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Nov. 20, 2020 - Full Haus
02:24:03
20201120_Dark_Winter
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Read up on just some of the atrocities committed by the leftist side in the Spanish Civil War, which of course occurred just over 80 years ago, right there in Western Europe.
It's known as the Red Terror.
Tens of thousands of nationalist supporters were executed by communists and other assorted scum, and many of their victims were merely civilians with the wrong opinions.
Monasteries and churches were looted and burned.
Firing squads were deployed even on religious statues.
Priests and nuns were dug up from their graves and put on display for desecration.
It's horrific stuff that nevertheless sounds vaguely familiar if you've been paying attention to the news at any time in the past five years.
The upside is that those atrocities convinced the nationalists of the need for total victory, which they ultimately achieved and then exacted justice in return.
But when you consider that these terrors occurred in a country that was far more religious, cohesive, intelligent, and civilized than America is today, well, then you've got some food for thought for what might be in store for us not too far down the road.
And it is your duty to plan and act accordingly.
All right, we are back with the American White Power Quartet.
Mr. Producer put his muzzle on again.
Or did he?
Thanks for the scraps, asshole.
And it's showtime.
So, MP, shoot the flares.
Welcome, everyone,
to episode 70 of Full House, the world's most indefatigable show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am your homeschool and host.
That's right.
The kids are back on virtual schooling.
Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of laughs and sometimes tears.
Before we meet the birth panel tonight, though, huge thanks to listener Polly Doros, our pal who helped get our entire show library up on Telegram.
Polly busted my chops for my Greek pronunciation there.
He let me know it's actually Palidoros.
So from now on, I'm just going to call him Polly.
But seriously, thank you, pal.
And all those shows are up at t.me/slash pro white fam.
That's our Telegram.
Actually, no, that's our show Telegram broadcast channel, but I'll put the link in the notes.
It's t.me/slash fullhouse shows.
And they are also linked, of course, at the top of full-house.com.
So if you missed those earlier ones or wanted to pass something on to a friend, have at it.
Easy downloads.
And here's the key.
All right, on to the birth panel.
First up, he almost quit the show this week upon learning that we weren't going to be talking about politics for another six hours tonight.
That's right.
But we convinced him that his wisdom dispensing was now considered an essential position.
So you can't quit, Sam.
Sorry.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah, never, never.
Never cook.
Never quit.
Yeah, I heard about this great event at the NJP rally.
Nothing but great anecdotes coming out of that, man.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And a great band played there, Birthright.
Man, I can't say enough to go check them out if you haven't already.
As far as the Spanish Civil War era, yeah, everything you said there, the only thing I'm going to add is that populace was not armed nearly as much as this populace.
Another factor there.
Yeah, thank you.
Thanks, Coach.
You bet.
Glad to have you.
We'll see you out at an NJP event eventually, Sam.
And yeah, the other, I know that there are separatist, serious separatism issues in Spain.
So they weren't an entirely cohesive country before the Civil War.
But still, I bet good money they were more so than we are today.
Sure, for sure.
Next up, he had his second coming out party this weekend.
The first one, of course, was when he told his parents he was gay.
But in all seriousness, Potato Smasher gave a hell of a speech at the second NJP assembly this past weekend.
He kicked things off nonetheless.
Welcome back, pal.
Hey, fashion faggots rise up.
They do exist.
We know from experience.
Hands-off experience.
Yeah.
Hey, I was privileged enough.
It's all about me, of course, to be able to be there for Smasher practicing his speech.
And you did way better than you did in the practice round.
Thank you.
I just went and got a couple of vaccines to really up the autism.
And I channeled.
Yeah.
Some people, they break out the flask and they take a couple of drinks.
I just have a refrigerated case with vaccines in it at all times.
That's right.
You all recovered from your hard work?
Yeah, mostly.
My brain is still kind of gunked up, but right.
Well, I mean, yeah, things move slowly through the brain.
More than normal or less than normal or whatever it is.
No rest for the weary.
Just time to get the next one going.
All right.
Rounding us out this week.
He is a proud, two-time Donald Trump voter, an infamous Groyper on Twitter, a proud boy founding member, and was most recently sighted at the Million MAGA March flying both American and Israeli flags.
And that's all true, folks.
Joe, welcome back.
Sorry.
Couldn't resist.
So, what, my thin blue line flag doesn't even make it into my intro?
What are we talking about here?
For some of us, the audience knows that we've been indulging in politics for the last three shows.
And, you know, if that was a little, we didn't actually get any hate mail.
Like, come on, guys, move along.
But we know it was out.
Yeah, I know, right?
But yeah, Jo, whenever it happens in the chats, he's just like, you guys know what?
Oh, I won't say it, but Donald Trump is the N-word.
Yeah, he's putting in all his good people now with like 60 days to go, you know, real.
Shut up.
Darren Beatty, Corey Stewart, getting those recess appointments for two months to work.
Yeah, worth a couple thousand dollars and maybe a resume boost.
But anyway, Jayo, how the hell are you?
I'm doing well.
I'm doing well.
I have been studying nonstop so hard with my homies, Josh and Water, and a big assist from, ooh, I don't want to blow the announcement.
I'll give the shout out when we do the birth announcements, but there's been another guy who's been helping us out a lot.
And yeah, having a good time, man.
My brain is melting, but having a good time.
All right.
As long as it doesn't melt down on the show, you know, feel free to let it happen.
In all seriousness, though, we are pivoting this week, in a sense, from the still ongoing.
And even today, the damn news conference with Trump's lawyers out there hustling and Rudy Giuliani sweating like a pig.
We're going to resist the temptation to dip our toes back in there.
But it's still the uncertainty there is still lingering.
The fight, it's still occupying so many people's time.
Like when you just, when you look at Twitter, when you look at anything, it's still election this and Donald Trump that.
And man, that'd be cool if I could look at Twitter.
Yeah, it's my understanding that they're not big fans of yours over there.
Old Dorsey got done getting slapped around a little bit there by Ted Cruz.
And he was like, you know what?
I'm going to go take out my anger on some nonsense.
Yeah.
Ted Cruz totally demolishes Jack Dorsey and nothing changes.
Ted Cruz eats Jack Dorsey's butthole.
C-SPAN smasher, you got to be like Better Call Saul when he's just selling the burner phones out of the store.
Just have a pile of 50 and that'll keep you going.
That last account, well, second to last account lasted a solid most of the year, more than six months.
Yeah.
And then this, I got banned Saturday.
I had to make a new account before the event.
And then I got banned today and it didn't give me a reason why either.
And obviously I had no strikes.
Give you no reasons.
This is the first time.
Well, these last two accounts are the first times I've not gotten a reason.
And the second account was a brand.
Right.
Sure.
The last account was a brand new phone number and a brand new phone.
So, you know, I know that I wasn't device tracked or phone.
No, none of that stuff.
And if you're posting about the NJP, like they're coming to get that's pretty much, I think, what it was is the tweets that I was sending out were gaining a ton of traction, but I was also interacting with a lot of people.
Like the NJP Twitter account is still up, but we don't do any interaction on it.
It's just here is the thing.
Here's the thing.
Just broadcasting.
You know, getting back on and seeing, I've said this before, the hamster wheel.
I'm like, it's fun being on there.
Dude's still doing good work.
I'm contributing as well.
But it really is the same old stuff.
Like, how can I point out this atrocity or this hypocrisy over and over again?
Not to be a Twitter downer, but it's all about, you know, you have to kind of get good at finding your way into conversations where you don't belong.
And then also feeding everybody in the conversation the sandwich of anti-Semitism that you brought with you and getting them to admit that they like it.
Yeah.
It just takes a lot of time.
And when I look at my kids and then I look at my phone, I'm like, man, just ban me now so that I can be free of this.
No, don't, don't actually do that.
The best tactic to insert yourself into any conversations, not just about the election, but including the election, is if you're talking to Republicans, conservatives, Trump voters, whatever, just always preface it with how much you supported him four years ago, and then they will hear you out.
Yeah.
And it has the benefit of being true, right?
So many debates about how to handle this to focus on the results and the fraud or focus on how much Donald Trump's Trump sucks.
And my overall theme or message is Twitter and online is for blood sports.
That's not the place to pull punches.
Can brutally shive people on there with words that are true and do good work.
And then, IRL, it's not like we're going around and mocking red hats, right, for their latent Trumpism.
We're just trying to talk some sense into them.
Yeah.
Prominent red hats maybe deserve to be mocked IRL too.
But anyway, going forward, we got this uncertainty still lingering.
People are obsessed with this.
And Mr. Producer and I were thinking, it was just like our job as fathers, we have to have income.
We have to keep the family safe.
We have to get stronger.
We have to protect our kids.
And we're coming into Thanksgiving.
Christmas is not too far around the corner.
And we're likely coming into a Democratic administration and probably harder times, but maybe more Gibbs.
So, Sam, you didn't get to talk a lot last episode because there was election spurging, but where's your head right now?
I assume that you're not too impacted by this and it's just steady as she goes.
But what's on your mind, big guy?
Yeah, for sure.
It's hard to call it.
You know, when somebody like Biden would come in, if he does, that could impact the economy.
You know, when Trump took over, regardless of what you want to say that Trump did or not did or did not do to actually help the country or the economy, because he was a symbol for something, people in business let loose with the spending and expanded their businesses, hired people, bought new machines, all that type of thing.
Under Obama, people were holding.
It's not that they were doing horribly, but there was just the perception that this is not a business-friendly climate.
And when Trump become president, then people, regardless if you say there's actual good reasons or not for that, people believe that at least it would be a little more hands-off and people could run their businesses.
And, you know, the market is very emotional because there's no way that an economy this big could just turn on a few months like that the way it did.
So you think we're in for some lean years going forward.
Possibly, possibly.
You know, it's tough to predict it.
And I don't want to say that I know, but that's just, you know, that's the emotional aspect of the market.
But like I said, you know, because other factors are changing at the same time, because you hear the reports that Wall Street and investors are just going crazy with the prospect of a Biden presidency.
So who knows how it's going to play out?
You know, I'm fortunate to be in an industry that's always very busy and is considered an essential business and or essential activity rather and all that type of thing.
So that's yeah, that's the way I see that.
They say recessions never negatively hit the mob.
That is true.
It's also nice.
It's nice to see our guys online really going hard in the paint on no, if you can get Gibbs, you get them.
This is not time for conservatives for sure bootstraps.
Yeah.
Don't break the law.
Get what you can get.
For free.
Absolutely.
Yep.
Yeah.
I've always said that too.
The country has become a debt-filled trough and all the pigs are slurping at it.
And you're a damn fool if you're not going out to get what you can for your family while it's still on offer.
And, you know, aside from that looming, we have the dark specter of the Chinese flu coming back with a vengeance.
And Smasher wanted to hit on this a little bit just because it really is.
We thought it was over.
And now it's like, I got upbraided by, I'll say Karen.
She was a Karen.
She had short gray hair in a medical office.
I was with my son for a medical appointment and she was so nasty about the mask thing.
I brought one, but I don't just put it on instantly.
And she was so snotty about it.
But go ahead, Smasher.
Well, I just wanted to talk about, you know, Washington State has already announced another lockdown.
Ohio has a curfew in place.
I know a person who is in a position, a managerial position for like warehouse distribution stuff for a pretty big chain of Walmart type stores.
And they have been getting in a lot more paper towels, Lysol wipes, toilet paper, all the things that everybody went out and bought last time and you couldn't get.
They have a crap ton of them sitting in warehouses waiting to go out to stores.
My local Lowe's has all of their cleaning stuff has been quadrupled.
It's all in the aisles.
So I think we are pretty much probably going to be in a lockdown soon everywhere.
Some states, like I said, are already starting to do it.
So if you did what I did and you bought a bunch of stuff to prep for the lockdown, whether you think Corona is real or not, like lockdown is going to suck and you're going to be short on supplies.
Real enough to impact society.
Yeah.
Like the virus might be pretty fake and gay, but the impact it has is real.
Yeah.
So go out and do some more prepping.
You know, we burned through a lot of what we bought because we bought it and we were like, well, a lot of this stuff isn't going to make it.
We might as well just use it.
And I just ran out of money, right?
Like the literal bump and the unemployment was gone.
It was like, hey, remember that 200 pounds of rice and beans that I bought a couple months ago?
I can't afford any groceries.
Let's get in there.
Yeah.
Well, the lockdown was over before I ever even got my unemployment.
So it was like, we lived off of what we bought.
My problem is that I'm such a spiritual Jew that all of my canned goods and like prepping stores, I view them as like absolutely last resort.
Like I'm pretty sure my family could actually be starving.
I'd be like, no, no, don't touch the rice-arony.
So instead, I just crawl into the back of the refrigerator with my claws to like get the desiccated cucumber instead of.
Oh, you don't like a mustard sandwich?
What's wrong with the mustard sandwich?
I got some more bay on there.
Paper sow is going to be great.
A little bit of black mold.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I got to start going through those cans because otherwise, like, in, you know, you know what?
Like, I'm going to open up my rice-aroni and it's going to be, you know, rats and mice in there or something.
So replace it as you go.
You have to eat through your stock, but you're going to know.
And that's, that's the real thing with prepping, right?
You should, you should be working through your stock and like backfilling.
Don't front fill.
Don't go buy a bunch of cans of spaghettios and put them at the front and eat crap in the back.
Eat, you know, front to back and always backfill.
And then like, as you eat things, pull your older cans forward.
Do you know how cool it was to have an excuse to eat canned corned beef hash every day for 12 days?
Dude, I ate so many burritos.
We used canned chicken and then we'd use adobo peppers and like rice and beans, all that stuff.
Dude, it was really, it was actually legitimately really good because you put enough seasoning on the canned chicken and it doesn't taste like canned chicken.
Dude, that's what we had for dinner tonight.
Is everything you just said?
That's what we had for dinner tonight.
I still have Vienna sausages up on the shelf that are Charlottesville Vienna sausages because one of our friends, I don't know if it was our friend or a stranger, but like somebody just ended up with a backpack in their hotel room at the end of that weekend.
And they were like, I don't know what to do with it.
You take it, Coach.
So I was like, okay.
And I put out a couple fuelers.
Like, is this anybody's backpack?
Nobody claimed it.
So finally, I was like, well, let me see what's in here just to make sure I'm not, I don't have any like illegal paraphernalia in my garage.
And it was totally a single guy.
He had like black gloves, baby powder, and Vienna sausages.
Whoever you are, bro, you're based.
He's definitely a soldier.
They're the only ones.
And if you're out there, if you're listening to this, yeah, I will give you your backpack, gloves.
And I think there's one can of Vienna sausage left up there just like anyway.
But yeah, they're taking that random.
Yeah.
That's a memento.
That's going in a museum one day.
Well, they know what the toilet paper.
There's really no like alternative thing for that.
You know, back in the day, because I'm older now, remember.
Well, yeah.
No, there's the Sears and Roebuck catalog.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You would, oh, yeah, yeah.
Thick, nice, big, thick, tissue paper, thin page, you know, thing that was like once, you know, once it got beyond a certain time, it was no longer any good anyway.
So I remember that our family, we had downstate, we had some property, and when I was little, they didn't have indoor plumbing there.
And there was the outhouse, you know, and in the outhouse was the Sears and Roebuck catalog.
But now there's no Sears and Roebuck catalogs, you know, it's all everything's online, and you can't wipe your ass with something online.
So insert three old man jokes here.
Yeah, but even before that, the thing they had before that, they would have like a can of uh uh old corn cops, and you would use that.
A lot of people have been arguing for bidets.
I'm just too American for all that, man.
Same here.
I need to watch like a YouTube video or something.
Like, how do you use it?
How do you use it without getting the water all over your legs and all over everything?
I mean, I don't know.
How do you use the bidet?
I'm not sure they have that one on YouTube, Sam.
You might find that on OnlyFans.
Two girls, one bidet.
We're not making that the episode title though.
What's up?
Yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Oh, the Japanese really like it.
Yeah.
Some guys are like fanatical about that.
Like, no, you're just a grog if you don't try that thing.
And I'm like, no, that doesn't make no sense to me.
Like, spray water up there.
I don't get it.
14 baby wipes.
Yeah.
Baby wipes are very good.
And Sam, I had to ask, was the phone book no good?
Was the Sears catalog better than like the yellow pages?
They never used the yellow pages.
They always had the Sears and Roebuck catalog.
All right.
Just take a shower.
You know, you used to be able to buy fully automatic weapons through the Sears catalog.
Yeah.
And they were cheap, too.
Yeah.
Get a mod deuce for like 50 bucks.
Yeah.
I'd be like, every American should own this Browning M1919A1, only $125.
I'm like, dude.
I can't even get a barrel for a 22 for like $121.
What the hell?
Yeah.
I'm going to have to ask you guys about ammo prices maybe later this show because I'm sure it's still a show out there.
But we're going to talk, we're going to talk gifts a little bit later too.
But before we do that, Mr. Producer said that Sam was wiping his ass with someone else's reading material.
Yeah, so if you invite Sam over, clear the magazines and the books out of your bathroom.
He wants to relive the that's not really a thing anymore.
That's almost what Sam was getting at.
Is like every house used to have like a small library in the back.
And now with phones, that's just not a thing anymore.
I know that's your thing, Jo, but that always grossed me out.
Like people sitting on the can, like communal reading.
Like there's germs on that thing.
Whatever.
Unless it's your own.
Yeah.
All right.
JO, you have been put through the ringer, I assume you or your family recently with more medical craziness.
How about it?
Well, before anyone gets worried, it was fake.
And that's like my beef with it.
I take my son in for a hearing exam.
And for whatever reason, the doctor says we're going to run this battery of tests, you know, because he's a year now.
So for his one-year visit, we're going to run these tests.
Long story short, we end up in a hearing exam.
And at the end of this exam, they're like, oh, yeah, I think your son has hearing loss, which it's possible.
Preemies, antibiotics, that kind of thing happens.
Fluid.
There's a history of that in my wife's family of like the people with the fluid in the ears and you have to get the tubes and that kind of stuff.
But I'm like, it's always been like sort of a meme for me to like whisper at him when he's first waking up.
I get out of his eye line and I whisper at him from as far away as I can because when he hears me, he goes from like zero to 60 and he's just so happy to see me that it's like a fun little thing that we do.
I'm like, what do you mean he can't hear me?
But like, so I knew from the outset that it was crap because I'm going to explain how this test works to you.
And you're going to immediately understand how and why I was so angry.
You go into this room.
It's like a little studio.
It's like a soundproof sound booth, right?
Like where you would rap or something.
And you're facing a corner.
So you're like on a diagonal.
And on your left and right are like speakers and screens and all kinds of stuff because I think they do other kinds of tests in here as well.
And on one side, they'll have like a cartoon playing with big flashing lights.
And there's like a mouse playing a guitar doing cartwheels and stuff and it flashes.
And then on the other side, there's a speaker that goes, hmm.
And if the kid doesn't look at the sound, they tell you he can't hear.
So then we got to take him in for the more advanced one.
And the doctor's like, oh, yeah, no, he's good to go.
And I'm like, okay, that's great news.
But I explained the test.
I was like, you can't tell me you haven't had 100 people come in here and complain about the same thing.
She's like, well, I can't comment on other clients.
I was like, you can, you know, do this HIPAA dance, but you know, this is like fake, right?
Like, this is just, it's, it's fake.
I hope they're not billing you for all this.
Well, the insurance is eating it up, and we have really good insurance.
And I think that's why they keep wanting to do all of this.
She's like, yeah, we'll book you up for a, we'll book you for a follow-up in three months.
And I was like, I'm not coming.
A patient with good insurance is a buffet to the medical establishment.
Yeah, yeah.
I was like, no, there's no follow-up, sweetheart.
Like, you have a good one.
And yeah, just so frustrating and infuriating because he also had, he had to go to the doctor two days in a row.
He had his basic 15-month thing.
This would have been two weeks ago now that all of this happened.
He had his basic 15-month thing.
And then he had the hearing thing.
So every day he's got to get dragged off to the doctor or the hospital or something.
And I just felt bad for him.
It's like, would you guys leave this little dude alone?
Yeah.
Well, even if he does end up being deaf JO, then he and Potato can form like a traveling deaf and mute comedy gang because our toddler is slow to speak, at least compared to the other two.
Instead of saying please or anything appropriating that, he just says peas and stuff like that.
And my mom was like, you should take him to get speech evaluated.
No.
Like he's, I know, I was like, he's, he's two and a half.
And he was taking a bath tonight.
And I was girling him on his ABCs, you know, A, and he'd say A, B, B.
And then I got to C and he just said no.
I was like, all right, well, try D.
No.
So he just shut it down.
But yeah, I think four when I was counting, you can ask my parents.
I would say one, two, three, no.
Five, six.
Yeah.
I don't know what my beef with four was.
I don't know what four did to me, but that was like, yeah, Sam said we were taking daughter in for her annual checkup.
And Sam's like, why?
What's wrong with her?
I was like, I don't know.
It's just what I'm supposed to do.
Yeah, I was about to say, I feel abusive talking to you guys.
Like, you know, I've taken to my kids to almost no kind of, you know, what you would consider periodic checkups.
And, you know, even when they're older, they're like, this is weird.
Like, why do I have to go do this?
And yeah, but and as far as like when should somebody begin speaking or begin, you know, that's, that's different for everybody.
And even when do they learn to read and all those things are different for everybody.
So please don't subject your kids to that.
And that's the thing, you know, if you have enough kids, you start to get kind of jaded to all that type of thing.
When you have one or two or whatever, just a couple kids not criticizing or not trying to sound better or anything.
But, you know, when you have a couple of kids, like everything is important.
Everything's new.
Everything's a big deal.
Whereas, you know, if you just kind of back off a little bit, it's, you know, most things end up working out just fine.
100%.
There's a friend of ours who is super successful.
And I'll talk about it in the chat after the show or whatever.
You know, he is my first.
So you do get a little bit spooked about milestones and stuff.
And there's a friend of ours who's super successful, brilliant guy.
And he started telling me about like his own personal, like unimpressive milestone ages or whatever.
And that made me feel better.
And the way that you see two different kids who are the same age develop different things at different times.
And we've talked about that a hundred times, but it's like our kids are frequently born in batches.
And then it's like, you know, and I'm not saying this is the case, but just for example, like, you know, coach and smasher, you guys both had kids around the same time.
And then like, so coach's kid walks a month before Smasher's kid does, but Smasher's kids are talking two months before Coach's kids are, et cetera, et cetera.
You know, it took forever for my kid to get potting trained, but he could do math when he was three, you know.
And even if you're not worried exactly, the parents like, oh, gosh, Junior's not measuring up to his peers.
You know, it's a status thing too.
And yeah, like a measuring contest.
I really try not to worry about any of that because I see kids doing like lots of stuff.
And some of them, quite frankly, seem like they're kind of retarded, but then they do some other things really well.
And then my kids do some retarded crap.
Your kids are monkeys.
Yeah.
They climb shut.
They are extremely athletic.
Now, boy is significantly more coordinated than girl, but they're both like really athletic.
Boy is jumping off of the table onto the floor and like sticking the landing.
No problem.
Shakes the house too.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, yeah.
And he's dense, man.
Holy cow.
Is he dense?
But it's like find another two-year-old that's jumping four foot off a table and not eating it, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
As Junior is approaching 10, I look at him every once in a while.
I'm like, holy cow.
He's like, he's a real, you know, thoughtful grownup.
He's a personality and he's a person.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We have serious conversations.
I forgot about this, but we were riding home.
I took the kids out to Walmart the other night.
It was later than usual, but the schools here have been doing light switch school on, virtual school on, back and forth.
So our schedules are all out of whack.
Sometimes they have to be up at the crack of dawn.
Sometimes they get to sleep in.
And mom or dad manages homeschooling, which by the way, if you're out there and you're on unexpected homeschool, if you're a parent, you have a job and you're trying to work online while you're also homeschooling your kids, especially if you have your have a toddler.
Like it's tough.
I'm not anti-homeschooling, whatever, but it is not like this beautiful, you know, picturesque stock image from the internet where everyone is smiling.
Unfortunately, there was some commie who posted a picture like what they sell you and it's that image and then what it's really like.
And it was a picture of like a beast eating a child, which I don't, I don't, I don't like that sort of snark, you know, just making it all out to be horrible, but it is tough.
It's tough to keep your sanity, get things done.
Yeah, keep your sanity.
I've heard a couple people tell me otherwise, man.
Really?
That's not to, you know, negate your thing, but especially in the cases where like, you know, I think I said on the show, the one guy sends his kid off to the first day of third grade and there's not one but two trannies in the class.
Yeah.
And she had been since COVID broke out last year, he had been like, listen, honey, we're doing homeschooling right now.
Let's just do it in perpetuity.
And she's like, oh, I don't know.
Then they send Junior off to school.
They get the double tranny and it's like, you know what?
Homeschooling is great.
So especially for people who are like kind of running from something, it's good.
But like, I've heard from listeners mostly tons of cool stories of people being like, man, like, sure, maybe this part's a pain in the butt, but I like having them around here.
And most of this, you can get like a day's worth of schoolwork done in like an hour.
That's true.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you got to adjust your expectations because sometimes you're going to have bad days.
And, but the thing is with homeschooling, it could be 365 days a year, you know, and it could be six days a week.
And it could be like a less, lesser intensity, but, but more content.
And anyways, the child is learning.
Like, let's say you're preparing breakfast and the child helps you prepare breakfast or lunch or whatever it is or go shopping or do chores around the house.
That's all learning too.
Imagine knowing how to appropriately make like an omelette when you're 10.
Yeah, exactly.
That's a real thing.
Or how to do the laundry or help with the laundry or how to fold laundry or whatever, all the little chores that come along.
And I've mentioned this before on the show, but we should always repeat things we say on the show because there's always new people and it's important.
But I remember many years ago learning about homeschooling and one of the sayings that homeschoolers have is the years teach what the days never know.
In other words, from day to day, maybe you don't feel like you're making progress, but from year to year, you are making progress.
It's almost like the difference between having a formal education and having job experience.
You know, you get some guy, you know, and granted to a hammer, everything's a nail.
So everything's coming back to this for me right now.
I know so many people with computer science degrees that graduated without knowing how to do any computer science.
Right.
Yeah.
Because they could pass the tests and like, you know, do flashcards and blah, blah, blah.
But like when they sat down, they didn't know how to do anything.
But if they had spent that four years doing what I've been doing, they'd have been super employable and known all the time.
Oh, yeah.
This is the whole thing with college.
Oftentimes people graduate with degrees and they're quote smart on paper, but they literally don't know how to do anything.
I know that we have easy to take a shot at with like social sciences.
Like, oh, you go to women's studies degree.
Who's going to do anything with that?
But you're in a rough spot if you went for a STEM thing and don't know any of your STEM when you right.
No, but that happens too.
I agree with you guys completely.
And I know that, God, it would be great to have some data on our audience and how many homeschool, private school, public school.
And I defer to homeschoolers as having the best approach as the audience may or may not know we are sending our kids to public school this year.
And I will say, for those out there who are also sending their kids to public school, so far, I've been pleased.
Wife also, they wake up early and with smiles on their face.
I thought I was going to have to drag them out of bed.
When they get off the bus, their smiles and they're in good moods.
Their behavior has not changed since they went back.
Sure, I wish it were a little bit more challenging for them.
And the day is way too long.
I'm sure they could condense that and get them home.
But so far, so good.
And most importantly, of course, the red line of over-the-top pause, the worst has been a little bit of a damage.
If you had had the double tranny situation, would you have pulled your kid?
Two.
Oh, if trannies in elementary school that were accepted and celebrated or whatever.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yeah.
That's a red line and over-the-top propaganda.
What a nightmare.
And the kid knew the kids.
You know, because it's a school.
Like you went to school with them last year.
Maybe they were in your class.
Maybe they weren't.
But like you knew the kid's name.
You had been on the playground together.
Maybe you were in class together.
And it's like all of a sudden, Johnny and Timmy were supposed to call them Jill and Tammy, and they dress like girls.
I don't know what's going on.
I'm eight.
Yeah.
Well, this country deserves whatever happens to it.
Oh, yeah.
Should I return the Christmas dress I got for your son?
Jesus.
No, send it to us and I'll save it until my daughter is big enough.
There you go.
By the way, Smasher, you are, I don't even know if you remember this, but you are getting that thing that you gave me back.
No, it was not anything naughty.
Smasher bought something at the event and he was like, here, coach, you take this.
I was like, what?
You're crazy.
So I'm bringing that back to you, buddy.
It's yours.
You're too generous.
You're too kind.
You touched it first.
No, you definitely can't give it back now.
No, it's a very cool embroidered product.
We won't go into any more detail than that.
But anyway, I'm going to bring it back and we can do that whole thing, you know, like with grown-ups.
Like, no, no, no, I'm paying.
No, you, no, anyway.
Yeah.
Trying to outwhite each other.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, you were just flexing on me by showing your generosity.
But something that we don't talk too much on this show about is not male-female dynamics so much, but our wives.
And that's because it's very personal.
Nobody, you know, all marriages have their problems.
And if our wives had their own show, we wouldn't want to hear them necessarily critiquing their marriages or this or that.
But the good news is the good news is we have been getting a slew of really good questions from the audience about their relationships, whether they're married, engaged, or dating.
And they deserve to get some airtime and it can be sort of a proxy.
But more importantly, these guys need help.
They need advice.
They asked us for it.
And damn it, we're going to do some audience appreciation this week and hopefully add value for everybody out there.
Yeah, there's one I'm really interested in talking about.
Yeah, I don't know where to start, but I'm going to start with one that's probably since this guy is married.
The other two are engaged or yeah, the other two have fiancés.
So we're going to start with the marriage.
We're going to call this one black-tilled wife.
And I'll read this quickly and then we'll chomp on it.
Yesterday, my dear wife started to tell me how anxious and almost depressed she has become, mostly because of the things I talk about, Jews, demographics, and culture.
I'm not always negative, but I'm as honest as I can be about how I see the world and our race, country, and nation as it stands.
For me, it is a source of inspiration, a challenge to overcome and become better, a role model and a man that my daughters would want to marry.
Unfortunately for my wife, it has had a bit of a negative effect.
She's told me that sometimes she just wants to cry thinking about the future for our daughters.
She even wonders if it was a good idea to have babies.
I prefer to know how things are and be prepared, but it seems that I might have done more wrong than good by being upfront in this instance with my wife.
Anyhow, I'm at a loss as to how to ameliorate the situation.
Any advice, welcome.
Thank you all for you do.
Thank you all for what you do.
And keep up the great work.
So this is the one I wanted a piece of.
All right.
How about a good one?
It's pretty based.
Like, just blackpill your wife.
I love it.
Yeah.
Just cry all day and then she won't be bothering you.
Go ahead, Jay.
You got your up first.
Just stop.
Don't talk to her about it anymore.
Talk to someone else.
Don't talk to your wife.
Well, no, you don't have to talk to her about that.
This is a lot for them to handle.
And if we're going to accept that men and women are different, some women can handle this and not get depressed and think maybe they shouldn't have had kids.
Some women want to be in the fight, but you're not dealing with a man.
She's not going to take it like a man.
She's not going to be as resilient or tough about this as a man.
So I'd say just don't talk to her about it anymore.
Or as little as possible, because it sounds to me anyway, like that she sort of agrees with you and understands these situations.
She's not pushing back on it.
All right, bro, she gets it.
You know, for the same reason, maybe I don't need to listen to the 10th podcast this week telling me the same thing.
Maybe you don't need to have the same conversation with her or point out every Jew on TV or every Jew in government who's doing an evil thing.
Like, you just got to stop.
Like, there's a show that made fun of people like us.
They even dressed him up like a Charlottesville guy with a tiki torch and a white polo.
And they didn't even go with the like, this guy is a jerk because he's racist thing.
It was just that he wouldn't stop.
He wouldn't stop talking.
He was just trying to get everybody up the wall.
And she doesn't need to hear every red pill.
Obviously, it's not good for her.
As long as she's not going to stand in the way of you making the appropriate like decisions with regards to race where your children are concerned, then just let her be a wife and mother and you handle your children's racial education And talk about some more positive stuff and not just like positive race stuff.
You know, talk about unrelated things, maybe some things that she likes, at least until she recovers psychologically and emotionally from like red pill overdose depression, which is a real thing.
We, you know, a lot of it happens to a lot of guys, especially when they first get red pilled.
Yeah, just take your foot off the gas, man.
At some point, you're not helping.
That's an elegant, simple solution.
That, gosh, I mean, yeah, that's well, that's an easy, that's the easiest thing to do, but go ahead, Sam.
I would say, yes, I agree with everything JO just said.
If possible, you look for the opportunity to share the good things.
I mean, if you've been to any of our events, whether it's pool parties or whatever, nationalists, white nationalists of any type, having an organization or rather a, you know, a get-together, a party or anything, it's so positive.
You know, we have so many incredibly great people in what we're doing that, you know, anything I've been to, pool party, manner bun, NJP, going to a skinhead concert, anything is just full of positive energy.
Try to give her some of that, you know, or if possible, if she could talk to other women that are in this thing, that it is not all negative by any means.
I would say it's more positive.
You know, even for myself, when I look at some negative thing or see some bad video or something, I like to see the good things.
I like to hear the great things that people are doing.
And you don't need to go any further than this show.
Look at all these positive guys.
We're talking about important good things, having a good time, having laughs.
Show her those things.
Don't give her the black pills.
Yeah, I hope this guy has email in text because there's something in the email that we decided not to talk about on air.
But I actually, yeah, I'm going to email the guy.
Yeah, I hope he has people he can meet with because listener twist, he is not from the United States.
He's overseas.
But we know other people, right?
Oh, in that in that country, for sure, there's people.
Yeah, and I would say to piggyback off of Sam, like, just give her the positive.
Just give her the positive.
It makes a huge difference.
And yeah, think how pumped up you get like being on this show and talking to each other and everything.
Give her that.
And if there is a network that she can be involved with, that is huge, especially in Europe.
The people in Europe are a lot more serious.
They don't have a lot of like the meme baggage that we have here in America.
It's get involved.
You know what I mean?
It just made me realize how fortunate are all five of us, including Mr. Producer over there with the ball in his mouth, just dropping drops on this show to all have wives who both get it and support our involvement.
And I mean, just speaking for myself, I don't blame wives for getting frustrated sometimes with us with our obsession or the time consumption.
Or a lot of times they get the sense like, where's this thing going, guys?
You know, like you've been online for a while.
Sure, you made a lot of friends, but the world is still circling the toilet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Hanging on there.
And keep in mind the psychology of women.
And this doesn't apply to every single woman.
I know that.
But remember, I've talked about this on the show.
I was married for 12 years before.
I've been married for 17 years now to a wonderful woman.
But the first wife was when there was a lot of people and a lot of things going on, meaning our white nationalist things and activity.
Then, oh, yeah, she was as hardcore as everybody.
But then, when something happened and those people were scattered a little bit or things weren't going as strong, then she was down and eventually fell away.
See, so women are attracted to power in a sense, you might say.
Some are more altruistic than that.
I get that, but just generally, women are more attracted to power and things like that.
And if you are isolated yourself and your wife is isolated, then she's also reacting to that type of a situation.
So, that's why it's important that we have to have community and we have each other, we have each other's families and things like that.
Yep.
And MP adds that they deal with things more on an emotional level than we do.
And I'll speak for myself.
I mean, hey, the events in the world and the pace of our progress give me the blues sometimes.
Sure.
So, I don't blame any wives out there looking at their radical, angry, you know, teeth clenched, fists pounding on the table and going, oh boy, this isn't good.
So, hang in there, buddy.
Take it easy on your wife.
I think that's the consensus: just ease off a little bit and double down on the shit posting.
Vent your spleen that way, not with wifey.
We got two more here, and I'm going to go with the briefer of the two in case the other one is about a fiancé who is really wishy-washy on having kids.
And our dear emailer is wondering whether it's time to cut bait because he's concerned.
Oh, I got a solution for that one.
But this one came in more recently, and it's kind of elegantly simple.
So, I would call this one safety versus family.
Emailer says, My fiancé and I are very close to our wedding day.
We've been together a long time.
I moved us out of our home state away from family and friends to live in a less restrictive police state.
And I really like living here.
However, my fiancé hates it, misses her family dearly.
We are at the range where we can visit, but far enough away where it's not easy to just get in the car and go visit them.
I know when she's pregnant, she's going to want to be near the family.
That is what it's all about, after all.
And I feel bad to deprive us of that.
But I also know that our home state is not a place I want to raise our children.
Is it more important to make sacrifices for my fiancé's desire to be near family and give her that environment she deserves while possibly jeopardizing ourselves with excessive oversight and restrictive laws?
Now, there's a little bit of libertarianism in there, not race.
We'll touch on that.
Or do we stay where it's relatively freer and safer and more down-to-earth and much less restrictive on things like homeschooling, taxes, firearms at the cost of perceived isolation, melancholy, and missing out on family moments?
Help me out here, guys.
So, I don't think that like dismissing this is like libertarianism.
Like, if the guy wants to be able to own his guns to protect his family and pay less taxes and homeschool his kids, sure.
Yeah, believe me, I wasn't making fun of him there, but for me, like it's it's diversity more than blue states, of course, but that, but that's that's irrelevant, right?
Like, and I'll yeah, I'll chop on this one.
I'll chop on this one first.
Uh, he's he's he's still within driving distance of her family, right?
It's not like they're on other sides of the country.
Well, that's that's what I was going to say is that it sounds like he's got the perfect mix where it's too far for annoying visits and just two or three days of thought, you can be there.
Yeah, I mean, if it's let's just give an example.
Let's say it's like Chicago versus Indiana or Missouri, right?
And let's say it's a pause, hyperdiverse, expensive blue state suburb versus a rural, low-tax, white living area.
I'm sorry, but I got to go with the dad here or the groom to be and say that that safety, peace of mind, lowered cost of living is more important than wife's desire to have her family very close.
Now, that's not easy.
We're not dismissing that desire.
We talk about family being close so often, but you got to carve out a little bit of peace of mind in this world and not get tax harvested and not get your guns taken by a commie state.
And this guy clearly has some like individual liberty, freedom, desires that are perfectly healthy and natural.
If you're zero help where you are, that's another thing.
Are you vetted?
Do you have a community?
Like, I understand that she wants to be around her mom, but are you sure that the mom is even going to be a whole lot of help?
That could be up in the air, or maybe it's not, and she necessarily would be.
But that also raises the possibility of moving there for a year or a year and a half, two years.
A couple years or something.
Let me tell you, a lot of these red states are a lot gayer than you think.
I mean, you know, I don't know.
It sounds like he likes where he is and he knows the place he left and doesn't want to go.
Like, he seems educated about both locations because he's in one and he grew up in the other.
And yeah, like having having her mom around or her family around could be a big help.
So maybe it's a short-term thing.
That's actually not, that's not bad, J.O.
Yeah.
You could like, because when if you don't have kids yet, you're not even married yet, those first year or two with a baby, that could be a huge help and you can swallow your pride.
And maybe we don't know like how easy is it?
Is this, does this guy have a type of job?
It's easy for him to do this.
I mean, for me to move, you know, of a few states away would be like an incredible upheaval, you know, but maybe for this guy, depending on what kind of job you have, maybe it isn't.
And if you could do it for a few years and make your wife happy, I don't think that's the end of the world.
And is it possible to move closer without leaving the state?
You know, split the red states.
Yeah.
Mr. Producer says every area and every region has places for people like us.
I agree with that.
Although I wouldn't, I mean, I'm sure that's true in like upstate New York, but I still wouldn't want to live under New York's gun laws and taxes and get paused there.
And then he says there's no state that is wall-to-wall pause.
Very true.
Yeah, if you go rural just about anywhere, but like, you know, this is a silly allegory, maybe.
Joe Rogan saved himself about $30 million by moving from California to Texas before he took up his Spotify deal.
And granted, that's a guy who's making $150, $200 million, you know, all of this stuff.
But these tax jumps are no joke, man.
Like California top bracket is 13.8 state income tax.
And on the first of the year, that's moving to 16%.
I think 16.1 even.
That's a huge bite.
And especially if you're living in a red state where your taxes are probably lower, your cost of living is probably lower.
You might be a little bit more further out in the cut.
You might not be able to afford to live in your home state with a brand new baby and a wife who, you know, I don't know.
Does she stay at home?
And I'm a principled enough SOB that I remember moving from Maryland to Virginia and being like, ha, you know, like, screw you, blue state.
Know I'm moving to Virginia, which at the time was far better.
You know, it was wall-to-wall Republicans in state power, great gun laws, taxes, et cetera.
Fast forward six or seven years, of course, and the rug's been pulled out from Virginia and it's now blue.
So that may come to wherever they are now anyway.
But yeah, you got to carve that stuff.
That stuff is important on a financial, on a safety, on a personal satisfaction level.
And yeah, and if that blue state is a racial jungle where you're not allowed to have guns, bro, you just, you got to make the right decision, even if she's sad about it.
You know, maybe get involved with your local community of our guys there.
And, you know, I often wonder, I don't know how old you are.
I don't know how old your in-laws are.
Why don't they move?
Right.
Sure.
Why don't they move to come be nearer their grandchildren?
Yeah.
Like, if all of their kids, presumably, are up and out of the house, and I'm just going to assume that they are, what's holding them in their crappy blue state?
Yep.
Goes both ways.
And one more thing.
My family was tempted to move closer to family, but blue state, insane property taxes.
And every time we visit, it's darker.
And we had to say, I'm sorry, but that's just not an attractive equation for our family on a day-to-day basis.
As much as we want to see you and get a little free babysitting here and there, sure.
But, you know, it's just it wasn't attractive.
Some of these states are that terrible on a lot of key issues to people like us.
mean it's darker because we're getting into winter all right We are, we're going to save the third one, but good luck.
Let us know how it goes.
And I think trying to compromise and maybe get a little bit closer with the borders.
Obviously, this is all, you know, the crap that you don't want to move to is coming your way regardless.
Don't forget about that either.
You are not safe anywhere you are.
But yeah, try to make wifey happy while also sticking to your guns, metaphorically, of course.
I lost track of my junior story before, but we were riding home from Walmart the other night.
And because of the schools closing, I was like, all right, yeah, we can go to Walmart at eight o'clock.
Like, who cares if you stay up for an extra hour?
And because they just wanted to get out of the house and go for a ride.
It's kind of fun.
And I'm always a jolly dad pushing them around in the cart and getting groceries and stuff.
But they wanted to each buy a toy with their own money.
They got good report cards.
So grandma incentivized them and their good grades by giving them a little bit of cash, which I gave to them.
And as much as I told them to save it, no, I made sure that they got that cash in hand because usually whenever they get gifts, we just put it right into their college savings accounts diligently.
Anyway, we went to Walmart.
They had some cash on hand.
Daughter had no concept.
She wanted to buy an expensive thing.
I was like, absolutely not.
You know, let's keep it down below $10.
She got one bauble.
Junior got another.
And then I picked up a tiny little thing for the toddler.
So he didn't feel left out.
He loved that.
But on the way home, Junior said to me, He said, Hey, dad, you remember when you used to go on work trips and bring me home gifts?
I said, Oh, yeah, I certainly do, Junior.
He said, The one that was the most awesome was this.
It was a fighter jet.
I had a stint at the Pentagon for a couple months many years ago, and I brought Junior home a Blue Angels F-18.
I think it's really well-made landing gear and missiles on it and stuff like that.
And he described that.
This was four or five years ago.
He described it to a T, and then he described how hurt he was when it eventually broke because he was pulling a bit too rough.
And I was like, oh, man, I was touched by how much it meant to him.
And of course, it was slightly an afterthought at the time when I got it at the little gift shop in the basement of the Pentagon.
But it brought to mind that we're entering gift season.
We don't have a lot of time here to do a ton of things.
But credit to Nat Scott for bringing up gifts.
And we can revisit this and refresh our pro-white family, pro-white kid gift idea.
But just around the horn, real quick, a good gift for wife, kid, or just in general stream of consciousness.
I'm springing this one on you guys.
My guy hit me up the other day and just said, Hey, what do you got for me for gift ideas?
You know, I'm trying to go in on this Christmas thing.
It's his first year with his woman.
He's like, What am I supposed to get her?
And in this instance, she's pregnant.
And I told him, and I'll just keep it to that.
I said, take care of her feet, especially if she works.
I don't know if she works, but get her pedicure appointments.
Maybe get her one of them little Epsom salt warm foot baths.
Yeah, that's what I have.
Those are great.
You know, maybe just do the bit by hand, you know, like that might be something that she thinks is sweet or whatever.
Especially if you're one of those feet niggas.
Yeah.
And it's free, too.
So I'm rubbing my hands on that one.
Rubbing my feet on that one.
Yeah.
And maybe just appropriate footwear.
You know, she might need different shoes as she, you know, as this pregnancy moves on.
So yeah, if you got a pregnant wife at home, just take that into consideration, I guess.
Good stuff, Jayo.
Thank you.
Very thoughtful and useful.
Think of the ladies and their feet.
Sam, fire away.
Well, some of the gifts.
Skinhead records.
No.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I mean, what Jayo suggested, that's very good and all that type of thing.
My wife and a lot of the kids, they always knew exactly this is what I want.
This is what I got to have.
And I usually just honor that.
But some of the gifts through the years that I remember fondly was things that have gone a little bit out of style, if you will.
And I remember with some of my sons, especially that the, I don't know, maybe, maybe I'm way older than you guys, and you guys can't even relate to this, but making a model, which is like, I remember one time we made a Blue Angels.
That's what made me think of that when you mentioned that, Coach.
I made a Blue Angels fighter.
I made an aircraft carrier one time.
And again, maybe this is like way out of date, but I put together a Jeff Gordon NASCAR, you know.
It's like a thing you can do together.
Yeah, we'll have a thing that is cool.
My dad, I made an SR-71 together.
Oh, man, that's cool.
Yeah, so something that you do with your hands, something.
And, you know, I was had done it enough times already that I knew how to.
I'm laughing at Mr. Producer.
Sorry, I mean, too.
Sorry.
Mr. Producer says, I can, see, Sam, you got the best fans.
I could see Sam in the tump with his aircraft carrier and his F-A-18.
Not like Francis in Pee Wee's Big Adventure, but much but slimmer.
But, you know, I was good enough at this already where I knew how to use an exact node knife and make it really clean.
And we, you know, how to, I, I had painted miniatures and things when I was a teenager.
So to get that type of a paintbrush with the very, very thin horse hair, you know, very fine.
So you could do fine line.
And, and, you know, and I remember putting those things together with my sons and, you know, how much fun that was.
And then, even though a model is not bad, I want a model of a Falcon 9 rocket.
I'm 40 years old.
All right, yeah, but just I would just say one add-on of the Sam, just make sure it's age-appropriate sometimes because with the little kids putting it, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is more maybe for an older kid, but yeah, and also like what you're saying, Joe these the rockets where you could set them off in your backyard and they come down with a parachute and things like that.
SDs, I think, makes good rockets that you can see.
These nuts, yeah.
There you go.
Speaking of Smasher, I realize we are giving Smasher the big.
I'm sorry to cut you off there, uh, Sam.
You want to finish up?
I get like letting Smasher go last on this gift idea is like the biggest Fed post softball ever.
What is he got?
What has he got cooking in the hopper?
Maybe it's going to be like flowers.
So, with women, you have to get them two gifts: you have to get them a utilitarian, yeah, uh, you have to get them a utilitarian gift that you know that they need because they don't know better.
The vacuum, the scale, robot vacuum, scale, scale, uh, gym membership, large underwear, large-size underwear.
Yeah, oh, I remember that, yeah.
Um, you'll have to tell that closer to Christmas.
Oh, yeah, yeah, I remember that.
I remember that, but then you also got to get them something good.
You know, you get your wife just a vacuum, and it's like, okay, I'm going to take the extensions and shove them in your ass.
Yeah, for kids, I'll say, Yeah, well, some people pay extra for that.
Um, for kids, uh, I am big on don't just buy them action figures, uh, buy like Legos, uh, yeah, yes, buy instruments.
I'm probably gonna buy some instruments for the kids this year, or Santa's gonna bring them instruments this year if Santa gets his stimulus, but um, no, seriously, it's probably gonna be gonna be like maybe a drum set or a piano or whatever, something like that to try to really get them uh into something outside of just like I took my G.I. Joe and I beat the shit out of your Barbie with it.
Like, that's kind of yeah, you want to get them into stuff, but especially, and you know, this has been said by everybody, especially when they're real little, you don't have to get them anything fancy.
My son's favorite toy is, I forget what brand it is, but there's like a can of Pringles, but it's a different brand and it's made out of plastic.
Yeah, well, it's a favorite toy because like you can bonk on it like a drum, and yeah, so he's got a thousand dollars of toys running around here, and all he wants to play with is the remote and a Pringles can.
That's right, same.
I can't, I can't do work at home because my son wants the tools.
I can't, I can't get a hammer out without him following me around screaming hammer.
His favorite tool, his favorite tool is a 16-foot, uh, nine-foot standout auto-locking Milwaukee tape measure.
That is pretty dope, though.
That is awesome.
Yeah, all right, Mr. Purdue's tapping on his watch.
Sorry, that's all right for a while there.
People wanted to play with nothing but potatoes.
Is that still a thing?
Uh, sure, we don't keep bags of potatoes in reach of toddlers.
Shame.
Shame.
Yeah.
I was saying MP was tapping on his watch.
He's like, here, time is good, coach.
No, I'm kidding.
He's just letting us know we're at an hour.
The content's good.
You run with it.
Yeah.
I will say, yeah, kids smaller is better.
Parents always talk about the time when Santa Claus came and brought a giant Fisher-Price playhouse and a little animal from Sesame Street stuffed animal.
And I came down the stairs to see that Santa had came and I screamed out, Santa brought animal.
You know, I just completely ignored the giant plastic hunk there.
So thoughtful better than big.
For your bros, if you're one of those guys who gets your bros gifts, I'm going to be sincere here and say ammo.
And I'll give a shout out to my buddy C, who once gifted me a box of very high-quality nine-millimeter ammunition, which I still have.
I don't use it to plink or anything like that.
And that was a great gift.
And for your, and I know it's expensive now, too.
So it's even more impressive, right?
Is this the same C that I know?
Yes, it is.
Yep.
Oh, yeah.
He once gifted me something similar.
There you go.
All right.
So that's his go-to.
It works.
CD's nuts.
MP.
All right.
That's enough.
All right.
Yeah.
I'm going to ban you from the chat there and just be record monkey.
And then I will give a shout out to my wife, who for our anniversary this year, I went to a jewelry store, bought her a nice pair of earrings.
Not too expensive, not cheap.
I brought them home and she said, you know what?
I really don't need jewelry.
I'd prefer to get a fitness watch instead, one of those things that tracks your stuff.
So right.
Yes.
Very wonderful.
And so think about that.
And I don't think wives would be pissed off that you're like hinting that they need to get.
Well, especially if they're already a person who works out.
My wife has been working out like a mad woman for like two months now.
So if I just, if I spring on some kind of workout equipment or workout clothes or something for Christmas, it's not insulting.
Yep.
Exactly.
All right.
Let us wrap this first half up, put a bow on it.
And we have a special treat in store for you this week as we get back in the saddle to our regular programming.
I realized Sam had not stepped into the DJ booth for a while.
And so we have not one, but two.
But I'll turn it over to you, Sam.
Take us away into the break.
How about it?
Oh, boy.
Well, I suggested two songs.
I was asked for one and I thought, well, it's better to get forgiveness than permission.
So I suggested two songs because, you know, we want to play things that maybe, what could I say, the average person might approve or enjoy, whatever.
And then maybe something that had a little more of an edge to it, I had to suggest.
So a great band from Mistreat going all the way back to 1990.
I have a record in my collection from 1990 from these guys.
And they just put out a CD last year.
These guys are about my age.
Great guys from Finland.
The name of the band is Mistreat.
And Finland, if you know your history, they fought on the side of Germany in World War II and they beat the Soviets and they never surrendered.
They just kind of, the war ended and they just remained where they were and what they were.
And so that's right.
And that comes out a lot in their music.
These guys are really great.
And like I said, after going on 30 years, they just put out an album last year.
And they actually put out a couple of splits this year, too.
I'm not even mentioning those, but I happened to just pick a song off of a great full album that they put out last year.
The name of the song is Side by Side.
And the other song that I wanted to suggest is if you're going to play that now, I'll mention it now.
Is Birthright, a great band from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Great guys that I have got to know.
They've played at the MJP event.
You know, OI music is a type of thing.
It's very like, it has a strong format to it.
So it's hard to really sound new and different.
If we were all going to make an OI band today, it's hard to make something that sounds fresh and new.
But these guys do it, man.
These guys are great.
Everyone should go buy their CD right now.
Birthright, hated few is the name of the song.
All right, and Finland is in our top 10 most listening to full house countries in the United States, too.
So double credit for them.
Thank you, Sam.
Enjoy this double header audience.
Don't go anywhere.
Oh, yeah.
We're going to go use our bidets.
Once I didn't know at the time, it won't be since no.
And a crew corner nation had reached to a victory.
Within just a few weeks, my money finds me.
The suffering black wind scream.
I know this is my friends, but some taken down.
Hell singing there is a go, but nowhere to be found.
Side by side, wearing inches more.
I'm making it through, side by side.
Broken barriers, side by side for the wide arm blue.
Motor starts running, and the tanks begins to roll.
Troops begin to mortgage, they won't do what you've been told.
Our jewellery is played.
Bottomless are dayway.
But I got to want it.
It's too late to break.
They are so many and a country so small.
We shall find space to bury them all.
Side by side, wear the inches more.
I made it through side by side.
Broken barriers.
Side by side for the wide unblue.
After war, red general sin.
We want just enough chrome to bury our dead.
Side by side, we ran the inches more.
I'm making through side by side.
Broken barriers.
Side by side for the wine I burn.
You're told that the freedom that test days.
But there's still a feeling that standing your way.
Cause all our people wanna march the road.
The battle was just here, this is gone.
The queen that jumpies out of our streets.
And don't think I'm a place by the unique.
You don't recognize what you're wrong.
But that's this is a second follow-up.
Downsets of your city streets.
A bit of fake, the right you.
By that mind of it will never change for one of you.
Red sentence is down on us.
They're getting straight for what's our head.
We're always on the front lines and better than they did you.
The body's wondering for the break.
You don't give a fuck what society thinks.
You go test button and your clutch is a mess.
The one aspect's always for the best.
The love you're left and right.
No one touches on his life.
But this thing can only store.
A big superwatch that will break to war.
Nothing from your citizenship.
So fear me right at you.
to Full House episode 70, second half.
Hope you all enjoyed our double header there, courtesy of Sam from Finland to Pittsburgh.
White Pride worldwide, support your musicians, folks, by their music.
Don't get Sam to send you the MP3s like me.
We are, yeah, we were talking during the break, and it does, I hope it sounded good in the first half because it felt good to get back to our bread and butter after our little political detour indulgence.
That nevertheless, no regrets.
That stuff is important, even if it's fake and gay.
So, I only have one new White Life announcement this week, and it's actually pretty special because it comes courtesy of the first emailer who we addressed in the first half.
Our international friend let us know that he and his wife, who is a little bit black pilled due to him being candid about things, welcomed their second child recently, and she almost died in her first two weeks.
She was an ICU in critical condition, but fought her way out of it.
So, bless you, sir.
Bless your wife.
We know that wives always want us to open up and talk about things, but yeah, in this case, I guess we got to hold back a little bit with our racisms and our candor about the world.
But way to go.
So happy that you have a beautiful baby daughter who fought her way to life like so many others.
JO is keeping his thumb or his, he's got the pulse of the movement better than me this week.
So I think he's got a couple ones, new white lives, too.
First, I want to say to that person, I've been there.
If you want to talk about it, you can go ahead and write us.
Yeah, but my boy Gaines, who has been so clutch in our sort of code camp tech guy stuff, just been super helpful.
The guy's brilliant, and he's got one on the way.
He actually told me that a couple weeks ago, but I didn't manage to get to it like on the election stream.
And I haven't been on since.
But congratulations.
It's excellent news.
And thanks for all your help, man.
Amen.
Yeah.
And also in terms of guys out there, just the other day, somebody dropped in the chat that one of our guys recently got furloughed.
He's got kids.
He's not destitute.
He's not going to be eating dog food, but it's going to be rough around the holidays.
And there's probably going to be more stories like that as the shutdowns come.
So if you know somebody who needs help genuinely, obviously.
open ourselves up to some people who might try to abuse generosity.
But I think we're pretty good enough about these things and we're honest enough with ourselves that let us know if somebody needs help or if you need ideas for causes and generosity.
I'll put that in the notes for next show to not just gifts for our friends and our wives and our kids, but worthy causes for your charity and kindness as we go into the dreaded dark winter that the elites have been forecasting along with the great reset and so much else.
I have two family service announcements, as I call them, as Thanksgiving is approaching.
I've told this story on one or two podcasts before, but our family is fortunate enough to have PD Mouse visit our house around Thanksgiving night every year.
He is an emissary from Santa.
He's a little cute mouse.
Looks like just a little stuffed mouse who comes in a basket, but he's actually one of Santa's messengers and emissaries.
And he hangs out with the kids and they play with them and they talk to him and he does keep tabs on their behavior and then reports back to Santa when Santa comes on Christmas Eve.
So if your family hasn't had a visit from him, I don't know how you go about getting him to visit your house.
Maybe a note to the North Pole or something like that.
What's coming on over here?
Santa's snitch.
But yeah, I won't beat it to death, but it's a really nice thing for our family.
Our PD mouse that comes to our house is the same one that came to my house when I was a boy.
So that's pretty special.
And it's way more personal and cuter than a elf on the shelf that's sort of moving around and looking a little creepy and possibly giving your kids nightmares.
What about the mench on the bench?
I think we may have had this exact same conversation this time last year, but you never know, like they say, might be somebody's first time listening.
So I hope there are more PD mouses or whatever you want to call your mouse or messenger from Santa.
It's a nice thing this time of year.
And we'll have more Christmas posting in the month ahead.
And one other one that just came across my screen tonight from a good friend, won't say his name, but he shared a wonderful family.
I don't know if it's a tradition, maybe it's just an innovation, but it's called The Story of Our Grandparents.
And what they do is they get one of those blank journal books that parents buy.
Maybe it's like a scrapbook or I guess it could just be a notebook with blank pages.
And it's for logging everything about your elders' lives while they're still alive.
So you go and talk to them and you sit down ideally with the kids and ask them about their first job, how they met their wife or grandma, of course, where they lived, where they moved, tough times in their lives.
So it's like filling out a scrapbook for older folks who might not be around for that much longer.
You can keep it as a keepsake.
And whether it's your parents for your kids or grandparents, depending on your age, I can't imagine any older person out there being bothered by sitting down with some youngsters and telling their stories and getting it recorded in a family chronicle of sorts.
So wonderful idea.
Thank you for that.
No, that was a really cool idea.
And I would say get some video and voice recording too.
Yep.
It's so A lot of, and a lot of my kids have one great-grandparent still alive, but she is on COVID lockdown in the home.
So, you know, get on the horn.
I know sometimes the kids don't even want to talk to their grandparents sometimes on the phone, let alone a great-grandparent who might be hard of hearing.
But our own Nat Scott said, write your grandma, call your grandma.
It's worth it and really special for your kids too to have memories.
Just today, Junior had to complete an assignment to talk about the oldest person that he knows.
So I said, well, there's one oldest person that you know, have at it.
And he wrote a really kind, genuine five sentences that wasn't flowery.
He wasn't gilding the lily.
It touched me, and I'm going to share it with his great-grandma, too.
So, yeah, remember your wives, remember your kids, and also remember your elders as we get toward Christmas this year.
All right, we are going to tackle the third and I don't know if it's arguably the most important, but it's probably the toughest question that we got about wives and fiancés.
It's a little bit long, so apologies to the emailer.
I'm going to have to cut it a little bit here.
We're going to call this one maternally skeptical.
Here goes.
Emailer says, I am at a crossroads in my life.
I've been engaged to a fantastic woman for a while now.
We'd have been married by now, but we delayed the wedding thanks to COVID.
She's gorgeous, smart, totally on board with our thing.
She really helped turn me from a layabout playing video games into someone who does furniture for our apartment on the weekends.
She's been a great influence.
The big problem is that when we met, she really didn't want children.
But as we've been together, she's come around, or so I thought.
When we got engaged, we were talking about having kids, how soon, all that stuff.
But she never seemed nearly as excited as I was.
I always put this down to the possibility being a new idea for her, but she's gone back and forth several times and never has seemed really excited about it.
After listening to Borzoi talking about his accidental pregnancy and relationship in general, and just how you guys and your wives talk about it, I can't help but wonder how that would actually go down if it happened to us.
I don't see her being happy about it.
I don't have much experience with relationships, and this is the first one that's been serious, so I can't benchmark it against anything.
I love this girl.
I don't want to get to the end of my life and haven't had and haven't tried to have kids and regret it.
I don't want her to become a mother just because it's something I wanted and then not enjoy it as it's not that good for anyone involved.
So this guy is engaged and he's seeking help for a wishy-washy fiancé.
He's not confident whether she's going to be a good mom or she's going to be on board.
Go ahead, Sam.
Okay.
Hold on.
Just real quick.
You say that she is fully on board in the thing.
She's pushing back on having kids.
Be honest with yourself.
Sure.
This is not a head thing.
This is a heart thing.
So you got to find a relative or some of our guys, you know, who are having kids.
Somebody who's got a newborn baby and you go and visit that couple or you're hanging out and you put that infant in your fiancé's arms.
There you go.
Once she gets that new baby smell, that will tell you what you need to know.
And I can't believe that she will not want to have children once she has that experience.
So put a newborn baby in her arms, and then you will see that her feelings will change.
Confidence in nature, though.
If it doesn't have a profound effect on her, then you can't do it, man.
Okay, Let's nail you down there, Jo.
You're saying if she recoils or is not at all maternal with a little baby in her hands, you're leaning towards he's got to break it off.
Yeah, um, you know, I am ferociously against, and I'm not saying this is where it's going, but I want to cut this one off at the past because this is where I hear this one go a lot: well, maybe having kids isn't going to work out for me, but I can contribute in other ways.
Shut up, you shut up.
I will not hear that from anybody.
Um, but if um you know, if you still have strong doubts, um, you know, I don't know what kind of timeline to put on it, but if you're calling her your fiancé, that means you're about to get married.
Unless you're sure that she's down to have kids, um, you can't marry her.
You know, I actually hand wrote it as a note because I take notes all day anymore, and it was like instinct.
Uh, you referred to her as you know, like a fantastic woman who's on board with our thing.
I don't know that uh, you can use those kind of words if she's flip-floppy on having kids.
Uh, well, she might, you know, theoretically, somebody could maybe not have a lot of enthusiasm for it, but yet admit the importance of it and do it.
Um, maybe not with the same enthusiasm, but say, no, this is a thing I should do and must do, and I will do it.
So that would be okay, too.
Lie back and think of the white race, lady.
Yeah, that's right.
Oh, yeah, just do it anyways.
Just get it pregnant, right?
Woman, what is she gonna do?
Yeah, Mr. Producer says his wife agrees with Sam and Jo.
I'm skeptical or leery of breaking off an engagement based on this stuff because I think what are we doing here?
No, no, no.
I mean, she has, yes, no, but don't get me wrong.
She like her job is to be a mother and bear children, whether it's one or two or three or ten, ideally.
Sort of kidding.
I'm just because she is waffling and giving mixed messages.
I'm doubting her sincerity a little bit.
I mean, this guy was concerned enough to write in, sure.
I mean, aside from putting a baby in her hands, does he sit down and have a heart-to-heart with her and be like, listen, baby, this is a deal breaker.
If you're not on board, does that work with women sitting down and having you do that conversation after you put the baby in her arms?
Right.
Yeah.
But it's a deal breaker because what are you going to do?
Wait three years?
You're married.
Now she's entitled to have your stuff.
Is she going to have kids and she doesn't want to?
And you're talking about let's make a baby and she's talking about, I want to see Spain.
This is something I've told young people in years gone by, and something I would say to both the man and the woman.
You know, when it comes to childbearing, first of all, we should be open to it morally.
We have to be open to it.
That's the goal and purpose of marriage.
Natural law.
Yeah, natural law.
But at the same time, like if you read the Bible, especially in the Old Testament, there with the different families and that, you know, some women had one child, some women had three children, some women had 10 children, some women had zero children.
So you don't know what is in store for you.
And the thing that you need to be is open to it and have faith and accept what comes to you from God, from nature, if you will.
Yeah.
And a and a woman, I wouldn't think, would want to be married to a man who's really excited and eager, as well, he should be to have children.
And then, you know, God, I hate to think about the scenario where she might be sneaking birth control.
I'm sure it's happened.
Well, she should be why, and why wouldn't she think the same thing?
Like, I can't marry this guy, he wants to have kids, and I'm not sure.
Exactly.
How would she ever maintain respect?
Like, oh, this is this guy's goal in life, but he's going to pass up on his goal in life because, like, to have a goal, I have really good sex or something.
Like, get out of here.
Like, you're it's gonna turn into disrespect.
Oh, sure.
Yeah, no, the marriage would probably end.
I would take boring sex with a dedicated woman over like the best sex I've ever had with a woman that doesn't want kids.
Yeah, of course, sure.
And this guy also is saying he doesn't have a lot of like relationships under his belt.
He doesn't have anything to judge this against.
You know, certain people would maybe talk about something called a one-itis, where you've never, you know, you get all hitched up on one girl frequently because it's the first girl you've ever had a serious relationship with or serious feelings for.
I would hate to see you go forward with this because you feel like, oh, well, she's the best I'm ever going to do, or I just, she's so great.
You know, no, there's, I'm sorry, I'm going to, I'm going to go kind of cliche here, but there's plenty of fish in the sea, dude.
And if you score once, you can score again.
Yeah, I mean, like, like I interrupted with, you know, you say that she's full-on in this thing, then why shouldn't she be willing to have kids?
If she is like, oh, the white race is being targeted for extermination, we must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children, then why isn't she making white children?
Why isn't she helping make that happen?
Well, you know, I'm not a big fan of the generational struggle argument, but like if there's, I don't know, 10,000 white nationalists and we all have three kids, well, in one generation, we've tripled our numbers.
And if all those kids have three kids, then in two generations, we've, I don't even know how many ooples we've gone through.
You only get a pass if you're Adolf Hitler or infertile.
And if you're infertile, you should be out there trying to adopt.
You've always infuriated me about the contribute in other ways argument.
If you park national socialism in the White House, I will personally write you a pass until then.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
Like if you are Hitler today, okay, fair.
Well, if you are not, if you are dedicated to the movement and everything about it, the same way that a spouse is dedicated to their marriage and their family, okay, fine.
But for anybody, yeah.
And for any guys out there who are thinking about like, well, you know, it's too difficult, or I can contribute in other ways, having one child is easy.
Let me tell you, one is easy.
There's two of you, there's one child, and you can focus all your energy.
So you start with one.
Just have one.
If it's horrible, wife doesn't get all maternal or whatever.
Maybe I guess you just kind of try to entertain one kid.
That's really hard.
Seven is easy because they all play with each other.
I don't know.
Also, I'm just trying to get one out.
And then go from there.
I've had no one move the goalposts.
Brief periods of time where I only have to deal with one child.
And that is easy.
I could do one child forever.
Yeah.
Just think it back to when we only had one.
It was a cakewalk versus three.
Dude, that must be nice.
Yeah, I would just tell this woman that she doesn't know what's in store for her.
I'm just going to tail back on what I said before.
She doesn't know if she can have any kids or one kid or two kids or 10 kids.
And if she had 10 kids, she should consider herself blessed.
And that's what's so sick about this society in this generation is that, especially if you read the Bible, children are a blessing.
And so what are you saying?
You don't want more blessings?
You know, but it's a demented point of view.
She might say that she doesn't want any kids, and then maybe you guys squeeze one out, and then she can't have any more kids.
And it's a terrible thing because all she wants is more kids.
You never know.
Yeah, that's right.
You could be.
Are you face posting on me right now?
You might be.
Oh, that she wants.
No, we're not going out on that one.
I mean, we had two goddamn miscarriages.
I don't even care.
We had schools right out.
No, I'm just mad.
Like, I'm getting mad.
We had two fucking miscarriages this year.
I wish that we could just have kids at the rate that it'd be incredible, but we fucking can't.
And this woman that you love doesn't want to give you children.
Like, you deserve better than that.
You deserve better than that.
Well, that's what I would tell her.
You can convince her to give you children.
Starting with her.
Tell her, you know, look at the people that wish they could have kids.
They're having the in vitro fertilization and they're adopting kids.
Think of all the infertile couples and you are going to take that type of position.
That's not right.
That's slap in the face.
When the NJP takes power, they're bringing back the Muta Cruz, which is Mother's Cross.
But we're going to make it a little easier.
We're going to take it from four down to three, which is above replacement level.
Anyway, Smasher, that's my suggestion.
On top of the excellent platform that you guys put out, check them out, nationaljusticeparty.com.
Little plug there.
And the other thing we're going to do is we're going to make it a lot easier to adopt white babies domestically so that we don't have these people flying to God knows where to pick up a baby from Africa or whatever.
It's like going to a pet shop.
Yeah, we should do a show on the foster kids.
If you want to bring yourself to tears very rapidly, which happens for Smasher on a daily basis, just naturally mad.
I get so mad I cry.
But oh, God, the foster kid sites will break your heart.
And if you're listening out there and you don't have kids and you can foster, I can't think of a better deed for the white race than taking a foster kid under your wing permanently and giving him a happy life, especially those ones that have gone through hell.
Good Lord.
All right.
So we did our justice to that emailer.
Put a baby in her arms, test her out, have a sit-down conversation with her.
And if she's still sincere, you know, look her in the eyes, hold her hands and let her know how important this is to her.
Don't beat around the bush.
Poor analogy there, but do it.
And if it's still bad, then I guess the consensus is you got to move on, even though that's not an easy decision.
Good luck.
Let us know how it goes.
Please do keep in touch.
One corollary to this I wanted to add on before we go to navigating the collapse.
I had a conversation with a buddy today who is seeking woman advice of all things.
I told him, I've been out of the game for a while, pal.
I don't know if you want to take my dating advice, but he was concerned about a girl he went out on a date with.
They enjoyed their company.
They had a good conversation, but she's got a big body count.
She's been around the block.
And he thought that might be a deal breaker with all the baggage that it comes along with.
If a guy out there, let's say a guy in his 30s who wants to settle down and he meets a girl with a, she's never been married, hasn't had an abortion, but she's had a lot of guys through the greatest.
Yeah, I would say, one, what's a lot?
But two, keep around, but don't commit.
Because you can, just because you're in your 30s doesn't mean you have to settle for somebody with a high body count.
Oh boy.
There you go.
Yeah, he didn't tell me how many, but I just, yeah, I would have add to the body count.
Did she give it up already?
Not yet.
No, I said, you got it.
Well, and here's the thing.
She said, I don't want to do the deed again until marriage.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, right.
I'll wear a slut and go somewhere else.
No, I'm going to get a little bit vulgar, so we might have to do some editing here, but this is some fifth grade wisdom.
I feel like what you're dealing with is a bitch, not a slut.
The difference between a bitch and a slut is that a slut bangs everybody.
A bitch bangs everybody except you.
She's going to tell you that she's done a ton of dudes, but now she's going to save herself.
No, no, she's playing you.
Get out of there.
This is ridiculous.
MP is jumping out in the chat.
He's like, what?
Run away.
Run away.
Yeah, I didn't tell him to run away right away just because she had a big body.
I'm telling you to run away.
Roasty lives matter.
Roasty lives matter, guys.
Come on.
Well, I would say that it's very situational.
And, you know, this person could be turning over a new leaf or, you know, trying to become a different type of person.
I guess I would say I don't know enough.
I'd have to be right there in the situation or something.
I don't know.
I don't like to slam the door shut on anybody.
Same here, but it's a very narrow.
I know enough to play the odds.
I know enough to play the odds, especially if it's this whole like, oh, you know, I blew my entire college class, but none for you.
Anyway, you want to get married?
Get out of here, man.
So is that our message to high body count women that they got to put out again to prove their bona fides?
I guess, yeah, you can't go home again.
You can't.
I'll tell you, the only sort of irredeemable, or I'm sorry, the most redeemable sort of high body count woman is the one who doesn't tell you about it.
Yeah, turning over a new leaf, becoming a new person.
That's right.
Lie and fake and pretend she's a virgin, but like I almost feel like there's no reason a woman would ever tell you they've been 25 guys unless it's like just to cuck you by telling you that.
Right.
Yep.
I agree with you.
All right.
So I don't, yeah, I don't know if he's a listener, but I'll share this with him and Godspeed and proceed with extraordinary.
And I do want to be a little bit more fair about the body count thing.
Like, what's high?
Because what's high today is different than what was high 10, 20, and 30 years ago.
You know, some dudes will tell you that, you know, a number less than any number greater than zero is high.
Yeah.
And I didn't want to throw the baby out with the bathwater just because somebody lives in this culture and succumbed to it and made bad decisions doesn't mean that they're irredeemable.
And completely.
But maybe they're for someone else and not for you.
Yeah.
Like maybe I'm not saying that they are without value, but you are of greater value.
You deserve better.
Right.
Not that that person's terrible, irredeemable, horrible, and deserves nothing good out of life.
Sure.
What's available to you?
What you can do is that.
Ticking by my advice, keep her at arm's length, but keep searching.
You know, maybe you find something better fast enough to keep your options open.
Actually, a really good line here from Mr. Producer, too.
High is what he thinks it is.
Right?
Like, if he thinks the number is high, then it's high to him.
Even if it's not hi to someone else, it's enough to bother him enough to have this conversation.
Might bug him 10 years down the road, too.
Yep.
We can be that way, too, in our heads.
All right.
Good luck.
Keep us.
Well, I'll talk to him and follow up.
And I'll share this lesson with him.
All right.
Without further ado, gentlemen, we're going to move on to navigating the collapse unless there's any outstanding business here.
Yeah, real quick.
My new meme is when Mr. Producer is not on the mic, I'm just going to start stealing his takes and not crediting him so every things get the taste that he drops in there.
I told him he can come on mic anytime he wants.
He doesn't have to sit back there behind the soundproof booth like Mr. Snerdley holding up signs for us to read or whatever the hell he and Rush do.
But that's all right.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, our pal Nat Scott came through once again.
Not at all like Meraku last minute.
No, no, no, sir.
So let's fire this puppy up and see what he's got in store for us this week on Navigating the Collapse.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
Everyone knows generally how to obtain meat, eggs, vegetables, and fruits.
But a significant amount of the items in our fridge and cabinet cannot be obtained by killing or harvesting it.
In the future, many of these items will be considered luxuries.
Here's how to make two of them.
First off, mayonnaise.
I'll be honest, I had no idea even what was in mayonnaise until recently.
When I checked the label and noticed just how much soybean oil it contained, I decided to make some of my own.
All you need is an egg, some kind of oil, vinegar, and mustard, but mixing them together can be a bit difficult.
If you don't get it right, it can come out as more of a soup.
The egg must be warm at about room temperature.
Put it in a bowl of warm water for a few minutes if you need to.
Add the ingredients, minus the oil, together, and then slowly drizzle the oil in while blending the ingredients.
As for the oil, use one with a very light flavor.
If you use olive oil, don't use extra virgin.
Any kind of vinegar works, but some will taste better than others, and you can also substitute it for lemon juice if you wish.
You can add some spices like paprika or garlic to make more interesting flavors.
Jar it up, and it should last as long as the egg you used would have.
But how do you make vinegar?
Here's a condensed explanation.
Take a glass jar and make sure it's sterilized.
Take wine with an alcohol content of about 12 to 14 percent and pour it into the jar with distilled water at a one to one ratio.
The wine must not contain sulfites.
Then, add in the vinegar mother.
This may be a bit hard to find in the future, but you can easily get it now contained in certain types of vinegars.
Just check the label to see if it contains the mother.
The mother is a sort of gelatinous blob that contains the necessary bacteria for vinegar production.
Cover the jar with cheesecloth and seal it with a rubber band.
Place the jar in a dark, airy, and somewhat warm place in your home for about two months.
Once it's done, remove the mother.
You can pasteurize the vinegar by heating it to over 140 degrees, but not over 160 degrees.
Once pasteurized, vinegar will keep indefinitely.
Vinegar can be used in cooking, shining and polishing metal items, preserving food, removing that old Trump bumper sticker, treating plant diseases, removing stains, and can clean just about anything.
It is an absolutely necessary tool to have in your home.
And now, a section of the doctrine of fascism by Benito Mussolini After socialism, fascism trains its guns on the whole block of democratic ideologies and rejects both their premises and their practical applications and implements.
Fascism denies that numbers as such can be the determining factor in human society.
It denies the right of numbers to govern by means of periodical consultations.
It asserts the irremediable and fertile and beneficent inequality of men who cannot be leveled by any such mechanical and extrinsic device as universal suffrage.
Democratic regimes may be described as those under which the people are, from time to time, deluded into the belief that they exercise sovereignty, while all the time, real sovereignty resides in and is exercised by other and sometimes irresponsible and secret forces.
Democracy is a kingless regime infested by many kings who are sometimes more exclusive, tyrannical, and destructive than one, even if he be a tyrant.
This explains why fascism, although for contingent reasons it was republican in tendency prior to 1922, abandoned that stand before the march on Rome, convinced that the form of government is no longer a matter of preeminent importance.
And because the study of past and present monarchies and past and present republics shows that neither monarchy nor republic can be judged subspecie eternitatis, but that each stands for a form of government expressing the political evolution, the history, the traditions, and the psychology of a given country.
Fascism has outgrown the dilemma, monarchy versus republic, over which democratic regimes too long dallied, attributing all insufficiencies to the former and proning the latter as a regime of perfection, whereas experience teaches that some republics are inherently reactionary and absolutist, while some monarchies accept the most daring political and social experiments.
In one of his philosophic meditations, Renan, who had pre-fascist intuitions, remarks, Reason and science are the products of mankind, but it is chimerical to seek reason directly for the people and through the people.
It is not essential to the existence of Reason that all should be familiar with it.
And even if all had to be initiated, this could not be achieved through democracy, which seems fated to lead to the extinction of all arduous forms of culture and all highest forms of learning.
The maxim that society exists only for the well-being and freedom of the individuals composing it does not seem to be in conformity with nature's plans, which care only for the species and seem ready to sacrifice the individual.
It is much to be feared that the last word of democracy, thus understood, and let me hasten to add that it is susceptible of a different interpretation, would be a form of society in which a degenerate mass would have no thought beyond that of enjoying the ignoble pleasures of the vulgar.
Go ahead, Joe.
Um.
Matt knows I love him, but have you ever felt bad for like a high-quality Negro observing TNB?
Because here I am on a white nationalist podcast, and our friend here is talking about making mayonnaise.
They don't like what we eat in the first place.
Is this just who we are now?
They were right all along.
We're just a bunch of mayonnaise eating.
And actually, I make really good mayonnaise, but it's just.
Yeah, but do you wash your chicken next to oven?
Oh, all right.
So, yeah, so Jayo makes his own mayonnaise.
Oh, so yeah, so J-O makes his own mayo, and yet he's mocking that scott for getting it.
Isn't it funny?
There is a uh you know, there's a Trump Negro who uh became a big deal like four or five years ago.
His name's Terrence Sutton or another, and he does videos where like he eats fried chicken in a sloppy way and talks about how much he loves Donald Trump and white people.
And when I saw that, I was like, dude, if I was a black man with a shred of dignity, this would drive me up the wall.
I just thought it was funny.
I talked about that recently.
I just thought it was funny that, like, here we are, and we got the dude going mayonnaise, which actually is important.
And mayonnaise is excellent and easy to make.
And I put it on everything.
I'm looking at the slackers in the audience.
You have to do one of these things.
You have to make vinegar or make mayonnaise at home.
There's no free riding on navigating the collapse.
Yeah, why not both?
Who knew vinegar had a mother?
Send pictures.
Yeah.
I actually used one of the first navigating the collapses when my parents visited the other day.
I built out of cedar.
I did the gardening bit from Hail Victory Gardens.
I built a nice cedar raised bed for tomatoes and other stuff right in front of our house.
But, you know, the tomatoes are long gone.
The sage is still growing.
And what else is in there?
The thyme, the basil is long dead with the first frost.
But there's a lot of chickweed in there, which normally I would just yank out because it's a weed.
And my old man busting my chops, like you grow in a weed garden there.
I was like, uh-uh-uh, dad.
Those are edible greens that you can make salad from.
So good excuse for that.
Also, yes.
I know.
Yeah.
Like, it's laziness.
And if I am starving, I can eat that.
Yeah.
Also, a good reminder that Mussolini was a thinker and an orator and not just a meathead lackey of Hitler, right?
He was out there.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I have never read any Mussolini.
I presume that he wrote that himself, that he didn't have speech writers like so many of our trained monkeys do today.
Well, and also, by the way, several canonized saints have said that Mussolini is in heaven already.
Nice.
Yeah.
There you go.
Pretty cool.
And Mussolini agreed to.
I didn't read Mussolini until, what was it?
One of Trump's ex-wives said, oh, he would read Mussolini all the time.
And I was, you know, getting into our thing.
And I was like, you know, I've read Comfy Chair twice.
But I never had given Mussolini the read.
So I did back when I still had faith in the orange faggot.
Yep.
And remember that he suffered a terrible, horrible fate at the hands of his so-called countrymen.
And I just popped over to Zero Hedge during the break and saw this headline.
Now, of course, it's a lot of clickbait, but I did see this tweet too.
Somebody suggested re-education camps, firing squads, and banning talk radio to deprogram the 75 million Trump supporters, which really corresponds with the opening monologue unintentionally, that you know what these people fantasize about.
Like, you know, that the far right wing, we can be naughty with our Fed posts and this and that.
And you know that they do the exact same thing.
They just don't get their account shut down for it.
So I'm dead serious about assuming the worst about how things go going forward.
And that's part of the reason why I was sympathetic to the guy trying to stay in his red state where he was allowed to own guns because dark times are coming, fam.
If you don't feel it in the marrow of your bones, it's going to be bad.
I genuinely believe that.
That's not fear-mongering.
That's not collapsitarianism.
Like you see it written in the sky.
Hard times are coming.
Things messed up.
Yeah.
And I'm no saint.
I should do a lot more.
I have been very active over the past two years to strengthen my family, our redundancy, our prepping, our skills, et cetera.
My wife has been fantastic on this too.
But there's always more to be done.
Every single day that you're alive when your dollars are still worth something, when the sun is still shining, and somebody's not trying to break into your door to slit your children's throats is a gift.
And if you're wasting it, well, you should feel really bad about it.
Kick yourself in the nuts and get at it.
All right.
Just a little spleen venting there, but 100% sincere.
Yep.
I want to move on to something very brief, but dear to my heart.
Our international friend who, you know, God knows how he found the show and wrote in about not just his second child making it through, you know, a very difficult early days of her life, but also having problems with his wife.
But we get international feedback from Aussies, from Brits, from South Africans.
Do we get any from white people?
Damn it, J.O., I was having a serious.
No, it's okay.
But what I said during the break was, I don't care if this sounds bad, but it means more coming from them, knowing that even though we're separated by thousands of miles in languages and cultures and history and all that stuff, that we're all on the same page.
It's as heartwarming for us as it is terrifying for our enemy.
And it's not just about us American bears sticking together and plugging for the NJP and refusing to bend the knee for whatever garbage the GOP is cooking up for us in back alleys.
Yeah, it's probably back alleys, but maybe smoke-filled rooms for the next heap of slop that they're going to serve us.
This is an international struggle of solidarity.
And to our international listeners around the world, we love you, but we love these 10 countries the most.
We're going to go quickly through.
We haven't done this in a while, so it's fresh.
This is one struggle moment.
Yeah.
And our new podcast provider gives us better analytics.
So I'm more confident that these are legit rather than the half-assed, cowardly, I'll say their name, Zencast, Zencast, Bentonia, whoever wanted us deplatformed.
And we love our new provider.
And we love damn it, Smasher.
All right.
Here we go.
Number 10, the 10th most listening country to full house, other than the United States, of course, is Finland.
Finland.
Yeah, exactly.
From our Mistreat.
There you go.
Listen to Mistreat by their music.
Thank you, Finns.
We love you.
Number nine, Switzerland, the country that many of us would possibly choose to emulate, I think.
Yeah.
They have good chocolate there.
Yeah, absolutely.
I do want to visit there eventually.
I think that there'll be a lone holdout there in Western Europe while all the rest of the stuff comes crumbling together.
Emigrate is the word you're looking for.
What did I say?
Immigrate?
Emulate.
Oh, well, no, I meant emulate.
Like, I thought, yeah, like we should have good chocolate here.
Yeah.
Well, it's a multicultural, multilingual, multi-ethnic white country with the highest standard of living on earth.
What else do you want?
Yeah, with a good amount of direct, well, direct democracy.
Is that a good thing?
I mean, direct democracy, in theory, is a good thing when you're a country of white people, but everybody owns a gun.
Yep, exactly.
Number eight, and I'm proud of this one too: Japan.
And that's not just, yeah.
That's not just alt skull.
These, these numbers are paid altskull to, no, of course I wouldn't.
Alt Skull's got like 12 computers and 14 VPNs.
Yeah.
And I don't think this is all VPN BS.
I do, I love Skull, and we had him on, I would have him on again.
I do think, and I hope you're listening, pal.
I think he's batshit crazy.
He still thinks Trump's going to win because that, you know, the system, whatever.
It don't matter.
I think he's batshit crazy.
All right, Japan.
Thank you.
Number six.
Japanese people are interesting, I will say.
Absolutely.
I'm not going to spurg out about Japanese cedar on the show, I promise.
But I've been thinking about it a lot.
No, it's all right.
That's a good thing.
Japanese cedar trees are awesome.
You can say why, Smasher.
You brought it up, or I can.
We both love them.
Well, so cedar is a great wood to begin with because it's water resistant, it's bug resistant.
It's a soft wood, so it's easy to work with.
It grows relatively quick.
But the Japanese, they have mastered it.
So they kind of have like a bonsai tree that then, from the tops of the tree, grow extremely straight cedar trees.
It's super sustainable.
It's almost 100% waterproof.
And that's what they use for all of their building in Japan as opposed to the pine and the southern yellow pine and the Douglas fir that we use here in America.
It's a superior tree, superior building product.
And I did not why we haven't shifted to using that blows my mind.
And I had one.
We had one in our backyard at our old house.
I planted it with my father-in-law when it was but a little baby.
It was small enough to get in the back of a pickup truck with two guys to plant it.
And within that doubled in size, maybe I'm exaggerating a little bit, but it's gorgeous, stays green, and then it turns beautiful rust-colored brown in the winter.
It's good for privacy.
If you need good wood down the road, there you go.
It does put out a lot of debris, wolf heads in the winter.
That's the only thing you wouldn't want to put it near your vegetable garden or anything like that.
Big fans of Japanese cedar and Japan.
Thank you guys.
Number seven is the Netherlands, the Dutch, Holland.
Wonderful.
Thank you.
I don't have too much commentary on that.
That's English country in the world outside of the formerly English-speaking countries.
Why do you say that?
It's just you said most English-speaking or best English-speaking best.
They speak the best English.
Ah, okay.
Sure.
I thought you meant they were like the best country.
But that's also the last place that I ever consumed illegal drugs in my early 20s.
They are the tallest white people.
Wow.
Yep.
And they do do the bit.
They ride their bikes with like kids on the back and groceries in the front and the cell phone in their hands.
I remember looking at my hotel room and thinking, wow, these Amsterdammers are wild.
Number six, the country of Smashers' true loyalty, the Emerald Isle.
Not bad.
Not bad for a tiny insignificant island.
And they did have to.
Start your car tomorrow.
Yeah.
Some of you are pretty cool.
Don't start your car tomorrow.
I'm not bringing you that embroidered pen thing back.
Yeah.
I'm keeping it now.
Number five is Sweden.
And just today, Daily Mail put out an article.
And the Daily Mail can suck.
It can be clickbait.
It can be terribly edited.
But they publish things that Fox News and Newsmax wouldn't.
And it was a story of two Swedish boys telling of being abducted, beaten, raped, and buried alive.
They lived to tell the tale, and the Swedish authorities pixelated the photos of the perps, presumably to not antagonize the natives with hostility toward their invaders.
But you could tell it was a bunch of sand N-word neckbeards.
And God knows we've seen enough of those stories this year and in the past decade and in the past century.
But if you're listening to this right now, I want you to sear that into your memories.
I'll put it in the show notes.
The true consequences of the diversity that these garbage, evil, nation-destroying people impose upon us.
Moving on to a country far less impacted by invasion and horrible atrocities, Germany at number five.
A country close to my heart.
I'm more German than anything else.
I'm damn proud of it.
And just in the chat tonight, somebody said what have they done there?
They certainly didn't create any astronauts.
Yeah, yeah.
No Nazis ever went to the moon.
Most of the astronauts in America come from Ohio because that place sucks so bad that they want to leave the earth.
That's right.
John Glenn.
Can you hear me, Tony?
Can you hear us, John?
We are the official Ohio hating podcast of white nationalism.
I got toning pretty good earlier.
Somebody said something about, like, oh, well, if someone needs me to do this, that, and the other thing, I could just talk to Tony.
I said, I inherently mistrust anyone that would talk to him on purpose.
And he chimes in, checks out, really, really suspect.
Yeah.
You tried driving from the East Coast to Chicago or something, and Pennsylvania is all curvy and challenging.
Indiana is pretty quick and efficient, high speed limits.
Chicago, Chicago, and Ohio is just a total wasteland there across 80 or 90.
They can't even make up their mind whether it's I-80 or I-90.
All right.
Sorry, German.
A lot of Germans in Ohio.
So we'll call it a program.
Squareheads.
And a square.
Number three, the island that seeded this god-awful project that's got off the rails so far.
The United Kingdom.
Speaking of going off the rails.
Yeah.
Thank you, Brits.
Ireland should be included in that too, by the way.
I don't know how they got a separate.
Do you know his actual name?
Like, there was some contention about this on Twitter.
He's actually getting angry.
It's all fun and games with Smasher until he attached the third rail.
They're like, no, he just talked to this other guy.
Yeah, the National Justice Party is fake because of this guy.
Those threads are great, by the way.
Yeah, somebody said all that, like the NJP is getting attacked by all the right people, just like deranged leftist lunatics and Spurgs on our side.
Some of these deranged leftist lunatics have massive followings, more than 100,000 followers.
And they're tweeting at the platform.
Very dumb.
Imagine like 100,000 leftist Ahab speech.
Right.
Or you look through the replies on Twitter and they're like, man, this is kind of basic so for all the stuff about white people.
And it's just like, so you get it, right?
Like you, you want everything that we're talking about, as long as we say brown people get it too.
And it's like, well, we kind of did, homie.
And we mean it.
Like, you know, the meme from Trailer Park Boys, I'll pay you $100 to frig off.
Like, I love the sick burn that somebody laid right on Greg Johnson's gigantic head.
And he tweeted something like, the only thing more ridiculous than Republicans appealing to blacks is wignats appealing to leftists.
And then I forget the account, but he basically said, well, I was a leftist once, but I was never a black man.
So let me assure you, they did not say black man.
No, I think he did actually.
He was playing it straight.
Like, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, hey, let's be honest, like, appealing to leftists is a bit of swinging for the fences.
But yeah, I was a liberal once too.
A lot of us were.
And here, here's my biggest thing: is like, we're not, I mean, I know in Warren's speech, he was appealing to the left, but he's appealing to the populist left.
He's not appealing to like straight up liberal indoctrinated pieces of shit, right?
So, like, you can stop being a Bernie bro.
Greg Johnson will never stop being a homosexual.
Leave that one in, Mr. Producer.
All right.
Number two, our favorite country in the world.
Well, I'll speak for myself just because Thumos is such a nice guy.
Aussies, thank you very much.
Hey, number two.
Yeah, for that, that tiny little album.
Yeah, punching above their weight.
No, they are great.
If I could emigrate, I like the when we get the audio drops in the chats from Aussies when it's like 2 p.m. in the U.S. and they're hammered over there.
Like, why is this guy?
Oh, okay, wait, no, he's failing.
That's right.
Yeah, I don't want to emulate Australia, but I would consider emigrating there.
You know, it's like some magic sauce that got down there.
And then, number one, this, and this, this makes the most sense.
Number one is our friends up north, the Leafs, the Canooks.
Yeah.
Yeah, hey, Canada.
That's right.
With the old data, like France was up in the top 10.
I think it don't matter.
But Canada makes the most sense.
And shout out to, we got a couple of Canucks in the flight.
They believe forever.
There you go.
God bless.
Chris Hadfield is one of my favorite human beings to walk the earth.
Who's Chris Hadfield?
He's an astronaut.
He was commander of the ISS.
He holds the record for red light blip chases on Soviet planes throughout the Cold War.
He was a, and he maybe is most famous for he did a, he did the David Bowie Major Tom cover on the space station.
A lot of people have probably seen that, but he's just an all-around, you know, top-notch model of a white man.
And he's from Kanuckistan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Little known secret.
JO will be just as likely to grab a beer bottle and be tempted to smash it over someone's head at a bar as he will be to nerd out on space and astronauts and whatever damn YouTube he's binging on these days.
A true, a true Renaissance man.
It's true.
Yeah.
All right.
Thank you guys.
All right.
That was our top 10.
No, I'm interrupting.
Jo, you know that on the ISS they turn off the video cameras.
Yeah, it's to secretly copulate with aliens.
No, I was joking the other day.
There is no race mixing in the ISS.
They'll turn off various cameras on the ISS so people can take a shower or change or do whatever.
But I just started going like wild with theories on why else they might do it.
And secret alien sex slave kind of went out.
Good stuff.
All right.
Let's land this plane.
To Mr. Producer.
Crash this plane with no survivors.
Yeah, seriously.
No, I feel good.
We're back in the saddle.
Mr. Producer, I hope you feel good too.
Go ahead, unmute yourself or play a drop or do something.
Yeah, I've cracked jokes.
Yeah, I feel good.
Stick poking.
Do something.
Mr. Producer.
What are you going to do?
Wait, it's all Ohio.
Oh, always has been.
Yeah, always has been.
Sorry.
Mr. Producer, tear down this wall.
Mr. Producer, thank you for keeping us on track.
Sam, you're not too bad yourself.
Oh, wow.
Thank you.
It was a great show, and everybody did such a fine job.
I wanted to say to everybody out there, you have Thanksgiving coming up next week.
And so we may not talk on this show before then.
But everybody, I think it sounds cliche, but think about counting your blessings, really.
I'm not going to go through that out loud because it's a deeply personal thing.
And whatever blessing we may be able to count, maybe somebody else can't count that same blessing.
But seriously, think about it for a few minutes and think about a few of the things in your life, the things that you do have that if just one little part of it was changed, one part of it you didn't have, how worse off you would be and how much sadder you would be.
I'm not going to go through each thing in detail, but think about, you know, are you married?
Do you have a girlfriend?
Do you have somebody?
Do you have kids?
Do you have a job?
Do you have a decent place to live?
Think about all the things in your life that if one little thing was changed, man, you'd be wishing for it to be the opposite way.
Encounter blessings.
I've talked about on this show before how I've had depression at different times in my life, and sometimes really came on strong until I figured it out.
And just like any serious problem in your life, once you kind of master it and you beat it, but you're always kind of dancing on the edge of it, you know.
So I make sure I take time and I count my blessings because there's a lot of sorrows in life that everybody has.
We all have sorrows we could count.
But like I said, go back to some of those things.
Think of some of the really big things in your life that you do have.
And if those things were not that way, man, you'd be wishing you had it that way.
So think about that this week.
You're damn right, Sam.
Thank you for that.
And I try to do that every time the family sits around the dinner table looking around at healthy, happy, that's right, well, well-fed faces.
And that's that's that was half the battle for the vast majority of our ancestors for so long.
And real quick, it reminds me: I've been watching barbarians on Netflix.
It's outstanding.
It's about Arminius, the Roman legionary who turned and united the German tribes to essentially deal the great Roman Empire its greatest ever defeat and keep them out of the Rhine and allow the Germans to coalesce.
But most importantly, there was a scene in there where a Roman is basically like grabbing a woman by her hair, and her little baby brother comes up and bites the centurion on his arm and he clubs him on the back of the head.
And then that kid is basically handicapped for the rest of his life.
And my wife and I were watching that and just thinking, God, what if that happened to our son or to our daughter?
And, you know, it's dramatized, it's fiction, but it happens all the time.
Sure.
Whether it's a drunk driver or anything else, we don't need to beat it to death.
Especially back then, man.
Yep.
Don't die.
Choose one.
So Joe's kid bite people.
Oh, yeah.
We didn't do the biting thing.
But watch barbarians.
If you get Netflix from your grandma or whoever, don't pay for it.
But it's outstanding or find it wherever things are streamed.
I don't know.
All right.
Yeah.
We'll go to you, Joe.
Have at it.
Oh, I mean, there's not a lot there.
Yeah, thank you.
My son started biting me, and I'm mad.
That's that's that.
Like, I don't have 10 minutes of material on this.
He bit me, he bit his mother, and I'm mad.
And I think he wants to fight me.
And nip it in the blood.
Nip it in the bud.
Yeah.
Seriously.
Yeah.
Don't let him become a biter.
All right.
Thanks, buddy.
Great to have you on.
And last but not least, measure.
I want to clear up for our listeners that have already Googled Japanese cedar and not found what they were looking for, because I know it's going to happen.
And then somebody's going to be like, oh, this guy's stupid.
He doesn't know what he's talking about.
They're called Kitiyama Cedars, K-I-T-A-Y-A-A-M-A.
Originated in like the 14th or 15th century.
I don't remember.
But Kitiyama Cedars is what you're actually looking at.
Ching Chang Chong.
What's up?
What's up?
Get out of my bones.
Kung Fu.
I can't understand.
Plant your trees in my yard and get out of my country.
But no, I do want to put that out there because it is really interesting.
Interesting.
It's a great tree.
It's a great tree.
Japanese cedar is the official tree of Full House.
But going along with what Sam said, we're coming up on the holiday season.
I guess it's officially been the holiday season since like the 4th of July when they put out the fall stuff at Walmart.
But It's important to be thankful whether you have a family or not.
You've got a family here.
You've got a family in the white nationalist movement.
Hell yeah.
I always put out to people that you can reach out to me if you need anything, if you're feeling alone, etc., whatever the case may be.
Please reach out to me.
You can't find me on Twitter right now.
You can find me on Telegram.
My thing is at the underscore Mick underscore 14.
And please reach out to me.
Please reach out to anybody that you know.
We're all here for you.
We're all going to make it, fam.
We're all going to make it.
We need more Smashers.
Be like Smasher.
Just be more careful than him.
Sorry, I had to do it.
All right.
Wonderful, fam.
All right.
Full house episode 70 was taped on a sparkling cold November 19th, now November 20th, 2020.
Follow us on Twitter.
Ooh, at Rad by Reality.
I don't know what that means.
Reference to a different time.
Telegram, YouTube, BitChute, Parlor.
Good God.
Every time we put out a show, I'm like, Yeah, I created a parlor for the show.
Just, I don't know.
It's a little sleepy.
Give me the login.
I'm going in.
All right.
Please.
Finally, I got to volunteer.
All right.
No, I think we need to give Mr. Producer more work on this show.
He's got a lot of time on his hands.
Yeah.
Give him the parlour.
Lazy.
Lazy guy.
Check the show notes for all the rest of the stuff, fam.
So to all white families struggling with the visions within, please do hang together or else you shall assuredly hang separately.
Mr. Producer, I'm going to keep going back to this well until a listener complains and it hasn't happened yet.
So please take us out tonight to Breathe by Eric Prides.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you sometime next week, Thanksgiving, whatever.
And do the Bit Smasher, please.
See ya to send free.
Now, when you close your eyes, just breathe, breathe with me.
You return to the skies always falling wind.
But when you close your eyes, just breathe, Breathe you and let
go of the way you feel till you return to let go the way you feel, the way you are.
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