In honor of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, we'd like to open this episode of Full House with a moment of silence in honor of her decades of contributions to American jurisprudence.
Just kidding, everybody.
We have got Rob Freeman back in the white room after almost a year since he first came on to talk about homeschooling.
We've got all sorts of good stuff in the hopper.
Sam and JO are with us.
Potato Smasher has taken the week off, and we're ready to rock.
Mr. Producer, light the fuse.
Welcome, everyone, to episode 63 of Full House, the world's least politically invested show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio family.
Unless it comes to NJP, I guess.
I am your woefully internet adult host, Coach Finstock, back with yet another blend of current events, dad stuffs, and Deez Nuts jokes.
Before we meet the birth panel tonight, though, just one donation.
Thank you to that special someone who came through for us, and he prefers to remain anonymous.
Not even a fake sock from this feller.
That's how serious he is.
Seriously, though, thank you, buddy, and for everything that you do.
And with that, let's get on to the birth panel.
First up, he's a star on Full House, but a superstar.
IRL.
That's right.
A friend of mine remarked recently, Coach, I got to meet Sam this past weekend.
Yes, somehow.
He remains down to earth.
Sam, that's a true story.
Thanks, Coach.
That's a wonderful introduction.
And it was tough not being on the show for a couple of weeks.
I really missed it.
But I was down at Mania.
I don't know if we're supposed to say where it was or not.
And it was so great to see everyone again and meet a lot of new people.
And I got to tell you, it was heartwarming because when I walked in the door, some people said, hey, another full house guy is here.
And yeah, and because there was a couple other guys there, I don't know if I should say who they were, but there were a couple other full house guys already there.
And it was nice that we were recognized and acknowledged as such as full house guys, you know, and I had a lot of wonderful conversations with different guys through the entire weekend.
And it was tremendous fun.
And Mania is just something that once you go to it, you will not miss another one if you can help it.
So we did some nice sightseeing and spent a lot of time with our guys and having a good time.
And then I got home.
I fly to these things because I've driven enough in my life.
You know, I've proven I could do that.
So I fly everywhere.
So I get home from, I fly in.
And of course, I could see that the laundry and stuff in the house had not been kept up.
So Monday morning at the break of dawn, I'm waking up to go to work and I reach into my underwear drawer, which is empty because the laundry wasn't done.
And I reach back and I had to wear a thong.
Yeah.
And, You know, this is a question I'd like to put to the birth panel one of these days.
You know, briefs, boxers, commando, or other.
But, anyways, whenever my wife catches me wearing the thong, she sings that song, Thong, Ta-Tong, Thong, Thong.
Like, it's like dental floss for the butt.
Anyways, next man.
Yeah.
See, we're all backed up.
Yeah, we haven't had a show in almost two weeks, and I apologize to the audience.
We had scheduling trouble, and then my internet went completely out.
And it's still out.
They're not sending a tech out for like another week.
So I'm here by the seat of my pants, tethered to a cell phone that is up in the window, little inside baseball.
And yeah, I'm sorry I didn't make it to the big show this year, Sam.
But that's that's wonderful that we had a full house retinue there and everybody very intimate.
It was because of the COVID and getting everything together.
I think it was maybe just a little bit smaller of an event, but it was the more intimate for that reason, too.
So, man, it was really great.
You know, you had a lot of stars there and a lot of new people, I think.
And it was really great.
Port-au-Prince is lovely this time of year, so I'm glad you got to go.
All right.
Next up, this might be his very last appearance on Full House.
That's right, folks.
We have been storing some of his stuff in our garage for almost a year now.
So I'm throwing down the gauntlet.
JO, I'm going to start rifling through your stuff if you don't get it.
I'm kidding.
Oh, wait, are we on?
Are we on?
Sorry.
I was just still listening to the song.
Yeah.
That's the same response every time I mention this stuff.
He's like, oh, coach, beautiful weather out there today, isn't it?
It's all right, buddy.
I'm just busting the job.
Listen, your wife commandeered several of my possessions.
I know.
I have my underwear in your old underwear drawer now.
That's that's pretty intimate.
Boxer briefs, Sam.
Mostly box of briefs.
Thongs.
How's it going, Jayo?
No, I'm glad to be here.
I uh I had a great time in Port-au-Prince as well.
It was great to see Sam.
Yeah.
It was great to see everybody.
And yeah, I got back.
The first thing I did was went and got a Corona test.
And I came back clean of Corona.
I should send you.
Oh, no, that would give away where we were if I were to use that picture I took as show art.
Damn.
You came back HIV positive, unfortunately.
that's been for years though man Like that had nothing to do with me.
Like Dadic Johnson hardy as ever.
Any was it raucous and wild as usual or was a little tamer this year?
No, it was pretty lit.
It wasn't particularly mellow.
No.
I was hoping it was going to be a boring one since I wasn't there.
Well, that's why it was a good time.
There you go.
Exactly.
Yeah.
All right.
And finally, returning to Full House for the first time in almost a year.
Big thanks for his help on the homeschooling episode.
He is a longtime white advocate, father of only one child, but he's really making it count.
And he is an all-around Renaissance man.
Rob Freeman, welcome back, buddy.
Thank you very much for having me on.
Our pleasure.
We had the pleasure of catching up IRL.
I don't know, sometime in the past couple of months.
Time is flying, and we are rapping about homeschooling and everything, of which you are an expert.
But you also have hot takes on a number of topics.
And you sent me a couple wall texts of stuff that you wanted to talk about.
And the one that I seized on was your, I don't know if it's a unique take, but it is a positive take on the sword of Damocles that hangs over so many of our listeners' heads and also just people in the pro-white cause or even just anonymous guys on the internet.
And that is draw roll, if necessary, the threat of getting doxed and what happens to you and how to handle it and all the rest.
And I found your take particularly upbeat.
And we may disagree with you as we parse it here, but let's go right into it.
You see it as you see it with rose-tinted glasses almost as a positive in many ways.
So have at it and we'll kick the idea around a while.
Okay, well, for those that it doesn't destroy, it makes them much harder men.
And it is making us into a market-dominant minority.
Now, there's a lot of stuff going on that simply isn't televised.
The old saying from that singer from the 60s, the revolution won't be televised, is really true.
I mean, there's so much happening.
You know, white nationalists think that if they don't see it on TV or they don't see it talked about, then it's not happening.
But we are becoming a market-dominant minority, as Amy Chua wrote about in her book called World on Fire.
Yeah, what do you mean by that?
Yeah.
Well, a market-dominant minority is like the group of people who dominate an industry, like the Indians dominating the convenience stores or Chinese dominating dry cleaners or the Jews dominating banking.
So the market-dominant minority strategy is how Jews became so powerful.
And by doxing us, they're forcing us as a defensive measure to find to fall back on what resources we have and become market-dominant minorities in certain niches that we can.
And it's kind of giving away their power.
We're going to get their power, even as they're kind of going through the shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves in three generations process.
They're slacking off.
You know, their great-grandparents were mathematicians and physicists, you know, from Russia.
And then their children became businessmen.
And then their children, you know, want to be in show biz or something.
You know, they, so, so, I've noticed that the Jews have degenerated.
They don't win Nobel Prizes in physics anymore like they, you know, they did back in the 50s.
If you've ever seen that.
They're not anymore resting on their laurels.
Right.
Are you familiar with the play Death of a Salesman?
I know of which you speak.
I don't think I ever read it.
Okay.
Well, it's the Jew next door is like this awkward kid who he's kind of a loser and the wasps are these athletes and they're kind of making fun of the Jew.
But by the end of the play, the Jew is a clerk for the Supreme Court and he's doing well and the WASP jocks are like losers going nowhere.
And a lot of that was happening.
I mean, that was a real process that happened in the country.
We rested on our laurels and the Jews ate our lunch.
But now it's, you know, it's going the other way.
And they're not ready for that.
And they don't think it's possible.
But, and you know what?
They would have prolonged their dominance if they didn't kick us so hard.
But, you know, going after like pizza delivery guys who were at Charlottesville by these really rich, privileged lawyers.
These food vendors.
Yeah, it's so disgusting and so monstrous that it's going to speed it up.
And if their great-grandfathers could rise out of the grave or take a time machine and see what's happening now, they would warn their grandkids, their great grandkids about doing this to us.
Because now we're in the position that the Jews were in 100 years ago.
And we're going to respond accordingly.
And anyone listening to this, I urge you to accelerate it as much as possible.
Make yourself a market dominant minority.
Read Amy Chua's book, if you want, World on Fire.
But make yourself as prosperous.
And this is the moment in history.
If you want to be a white nationalist activist, just be as successful as you can be so you can help others be successful.
And that's all we really got to do.
We don't have to, we definitely are not about challenging the state's monopoly on the use of force.
They're going to spend themselves out.
They're going to run out of steam.
And we're going to assume power, in my opinion.
There is a lot to unpack there.
I hate that cliche or bon mot, whatever it is.
And I've got lots of feedback already.
We want to hear from Sam and JO first.
First things first, though, is that Rob is upbeat and he sees it as a net positive.
I think that's fair to say, because it forces people to become harder, to make choices, to become more self-reliant.
And I used to always say, like, we're white men.
We will land on our feet, right?
Or die trying.
It's not the end of the world to have your true, honest, and sincerely held beliefs associated with your own IRL persona, your real name, right?
Another thing that I've said that may be controversial is, in the end, do you really want to grow into an old man undoxed, as they say?
And what I mean by that is, do you really want your strong and virtuously held feelings to be sort of a secret from the world for all of your days, to go to your grave and not really let it rip in the world and stand for your own beliefs?
I would suggest that you possibly, or you probably do not.
However, just to be real clear for the audience, I don't think that any of us is going to suggest that you go and make it more likely that you get doxed or do things that are reckless or increase the likelihood of it happening.
Because as a smart man once said, the harder each one of us is, the more difficult it is for them to target.
So by becoming a hard target yourself, you make it harder to get other people.
And there's no, yeah, we're not masochists, right?
We're not looking to ruin people's lives.
And that's another thing I think we should banish from our vocabulary, even though some people may have been severely impacted by getting doxed.
It's not the end of your life.
You don't get executed as soon as you get doxxed.
It can go as well or as poorly as you have prepared for and as you have steeled yourself for the eventuality or the likelihood.
I'll stop there.
I got lots of questions and things to contribute and go to Sam just for top lines.
Yeah, well, I give you my perspective, which I will try to say is the perspective of many years.
The fact that this word doxing has even become a thing and that we're even talking about this, I would say is a sign of the times and an indicator of something.
And let me just explain like this.
When I was a very young guy, and I've been a factory worker almost my entire life.
And so, somebody like that, some blue-collar person who's like gets doxed, as you would say, or gets exposed, like, well, so what?
We're like nobodies.
We laugh about the 1.0 people or make jokes at their expense because these are like a lot of extreme people or weirdos or oddball people.
But that was also what enabled them to understand and grasp the message of white nationalism in that time.
But now, white nationalism has jumped into the professional class.
So now people, there's some actual cost of being exposed.
See what I'm saying?
So, I mean, you could take that as a positive in a way.
That shows that it's worth exposing people or that people that are getting exposed are of a higher echelon in society, shall we say.
So I take that as a positive in the sense that the lowly factory worker, well, who cares about doxing that guy?
He's a guy's nobody.
So that guy's a white nationalist or he's a skinhead or he's a whatever, you know.
So back in back in the day, people didn't live in mortal fear of getting doxed because it was like, all right, you know, worst case, I'll make a shit can and then I'll move on to the next thing.
But there was no internet back then too, to have, you know, constantly lingering or amplified things and all that.
Yeah.
I mean, I've had my, I'm not going to go into the circumstances, but I have had my dust up with the system, you might say.
And it didn't hurt me at all, really.
I didn't lose my job.
In fact, I got a raise.
So, I mean, it just depends what you're doing.
I don't want to make this like it's lighthearted or something like that.
It's depending what kind of job you're in.
And that's what I'm saying.
Like the more professional class, somebody who's maybe got a government job or somebody who's, you know, a school teacher or something like that.
It's, you know, so it kind of depends on what kind of situation you're in.
But consider what I said.
You know, when people were nobodies or lowlifes or kind of rough weirdos or whatever.
Yeah, okay.
So they get exposed.
Somebody knows about them.
Who cares?
But now you see that the situation's changed because like Horace used to say, this thing's gone into the professional class.
Yep.
Yeah.
And the size of the splash of the docks is, you know, it corresponds with your perceived status in this sick society, of course, how big it is.
And so the more, you know, our audience probably knows themselves and can self-analyze and realize whether, oh, am I going to make like a third-tier story or some shitbag on Twitter, or is it going to be a little local news piece, or is it going to be a big deal?
And you have to prepare accordingly to what you know.
And to be candid too, of course, we know guys who have handled it poorly in the sense of they just sort of disappear.
They shrink back and try to go back to normedom or whatever they can scrape out of it.
And then we know guys who have embraced it and fought and been like, thank you.
I have been waiting for this to happen.
This is the greatest thing ever.
And everything in between.
So there's lots of things that all of our audience should do, I think, to be better prepared for it.
But before I go into some of that stuff, Jo, responses to Rob and to Sam and me so far.
I would open up by saying that Ultimately, the goal would be to remake the world in such a way that a dox is a positive.
It's almost a virtue signal to be like, well, I'm the guy that believed the fundamental ordering principles of this society way back in 2014.
Sure.
Here are my papers.
Yeah, here's my here are all my sock accounts documenting.
I knew what's up.
But yeah, every minute, let's say you're kind of dox proof.
I don't know, you're independently wealthy or something, or a dox wouldn't affect you very negatively.
Still lay low because every minute they spend trying to get you is a minute they're not trying to get somebody who is vulnerable.
Never give anything away for free.
If it does happen to you, you are going to feel like everybody knows.
Nobody's going to recognize you.
Nobody's going to remember your face.
Nobody's going to remember your name.
All of the highest profile people that this has happened to, they've never been confronted on the street.
You know, there have been some pretty big ones, you know, and these people spend that day, the next couple of days walking around thinking that everybody's staring at them.
Basically, like a patient of the body snatchers.
Yeah.
They're going to notice.
Yeah, they're going to point.
But you're not a big deal.
And when it's happening to you, you'll probably feel like the world is coming to an end, but it's not.
And yeah, I don't know if you need some kind of support or direction.
You can always just email the full house email if you're afraid you're about to get doxxed.
If you do get doxed, maybe you're just a listener who's not involved in IRL, etc.
You know, there's kind of a set of protocols or whatever.
Never respond to media, shut down your social media, that kind of thing.
But yeah, just jump in the inbox.
Every dox that happens also means the thing has less value.
You know, they've done this to so many people.
It's it gets of less strength every time.
And especially with normies being called Nazis.
Yeah.
You know, like Normie cons are still super quick to burn a Nazi, but they don't know what a Nazi is.
When they see that, like, you know, I don't know, Candace Owens and Ben Shapiro get called Nazis.
If they see some article come across their Facebook feed from their local paper about like a local guy gets exposed as white supremacist, mostly they just roll their eyes and move on.
Yeah.
And even the people who do care, they forget about it 10 minutes later and they certainly didn't like study and memorize your face.
Right.
Yeah.
And before we make our audience paranoid or like we're drawing attention to the problem, I think, you know, there's, there's all sorts of vectors for risk of getting doxing, whether it's just screwing up and typing something wrong on Twitter that's personally identifying or a picture.
There's personal betrayal.
I think guys are more paranoid than they should be about like Twitter revealing their information or Google doing that.
Like I think there might be some database somewhere in the Utah desert where it's like, yeah, if somebody could or would go in there and like connect all these dots, then they possibly could do that.
But I'm not aware of many, if any, cases there of people getting burned by the tech companies themselves.
It's usually user error.
PayPal has now.
I know PayPal shut people down, but have they turn that information over even when it's not asked for when there's no crime suspected or alleged, just like oh, uh, this was a white nationalist PayPal account.
Here's the information, Mr. Feds.
And you think that, and I know that people have talked about it.
You think the feds have actually fed doxy stuff to third parties outside the government, which would clearly be in theory illegal?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Maybe I'm naive on that one.
So we shouldn't use PayPal.
Good takeaway, Sam.
Yeah.
And Peter Thiel is PayPal, mind you.
Mr. Producer reminds me, or at least he was a founder of it.
I guess he's, is he still involved with it?
Yeah, probably.
Not involved with it anymore.
Yeah.
All right.
Back to Rob.
Let's assume your theory is valid and this is creating market-dominant minorities.
What should people listening do now in terms of concrete steps to harden themselves in the eventuality and to get on that level where they're not doxx-proof, but more bulletproof?
Well, first of all, memorize the following line from the big Lebowski.
If someone comes up to you and says, Are you a Nazi?
Your answer is say what you want about the tenets of national socialism, dude.
At least it's an ethos.
And don't say anything else.
Just walk on.
And, you know, so if you get doxxed, for God's sake, don't act like you're guilty of anything because you're not.
And you got to remember that you're the good guy and everyone else is the jerk.
Right.
Yeah.
And I've been doxxed multiple times.
And, you know, it kind of always fell flat.
I mean, the worst thing they did, they went after my family.
And, you know, that was pretty dirty because they realized that they couldn't get anything out of me.
And so it was, it was kind of tough on my family.
I hope I'm not giving it away.
Yeah, let's go after their family, you know.
But that's very dirty.
And I think.
But that also doesn't work.
Like, there's something that I think, you know, Antifa types, far-leftists are pretty disconnected from how the American mind works.
And nobody in America, even like a Democrat or a Bernie bro, would suggest that you are responsible for your racist uncle's political beliefs or your cousin, your brother, your mom, your daughter, whatever.
Like the whole like guilt by association thing doesn't really play in this country.
It doesn't play anywhere.
Going way back to the Iliad and the Odyssey and the Greek mythology, the greatest crime was violation of the household, messing with someone's family.
And that raised the furies from Hades to come and like punish the people who violated the household.
So, you know, when they mess with my family, I'm like, you know, they violated the household.
Something terrible is going to happen as a result of this.
And two years later, Trump got elected.
So, you know, I saw that, whether it's true or not, I saw that as kind of my vengeance against them for what they did to us.
And, but yeah, you shouldn't feel like you're doing anything wrong.
And any casual listener out there, you don't have the luxury to be a slacker.
The slacker ethos, you know, the nihilist ethos is really deep in this culture.
When I was in college, I noticed that people wouldn't raise their hand and answer questions from the professor.
And that's really terrible.
And that was what was considered cool.
And I mean, that's why the Pajites come and eat our lunch because everyone's too cool to try hard to do anything, because that looks uncool to strive.
They've made striving uncool.
I mean, that was the masterstroke, I think, of the Jews in American culture is to turn us into a bunch of slackers and losers.
And now they're just, you know, mopping us up.
Yeah.
I think you could, you know, and this is just sort of anecdotal, but I think that the normalization of weed is a big part of that.
You know, the like South Park take of like, weed isn't like the end of the world, but it makes you okay with doing nothing.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
It's, it's, it's very insidious.
And even worse is that the guys who are like that get a lot of chicks, you know?
And the guys who work hard and try hard, you know, they don't do as well with the ladies, you know, and as the guys that sit around and do nothing and, you know, don't care about anything.
So that whole, you know, don't care about anything has had a positive, given, been given a lot of positive feedback, you know, and being someone who strives has not had concomitant rewards.
Although, I mean, I've looked at the guys who, you know, who are like that, and I wouldn't trade places with them, even though they get a lot of chicks and, you know, women like literally financially support them and their hardest problem is managing their harem.
But they don't know how to do anything.
They're, you know, they're losers.
And I wouldn't really trade places with them.
I thought about that for a long time and I noticed because I noticed this phenomenon.
And, you know, I like who I am, even if, you know, even if the American women don't find me as entertaining.
So I think that the guys who are like the harem managers, they learned how to be entertaining.
They learned how to be like the television for women.
And that's what women wanted.
They wanted a guy who was like the TV, was entertaining.
And the boring plumber or electrician who could support a family just wasn't as entertaining because he was too busy working and learning things and doing real.
I don't know that I agree with that on the whole.
That's fine.
I feel like the working man is attractive to women.
And there are those losers who are running around getting a bunch of chicks.
But it's kind of it.
I don't think there are a lot of them for one.
I think it's almost rock star tier without actually being famous to be one of those guys who gets away with a life like that.
And the sort of people that they're running around with, like that harem is not exclusive to him.
Each of them is like, okay, so he's got five, ten girls that he's, I'll say, seeing on the regular.
Each of those girls is seeing five other guys on the regular too.
Probably.
Yeah, you know, the world I live in, it's probably my perception probably warped by the kind of people I'm dealing with.
I think what you described, that dynamic is a symptom of a decadent and luxurious society as society would become harder and meaner and become more natural in a sense, then the women will flock to the man who's more of a provider and things like that.
It's just the kind of the decadence of the excess that we have in this society.
Right.
And what I so circling back to the market dominant minority thing is, you know, who the women like is a real incentive.
And, and, and the, you know, so just a whole house.
Female preferences throw themselves at us.
Yeah, right.
Status.
Female incentive, you know, their incentive of female desire has really incentivized the slacker, the ZFG guy, you know, smoking weed and playing his guitar in his room and, you know, not doing anything and not trying, you know, and women flock to that.
And that really trained a lot of guys to be like that.
Unfortunately.
And so that's women can have jobs and they can have their own money.
And so they could, you know, once society becomes like where it's only the real Chad guy is the guy who can go and earn a living and provide, then all of that will change.
Yeah, in the hopeful future.
I'm, you know, I'm banking on massive collapse.
In a sense, even.
I'm banking on massive collapse, bro.
I got my shorts in for the election for a massive stock market crash.
Yeah.
I call it the apocalypse portfolio.
I still think Biden's going to win, but it seems like the tide is turning and our guys are getting more confident that Trump has got it in the bag.
But let's bring it back to a little bit more practicality just for a second, because talking about status and money and all that stuff strikes to the heart of the probably the biggest fear of most people, even more than physical safety, you know, is a mob going to show upside out my house because somebody tweeted about me.
But it is the financials of it, your personal financial security, and especially for fathers, married guys with kids.
The biggest, that has to be probably the biggest fear.
Oh, I'll lose my job and I won't know where my next paycheck is coming from or how I'll pay my mortgage or afford rent.
So I would suggest that if you're listening to this and you're slightly concerned about getting doxxed, that having that, we did our financial show where we advocated all manner of saving $6 million men.
It's up on YouTube and BitChute for your personal finance needs.
But having as much liquid cash, obviously you want as much as possible.
But, you know, the experts say three to six months, having up to a year.
I know that's a steep climb for a lot of people, but having as much savings as possible so that you know that you can weather a storm.
I mean, you're supposed to do that anyway, whether you get injured, whether you suffer some calamity that is going to put a big hit on your checkbook.
So having that socked away is going to give you a lot more confidence and security that, ah, you know, if the hammer falls, I can weather that storm.
And there's all sorts of different ways you can do that.
I know that everybody listening spends money on stuff that they don't need to buy, that they don't need.
So look at your bottom line and see what you can cut out to add to your war chest.
But personal security is another one that people worry about.
And I have been telling everybody for a long time to increase the safety and security of their own domicile.
Get the hell out of cities and commie-infested suburbs if you can, but that's sort of a long-term pie in the sky objective for a lot of people.
But just harden where you live.
Get security cameras.
Make sure you got all those doors locked and make sure your vehicles are always locked up.
There's real peace of mind in knowing that you're prepared for bad guys showing up at your door in the middle of the night.
But even upstream from that is, we touched on it already.
And I wanted to say I wanted all of our listeners to look themselves in the mirror, if not now, maybe after the show, and just smack themselves in the face and say, I'm white.
I'm right.
And gosh darn it, people like me.
Just like Stuart, just like Stuart Smalley back in the SNL days.
But it gets to something that Sam has always said: is that this is a different world now.
Yes, the enemy has the internet to broadcast doxes and try to make a big splash, but we are not quite so isolated and alone and without support networks as we were before either.
So take heart in that.
And if you are listening as part of sort of an isolated, or you know, if you're just one guy who happens to listen and haven't reached out IRL yet, there are risks, of course, in IRL networking, but with great risk also comes great reward and having a network of guys who might have your back in a number of ways should the hammer fall.
And one other thing, while I'm on my soapbox here, is having a place to go is a good idea in any case, whether it's natural disaster, your house burns down, you don't feel safe for one reason or the other, whether it's going to a family member's house, going to a friend's house, or even better, having your own bug out locale location, even if it's just a strip of land in the woods where you can park a camper or even pitch a tent in the middle of the night.
Peace of mind is worth a million bucks in situations where you got to get the hell out of Dodge.
So I'll stop there and let you guys fill in any gaps I might have missed.
I miss no doubt.
That's all good.
That's all good.
What about like a year's supply of food?
Absolutely.
I don't think that this, I think that the system has a probability, a non-trivial probability of falling to a lower level of complexity where we don't have the just-in-time, the just-in-time manufacturing and delivery, you know, is the warehouse on wheels, Walmart.
It's a very fragile system.
People don't realize how fragile it is unless you, you know, follow stuff like read like James Howard Kunstler and then Peak Prosperity, Chris Martinson.
I mean, many of society's systems that we depend on are based on the exponential function.
They're growing exponentially.
And the exponential function, it's one of those things like if you had a magic eyedropper and you're in a baseball stadium and you're handcuffed to the nosebleed seats way up high and it was all sealed.
So, you know, with the water, this magic eyedropper doubled and it started with one drop of water and it doubled every minute.
How long do you have to get out before you drown?
Any idea?
If it doubles every minute, how long do you have?
Every minute?
Yeah.
If it doubles every minute, I'll say 64.
64 minutes?
Yeah.
Pretty close.
It's 50 minutes.
Okay.
But at 38 minutes, the water is only ankle deep.
So the exponential function, you know, like the old Ernest Hemingway saying, he went broke slowly at first and then all at once.
The function sneaks up on you.
And we have a whole bunch of exponential functions sneaking up on us that are going to smack us in the face, you know, sooner or later.
Yep, I tend to agree with you, Rob.
I know JO and Sam are a little bit more leery of collapsitarianism, but you want to be prepared.
Yeah, I think the system is robust.
You know, there might be disturbances to Amazon or something, but I think the system is very robust.
Do also still believe that it's important to have, you know, at least 90 days, preferably a year's worth of food on hand.
And I think, you know, we've talked about prepping and stuff in general.
One thing I think maybe doesn't get talked about enough is developing a personal relationship with people who create food.
Yeah.
Knowing a rancher, knowing a farmer, those kinds of things are really good to do.
But yeah, I don't.
I think the system is fragile when you look at specific things, but there's such a tremendous redundancy in this country that it could take quite a hit, I think.
It's how they prevent any sort of rabble-rousing.
You know, I was talking to a guy, a Normie, just yesterday, who was saying, with all this stuff going on, why aren't people doing more about it?
My first thought is like, well, why aren't you doing anything?
But everyone's super comfortable.
And if we were only 80% as comfortable as we are now, we still wouldn't do anything about it, which is proved out by the quarantine.
You know, like the quarantine and the unemployment that has come with the emergency orders and just with everything being closed and you don't have access to movie theaters, restaurants, this kind of thing.
Your quality of life has decreased dramatically.
And nobody's that bummed out.
People don't like it, but they're not freaking out.
You know, the only batches of people who maybe went to a Capitol building somewhere were all just called kooks and then they went home and that was a wrap.
Things can get our buddies kept this post worse.
Yep.
It was rolling still.
Well, the Fed is even talking about magically being able to deposit Fed bucks right into your account and cutting out banks, et cetera.
In the worst case scenario, they can just magically whisk money to you and do it a lot faster than the Treasury Department did under the CARES Act.
So, yeah, they are certainly considering options for keeping the wheels well oiled in the case that things really go pear-shaped again.
Go ahead, Sam.
This is Rob.
I think you guys are making the mistake of expecting the revolution to be televised.
A lot of things are happening as a result of the quarantine that aren't immediately visible.
They're not immediately televised.
You're expecting protests in the Capitol.
I mean, what's happening is a huge cultural change, but that's, you know, that's something that's not going to show up on the radar for years.
But, you know, it's a huge change.
Like, people, we were a very consumerist country and that's been broken.
And the public schools, people aren't going to public schools anymore.
And the implications of that are going to take years to work out.
So be patient because I mean, things have changed so much.
You just don't realize it yet.
You know, give it a few years and you'll see.
Yeah, there's no harm in getting your asses in gear now, even if we don't know exactly when the music stops and you have to find a chair to sit in and you don't want to find that one's missing.
Before we move on to a sunnier or more dad relevant topic, the other point I wanted to make about the threat of doxing and impacts and how to steal yourself and be better prepared for it is especially for guys who are married or engaged or even have serious girlfriends, they don't have to be fully on board with all of your beliefs.
They don't have to be necessarily political, but you don't want them to get blindsided by something.
It doesn't mean letting them into every single facet of your ideology or every sock that you have, et cetera.
But we do know people who have lost loving relationships as a result of their political beliefs and having the temerity to express them, whose marriages got rocky at times or who even lost. wives as a result of it.
So I would suggest that if your significant other is completely in the dark about, I mean, hell, if you have any controversial opinion in this country, you are running the risk of having something bad happen to you.
I think you do have to have that difficult conversation with them to some extent so that they are not completely blindsided should that sword fall on you.
But your mileage may vary.
It helps if they're fully on board, but I don't think you want them to be completely oblivious to everything either.
Definitely not.
I think you got to show them the aspect of it that they will care about and understand.
Sure.
And the fact that they're not going to be necessarily social pariahs for still being connected to you after a dox.
Well, I play that on a thin line.
Like I let my family know that I have very controversial political opinions that could blow back in my face one day, but I don't tell them what those opinions are because I don't want to be in a position of talking about if they gave like a thumbs up to it.
You know, like, oh, like if someone were to like, I don't know, I don't talk about politics with my parents.
Like I'll let them kind of boomer post about whatever it is they believe.
And I might push back on a little thing here or agree with a little thing there, but I have no interest in red pilling my parents.
But like, imagine you did, and then you get doxxed and now your parents are screwed too because you went on Twitter and told everybody like, oh, I told my, you know, parents about Hitler and they're on board.
Isn't that great?
Yeah.
But yeah, but there's also a satisfaction, I imagine, too, where the people who are close to you in your life don't have the luxury to say, oh, I had no idea I was blind.
I mean, of course, they can lie, right?
I mean, we're not talking about saying, hey, mom, I'm Kykeslammer 88 on Twitter.
But at the same time, life is short.
And if your parents do know what you believe, if your family knows what you believe, if you get doxxed or anything happens to you, you have to explicitly grant them permission to tactically cuck.
They should not be expected to go down with your ship.
Or just say nothing.
Yeah.
And I guess that's what I mean.
But like, if in order to save their job, they have to say like, I disagree with my son's political beliefs.
They shouldn't have to like virtue signal and self-flagellate and do all of this stuff.
But like, I'm just saying.
I would never expect like my parents to starve to stick up for me and my politics.
Like, this is my family.
It's like we've had the conversation before.
I think someone wrote the show and asked how to red pill their parents.
Don't.
It doesn't matter.
What are they going to do?
What are they going to do?
Like, maybe if they're super rich or something, they can help out, but I really doubt that like your mom is the next Mike Enoch.
Yeah, I never waste time with older people unless it's some exceptional circumstance like what you described there.
You know, it's once you get to a certain age, if you're not pumping out kids or, you know, doing some daring activism or whatever, well, you know, what are you going to add?
I just can't comprehend, you know, your own flesh and blood, your kids in particular, your precious progeny, as I always say.
If someone is attacking them from the outside for like their political beliefs or their racial ideas or knowing about the Jews, man, I can't comprehend.
I can certainly comprehend just shutting up and like not giving it oxygen, but to even like contemplate throwing your own kid under the bus or something like that to me is beyond the pale.
There was that, yeah, go ahead.
I uh I feel like I could be like, I don't know, a serial killer or something, and my aunt would still stick up for me.
Like I could like be on TV, like, I don't know, burning buildings down with Antifa or something or whatever outrageous thing you can imagine somebody doing.
And if the media or the cops came to my mom about it, she'd be like, screw you.
He's a good kid.
Like, he did nothing wrong.
No, here we have him on video, like shooting a nuclear weapon at the moon.
Well, maybe it deserved it.
I don't know.
Sure, he had his reasons.
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
Rob is an early bird.
So we got to milk him for everything we can here in the first hour.
Rob, you had, you're a really thoughtful guy, and you have some lessons from your own experiences with your own boomer parents that you have been able to rectify in your own fatherhood.
And go ahead, touch on a couple of them for our audience.
All right.
You know, when I was growing up, my parents were like, well, you know, you don't need Boy Scouts.
You don't need that stuff.
And I realized I'm lacking all these man skills.
Like I didn't, I don't know how to put stuff together.
And fortunately, I mean, I'm fixing that now.
I realize from studying math, I have more confidence in being able to, you know, use do mechanical things now, like the roof rack for my kayak as an example.
And another thing was, I remember the hockey, a hockey arena, the Adirondack Red Wings hockey arena was being built.
I was about eight years old and I was pretty good at backyard hockey.
I could do a slap shot.
I could skate backwards.
And I desperately wanted to be in youth hockey.
And my father worked at the Y, you know, he was a, he was a jock.
My mom was a stay-at-home.
And between the two of them, they wouldn't take me to hockey.
I was just, what the hell?
You know, because, you know, my father could have brought me in the morning.
My mom could have brought me home.
And they were, and they conspired together.
Like, no, no, no, we don't want to have to do this.
And so they didn't want to buy the equipment.
They don't want to have to get up early in the morning.
And they were like, oh, you're not going to want to do it.
And then, you know, that's never tell your kid that you don't want to do that.
Never tell your kid, oh, you're lazy.
You know, that's the worst thing to ever tell your kid.
Did you have a lot of siblings?
I had one sister.
Wow.
And they're just boomers.
They're boomers.
They were boomers.
And then when I went to college, I was kind of, you know, I was, I was into learning Russian.
I was very scholarly.
And I wasn't real popular with the Women.
And I was, I overheard a college girl say, oh, yeah, the hockey player came into my room when I was naked.
It was, it was so funny.
I thought, wow, if I walked into your room when she was naked, I'd be arrested.
You know, so had my parents said me to youth hockey, I would have been a hockey jock with groupies in college.
Oh boy, yeah, wow, what an epic uh realization, huh?
So, when I was raising my daughter, I was like, you know, I was spared no expense, no effort.
You know, I would take her to anything, you know.
Um, I took her to gymnastics.
The one thing that she ended up really liking was all-star cheerleading, and I didn't take her to that initially because it was like the it was like uh the inappropriate clothing on pre-teen girls.
Yeah, I was pretty grossed out by it, um, but you know, she had and she got into it when she was about 13, 14, so she wanted to do it.
So, I took her to it then, but then it was kind of too late, she didn't have the back handspring.
So, I, you know, in retrospect, I guess I wished I had taken her to that, despite the attire they put on those girls.
Um, because that's what no, well, you know, I mean, the most important thing to me was that she's doing something real, you know, in three dimensions rather than like watching TV, sitting at home, playing video games, doing nothing.
And so, anyways, now you know, now that she's grown up and on her own, the I can tell you what happens if you raise your kid, you know, you keep him away from screen time and you raise him doing things.
Is she's actually grown up into an adult, and um, her boyfriend originally started off was a slacker playing video games and stuff, and she broke him of that and made him do real things.
Um, so she's very ambitious, and you know, she's not coming asking us for money, she's she's right in independent, you know, and she's like a full adult at 20, you know, she was a full adult at 18.
Um, whereas a lot of kids, you know, they're they're still they're still kids when they're 35 sitting in mom's living room playing video games.
I resemble that.
Oh, do you?
I'm sorry.
No, so so that's why you know the correct amount of screen time is zero.
Um, some kid gave my daughter when my daughter was the next sixth grade, gave her a Game Boy, I guess, one of those handhelds.
And we made her give it back, you know, and uh, she was wow, yeah, she was pretty unhappy about that, but you know, she became an adult, she's not a slacker.
Yeah, they might resent you at the time, but uh, your daughter is not still sore about the Game Boy, absolutely not, sure.
No, and she forced her boyfriend to stop playing video games, yeah.
I'm glad that I never caught, man, yeah, yeah, I agree with you.
I got into the video games thing real bad time, suck, yeah.
And what's a trip is um, I like this blew my mind to think about it.
I look at everyone I grew up with, and a bunch of guys maybe took this wrong road down party and booze and women and drugs, and a bunch of guys took this road down like anime and video games and like being a loser.
And 10 years ago, I probably would have reported otherwise.
But the people who got all screwed up on women and drugs who then like got over that or graduated out of that, they're more successful than the guys who went down the anime video games loser route.
Yep, a lot of guys who went through a lot of women and then had a lot of fun and came to their senses too.
So if you're going to have a vice, I guess beats.
That's a very interesting insight that video games are worse than partying.
But I can see it.
I agree.
I mean, it's like short of opiates.
Opiates are just cancer.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But, you know, video games are like, are like electronic opiates.
Yeah.
Do you, do you, do you look back at your wild days, Jo, and sincerely have, I'm sure you have regrets about some of them, but in general, the ethos of living wild while young and then coming to your senses?
The problem is I let it keep going until like I wasn't young anymore.
Yeah.
You know, like you're in your 30s and you're still partying.
Come on, man.
Like the greatest regret of my life is that I didn't do what I'm doing now 10 years ago.
If some guy's got to sow some wild oats, maybe I'm just not trad enough for this world or something.
But if you're going to do some running around and partying, you know, in your 20s or early 20s or something, I'm not going to object to that.
But you can't say like, oh, I'm in my 20s.
So this behavior is okay when you're three weeks from your 30th birthday.
Yep.
Which is exactly.
Which was me, you know.
But yeah, I don't regret early 20s wild oats.
And I was married at 25, so I didn't have too many wild oats in my later 20s.
But yeah, dude, I hit rock bottom at 15 years old and had to clean up.
Yeah.
But I cleaned up after that.
But between 11 and 15 was my partying years.
What?
It was really bad.
Yeah, dude.
Man.
Well, dad's on vacation.
My father had to go, you know, out of leave the state for a job.
My mom divorced him.
And my mom was like going off doing her career and left me with babysitters who, you know, and I got drank and got high with the babysitters.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And then went out, you know, and partied down by the Hudson River with the older kids a lot, you know.
And similar stories from people with like absentee parents or people or kids who were like literally like in the system.
They were like foster kids.
They lived in children's homes.
And they're like, oh, yeah, dude, we were doing ecstasy when we were 11.
Yeah, yeah.
I'm lucky to be alive.
I'm lucky to be alive.
My first day of ninth grade, I was snorted coke and got stoned and drank, drank a couple of nips, you know.
And yeah, it was, it was really crazy.
But then I went to live with my father and I made it, I did that, I made that my rehab.
And he was the total straight edge and pretty strict.
So I knew I couldn't get away with anything around him.
So I cleaned up after that.
Anybody can turn around with the right circumstances and the right will to power.
And that also ties back a little bit to the dox thing, too.
Like JO said, you know, you might think that you're important and the world is like caring about you.
But as my wife usually says, most people care about one thing and that's themselves and what's going on around them and what people think about them.
And most people give them all your doxed guys.
All of your favorite doxed guys, all of your favorite e-celebs, none of them has ever been recognized by a hater on the street.
None of them.
I have.
You're nobody's favorite doxed guy.
Right.
I mean, people around town have said stuff to me, but I mean, not mean, just like, oh, I saw you in the Norse Bulletin.
Well, the thing about getting doxxed is, too, you have to realize there's a tremendous amount of sympathy for our positions among the public, too.
And that's what I found when I had my dust up with the system is, man, there were a lot of people willing to help me.
I was walking through sort of like a smallish town, like a sort of well-to-do town.
And in this town, they had there's a townwide block party once a month where they shut the streets down, open container laws were suspended, there were bans, you know, clowns, face painting.
Just it was a party in the streets of this sort of smallish town.
And a guy looks me dead in the eye and says, Jail.
And I kind of freeze and like I'm ready for something to go wild.
And he walks over, he pulls me off to the side.
He's like, listen, my friends don't know anything about my politics, but I think it's super cool that you're here.
And I'm going to shoot you an email.
And he's like, yeah, I'm just going to pretend I used to know you from school or something.
You got to go man bye.
And he walks away.
And, you know, like, I'm thinking maybe this is someone who doesn't like what I'm about and they want to, I don't know, shoot me or something, but that's not what that particular instance was.
And that was, that was one of the weirder ones.
That's great.
Yeah.
And I've met supporters and fans around the way.
And it's funny because if you're going to get recognized from doing right-wing media, it's going to be by supporters, not enemies, because your supporters either see your face or listen to your voice for hours and hours on end.
Right.
Your enemies aren't that familiar with the sound of your voice or the look of your face.
The first time I got recognized was on my voice, not my face.
I'm at a crab shack.
Rare as hell.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And coach, you know who I was with, etc.
But yeah, it's going to be your friends, not your enemies that recognize you.
Yeah, it's, it's, I, I will wear banned t-shirts and things like that out in public.
And my wife is not lately, but she used to be a little concerned, like, oh, you got to be careful.
But I'm telling you, in 35 years of doing this, I've got nothing but positive feedback from wearing t-shirts and things in public.
I'm not telling everybody go wear t-shirts in public that say things.
You got to have a certain, you got to be prepared, I guess, for doing that.
But I'm just telling you, it's like there's a tremendous amount of support for our position.
No judges have ever heard of the NSBM band on your t-shirt.
Good point.
Don't live in fear, right?
We know it's a terrible feeling to worry about getting doxed.
And well, this might be, there might be this threat vector or another threat vector.
But life is short.
You're a white man or a white woman.
There's a big community out there.
And, you know, the world is sick and twisted and you are not.
That should feel good.
And just being the target of despicable people should make you feel good in and of itself.
So don't, yeah, yeah, don't, don't hang your heads.
Don't live in fear.
Don't worry that you're going to curl up in a ball.
We're all going to make it.
And speaking of we're all going to make it, apparently, Potato Smasher, he can't let us have just one night alone without him.
He left a voicemail for Mr. Producer that I guess he wanted to share on air or Mr. Producer wants to share on air.
So if you have a teeth up there, go for it and then we'll take a quick break.
If you see this while you're still recording, tell everyone I said fing juice.
Come on.
All right.
I think a friend of ours may or may not have had a couple of adult beverages this evening, wherever he is, whatever he's doing.
Yeah, see, Smasher's living the high life there.
All right.
Let's go to the break.
Rob, thank you so much, buddy.
Best to you and your family.
Thank you.
Yes.
Have a good night.
See you around.
Any links you want, send them to me.
I'll put them in the show notes.
And I was debating whether we were going to do this, but we are going to do this because when the news hit on Friday that Ding Dong the Witch was indeed finally dead, I did put this song on at least 100 decibels in the family room.
And we had a dance.
We did the crab dance.
And I only explained to Junior the significance of the crab dance.
And, you know, I think he smiled.
He kind of got it.
But we all did the Krabby Dance alone.
So please, Mr. Producer, put on Noise Storm.
The track is called Crab Rave.
And we'll be right back.
Episode 63.
Not sure what we're going to call this one yet.
Doc's holiday, maybe.
I was thinking, do like a crappy boomer meme of like, so you got doxed lib tard.
Yeah, I was thinking of Doc Holiday from the I can't, I can't think of the damn actor's name now.
He looks like hell now.
He's got neck cancer or whatever.
Yeah, Val Kilmer, thank you.
Yeah, no, you take that picture and you kid him the skull mask and glowing eyes.
I got two doxes, one for the both of you.
Anyway, big thanks to Rob Freeman in the first half.
I'm not sure we totally scratched the surface of market-dominant minorities, but I think optimistic thinking is okay sometimes.
And just talking about things sometimes makes them happen.
So stay strong out there, fam.
We will start off, as always, with our congratulations on New White Life.
And this week, our very own, not our very own, we're not in possession of him, but he's a full house veteran, Alex McNabb, Alex McDad.
Welcome to his second.
It was a boy, right, Jayo?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, I thought so.
Couldn't judge from the picture, of course, as is often the case when they come out.
But congratulations to him.
The little wristband.
I zoomed in and it just says boy.
Way to go, Alex.
Happy for you.
Keep going.
And I think when he was on, I don't think his wife was pregnant.
He was like, oh, you know, maybe, yeah, maybe we'll have more.
So glad that they went for it.
Also, in one of the chats.
Baby looks so much like his wife.
Lucky little guy.
Very good.
And to our pal, I don't know exactly who he is, but he was in one of the chats.
Lenny Bergblatstein has another baby on the way.
Ambrose.
Oh, yeah.
Yes.
Okay, let's just leave it at that because I thought Ambrose wanted to wait, Jayo, until he or she arrived.
Oh, if you got to cut me out, that's fine.
I thought they went public.
Oh, maybe they did.
I think, yeah, I think he asked me to hold off, but whatever.
That's fine.
We'll see.
Ambrose, deal with it.
Yeah.
Now you have to make sure Wifey brings that baby to terms.
All right.
Anyway, congratulations, guys.
I haven't done one of these in a while, and it's been some time since the last show.
So I've got multiple good stories accumulated.
I'll only share one because it's kind of consistent with what Rob was talking about with his parents and just the absolute imperative of getting your kids outside and doing things.
And my inclination often is to just let them go and do their thing.
We're not hippy-dippy parents in any sense of the imagination, but just getting the kids outside to walk, pick daisies, kick rocks, throw stones in the pond, whatever it may be.
But I cut down a, it was, it was kind of sad to cut it down, a giant pine tree on my property that had some lingering green.
And then after the summer month with almost no rain, it just totally died.
So I cut that down a while ago.
And as so often happens, I cut it down and then didn't really fully chop it up until a week or two later.
So I'm out there gathering up all these pine trees and pine cones and throw them in the back of the truck.
I said, hold on.
This is why you have kids in the first place.
So I called over, called over Junior and daughter to come help pile up the back of the truck with the sticks and stuff.
And I didn't have gloves for them.
So I did the dad thing where I was like, it's good for you.
You know, you get a get a couple of splinters, toughen up those hands.
I don't really want my daughter to have lumberjackets.
Like, she's not going to be worth a dang anyway.
No.
Well, so, yeah.
So here's the thing.
Yeah.
So, so daughter was very dutiful about picking up like the smallest possible sticks, right?
She's like, I'm really helping.
You know, here, here's a little pine cone in the back of the truck.
And then Junior was like definitely taking on some bigger stuff.
He was feeling his oats, but he did it very slowly.
So I was like, all right, I'm not going to be a total hard ass about this.
You are technically picking up wood from the ground and putting it in the back of the truck.
So that worked out okay.
I can only imagine your daughter doing it because she will do absolutely anything you tell her to do.
Anything to impress daddy.
And she drew all in.
And I can only imagine her like trying to pick up sticks and logs and pine cones.
And Dad, look, look, look, look, I'm doing it.
Look, look, look, look.
It's so, you're, you're exactly right, J.O. You nailed it on the head.
And whenever I get a little bit testy and I look over at her, I'm like, oh, God, I can't possibly break her heart.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's really useful, though, too, because, you know, any dad gets irritable sometimes unfairly.
I mean, there are times when you have to raise your voice and get nasty.
This is virtual.
This is evidence.
And maybe this is a topic for another show.
You don't have to use your hands to lay down the law.
Oh, no.
Right.
Yep.
Especially less girls.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
No, I've never had to give a spanking to her.
I certainly never wanted to anyway.
But no, her sweetness and sensitivity tempers me sometimes when I'm tempted to let my, yeah, just let my temper get away a little bit.
And, you know, Junior being a boy has definitely had a harder father to deal with on occasion.
Not corporally, but, you know, just in terms of he could be a pretty willful guy.
So we dragged all the sticks over to the fire pit and had a roaring, dead, dry pine tree fire.
And then I looked down.
It's like a human evolved response when you see something that's out of place and your brain instantly recognizes it.
I was like, pay attention to this.
And I look and like the ground is sinking down on the side of the fire pit.
I'm like, that's interesting.
It's collapsing a little bit.
And I realized that I had laid sort of a half-assed black plastic French drain by necessity.
I had to run it close to the fire pit just by the contours of the land.
And I realized that the fire was so hot, it had not just melted, but it started burning black plastic, long French drain.
And that thing runs all the way, you know, maybe 30, 40 feet along the side of the house.
So I'm like, oh, we got a problem here.
If that keeps going up the line, you know, the grass could catch on fire.
So then Junior and I had to whip him out and take a leak, but we were empty.
Fire brigade.
So that did work out so great.
So then we had to sacrifice a beer and a water, whatever we had on hand.
We stopped the fire.
But yeah, real, real fall, autumnal memories going on here.
Anyway, thank you for indulging me, fam.
It's totally backed up on Coach's Comfy Corner.
Anyway, we talk about the glories, the virtues, the joys of fatherhood on this show interspersed throughout our entire catalog.
But we never actually, I don't think we've ever actually stopped to ask our fam, our birth panelists, our regulars, what they love about being a dad in particular, whether it's a little anecdote or big picture philosophical stuff.
So Sam, father of seven, just, you know, however you want to play it, whether it's, you know, little stuff or big stuff.
Yeah.
Well, I just wrote one of my daughters a little note the other day just telling her about that I remembered the day she was born, you know, and I'm sure it's the same for you guys with your the family that you do have, but when you have seven, you know, it's it's each one really multiplies the feeling.
It doesn't, it's not like you have seven and your feeling is divided seven ways.
I would say it's you have seven and it's multiplied seven times.
So I can remember very tenderly the day that each one of them was born and things about that day.
And I was telling her about that.
So that is something that sticks with you.
And, you know, there's, well, as I put it to her, I felt like I was the luckiest man in the world.
Oh, man.
Did you write that you wrote a little note to her?
Did you email it to her?
I don't know if she's still under the roof or no, no.
She's actually, she lives in another place now.
She's an adult.
Six of my seven children are adults.
So most of them do live somewhere else.
But other things that I remember are teaching them how to ride a bike.
I don't know if your kids are at that point of learning how to ride a bike, but I can remember running alongside and helping them to stay up and seeing them go 10 feet or 15 feet and then they would crash.
Those types of things.
Teaching them to skate.
Skating is something in our family we've always enjoyed doing is ice skating.
And from when my children were maybe just a little bit after they could walk, we had them on little baby skates going ice skating.
So I can remember that kind of a challenge of skating alongside and supporting them and teaching each one how to skate.
That's fun.
Yeah.
And then reading to them.
Of course, all my kids have been homeschooled.
And reading is one of those things that think of yourself.
When did you learn to read?
It's hard to remember when you're just learning your letters and then you're piecing the words together and one day all of a sudden you knew how to read.
Well, with my kids, I can remember reading to them and also showing them the words, letting them sound out the words.
And even to this day, my youngest son, we do a little bit of reading together and I will read some and then I hand him the book.
I said, okay, now you read.
So I can remember with each of the kids, the learning to read.
So as you're introducing this segment, Coach, you said, you know, especially to those guys that are, they're not married yet.
They don't have kids yet.
Or maybe they're married and they're looking at that possibility of the children coming.
These are the things that should inspire you.
And there's, there's, it's, you know, you get choked up just even thinking about it and talking about it.
I mean, there's no, nothing that could replace that feeling in your whole life.
I know, Sam.
I love it.
And I'm glad that you called attention to it because when I, when I can hear the emotion coming through, I'm not misty at all, but just, yeah, the pure joy that you think back to those memories.
And it's a little bit bittersweet, right?
Because you know that you can never quite recapture that moment.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The challenge of it is that they are ready to move on before you are.
Yeah, I remember you delivering a line of at some point your kid's gonna say, Well, I'm too old for this game.
And you said, I'm not right, exactly, exactly.
Yeah, and also you think back to things, and it's uh, not to bring a negative thing into it, but I can already tell him all my kids are still young and under the roof.
And every once in a while, if you stop and think, you're like, Oh, I missed, I missed an opportunity there, or I'll never have a chance to do that again.
Uh, and then you smack yourself in the face and appreciate what you have now, and uh, and get right back to it and making more memories.
Yeah, there was some point this summer where I just said it was like it was like the dad in a Christmas story where he's like, All right, everybody, get dressed, we're going out to dinner.
And I was like, All right, all you kids get dressed, we are going out to see the caverns.
You know, we are not sitting around anymore.
And sometimes you just do that, crack the whip, and we're going to make memories.
Damn, it's most probably the finest memories just come about organically.
It's not dad cracking to go out and do stuff, but uh, no, thank you, Sam.
That's that's wonderful, Joe, go ahead, buddy.
So, my absolute favorite, um, because I've just got the one little boy, he's still a little guy, he just turned a year.
Um, when he is starting to, because the usual routine is that he goes to bed, um, and then he'll wake up in the morning hungry, uh, hit him with the bottle, and he falls right back asleep.
But I pull him into the bed, me, me, or my wife will pull him into the bed at that point, and uh, then I don't know, a couple hours later, it's actually time for him to wake up.
And when he is just sort of like stirring, making just a little bit of noise, he's maybe squeaking a little bit, fussing a little bit, and his eyes aren't open yet.
And then I'll just say, Hey, and he'll look over at me, and he goes from eyes closed to like he just saw his favorite rock star and he's just cutting teeth.
So, like, he gives me the silliest smile you can imagine, and it's big open-mouth smile, and he's dead still, like he's in shock.
Like, he, the, the look on his face is just, oh my God, it's him, yeah, and they're like, What are you doing, buddy?
And then, um, it's just like the biggest hug from like the tiniest guy, and he doesn't want me to put him down or cut him loose or anything.
Like, I just kind of walk around with him for a while, and it's the same hug that I get.
So, I've been doing all this like learn to code type of stuff.
And I'll go to take a break.
I don't know, I got to go get a water, I got to use the bathroom, I'm going to grab something to eat.
Uh, but if I walk by him and I just say, like, hey, how are you doing, buddy?
That's not going to work.
That ain't it, bro.
Like, he will chimp out because I didn't stop to hang out with him for a minute.
Yeah, like, did you just blow me off, old man?
Like, I'm out, like, we're doing our thing, and what you don't know me anymore or something.
So, I always have to stop and come back and grab him up.
And you get that same hug.
Like when they go from just like, I hang my arms over you because I'm a tiny baby human and this is sort of what my instinct tells me to do to where they're like putting their weight into it, putting their strength into it.
Like it's an actual hug hug.
Yeah.
Man.
Yeah.
I'll go real quick, JO, and then I know you want to segue into more awesome dad comment.
And I just want to let the audience know that you haven't lived, especially for the guys out there who don't have kids yet.
You haven't lived until you come home after a day at work and they either see you out the window or they hear the door open.
And then to have a little baby boy or a baby girl go toddling, running to the door in virtual ecstasy saying, dad, dad, dad, as if Santa Claus, the Easter bunny, and the Jew fairy just walked in the door at the same time.
Just, you know, unbridled joy, and it's totally reciprocated.
You could have had the worst day in the world.
You could have gotten fired.
You could have gotten beaten up.
And you walk in that door to have a little one come running to the door to greet you like you're the world's greatest man.
And it feels like a million bucks.
And it's mutual too, right?
It's not just about making you feel good.
You get down on your knees and give that little rugrat a big hug and everything's okay in that moment.
And they do grow up and don't get quite so excited when dad walks in the door, but that's why you have more.
You know, when I come home from work and Junior's like, hey, dad, you know, he's reading or doing whatever.
But potato is still run to the door mode.
And daughter's still there too.
It's going to be a grim day when she doesn't care when I walk.
I was around when she there was the one day that your neighbor called because she was like standing in the driveway and your wife was like watching her through the window.
But the neighbor comes out and says, hey, daughter, are you okay?
Yeah, I'm just waiting for daddy.
She's standing in the middle of the driveway.
And the neighbor calls and says, Do you know daughters in the driveway?
Like, yeah, I'm looking at her right now.
She's fine.
But there is a period where she would run out.
And she'd like run out to get in the car.
And she would freak out so hard that when you would be down the street coming around the corner, she'd run up to the house to scream to your wife, he's here.
And turn around and go back.
Like your wife was supposed to drop everything and be like, oh my God, it's Paul McCartney.
Somebody send my wife the memo, right?
That's all.
Yeah.
Oh, very good.
Yeah.
Make those memories, femme.
Yeah, it doesn't matter.
But yeah, before I get all misty, Jo, please keep.
Oh, that's what I wanted to say, Joe is that you know my kids so well from head to toe.
You've analyzed them perfectly.
I still haven't met your little guy, which is a crime.
It's not my fault or yours necessarily, but we got to rectify that soon.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
And I'll catch a flat.
I'd like to see a conspiracy going on.
So just hold tight.
Skexy's interested.
She doesn't consult you on anything, dude.
Like, we're just going to show up at your house one day.
Oh, I know, right?
I'm totally just a dumb dad.
Got a podcast and some kids, and all the important stuff happens on the side anyway.
But yeah, I don't, did you, did you reconnect with your old man recently or more significantly than usual?
You kind of teased it during the break.
Well, I don't know if it was more significantly or what have you, but he and I will communicate sort of like through text or something, sort of sparsely and with varying levels of frequency.
And this is the way I communicate with a lot of people is like a text here and there, blah, blah, blah.
And then you do the big catch-up session and you end up on the phone with somebody for several hours.
And my dad and I ended up talking last night for four plus hours.
You know, rehashed a lot of things we've already talked about and things that maybe, you know, I'm 40 now.
It was interesting to talk to him.
And I don't want to get too much into detail.
It was interesting to talk to him about like, so, you know, I grow up and one day I'm up and out of the house.
And then I'm 30 and I've matured from when I've left the house and I had maybe certain opinions on how I grew up.
And we talked a lot about how I view my own childhood differently from when I was 30 to now being 40.
And, you know, a lot of that like blew his hair back or whatever.
Like, man, I just had it locked in my head that this one thing was your opinion because that's the last time you issued an opinion on it.
And not even just stuff about how I grew up, but like I used to be a huge sports ball fan.
And I've told him that I'm not anymore, but I don't think he understood like how serious I was about that and why.
What changed between 30 and 40, though, in your evaluation of your childhood?
Like, did you think it was like one thing and now you look back with like fonder memories of it?
Or that I didn't quite understand?
Hmm.
I got to kind of like figure out how to dance around this to not get too personal into some spaces.
Sure.
But there were things that when I was young, I hated.
And then like I sort of came to terms with and was able to get over when, you know, say I was 30.
Right.
And now I absolutely think they are good things.
Okay.
Right.
Where before it was something that like I coped or I grieved or something like that.
And like I thought I was a mature adult for being able to get over the stuff by the time I'm 30.
And in retrospect, it was like, wait, no, I'm way better off for that.
And when I don't care how hokey it sounds, and people who listen to this show, I don't think would try and pin that on me.
But things do change a lot when you have one of your own.
Yep.
And to understand, like, you know, a big part of what him and I were talking about is as far as babies go, my son is like kind of super easy or well-behaved or whatever term you want to put to it.
And he doesn't test my patience.
And I just can't, I still can't imagine him like disappointing me or hurting my feelings or me doing something to him that's going to stick with him.
The three of us and everyone listening to this can remember at least one instance in our childhood and our teenage years, whatever, where our parents did something super screwed up and it has stuck with us ever since.
Like, I can't imagine doing that to him.
I'm going to.
Everyone's going to.
You become a parent, realize, oh man, this is hard.
Yes.
Yeah.
I do, I do do things that even in the moment, you're like, ah, that probably wasn't the right angle, right?
And one day he's going to do something I don't like.
And, you know, am I going to be thinking, where did I screw up as a parent?
Or am I going to be thinking, like, what the hell is wrong with you, kid?
Because I'm sure I'm going to have at least one of each of those instances, right?
But with him being this little, that stuff is still hard to wrap your brain around.
Like, the most I've ever done to hurt this guy's feelings is to walk by him without like picking him up.
Which even to him is like the end of the world.
The thing about that is it's just life.
You know, things just happen.
You can't make everything happen just perfectly the way you want it to happen.
So when something is, you know, not exactly the way you want, or there's a little bit of regret or something because maybe you just missed, like you were saying, Coach, you missed that moment or something like that.
That's just life, you know, and you can't beat yourself up about that.
Yeah.
And Jayo, I want to say not to be salty veteran here with three, but you know, you've barely scratched the surface, right?
And you're a very thoughtful and introspective guy, right?
So you're analyzing all these little interactions with essentially a toddler.
And yeah, when you have more and you've got age ranges, it gets a lot harder and more complicated too, right?
You have to worry about their dynamics.
Are they getting the right attention?
Am I being too hard on this one?
Am I neglecting this one at all?
You can beat yourself up pretty good overthinking it too much.
Sam, I wanted to ask, have you ever gone through, you know, parents, fathers, daughters, mothers, et cetera?
We all have sort of rough patches, right?
Like a kid can be a real jerk for a good spell where you're like, I'm not too fond of that one this week.
And I think parents probably too can have rough spells where they're not like at their best.
But have you ever had a rough patch with one of your sons or daughters where you had to patch it up or they had to patch it up?
You know, they were all, I would say, like rather easy children to deal with, you know?
So I don't know if that's, I can't, I'm not going to say I'm taking credit for anything like that, or maybe that's luck of the draw and all that.
No, I want to tell you what I think it is.
And I'm sorry to interrupt, but I'm very serious about this.
It's because they were homeschooled.
Yeah.
That's why.
I think you have something there.
And their mothers had the influence over them.
You didn't have to arm wrestle with the external world putting weird crap into their heads where suddenly you're desperate to figure out how to fix it.
I 100% think it's because of the homeschool thing.
And I see so much of this from the homeschool parents that like the worst disagreements they've had with their kids pale in comparison to those who put kids in public schools.
Yeah.
And yeah, I think you are hitting something there because whether it's exactly like an ideological problem or just there's something about when you send them off to school, there's that potential for the school to make a separation with the with the parents.
Or their friends.
Yeah, or their friend.
Just the whole experience of going to school has the potential.
I don't want to say, Coach, you're sending your kids to school.
I don't want to try to condemn you or say that, oh, you're going to have a bad outcome.
I hope not and probably not.
But, you know, when the children are at home with you all the time, they never go through that separation of it's me against my parents.
You're always all on the same team all the time.
So I think maybe that's what you're describing there, Joe.
Sure.
Yeah.
We're monitoring the situation very carefully.
Especially once kids get into puberty.
You know how easy it is for a teenage romantic interest to turn someone against their parents.
Oh, yeah.
Male or female.
Sure.
My first girlfriend that I was all head over heels for convinced me that my parents were total dirtbags.
And then I've done the same thing to girls, you know?
Oh, your mom doesn't want you to come over to my house.
She's stifling your creativity and blah, blah, blah.
And like you just spit whatever dumb stuff you're spitting.
You're not up against a lot of that same kind of stuff.
And there aren't, I guess what it is, is there's not conflicting authorities when you homeschool.
Yeah.
There's not, oh, well, my teacher's also an authority, or they had the cop come into the class to talk to us about this thing, or, oh, I have this friend who I think is smarter than me.
So maybe I should listen to them on something.
You're the shot caller.
End of story.
And also, if put yourself in the place of the child, you're always seeing your parents like how hard they're working, and especially if there are more children, you know, as if they're more, you see, oh, my mom, look at how hard she's working.
I'm going to help her wash the dishes, you know, because I don't want my mom to work that hard.
Or I see my dad's away all day at work and then he comes home and he's tired.
I want to help my dad.
You know, there's, there's just more love.
It could even be like competitive.
I've seen that too, where like the one sibling is super helpful.
So the other sibling gets jealous and says, I'm going to be super helpful too.
Right.
And it almost becomes like competitive.
There's a, there's a hundred lanes for the normalcy of having your family in your home.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure.
Good stuff.
All right.
Before we hit navigating the collapse, we have a backlog of audience comments and questions.
I can't hit them all, but there was one commenter on YouTube who harkened back to the fatherland days.
And he was like, I listened to Full House for dads and man talk.
So he was angry that we had not one, but two women on last week for the back to school special.
So, dear listeners, it's not going to become a regular occurrence.
Don't worry.
But, you know, every once in a while, we can step outside our lane and have the fun of sex.
We love.
Of course.
You know, it's nice.
It's fun, to be honest.
I mean, like, you know, this doesn't have to be the man podcast cave all the time.
So don't don't worry, friend.
Well, we're not going to have girls in the clubhouse every week.
And we had another Jonathan.
It's probably a sock.
He's got like an NPC avatar.
But yeah, anyway, he said, I wanted to not like this show because it had two women on it, what I found myself enjoying.
And even this was good and well done.
So thank you, sir.
And then we had a question, sort of a generic question into the inbox that maybe wouldn't normally have risen to the point of the show.
We gave him some feedback in writing, but it came from a listener named Thorskin, which hats off, sir.
Well, well played, Thorskin.
I don't care what the body of the email.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, we just wanted to say Thorskin on the air.
That reminded me, I'm going to name my next son that.
Yeah.
Speaking of Thor, there was the other show.
I could say Fatherland.
Who cares?
Yeah.
On the Fatherland, there was a guy who wrote him.
Yeah, of course.
Jim, come on.
We know you're listening, Jim.
But there was a listener who wrote into the Fatherland on occasion, and his sock name was Mule from a modification of Mule Near, which is Thor's hammer.
So shout out to the listeners who update the Norse mythological.
Yeah, very good.
Anyway, Thorskin asked for red pill material on premarital, you know what, and the rest.
And hat tip to Mr. Producer.
Mr. Producer is not simply a chimp at the control panel who hits record.
Don't believe you.
That's pretty much it.
What exactly would you say you do here, Mr. Producer?
I hit record, I hit stop.
Yeah, we can now we'd be up a creek without a paddle without Mr. Producer.
He's smiling in the chat.
All right, he is listening.
But he had Mr. Producer takes no BS and he and he deals no BS either.
But he was basically like, read this article.
I forget the exact link.
And it's like, graduate high school, get married early and have kids.
I think it was.
And you have right there greatly increased your likelihood of living a healthy middle-class lifestyle.
I think that was essentially the three keys.
Oh, wait.
Yeah.
Graduate high school, get married, and have kids.
Easy.
Easy buttons.
So in terms of the premarital sex stuff, that's a whole nother can of worms.
I don't necessarily think that not sampling the goods before marriage is wise.
I'll probably catch flack from the audience for that.
But anyway, yeah, if you get married as a virgin, if you want, that's great and admirable in this hypersexualized society.
But, you know, if your potential mate has been with other men, I don't think that should be a deal breaker.
There are five or ten guys listening to this show who are married and they and their spouse lost their virginity to each other.
Everyone else is either a guy who's had several sex partners or a guy who's never had sex.
It's easy to try and take a trad lane, and the trad lane on this is the superior lane.
If you're real young, you can still shoot for that.
And I'm not saying that you should like marry a slut or that you should be a slut, but the like tradness of virginity, it is not, it is not a Jewish myth that people used to have premarital sex and sneak around behind their parents' backs and stuff.
No, that's a thing that actually happened.
And like, it's not the end of the world.
And the big thing was just that you didn't talk about it and you didn't make it obvious.
Somebody was talking the other day.
Oh, no, I remember you're probably listening.
Had a European girlfriend who was living in Europe, and they would sleep together, but she wouldn't stay the night at his place because it just kind of looked bad.
Then, then it was like obvious.
And this is how everyone there sort of operated.
A ton of premarital sex are like trying to rack up numbers is bad for you.
But if you are sampling the goods because you're shopping to buy, I can't blame you for that.
Test drive a car before you buy it.
It's apples and oranges, I know.
But you got to intend to buy it.
Yeah.
Well, if it doesn't work out, like I legitimately like the Chrysler 300.
Let me jump in the driver's seat, take it around.
Oh, no, this thing kind of sucks.
I'm not going to keep this one.
So then you try the next thing down the line and you say, okay, this is a good one.
And here's, and I know that Sam has a hot take on this.
And just one other point that I'll try to make politely or diplomatically is that I had girlfriends that I thought I was attracted to.
And upon test driving, wasn't really.
Not that there was nothing like wrong with the engine or anything like that.
But there is like something magical about physical chemistry and things like that that is important to a marriage and a relationship.
And for me, I'll just speak for myself.
It makes me nervous thinking about going in for a lifelong commitment to raising children with that very important aspect unaddressed until after you've already exchanged rings and things like that.
I'll stop there and let Sam possibly correct me.
Well, I certainly would not want to beat up on anybody because people make mistakes in life and people learn and they, you know, people can aspire to better things and all that.
And I'm all in favor of that.
And so I don't want to condemn anybody excessively.
However, I think there's information to say, especially for the women, that whoever they lose their virginity to, that never leaves them, that feeling for that person.
And even maybe for the man to a certain extent, too.
So I think that you're really playing with fire to treat that lightly.
In a different day and age where the children were really like the property of the parents, especially the daughters, it would absolutely not have been allowed.
And it would have been a great affront, maybe, you know, occasion to elicit some kind of blood revenge even to defile the daughter without a marriage.
You know, because the parents cared about their daughters to a correct level.
But I will just say, you know, it is the best thing to hold the virginity for marriage when you're in love with somebody.
It is going to be hard.
And, you know, and even in olden times, the breaking of the virginity, that was the marriage.
So, you know, I think that a lot of the time, if you got busted, screw in.
And I'm not talking about a forced situation.
I'm talking about some horny teenage guy.
So he talks the horny girl from the next farm over.
The parents find out it happened.
It's like, okay, well, you're getting married now.
You're married.
Right.
Exactly.
Right.
But I will just say this: this sleeping around and trying out different women and all that type of thing.
This type of lifestyle is only made possible by this Jewish invention of birth control.
And this is a false thing.
This is unhealthy for people.
It is immoral.
And so we can only predicate this idea of sleeping around because of birth control.
Absolutely.
Totally agree, Sam.
And yeah, and I'll clarify here real quick.
I don't think you should sleep with a woman if you don't think that she's serious marriage, you know, if you can't see yourself possibly settling down with her and having kids with her.
Anyway, that reminds me of one other comment that we got.
It was not a nasty gram, but I cast a little bit of shade on the trad wife meme, at least so much as it is portrayed in terms of barefoot in the kitchen making sandwiches all day, right?
And a listener email.
Change of the radiator.
Yeah, exactly.
In the basement cage, as Smasher might put it if you were on this week.
But a listener wrote back and he said, You not only rustled my wife's Jimmy's, but here's an article that actually talks about what Trad wife actually is.
And it's not the simplistic wheat fields and kitchen slavery that you dumbass coach bought into.
So I will, I don't think I put that in the show.
That's not what the nuance is.
No, no, yeah, I know.
You know, when people think of like, you know, some people, when they think of like the term trad wife, they think of just an eternally smiling cooking woman who like dotes on the kids and does what she's told and like flinches if you say her name really loud.
Not that there's anything wrong with that.
Yeah.
If you have known any women that are, you know, what you would call trad, you know that they're very smart, oftentimes very educated, talented in a ton of ways.
So that's that's just like a meme.
100%.
Yep.
But yeah, a lot of good feedback, guys.
Thank you.
We read it all.
YouTube comments.
A bit shoot comments have been slower than YouTube.
And email, of course, in the email.
If it's good or interesting, get shared around with all the regulars.
So without further ado, let us get on to navigating the collapse and then bring this puppy home.
All right.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
The following information is from an unsourced document titled What to Expect If You Get Shot. PDF.
It is riddled with typos, spelling errors, and poor punctuation.
And I, for one, trust it more than anything the government says.
If you get shot, forget everything you've seen in movies, TV, or video games about being shot.
You won't fly through the air or get thrown 10 feet.
You might not even fall down or even know you've been shot until sometime later.
Unless, of course, it's obvious and your bicep just turned into pink mist.
You are still a viable threat until you are dead.
Don't stop fighting.
Never stop fighting.
Those who want to live in this world of eternal struggle must fight for that right.
Shots to your arms and legs won't kill you immediately.
A shot to the head probably will.
Prioritize.
Third, after being shot, you will receive an adrenaline rush unlike anything you've ever known.
I strongly recommend using it for something other than bleeding out.
Your first priority is either eliminating the threat or escaping it.
Once that is accomplished, coast on your adrenaline and get to medical help or determine if you need a tourniquet or other quick medical attention.
You can use that adrenaline not just for strength, but also for calm and collected assessment of your situation.
It's probably a good idea to conduct a quick check of your body after every firefight, as some people have died of gunshots without even noticing.
Adrenaline is that powerful.
Here's hoping we never need this advice.
And now, a word from Charles Lindbergh, published in Reader's Digest, November 1939.
A great industrial nation may conquer the world in the span of a single life, but its Achilles' heel is time.
Its children, what of them?
The second and third generations, of what numbers and stuff will they be?
How long can men thrive between walls of brick, walking on asphalt pavements, breathing the fumes of coal and of oil, growing, working, dying, with hardly a thought of wind and sky and fields of grain, seeing only machine-made beauty, the mineral-like quality of life.
This is our modern danger, one of the waxen wings of flight.
It may cause our civilization to fall unless we act quickly to counteract it.
Unless we realize that human character is more important than efficiency, that education consists of more than the mere accumulation of knowledge.
We, the heirs of European culture, are on the verge of a disastrous war.
A war within our own family of nations.
A war which will reduce the strength and destroy the treasures of the white race.
A war which may even lead to the end of our civilization.
And while we stand poised for battle, Oriental guns are turning westward.
Asia presses towards us on the Russian border.
All foreign races stir restlessly.
It is time to turn from our quarrels and to build our white ramparts again.
This alliance with foreign races means nothing but death to us.
It is our turn to guard our heritage from Mongol and Persian and more before we become engulfed in a limitless foreign sea.
Our civilization depends on a united strength among ourselves, on strength too great for foreign armies to challenge.
On a Western wall of race and arms which can hold back either a Genghis Khan or the infiltration of inferior blood.
On an English fleet, a German air force, a French army, an American nation, standing together as guardians of our common heritage, sharing strength, dividing influence.
Our civilization depends on peace among Western nations, and therefore on united strength.
For peace is a virgin who dare not show her face without strength, her father, for protection.
We can have peace and security only so long as we band together to preserve the most priceless possession, our inheritance of European blood.
Only so long as we guard ourselves against attack by foreign armies and dilution by foreign races.
We need peace to let our best man live to work out those more subtle but equally dangerous problems brought by this new environment in which we dwell.
To give us time to turn this materialistic trend, to stop prostrating ourselves before the modern idol of mechanical efficiency.
To find means of combining freedom, spirit, and beauty with industrial life.
A peace which will bring character, strength, and security back to Western peoples.
With all the world at our borders, let us not commit racial suicide by internal conflict.
We must learn from Athens and Sparta before all of Greece is lost.
Amazing.
Simply amazing from Charles Lindbergh.
I knew he was our guy.
I knew he was impressive.
I knew he was against the war and spoke about European solidarity.
I had no idea he was that compelling and that explicit.
That was great.
Yeah, I had never heard that one.
I had never read that one.
So thank you, Nat Scott, for bringing that to our attention.
I was at a World War II museum recently, and they had a Lindbergh speech that was supposed to be, you know, and they only played a clip of it.
It was supposed to be like an example of the bad guy Americans.
And I'm in there like, hell yeah, bro.
But speaking to the larger bit, Nat Scott, I'm just going to say that I thought it was really amazing when, in fact, I had to pee and didn't hear most of it.
I'll listen to the show, okay?
Yeah, that was great.
Yeah.
Anyway, yeah, Lindbergh, handsome hero.
And, you know, anybody said that today, they would instantly get tarred and feathered with Nazi.
So God, God bless Charles Lindbergh.
Where are all of our Lindberghs today who are already wealthy and idolized and who might get it already?
Please come forth, sir.
But anyway, also on the adrenaline thing and getting shot and not just lying down to die and bleed out.
I actually got rear-ended by a tractor trailer over the past since the last show and before this one.
And fortunately, I was making a left-hand turn.
I had my blinker on and the truck saw me in advance enough to slow down and swerve a little bit.
So he only took out the right rear side of my vehicle.
But yeah, I was.
Was you wearing your COVID-19 mask, coach?
I was wearing my seatbelt, Sam.
I bought into that meme.
Dude, I tried so hard to plow into him square and I barely caught the corner.
No, I know.
I mean, in theory, it was a 55.
So if he were going full bore and didn't adjust at the end, ooh, I could have had some roadkill coach.
But anyway, I got out and the first stupid SOB that I am, my first thing is to like, I see that he's a 30-something white guy.
And his first question was, are there any kids in the vehicle?
And I said, no, it's just me.
And he's like, are you okay?
And I'm like, I'm fine, which I was.
I was high on adrenaline.
And after the fact, I had a little bit of headache and sore neck, but nothing serious.
But my, after I was okay and I, you know, the truck's insured and I knew that he was at fault.
My concern was for him as a fellow white man, no meme, because he was clearly freaked out.
He was cursing at himself.
And I was like, man, I really hope this guy doesn't get fired.
To which somebody I know was like, you dumbass.
Like, he could have killed you.
You softy.
And you're worried about him and his job.
But that's what a little bit of white racial solidarity is like, where you, you know, he wasn't some commie.
He wasn't some Pajit driving a truck.
He screwed up, whether he was looking at his phone or whatever it was, it happens to all of us.
And in that moment, I did care about his well-being and not just, you know, lawsuit or muh insurance and stuff like that.
So did you tell him to listen to full hyphen house?
I should have, but he was, he was on the, he, he was really freaked out.
He was on the phone with his supervisor and like, oh, yeah, this happened.
And I was listening too because I wanted to make sure I wasn't dealing with somebody who was going to give a different story to the insurance company.
And he told the truth.
And then I told him, I was like, you think you're going to get fired?
He's like, I've never been in an accident before.
So boundlessly honest Aryan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Amen.
So to you, truck driver, who almost killed me.
Thanks for not killing coach.
Yes, that's my part.
How much did I pay you when you couldn't get the job done, you jerk?
Yeah, you had one job.
And I was able to drive his steering column was all messed up.
So his giant truck got messed up and I was able to drive home.
That's kind of insulting, Jerry.
Yeah, really.
Anyway.
All right, gentlemen, I think we have done duty and service to this week's.
We try to do it every week, but anyway.
So, Rob, thank you and Absentia for your contributions.
And Sam, I'm still smiling, thinking about you getting a little choked up talking about your little ones and all the fond memories of fatherhood.
Absolutely.
Thank you, Coach.
All right.
We're going to try to stick to our recording schedule here on out.
My internet should be repaired on Monday, God willing.
So, and Jo, sir, thank you as always.
Thank you.
Meet that little guy sooner rather than later.
I hope whatever you and my wife are scheming and cooking up.
I don't know what you're talking about.
Full House episode 63 was taped on a spectacularly beautiful September 24th, now September 25th, 2020.
I am back indoors tonight.
I didn't go down to the Great Wild gazebo, but maybe next week.
Follow us on Telegram, on YouTube, on BitChute.
More importantly, go to full-house.com, where I will get the next installment of Sam's autobiography up.
That is my own fault for not getting those up more regularly.
So that's on me.
And of course, drop us a line to fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
We will not only read what you write, but we will often respond to it.
So to all white nationalists listening to this show with at least a little sort of Damocles hanging over their head at the prospect of getting doxxed, be brave, smack yourself in the face and tell yourself that you're going to be all right.
More importantly, do things to harden yourself, to steal yourself, and to be better prepared should it happen.
And we salute you.
Mr. Producer, thank you, my friend, as always.
And as a sentimental dad, this time of year always puts me in a very emotional mood.
Summer is gone.
The leaves are fallen.
So please put on a nice track by one of my favorite DJs of all time, Paul Van Dyke.
This one is called Autumn.
It stands on its own.
But the title in tandem with the time of year meant I had to put it on.