pelvis in 2016.
I couldn't walk for a few months.
I was wheelchair bound.
I was younger then.
So they told me it would take me 18 months to recover.
I recovered in nine.
And really, I mean, I learned a lot about myself emotionally.
I was a wreck.
I did become alcohol dependent heavily.
Crazy when you can't walk.
But my big take is, and I just use that because it's like the most polite example I have for physical pain.
Is that physical pain hurts, but it's there and you can't do anything about it.
So shut up.
It will go away eventually or it won't.
And those are your options.
So stop worrying about it.
Take care of it.
Do what you can.
You know, get it doctored as best you can.
But that's it.
Those are your options.
So I don't want to hear about it unless they're unless you're offering a solution to it or asking for assistance with it.
I don't want to hear about it.
Yeah.
I'm thinking back.
I really have had a blessed life that I'm, I haven't had to suffer through too much emotional anguish nor extreme physical pain like that.
You know, tearing my ACL and, oh, God, this black nurse gave me a catheter after the surgery.
I was like, I don't have to go.
I don't need it.
Nope.
And it goes.
That was really getting a catheter is really, really unpleasant, I guess, unless you got a giant urethra like Sam and Smasher.
It really hurt.
It was not comfortable.
Maybe she didn't lube it up or something.
That was, that was bad.
And, you know, after I got my ACL repaired the first time, God, I think back it was crazy.
They forced me to get up out of the bed.
I mean, I was hit, I am not a pussy and I've been in pain and I'm like, yeah, whatever, you know, I can deal with this.
But I was like hitting the morphine the night after the surgery.
And the next day they're like, up and Adam, and you got to go walk these steps like with your crutches.
And I'm like nauseous and drooling and my knee is throbbing.
I'm like, why are you?
I almost like totally passed out on the steps.
And they're like, okay, maybe we pushed them a little bit too hard there.
Catheter removal.
That was rough.
Oh, yeah.
Maybe they did removal.
I don't know.
Well, see, I just woke up with it in.
So that was fine.
But the removal, and it was awkward.
I had this like weird, autistic male nurse.
It's like you have two types of male nurses, right?
Or three, really.
Dudes that do it to get laid, dudes that do it that are gay, and those are not mutually exclusive.
And then like really autistic people.
And he was the four or the latter.
See, I'm retarded.
Um, third one, just yeah, the third one, but oh man, it's just awkward, skinny, pasty.
And he just like he walks over and he's like, It's time to take out your catheter.
And I just looked at him and I was like, They sent you, and he was like, I'll do it myself.
Yeah, no, he was just like, It is my job.
And I was like, Okay, man, uh, this is gonna hurt pretty bad.
And he goes, It shouldn't be that bad.
Bro, have you ever had a catheter?
No, okay, nerd.
And uh, I asked him if I could do it myself, and he was like, You're not qualified.
And yeah, so not only did it hurt, uh, he stared at me in the eyes the entire time.
And oh, God, that was that was the most painful, yeah.
That was the most painful moment of my life.
And if that happened today, he'd make a TikTok video and dab on you after rainbow flag over your junk.
Yeah, uh, don't get a catheter, boys and girls.
Yeah, not pleasant.
Uh, yeah, I had to have one after I had an appendicitis, but they drugged shit out of me.
Moto curses, and then he curses at his curse.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, it's good that you don't have your appendix because we're gonna need you at one day.
Yeah, well, unless they are.
No, but they gave me like 10 milligrams of morphine that I just like checked out.
I was in cloud nine, and they're like, Okay, it's out.
I'm like, Did you do anything?
It's like, no, they felt different.
Lucky dog.
Yeah, no, I was like, I don't have to go to the bathroom, like, my bladder is not going to explode, lady.
And she's like, Uh-uh.
We're doing this, honey.
All right, yeah.
Um, if you, if you have the option, if you're not totally drugged up, just be like, I'll just piss my pants.
Thanks.
Yeah, I had my appendix out too.
And as you spoke about it, that was the most painful physical thing that I can recall in my life.
And I did not have a catheter.
I don't know how that worked at that time, but I can remember being you know when they cut through all those muscles and everything to get in there.
And then being in recovery, it's like, okay, time to get up.
And like, what?
Are you crazy?
How am I going to get up?
Oh, no, they're pulling you up.
And next thing you do, you're standing there and it's taking all your strength just to stand up.
And you're like trembling with pain.
Like, okay, let's start taking a few steps so you can go to the bathroom.
Like, you are crazy.
This seems normal.
Yeah.
First, do no harm, you hypocritic, hippocratic oath.
Yeah, hypocritical, hypocritical.
Yeah, that's that's basically what happened with me.
Is uh, I woke up one morning, my stomach hurt, and like I couldn't, I couldn't eat, I couldn't even drink, I couldn't even hold down water.
I'm like, okay, this isn't right.
So I'm like, I'm just gonna go back to bed.
And I laid down and it just felt like my entire gut was getting ripped open.
And I'm like, okay, F this, I'm going to the ER.
So I go to the ER and they give me about 10 milligrams of morphine.
So I could actually stand up straight at that point.
And we went and we went and got a CT scan, and they're like, Yeah, you have appendicitis, your appendix is coming out.
I'm like, oh, okay.
And so they scheduled me in.
They pumped me full a whole bunch of painkillers, knocked me out and all that.
So they still knocked me out and all that happy stuff.
And, you know, I wake up after, I wake up afterwards.
I'm actually feeling pretty good.
And like, literally, the next day, they're like, oh, you need to stand up and see if you can start walking and whatever heavy, right?
And I'm like, all right.
So, like, I literally tried to like, I got about maybe halfway up from like a sitting position to a standing because I went right back to sitting.
And I, and I, I cried.
I literally flipping cried.
It felt like I was getting stabbed.
There's no crying on full house, Mr. Primitive cut his money.
I was just like, holy cow, I feel worse now than I felt like I was coming in.
And they, and they, they're like, okay, well, just go lay down.
They give me an extra day.
What do they call that?
Dilopeted or something like that.
There's this like tiny little pill.
Dilotted.
Dilotted.
Yes.
They gave me that.
Delighted.
Yeah.
Diloted.
Sorry.
Yeah, right.
Couldn't resist.
So they gave me, they gave me that, and I was knocked out pretty much the rest of the night.
And then the next day, I was at least standing up on my own, and I was okay, at least on the painkillers.
But man.
Yeah.
I think being nauseous or being nauseated is one.
Like, if you had to sentence me to being nauseated for the rest of my life, that would be pure torture.
Whenever I, you know, when you, when you feel like you have to puke, but it's not happening.
You got the cold sweats.
You're like, good God, I didn't know how good I had it, you know, without this feeling.
There's a lesson there, too, right?
When you're sick, when you're in pain, you all of a sudden appreciate, or when you, when you hurt one of your appendages and you can't use it, you're like, damn, I really should have appreciated and made more use of my good time, which for all of us, you know, if you, If you haven't suffered severe emotional trauma or physical damage to your body, get out there and go for a damn run and hit the gym and soak in the sun and bask in the glory of not being damaged or handicapped like so many people are.
Um Moto, I did want to transition.
Uh I, I think this, I think this will be good and we don't have to go into too much detail, but you uh have gone through the loss of a loved one.
We won't say who or how, how recently or whatever.
Okay yeah, I didn't want to put you on the spot, but man, you uh, I met your dad.
He was a hell of a guy, total character, lived a very long and good life and passed at some point over the past couple years.
Uh, if you don't mind sharing a little bit about what that was like and and how you dealt with that pain um geez, i'm like, where do I even start with that?
Um, for for me, it was like I, like I knew my dad was on, was on his way out, but for for a very long time my dad was very, very stable and his health was okay, and then he took a downturn very, very quickly.
Um, I think you said you had mentioned coach, that you had met him and within and that weekend that weekend that you want you hi and him and hung out and you know we got some work done, um with I don't.
I think it was a week later that he was literally, literally on his deathbed, despite the fact that you know he had been okay and done a whole bunch of work and was chatting and joking and everything else.
Um, I think I think the hard part how, how should I say it?
How the the hard part wasn't wasn't, wasn't so much that he was going, it was that how he went, if that makes sense sure um, Like, because you thought you had more time with him.
I thought, yes.
Yeah.
I thought I had a lot more time.
And if you would even ask me, like, when we had left the house that day, if you know, what would you do if your dad was gone the week?
And I would like, what the fuck are you talking about?
And yet, there you yet, that's exactly what just happened.
Yeah.
It was, it was the suddenness.
It was the emptiness.
It was not the chance to do what you wanted to do, if that makes sense again.
Lost time with your father.
Yep.
Yeah, very, very, very much so.
Robbed a little bit.
Because there were things I wanted to do, things I wanted him to be there for that he just doesn't get to be there for anymore.
And I, and I have to say that you seemed from what from my witnessing and my observation to have handled it like a man.
You may have had darker moments, of course, that I wasn't privy to, but you seemed to take it very well and you superseded the pain to a certain extent.
You dealt with it.
You coped with it.
Was that a was that a conscious thing?
Were you becoming the Uber mention and beating it down?
Or was it just who you are?
Did it come naturally to you?
A little bit of both.
Because my, well, you know, this my dad had had an episode earlier on that I was pretty sure he was gone, that I, that he wasn't going to come back from.
And he did.
And like, I, I, I literally had to have my father on the floor of the living room where I am doing CPR to him and taking the deepest breaths I can take and blowing it into him, hoping to pray.
Yep.
I'm sorry.
He's good.
Praying to God that he freaking wakes up.
And he did.
And one of the things I did is he had been out for a couple of minutes.
This was back over, this is back over the summer 401.
He had been out for a couple of minutes.
And I took the deep and I looked at the clock.
I was like, Jesus Christ, he's been out for four minutes.
I don't get him up.
He ain't getting up.
And I took the deepest breath I could take and I blew it into him and watched his chest rise.
And sorry, I'm still good through it.
And basically gave him everything that I had to the point that I myself like snapped back and had to start deep breathing again because I just didn't have any air left.
And he and he literally woke up.
That's pretty amazing.
And just suddenly it was like, I need air and just starts going down going down the hallway.
And I'm like, the heck you go.
I'm just down, Pops.
I just, I just Lazarused your ass.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, where the heck are you going?
Oh man, that's amazing.
And of course, I get myself up off and I'm basically crawling after him because I'm still winded.
And he didn't even thank you after that, right?
He's like, go make me a sandwich.
Thoughtfully, he went down to his breathing equipment and he gave him some steroids and whatever.
And we got the ambulance here and everything like that.
And I had to, and I, I mean, I basically had to deadlift him off the ground and get him in the wheelchair because he was completely oblivious.
And like he, he didn't even remember any of it.
He remembers sitting down to watch a movie and then he woke up in the hospital and he has no, and he had no idea how he got there or why he was there.
That's, I mean, it's a, it's a wonderful story in a sense, buddy.
You, you saved him, obviously, as you know, and you gifted him more time on this earth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I'm, I'm eternally grateful for you being willing to share that.
And then if I could just ask, ask one more.
I mean, you, you think about him every day.
You're just soldiering on.
I mean, we all lose our fathers.
Some of us never even knew our fathers, right?
So it is a fact of life.
It's an every few day thing.
There are days that I'm like, you know, something goes wrong in the house or there's something that like, you know, him and I would talk about.
And I'm like, oh, well, here, let me go ask dad.
And it's like, wait, it's not there.
And it's like, okay, Google that or let's sit down and take a minute and deal with it.
And it's, that's, it's just how it is.
No substitute.
There isn't.
I mean, and I could go on and on about how he was and how helpful he was around the house and how the guy was basically a jack of all trades and all that.
There's just things, there are things that like it comes up and I almost default calling them just like when I told you, I was like, hey, my dad's really pretty good at doing a whole lot of stuff around the house.
You and I might have to do it because he's not feeling that well, but he'll at least tell us how to do it.
Yeah.
But that's, that's, you know, I don't get to do that anymore.
I don't, I don't have my, I don't have my Google air quote.
That was a, that was a testament to his character that you shared our need for a little bit of help.
And he was like, oh, no, let's, let's do it.
He came and he and he did it.
And he was, yeah, he was a hell of a guy.
He was, he was absolutely adamant about it.
Yeah.
I was, I didn't talk to my parents very much about our beliefs.
I was reluctant to, buddy.
I was like, I don't know, you know, but if he insists, like, please, yeah, you know, if an older guy wants to come and help, like, God bless him.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And in fact, actually, your situation is actually how I introduced him.
Because I talked to it very, very, very generally.
I was like, he believes this.
And without actually saying it, my dad wasn't a nationalist.
He believed what we believed in, but he wouldn't have said what he wouldn't call us what we are.
Right.
Does that make sense?
A lot of people like that.
Yeah.
So, like when I told him about your situation, he's like, Is there anything I could do?
And he, and he consistently asked me that for several weeks.
And I'm like, Well, they got some house stuff to do.
And it's like, Do you want to do that?
And, you know, we packed up the truck and we had it up there.
Selfless until the end.
Yeah, absolutely.
I wish, I wish I could have him back so just so I could fire Smasher.
I think that's the only time in recent memory I've gotten a break.
I'm joking.
No, yeah.
Oh, man.
Thank you, man.
I really appreciate that.
I put you a little bit on the spot, but I think, yeah.
It is what it is, and people, and people should know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think the precious lesson there, right, is to as pay as much of a pain in the ass as our parents can be or grandparents.
Or you don't, you don't, when you're, when you're living your time with them, you may try to treasure every moment, but that can be difficult for all their foibles and our faults too, our impatience or whatever it is.
But yeah, you will miss them when they're gone.
Even if, even if they weren't great people, right?
In most cases.
So treasure those times.
In that spirit, I want to give thanks to Nat Scott.
And he came on last week for life lessons.
If you missed it, dear audience, we tried to condense everything into one show, all of our assembled wisdom for the younger audience.
And Nat Scott talked about one of his regrets or one of his sorrows was missing a particular grandparent, but grandparents in general.
So I did follow up on that one and write a nice long letter to my sole remaining grandmother.
And just like writing to political prisoners, it felt good and it felt good in the right way because it's the right thing to do.
It's not sometimes in those things, I'm like, are you doing this just to feel better about yourself?
Right.
Is this actually a selfless act?
And the truth is, it doesn't really matter.
There are things like that where you can do good and feel good at the same time and everybody wins.
And spending time with your parents, with your grandparents, writing letters to people who would be totally shocked and surprised and delighted to just get a little piece of mail wherever they are in a nursing home in a lonely, you know, single wire or wherever it may be.
So take that time out of your life to spend time.
And if you can't spend time, IRL, at least write them a letter, even if you type it out on Microsoft Word because your handwriting sucks so much.
All right, gents, let's take it to the break.
We do not have to have an epic second half, as always, but I think we still got a little bit of gas in the tank.
I can't see Mr. Producer, but he might be rolling his eyes.
He wanted to go to sleep.
And I genuinely appreciate everybody sharing.
Sam Smasher, anything you want to wrap up on that first half thing?
Outstanding hanging Chads?
I got nothing.
That's a good discussion.
I got one thing I want to add.
Please do, buddy.
There is a time for everything and a season for every activity under the heavens.
A time to be born, a time to die, a time to plant and a time to uproot, a time to kill and a time to heal, a time to tear down, a time to build, the time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn, a time to dance.
The moral of that quote is that there is always a time to be doing something.
Make the most of it.
Make the most of what you have.
Listen to the birds.
Yep.
Turn, turn, turn.
All right.
Well, that's actually a scripture.
I don't know if you realize that's right.
Yes, Ecclesiastes 3.
It's ecclesiastics for you once we throw up through four.
Excuse excuse me.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, what a shallow Western man I am to think of the birds and tambourine or whatever, turn, turn, turn instead of the Bible.
But I apologize for that.
One other scripture comes to mind, especially when it comes to throwing himself in the pond.
When it comes to losing a loved one, perhaps this will give you some comfort as well.
There's a scripture that says, Blessed in the eyes of the Lord are the death of his saints.
Very much so.
Dark.
All right.
Well, Mr. Producer, thank you very much, as always, for keeping us on track.
That was a darker and frankly more emotional and deep full house first hour than we usually do.
So I hope the audience enjoyed it.
And I hope they enjoy this gem from 1971 as well.
This old feller died earlier this year from COVID, and his name was John Prine.
I had never heard of him until he passed, and he's got one.
Oh, he's probably got many.
But this one is a real keeper, and it's called Hello In There.
Whatever you do, don't get misty listening to this one, fam.
And we will be right back.
Me and Loretta lie living there.
Well, it been years since the kids had grown a life of their own left us alone.
John and Linda living Omaha Joe is somewhere on the road.
We lost Davy in the Korean War.
And I still don't know what for.
Don't matter anymore.
You know that old trees just grow stronger and old rivers grow wilder every day.
Old people just grow lonesome, waiting for someone to say hello in there.
We don't
talk much more.
She sits and stares through the back door screen.
And all the news just repeats itself like some forgotten dream That we've both seen.
Someday I'll go and call up Rudy.
We work together at the factory.
What could I say if he asked what's new?
Nothing.
What with you.
Nothing much to do.
You know that old trees just grow stronger And old rivers grow wilder every day.
Just grow lonesome, waiting for someone to say, when they're...
So if you're walking down the street sometime, spot some hollow ancient ass.
Please don't just pass them by and stare as if you didn't care.
Say hello in there and welcome back to Full House, episode 58.
I guess I shouldn't be too high energy after that very emotional and touching song from John Prine that one definitely puts a lump in my throat.
And beautiful track.
Hope you enjoyed it.
Consistent with the tenor of the first half, we are going to shift gears not too awkwardly or with too much grinding here in the second half.
Have a little bit of fun, keep it a little bit more lighthearted and make hay while the sun shines.
Because while that was a very blessed internet first half, here in the heart of Appalachia outdoors, with crickets and cicadas, my battery on my laptop does not want to take a charge, so we're under the gun and if I go out it's up to these guys to carry the torch.
So we'll see what happens here in the second half.
First I wanted to say big congratulations to a listener who knows who he is.
He's got another one on the way.
Won't say his name, won't say the details.
Uh b, another b, we'll.
We'll give him that.
I think one letter out of the alphabet is uh, safe enough congratulations.
Be good luck to you and your wife on welcoming new white life.
We can't quite top two of our guys in the cause having babies on the exact same day like last week, but we'll take them whenever the announcements or the uh confirmed pregnancies and the ultrasounds come along way to go guys, godspeed and god bless.
We had a bunch of talk about appendicitis and uh appendixes, appendices.
I don't know what the plural is of appendix In the first half.
And it just so happens that one of our many medical correspondents on Full House challenged us with a hypothetical earlier tonight, a real-life situation that he faced.
And he's got a family member who the family was concerned.
He had right-sided stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
And it had been going on for at least 24 hours.
How do you diagnose that, fam?
When you see that in your bio fam, that's right.
That's a likely appendicitis.
Immediate trip to the ER.
Don't mess around with that one.
I actually had my appendix out.
I had a very light case of it.
I had the pain, had a low-grade fever, and a little bit of discomfort.
And I, even if it was my appendix, I was like, no, I'm going to fight it.
Like, you know, I can beat this thing.
And my wife was like, you damn fool.
Go to the ER.
So I did.
And I got my, and they were like, yeah, it's inflamed.
We're going to take it out.
Of course, they had me there hostage.
And then when the pathology report came back, I requested a copy of it.
A family member who knows how to read those things was like, you might have been able to beat it there, coach.
So we'll never know.
But regardless, I'm glad I have my appendix out for one less thing Smasher has to worry about when he's carrying me over his shoulder.
It's like a race car.
You just got to remove all the extra stuff to save weight.
Exactly.
Take out one of my kidneys, give it if you need a kidney.
No, I'm not donating my kidney yell and save it.
I will sell the kidney.
Quick, comfy corner to start us off on the right note here in the second half.
It's the summer.
School is approaching.
And true to form, I got a little bit antsy the other day.
And I was like, I got to do something special with the kids.
Sometimes my wife thinks I go a little bit overboard with my desire to create memories and stuff for the kids.
We're not doing this stuff 24/7 or every day of the week.
But I was like, we're going to see the caverns.
There's caverns within driving distance of this place.
You know, the bits, stalactites, stalagmites.
They turn out the lights and tell you about how cool it is to experience total darkness.
Dear daughter was all on board.
Junior was a little reluctant.
Like, what are you cooking up here now, old man?
But we made the haul.
We went there and it was worth it, right?
If you've ever been through caverns on a tour, you see, they turn the lights off and you get to experience total darkness.
You shuffle through.
It's no more than an hour.
The kids are looking at rocks.
The tour guide gives corny jokes and commentary to try to entertain people and they fake laugh.
But it was worth it.
We got out and did something, right?
School's approaching and you got to make the most of your days.
Even if the kids aren't totally enthusiastic at first, they brighten up once they're out and about and doing things.
So take that one to heart.
And one other quick, fun story from here.
This morning, I was up with the kids, and all of a sudden, I see a neighbor driving up my driveway.
And I know him.
He's an elderly guy.
He's very kind, but he's never done that before.
So I think, oh, God, what's happening?
Is somebody sick?
Does he need help?
And then he gets out and a little dog hops out behind him.
I've never seen before.
And he says, Coach, is this your dog?
And I said, no, that's around.
And I know you had a dog.
So I think he was politely in some way saying, please take this dog off my hands, dear neighbor.
So, of course, I complied.
And he was a sweet, he is a sweet little boy who we weren't sure if he was a stray or a wild feral hound or somebody else's dog.
And we took him in.
The kids named him Billy and showered him with love and affection.
He seemed to be in hog heaven.
But tragically, it turns out that yes, he is indeed a neighbor's dog from about a mile away.
So, Billy is still asleep up on our deck as of right now.
The neighbor did not come to claim him.
And tomorrow is going to be interesting to see if he comes to collect his unclaimed freight.
Anyway, wanted to move on.
We have had a busy mailbox in the show.
A lot of kind stories, comments, and things like that.
I'm just going to pick a couple from random here.
And this one is from somebody who wants to remain anonymous.
I can call him P, another guy with one letter out of the alphabet.
It's fine.
But he says, I was mowing the lawn yesterday.
I had a few issues with the mower, mainly battery-related, battery-mowing guy.
And it took me a few days to mow it.
And understandably, the grass was a bit longer than usual.
As I was mowing, I noticed a gorgeous yellow butterfly landing on one of the small purple flowers that have grown with the grass.
It was on my mowing path, so I swerved to not hit her.
She flew away, only to land a few feet further ahead, and the same thing would happen.
So I decided to let her be and thus left an area of the yard not mowed for the butterfly to eat.
Coach and Sam gang right there.
And then he says, As I was riding away from the untouched area, I saw her dance in the air and land on one of the purple flowers.
Life is good.
Keep your head up.
So thank you for sharing that, buddy.
And then he sent a picture of his yard, which is pretty cool.
Mariposa, right?
Isn't that what they say in Spanish?
Butterfly or whatever.
Yeah.
Here's another quick, quick, good one we got from somebody else who we'll just play it safe here and keep everybody anonymous.
You guys know who you are.
Hello, Full House.
Just wanted to reach out to you guys and say thanks for doing such a great job in putting on captivating shows.
I promise you, dear listener, that I did not write these to myself.
I listen every Sunday morning while mowing the lawn, and it makes the time fly.
You guys are always funny and more importantly, informative.
I know you guys love to put out news of listeners with babies being delivered.
So I'll say now that we have ours coming this December, hoping to have that Christmas baby.
So fingers crossed.
I do have one question for the birth panel before I go.
What are some good names for children that aren't paused in any way?
Ah, all right.
I'm going to kick that over to the birth panel.
Thanks for the great time and a great weekend.
Like a Swiss watch.
I'll be listening on Sunday.
Yeah, sorry, we disappointed you.
We're recording on Sunday.
He thanked us and he says, God bless sincerely, a satisfied listener.
So congratulations, satisfied listener.
And good question.
Yeah.
Where do you, what's what's our go-to?
Aside from the, what's the Norse book of sagas, the Hajjmal?
Just have them all.
Thank you, Sam.
But have at it, guys.
Where should a satisfied listener go to start looking for baby names?
Soul.
Pick what your ethnicity is.
Just like, you know, everybody, literally everybody on this panel has a biblical name.
So I would stick to that.
It's for boy, baby, or girl, baby.
Stick to what, Moto?
What was the original thing?
I couldn't hear it.
Biblical names.
Oh, biblical.
All right.
So Moto says biblical names.
Some people would say that's paused, but no, not by the Old Testament.
We won't say that.
New Testament names.
How about that?
All right.
Better.
Improvement.
I have used Old Testament names.
I see.
Obviously, there's nothing wrong with that.
Whatever your ethnicity is, if you don't, you know, pick whatever your morality is or whatever you were maybe raised as, you know, whatever seems to be most Prevalent in your family and pick up names from that.
When you said ethnicity first, I thought you meant like, this is my son, Irish Jones, or German Smith.
Yeah, that's actually kind of cool.
This is my son, Austrian parents.
To really answer this would involve actually revealing my scheme of names that I have used for the children.
So, unfortunately, I can't go into it too much, but I have used names from literature, names from the Bible.
In the case of the Bible, I've used a couple of Old Testament names.
But in other respects, I've used a couple names from mythology and from literature.
And whatever you do, yeah, pick something that is going to roll off the tongue well and flows well with the last name and is not going to make the child's life any more difficult than it already is.
There's, I know, no guts, no glory, but naming your child is not a vanity project.
You want to give them something they can work with that isn't going to, in my opinion, make things tougher than they need to be.
I'll disagree.
I think your name is your name is a point of pride.
You know, I love my name.
I'm sure.
Almost as much as he loves himself.
You know, it's for me, it's a point of pride.
Like, sure, I didn't pick it, but it was picked for me by my father, and his name was picked for him by his father.
And every single father going back to the very first person that carried our name.
And I'm not a junior, but we've used family names every time.
And like even my son, I changed it up a little bit between my father and myself, but it's still a family name.
And it is true to our ethnicity, Irish, of course.
I didn't know the former.
I didn't know the latter.
I'm surprised by that.
I thought, brother.
Yeah, yeah.
What about the song, The Boy Named Sue?
You should avoid that, right?
Yeah.
No.
No.
Just name your kids after Beatles.
It's only, you can only give your son a girl name if you plan on being an absent father.
That's the moral of the song.
Yeah.
You know, I can't be there to make you tough, so I'm going to make everything beat the crap out of you until you're tough.
Right.
Yeah.
We know people who have named their children after national socialists, prominent national socialists.
Nothing wrong with that from prominent American white nationalists from history.
I think that's great.
You can get away with it.
There's plausible deniability, and it's a little bit of a wink-wink with your wife.
And yeah, we went with short and sweet and nice sounding.
Although, of course, our first two were during our ideological evolution in a sense.
So going forward, we probably would have been a little bit more on the conqueror, more on the grand and glorious scale of things.
But just have fun with it.
What a wonderful time when you have your first on the way and talking with your wife about what you're going to name that beautiful baby boy or baby girl.
I can't think of a better problem to have than what to name it.
My next song.
All right.
Can't go.
Very good.
Yeah.
Just, yeah, don't, yeah.
I'm thinking of some naughty, some naughty white men from the past decade.
I won't even go there in terms of naming your children after William and I wouldn't.
I was going to say, William and Pierce are both family names on my wife's side.
Plausible deniability right there.
Yeah.
Deutschland producer, Mr. Producer says that.
Yeah, that would ring well on the playground.
All right.
Yeah, they just call him Deutscher Dutch for sure.
Deutschland.
Let us go.
Let's go straight to navigating the collapse part.
God knows what.
Before my laptop craps out here and see what our good friend Nat Scott has in store for us and for you listening.
We see you there, sort of.
Fire it up, Mr. Producer, please.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
Several years ago, during the dawn of my political awakening, I had a friend who I would constantly debate politics with.
We would both try to convince the other using our own facts and logic, and would inevitably reach an impasse.
Instead of engaging with each other, we would mostly talk past each other.
As they say, facts are stubborn things, but our minds are even more stubborn.
Here's a few tips on discussing issues with your friends.
The first thing to do is quite obvious.
Clearly and effectively make your case.
Many people who are on the political right are a hair's width away from our politics.
A few irrefutable points that will stick in their mind are all they need to come to our side.
That being said, they have also been inundated with constant propaganda and will have irrational emotional hang-ups about racial issues.
To paraphrase, feelings don't care about your facts.
Once you've given a brief summary of your case, listen to any objections they have.
If they use emotional objections, don't counter with logic.
Their emotional objections show they are thinking with the emotional part of their brain, and you must match that.
If they mention innocent blacks being oppressed by police, they won't be convinced by statistics about IQ and genetic predispositions.
It is important as well that you give them an out to maintain their perceived social standing.
Don't call them stupid or say that only idiots could think like them.
This will only serve to entrench them in their position.
Instead, say that you used to think that way too, or that anyone could think that by looking at all the stories on the media, posts on Facebook, etc.
Maybe add that it seems they have put a lot of thought into the matter.
Then, let them know that there is another way of thinking that completely changed your perspective, or that there is something they might not have considered.
By validating their thinking, then introducing talking points, they will be much more likely to use their own logic to weigh your statements instead of outright dismissing them.
If possible, tell a personal story.
For the emotional objector, a personal story is the one thing that cannot be discounted.
I'm sure most of us have at least one friend or acquaintance that has been victimized by black crime.
The victims in white America have heart-wrenching stories.
Get to know a few and mention that white victims have no one to speak for them.
If they try to say that experience is not the norm, well, then you can talk about 13 250.
Finally, do not consider the arguments your objector is making to be a part of that person.
Do not say you are wrong because, or your argument is flawed.
Saying this creates an emotional attachment between the person and the argument, and they will often conflate any attacks on the argument as an attack on themselves.
Instead, say that mindset is not quite right, or I disagree with that statement because the outlook many whites have is a parasite in and of itself.
Treat it as such and liberate their mind.
Of course, most of this goes out the window if you have a group of based friends and only one to center.
Bullying and peer pressure really works, you retard.
And now, quotations from Ezra Pound, one of the greatest American poets, in a radio broadcast titled Non-Jew, April 30th, 1942.
Clarity has not come and will not come till an accurate census of the original Belafiers is made and until every pro-war Jew has his name listed.
I think the non-war Jews, at least those who were non-war before the war started, will be found to be very, very, very small.
In fact, apart from the thefts and extractions of the gang back in the Treasury Music Hall, it becomes increasingly difficult to discuss American affairs except on a racial basis.
Whether America will awake to this now or in 20 years will depend on Yankee enterprise, I suppose.
Whatever you read in America, we read here that the Americans, USAers, are irritated at finding themselves in war unprepared, disappointed in British flop.
Sometime, the Anglo-Saxon may awake to the fact that the Jewish cajal and secret forces concentrated or brought to focus in the unappetizing carcass of Franklin D. Roosevelt do not shove Aryan or non-Giddish nations into wars in order that those said nations may win wars.
The non-Jew nations are shoved into wars in order to destroy themselves, to break up their structure, to destroy their social order, to destroy their populations, and no more flaming and flagrant case appears in history than our own American Civil War, said to be an occidental record for size of armies employed and only surpassed by the more recent triumphs of Warburg's The Wars of 1914 and the present one.
You'll find out, brother, before or after the belly flop, England is on the teeter.
The central stink betrayed the United States in 1863, keeping up the hostilities, keeping the rebels at it, divide et impera.
Now, the same bunch of kikes is doing it in England, not for the benefit of the American people.
Sassoons, baboons, Rothschilds, etc., migrating to the United States and stinging up the whole country in the wake of Zucor and the other fine flowers of Semite culture.
Look at Litvinov's face, the soul shining in beauty, Greek philosophy jettisoned, Justinian jettison.
The sense of law that built up all Europe puked into the discard.
Sense of English law that was built up out of the Roman, puked into the discard.
You will find out, brother, later or sooner, and I should prefer it sooner, so as I should be able to meet some survivors.
Interested only in bunk, says the sheeny lawyer.
Seem what you can put over.
Immoral geometry, Freud, Bergson, crawling in through all the crevasses.
Honesty of thought in all and every department filched away, undermined, dry-rotted, wet-rotted, and simple-hearted elegiac poets like Archie put out in front as top dressing.
No, brother, the American people will have to start asking questions.
All right.
Outstanding from navigating the collapse.
And Nat Scott had no idea that Ezra Pound was that hardcore on the issues.
I knew that he was our guy, especially later in life, and that he suffered as a result of it, but not to that extent.
So we are growing and growing older and learning along with navigating the collapse.
However, I am sad to inform the audience that Nat Scott has been fired from Full House due to choosing that technically jazz or whatever it was.
But yeah, not a fan, but that's okay.
We are, of course, under the gun.
Yeah, right.
Let's see.
I wanted to go back to the mailbag real quick and full candor and disclosure for the audience.
The birth panel was having a little bit of fun in the sidebar there because we don't know if I'm going to go dark.
Not in that way, but if my laptop's going to go dark here any moment now.
And if it does, is it a full house if Coach doesn't close it out?
Or are we going to turn the reins over?
I mean, Smasher seems, Smasher really wants the job.
He really wants to close it out.
And MP is like, Coach, no, we'll just record it tomorrow, but we'll see.
Hey, we're living by the seat of our pants here.
It's August.
It's summertime.
Let's see.
Bug out plan or move from our friend JW says, God, we had a long correspondence here, regardless.
Anyway, I can't pull it up.
Great couple of shows from our man PJ, who says, I want to give our, hey, guys, I found you on Telegram last week.
So people really do find us just on Telegram.
It's not all about Twitter and word of mouth and the website.
Really enjoyed the last two episodes and we'll keep listening.
It's great to hear some parenting talk from a so coach just died live on air and you all got to witness it.
So that's the end of Full House forever.
We no longer have a host and the ship is sinking quickly.
So we will see you guys next week.
And we have to remember that my battery is about to die.
Have fun.
And remember, thank everyone.
Remind the audience of the Telegram channel at pro whitefam.
Bitshoot.com, forward slash channel, forward slash fullhouse and youtube.com forward slash c, forward slash full house, and the email fullhouse show at Protonmail.com to all white listeners who may be on the fence on our worthy cause and may be beating themselves up for not doing more.
Do more and we salute you, we love you, fam.
See you next week alone.
Long time ago.
I love nothing.
I never lost.
Control Your face to lie with the man who's all the world.
I laughed and shook his hand And made my way back home.
I searched for all the land For years and years I roamed.