We mostly stayed out of trouble growing up, got good grades, avoided the worst pitfalls of modern society, and worked for what we've got, including our wonderful families.
But at some point along our individual journeys, each of us woke up to the undeniable reality that there was something rotten in the state of America.
So many infuriating lies, hypocrisies, and evils, in fact, that rather than suffer in silence or cower in fear, we decided to speak out and fight back in our own ways to various degrees, no matter the odds or the risks, and polite society opinions be damned.
We spent a lot of time talking about fatherhood and prepping and self-improvement on this show, and these things are essential.
But if our families and our people are to thrive and grow in confidence once again, rather than merely eke out an existence, isolated and powerless and destined for oblivion, then all of you listening, plus millions more, are going to have to unite in common cause, get down to serious business, and either overhaul everything or carve out something new.
So, as we approach the end to one of the worst or best years on record, depending on how you view it, resolve to speak freely, live boldly, and get involved, because there's a ton of ways you can do so today.
It's better to live by honesty and candor and be ground into dust for your efforts than to skate by like a servile coward, ignoring the elephant in the room and feeding a system dedicated to your destruction, hoping it eats you last.
All right, that was just some light thoughts here this Christmas season.
I am broadcasting from the great outdoors in freezing temperatures.
We have the one and only Ahab in the white room with us again tonight, and we're overdue for a show.
So, mr producer, light the candles.
Welcome everyone
to episode 72 of Full House, the world's most radical show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
I am, nevertheless, your wholesome host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours dedicated to mirth in the face of misery.
Before we meet the birth panel tonight, though, big thanks to Big John for his generous donation this week, and also to our other pal, John, who I guess we're going to call little John from here on out.
And also, SS sent us a donation.
Thank you, SS.
I think that's a lady, but I'm not sure.
We appreciate the wonderful support, fam.
Thank you.
And that is enough of me for now.
Let's get on to the birth panel and get cracking.
First up, in a scientific survey of 1,488 Full House listeners, he was voted most likely to make the best Santa Claus.
It's true.
Sam, everybody wants to sit on your lap, big guy.
Thank you for that introduction, Coach.
Hey, Coach, you know, it's Advent season and we didn't have a show last week.
I had wanted to chime in on that in the show because in this time in our country or in the world, people are rushing in on Christmas, and the entire time before Christmas is Christmas, and then it's like Christmas season ends on Christmas Day.
Sure.
And that's exactly backwards as it should be.
And first of all, you're skipping right by the great season of Advent.
And maybe some people don't care about that, but I do practice the Catholic religion.
And in the Catholic religion, the Advent season is a preparation for Christmas time.
And there's a lot of wonderful little traditions and things about it that enrich the season and then make the season of Christmas, which starts on Christmas Day, that much more special.
And for the listeners at home, they can't see this, but I'm holding up my Advent wreath.
It's with Celtic knotwork on the base.
And then I have my three purple candles and a pink candle.
And this last Sunday, we lit the, or turned on, in my case, turned on the electric third candle, which is the pink candle.
The candles are purple, two purples, a pink and then a purple, because Advent in olden times, it was called St. Martin's Lent because it started on St. Martin's Day in November and went to Christmas.
So Advent is supposed to have kind of a Lenten feel to it, a little bit of contemplation and self-contemplation, especially to get ready for it.
So each candle means something.
Maybe I won't go into that right now, but it's a wonderful tradition.
And we'll be lighting this fourth purple candle this Sunday.
And then some people will have a white candle in the middle, and that's lit on Christmas Day.
But, you know, Christmas in the very olden times was actually Christmas Day was celebrated on what's called Epiphany Day, which is like two weeks later.
And in Catholic countries, Epiphany is still regarded as a holy day.
And a lot of times everything shut down on that day and it's a special celebration.
But so Epiphany was celebrated as the Christmas Day.
And as time went on, then Christmas Day was set as we know it now.
And the Advent preceded that.
And there was always an Advent, but in different places at different times, it was two weeks or four weeks.
But it's the four Sundays before Christmas.
And then on Christmas Day, you're supposed to celebrate the Christmas season starting then.
And I'll talk about Christmas season when it's Christmas season, but it's Advent season now.
So thank you, Coach.
Of course.
It's beautiful, Sam.
It reminds me of my days in CCD when the teachers would try to teach us about Advent.
And I definitely learned more from you in just a couple of times you've talked about it than I did back in those days.
And also, apologies to the audience.
Sam mentioned we did this last week.
I was totally ready to go, but Smasher said he was a little tired and a little bit more.
I was ready to go now, by the way.
No, Sam and MP were totally ready.
Smasher, I don't know.
The muses didn't talk to me quite as much this week.
Sometimes we got more content than we know what to do with, and sometimes not.
I'd rather put out a quality product than just wing it, but we'll do that in the future.
Anyway, all right, moving on.
Next up, in that same scientific survey, he was voted most likely to be head elf in charge of all manufacturing and destruction operations or maybe Krampus.
Smasher, what's up, big guy?
Not much, man.
Glad to be here.
I'm not tired this week, but I didn't talk to any muses.
Okay.
That's normal.
Yeah.
Just winging it like usual.
Did you get big snow up there?
Yeah, I actually today couldn't leave our street.
So that was exciting.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, we're where I normally record.
The router was just giving an awful signal.
So rather than disturb my family back in the other studio, I am literally in the gazebo surrounded by snow.
It's going to be alpha.
Yeah.
Giant parka.
So if you hear my cheat chittering, you know, it's not because I'm nervous.
It's a little chilly out here, but we're going to soldier through.
It's going to make for a brisk and bracing show.
And speaking of brisk and bracing, finally, our very special and patient guest.
This is his third appearance on Full House.
To date, I'd call that about 68 or 69 episodes too few.
Proud husband, papa, son, and also our spiritual authority on the movement and the man that the world still hates most.
Ahab, welcome back, buddy.
Wow, what an introduction, coach.
Well, thank you very much for asking me back on.
And I have to say, it's an honor, as always, to be in the company of you fine gentlemen.
Right back at you.
Yeah, you came on for the first time.
I remember you spoke, it was around, it was December, I think, of last year, and you spoke movingly, heartwarmingly about having Christmas with your parents in your 30s without a little rug rat at your knee.
And now you got a big, bright, and beautiful one.
And yeah, how's the Christmas season treating you?
Oh, it's really great.
Well, first of all, yeah, I got a lot because I'm in the same part of the country that Smasher is, and I got the same dose of snow and was out there shoveling it today.
And I was thinking of that scene in Schindler's List where they have all the Jews shoveling snow.
And I thought, you know, this is another thing.
Like, wouldn't I mean, what Arian wouldn't want national socialism if it means you don't have to shovel it out?
You have, they had automation before automation, actually.
You know, they just thought of a way to do it.
You know, so you, anyway.
But no, I just sorry.
I had to, you asked such a nice, heartwarming question.
I had to go in with my Schindler's List scene.
That's what it means to be a National Socialist in 2020.
I always think of that, that one Jew that was very cleverly trying to trick them, the one with the one arm.
And he was very slyly trying to be like, I'm an essential worker to the war effort.
But they saw right through his bullshit, which is that's that's what makes national socialists great.
But no, in all seriousness, I'm very much in the Christmas spirit right now, as my morbid Schindler's List joke should tell you if you know me well.
No, I'm very much in the Christmas spirit.
The snow we got here was just so lovely.
And it's my wife is very good at decorating and making a very cozy environment, which is so essential to, I think, to bringing up kids is to have a very, very cozy scene at home, which I grew up in that kind of a house where we really did Christmas nice.
And yeah, my little boy, I mean, it's just, it's wonderful because he was born last year, but he was not, you know, he was a tiny newborn and he wasn't really old enough to get it.
And he's still not old enough.
He just turned one.
He's not quite old enough to really appreciate all of it, but he, you know, he's he's so smart and engaged and happy.
And he senses there's like some kind of big thing happening that's magic.
And we've all just spoiled him so much, the presence we've got this kid.
I mean, it's just like really, I mean, we can't keep doing this with, you know, for every year.
But, you know, my first, my first child at the age of 38, I'm going a little nuts with like, oh, he'd love that.
Oh, I'm going to get him that.
Oh, I'm going to get him that.
Are you guys?
Yeah.
Are you guys trying for more or are you just open to it at this point?
We are definitely going to have some more.
We will be probably trying more in the coming year.
But yes, we are definitely, we want to have more.
We would like to have, I think, the number.
It's funny because when I proposed to Emily, right after that, she went on a red ice stream and Lana was talking to her and she was all excited.
And Lana was like.
So you want to have a family?
And Emily was like, yes.
He's like, how many kids do you want?
And Emily was like, five.
I remember thinking, I was like, whoa.
Wait a minute.
And it's funny because after we had the first one, I was like, yeah, let's do it.
Let's have five.
And she's like, maybe four.
You know, four is a good number.
By the way, Warren, my son and I, we were the whole family, we were watching the Tom Junes video on BitChute.
We really enjoyed that.
And my youngest son, he has quite a crush on Emily.
Oh, my goodness.
Well, fortunately, I'm not a jealous person, but no, I'm glad you enjoyed it because I helped her film it.
And Coach, if you don't mind, I'll just plug Emily's thing right now because she finally, Emily's been, you know, she was really big on YouTube.
She had a great channel and she was on Twitter.
And it's funny because she got banned hard.
I mean, Emily was on that first wave of people that got banned.
She was like right after Milo.
And it was for a joke she made about Heather Heyer right after Charlottesville.
And yeah, and Emily has since, I joke that she's been toiling in obscurity because she was just like languishing on Gab.
And recently, since we got together, she developed, she got a BitChute channel.
But, you know, the way BitChute is, for a while there, you couldn't even find it.
But I am happy to say I finally convinced her to join Telegram.
She has a Telegram channel, doesn't have a lot of subscribers yet.
Wow.
But maybe you guys can share it out on the full house if you didn't already, you know, or just spread the message.
I know Smasher shared it when I put it out.
What's the channel name?
Do you know?
It's just Emily Yucas.
So it's t.me backslash or forward slash, I guess, Emily Yucas, Y-O-U-C-I-S.
And I think if you just search her on Telegram, you can find one word, Emily Yucas.
And also on BitChute, all you have to do is search her name and she comes right up.
This year, Emily had a big year as far as doing things because, you know, I could talk about this now.
Emily is an animator first and foremost.
And that's her main thing.
And animation is an incredibly time-consuming process.
It's very, very, I mean, she would have to, to do her animations in the past, her Alfred Alfred cartoons and the stuff after that, like waking up, she would just need to go at it for like 12 hours, you know, 13, 14 hours straight on her computer and just shut out the world for very long periods of time.
And while she was pregnant and then after we had our boy, you know, especially with a newborn, it's just not possible for her to animate like that.
I've been encouraging her to do some animations, some smaller stuff.
But she had really stepped up her game as far as her last couple of animations.
So, you know, I think she wanted to kind of deliver really, really well-done animation going forward.
So this year, instead of that, she's just gone back to making these kind of funny like meme videos.
And she did the Corona Chan one earlier, the Wuhan parody, which is funny because now it's like such a thing.
I watched it the other day and I was like, man, it makes me nostalgic for the early days of the coronavirus.
But I mean, before, you know, when it was still like this, like the zombie apocalypse was happening and it was kind of scary and exciting at the same time.
And we were all getting big checks from the government, which those days are long gone.
Yeah, and the high unemployment and everything else.
So, unemployment payments, I should have said.
But that was a big hit.
And then she did her own rap that she wanted to do, which was that one's a little more kind of you have to get you have to be like an Emily Yukas fan to really get into that one.
It's Red Velvet.
I really love it.
I find that one too.
Once we were watching the other one, we started watching all of them and we watched that one too.
Oh, that's great.
Yeah.
There's a lot of neat things in the lyrics.
She makes reference to a ton of different things.
I mean, the basic theme is more like the Jeffrey Epstein kind of crap that the elites are doing behind the scenes.
That's like the job.
If Jeffrey Epstein went to the gym, he'd be Jeffrey Repstein.
Very good.
But if that's why we pay him any more, that's what they probably say about him in Israel where he's going to the gym right now.
In the gym, and his massage agent bros, high five of them.
Jeffrey Repstein hit me.
Jeffrey Repstein.
Yes, exactly.
But yeah, Red Velvet was.
Personally, it's probably my favorite of the things she did this year.
It was very artsy, though.
And it's kind of people don't like rap in our movement.
Emily killed both her audiences because the problem is her animation was too, you know, quote unquote degenerate for our movement.
But at the same time, her stuff that she does now is too racist for her old, like degenerate art fans.
So she's like killed both her fan bases.
But she did that.
She did a wonderful Black Crimes Matter, a video that she did all the research.
I didn't feed her anything for that.
She autistically found every possible statistic when the George Floyd stuff was happening.
And then the last one was this Tom Jones parody, which I thought came off really well.
But it was great.
It was a really good idea, too, for her to have herself dancing in the background because she looked beautiful as the background dancer, but it was disturbing to see her in the juphro jimmy around.
I was like, oh man, I don't know how that makes me feel.
I really, I loved the footage of her as the dancer, but at the same time, I told her to like cut.
I gave her like, I was like, okay, you can have like five seconds of yourself as that character, and that's it.
You can't do any more than that.
So you're like the, you're the husband and the producer.
Like, you're great, honey.
I'm telling you, you're killing it.
A little less of that, two seconds.
I feel like Desi Arnaz, you know, it's, it's sort of, it's, it's hard being with an e-celeb, uh, pretty comedian, you know, because it's like, uh, Emily's great.
I love, I've always loved her stuff before we met.
You know, I loved her stuff.
And I, I, I really, the thing I loved most about her was her courage because she really just came right out there with everything.
Let me tell you, one of one of the best things she ever did was she gave this very heartfelt little monologue about how she had almost squandered her maidenhood or she felt she had squandered her maidenhood.
And it was kind of a cautionary tale that young women should hear.
I'd love to have a copy of that.
I think I know what you're talking about.
Yeah, it was quite a few, well, quite a few years.
You know, I don't know, it was like four or five years ago, something like that.
And it was, you know, it was very moving.
I honestly was very moving how women when they're in their young 20s, they're going to college or they're chasing their tail in one way or another and doing worldly things.
And they're losing out on the opportunity to be mothers and wives and to do more serious things too.
I will say this about Emily.
One last thing That's in line with that, Sam, is that, and again, I can talk about this now, but the big secret that nobody knows about Emily, and you guys know somewhat, is that Emily is actually, in spite of her crazy stuff she put in her Alfred Alfred cartoons and her wild stuff that she's done, she's an incredibly traditional person.
Emily is just a really, she's a wonderful mother to our son, and she's just a really good wife to me, probably better than I deserve.
And she's very, very just a natural like homemaker.
I don't know.
It's just, it's funny because she's one of these people.
I think people online, they see Emily's antics and they think she must be completely like a crazy dumpster fire.
And she's definitely crazy, but crazy in the same way that I'm crazy.
So our crazinesses match out.
But as far as just as a mother and a daughter-in-law, and she's just so traditional and makes and Christmas was actually, I think, Coach, the moment when I realized it, when Emily and I first together, I remember I had a really hard day at work.
And I came in and I looked and she had gone out to the Goodwill and bought all these Christmas decorations and like decorated the whole house like you would not believe.
And there was like Bing Crosby's Christmas tunes playing.
It was the coziest, nicest thing I'd ever seen.
And I thought, oh, you know, a woman that can make a cozy Christmas, that's really special.
Absolutely.
I think if you meet her in person, that comes across that, you know, like you say, there's some sort of online persona that somebody is guessing at, like this person is very out there, very demonstrative or kind of wild ideas.
But to meet her in person, she comes across kind of introverted and reserved and dignified.
We really didn't plan for this to be the Emily Yucas appreciation.
Oh, yeah.
I'm just calling it out.
But I'm going to even pile on here.
My favorite thing of hers that she ever did, and this was somewhat important for me getting off my old like Gavin McGinnis, edgy, Jim Goad sort of reservation, was when she busted his balls and he wouldn't say the 14 words and he said set a feature for Western children.
And that just caught him straight to the bonus.
That was the first time I saw her.
That was the first time I saw anything by her.
I remember Andrew Anglund had an article called Female Jew Hating Shitlord or something that destroys Gavin McGinnis.
And, you know, Anglin like hates all women more than anybody.
And even he was like, this is amazing.
He was like simping hard for Emily.
And the second thing I saw, I didn't even know she was an animator.
The second thing I saw was at NPI.
That's actually where we met.
I saw her at NPI out there trying to interview those Antifa and like jokingly.
And there's like her, her and her cameraman with like 300 Antifa.
And it's so funny to think of me and my dad inside the building at that time and Emily out there carrying inside her the future of my children.
And she's out there with 300 Antifa and I'm inside like wearing a suit, like getting a drink.
I mean, like now I'd have been out there with like a folding chair, you know, and flying.
And I remember that because her cameraman got bloodied on the street that did.
He did.
What?
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, Emily's.
No, anyway, I'll stop simping for my wife on your show.
But I really love her and she's a wonderful person.
And we have a wonderful marriage.
It's all it's, it's really, you know, and that's what I guess I'll just tie this back to the broader theme here, Coach.
If you're out there and you're like 30 years old and you haven't met the right woman, or you're 31 years old, or you're 32, or you're 33, or you're 34, and you're looking at Smasher here and you're thinking, oh, man, there's that guy, you know, like I'll never be like him.
And be, well, you know what?
Maybe you'd be like, You won't be like Smasher, but you, you know.
But you could be like Warren.
Yes, yes.
As a man gets older, sometimes he gets wiser too, which, you know, but some guys get lucky and find the right girl early.
And your girl is definitely the right girl for you.
My girl was the right girl for me, and I met her later in life, 37.
You know, so there were many times when I was younger than that where I thought, oh my God, I'm never going to meet the right woman.
So don't give up.
She's out there for you.
It's really important.
We've seen a lot of traffic in the chats over the past couple weeks.
It's probably not a coincidence that we're getting close to the holidays of guys either, oh man, they're either getting desperate to find a woman or they're, you know, they're really eager to do so or they've got one on the line, but they're not sure if it's going to work out.
We got a couple good audience questions.
So that's important value add for us to do.
And I think we're going to do that in the second half.
But this is our last show before Christmas.
So this is our last chance to share Nuggets, Goodies, good feelings going into one of the finest days of the year.
And I'm going to try not to be dour coach here because I've talked before on shows about the dark shadow.
And even if you're having a blissful moment with your family, like we did when we were decorating the tree, that yes, I'm always at least partially grinding my teeth and thinking about the enemy and the state of the world and all the challenges that we face.
But real, yeah, just from the Finstock household, it's been a weird Christmas season, right?
Schools are closed.
I can't take the kids up to see Grandma and Grandpa because they both caught the kof, believe it or not.
They're doing fine.
So they're just like, don't you dare bring your babies up here and have us possibly give it to them.
But going out and cutting our own Christmas tree was a highlight decorating the tree.
This is the first year that Junior is asking very pointed questions about the details and the logistics of Santa Claus.
So, you know, answering him and keeping the faith because we had, of course, Santa's emissary Petey Mouse is here.
So he's keeping watch over the kids, not as a snitch, but as a good faith friend of theirs until Santa comes.
And one of my favorites this time of year is just piling the kids into the car and going for what I call a Christmas light drive.
And it doesn't matter.
You don't have to go to the Ritzy house that has a million lights up, but just cruise the dark streets, suburbs, city, whatever, and just take a look at the lights and put on some Christmas music.
And that is a simple pleasure that we have always loved.
And just pulling up to the house with the Christmas lights on is something that brings me joy.
My parents did it.
We do it in the same way as they did.
And it's extremely important for your kids, obviously, but I don't need to preach to the choir.
Now, Smasher, did you put Christmas lights on your house this year?
I did not.
Oh, come on.
I live on a private road.
Like, nobody sees my house.
It's not about your neighbors, dummy.
It's about the mother kids.
All right.
He's a grid.
He's like, lay off, coach.
We didn't put a tree up either.
Really?
Yeah.
All right.
Well, mostly because the toddlers would just destroy.
Sure.
All right.
Well, next year.
It's not worth it.
I'll come over and help you put up Christmas lights.
It's the least I can do.
Okay.
We'll have to buy some because I don't own any.
All right.
Give me some.
Sam, how about you, big guy?
Anything that you're doing this time of year that's special or the audience might be able to adopt?
I don't know.
Yeah, well, I have, in years gone by, especially, we would not put up the tree until Christmas Eve.
And of course, traditionally, that's the first time that Christmas carols would be sung in the season.
So I have, though I have noticed, especially in the last 10 years or so, if you do not get a tree by at least a week before Christmas, you may not be getting a tree.
And I got in that situation once or twice.
So as a matter of fact, earlier today, I went and got the tree.
And it is in my garage in a bucket of warm water.
And in the next few days, I'll probably start at least getting it ready to be put up.
And we do put it up now at least, you know, a few days before Christmas Eve.
But, you know, you could see by what I just told you, I just got the tree today that we I try to wait.
And like I say, I tried to take advantage of the Advent season.
But we do look forward to putting up the tree and bringing out the Christmas music and decorating the house in different ways.
We don't put lights on the outside.
It's just not anything I've ever done.
I would have to go get the lights and all that.
I do like that.
I'm not against it.
And I do what you do, coach, which is take a ride and see the lit up houses and the different ways people do it.
And there's a couple of houses around here that the people really go full force with that.
And sometimes you get the people where they have the little FM transmitter and you go and they're playing Christmas music or whatever.
And so we enjoy that.
It's a good way to find out who the Jews in your neighborhood are too, the ones with the blue lights.
We talked about on the Fatheryland years ago that, yeah, if they put those blue and white lights out, then you know.
We put the tree by our window.
So you, you know, it's not, if you go by our house, you'd know we were celebrating Christmas.
I really love the fact that you, the fact that you put your tree up at Christmas Eve or close to Christmas Eve.
That's the way we always did it in my family, too.
And it really, I know there's a, there's a weird thing with, maybe it's like an American thing.
It's all about like the commercialism because you've got to be promoting for the crazy thing of, yeah, of you put the tree up like the day after Thanksgiving and you take it down the day after Christmas.
That's insane to me.
You hear people say the most horrible thing is, oh, I can't wait till we take it down.
I'm sick of Christmas.
Oh, I know.
We've left it up in my parents' house.
We've left it up so long.
It's ridiculous.
Like the Easter money is out there and it's like the Christmas tree is still up.
But we always, my mom has like a million old ornaments for the we're like family heirlooms.
I mean, they're like ancient ornaments.
And I usually put the lights on the tree, although she's going to put them on this year because we're going to be going to see my parents like a day before Christmas.
But the same exact thing.
When I was growing up, that the anticipation of when the tree and the lights go on and it all anticipations.
And then you have the tree up during the dark weeks and months, you know, of like late December, early January, or through January into February when you really need some nice, cozy Christmas lights to sort of cheer you up.
Right.
But I like that that you do that.
And Michael, you have to put up a tree for your kids.
Well, you know what you could do?
I am thunderstruck.
I am flabbergasted.
I didn't even put up a tree.
I'm with you on the lights on the outside.
I understand, but you got to put up a tree, man.
Well, Smasher, let me make a suggestion to you because there were one or two years where I got stumped on getting a tree and I had to make another accommodation.
What I found in a nursery was they had like a little miniature potted live tree that you could like put up on a counter where the kids can't get to it or up on your dining room table or something like that.
So you could like get a little tree and then you get these little itty-bitty ornaments and you could, you know, you could have a little tree.
It's Yule.
You're pagan, right?
Yule.
Yeah, yeah.
With the pagan thing, especially, you got to have the tree.
I mean, that's the one thing with Christmas, you know.
But yeah, Christmas season goes to February 2nd, of course.
It's a 40-day festival, you know, in English.
In Ireland, they cut all the trees down.
That's what it is.
Just like the windswept, like the moors, right?
Or is that Scotland?
Do you have the moors?
But I just think of the British Isles.
I think of a lot of just coast and like rolling plains or rolling hills, but no trees.
Just green hills.
Rolling rocks.
Rolling rocks.
Exactly.
Well, yeah, one little Christmas miracle we experienced on the homefront this year was just on a whim I put on 1982's The Snowman, which was a short film based on a movie or based on a book from 1978.
It first came out on British public TV and then it made its way across the Atlantic and was popular here.
And it's a little slow.
I didn't remember loving it as a kid.
It's got beautiful music.
But Potato, our toddler, sat there captivated for all 30 minutes watching, enjoying it.
Didn't move.
He sat on my lap the entire time.
It was actually a beautiful moment.
So that's an endorsement from me personally to try that just for the music alone.
It's spectacular.
But I seconded it.
Yeah.
Well, on that, Coach, I have to jump in.
I second that very strongly, and I just showed it to Victor for the first time.
It was about a week ago.
Actually, we were down visiting my parents.
And it was one that my mom, because she was big into colored pencil art.
Yeah.
And it's entirely done.
You know, I'm an animation person.
I love animation.
That's part of the reason I love Emily.
And it's all done with colored pencil the old-fashioned way.
It's a beautiful film.
But yeah, I just watched it.
It's called The Snowman.
Yeah.
Snowman.
Yeah.
1982.
And I think it's free on Amazon Primer.
There's no dialogue.
It's all just music and images.
Wow.
It's all just music and images.
And it's an incredibly magical, special little film.
But yeah, that's awesome, Coach.
The other thing that stood out from that, and I guess, yeah, we're going to segue here into a little bit of movie reviews and endorsements.
We'll call it either Paz House or Full Button.
I don't know.
Paw's house is a better term.
But in The Snowman, the kid is clearly an only child.
And it's clear that he is a little bit lonely.
He's very creative, right?
He fills all his time.
But the snowman becomes this pal that he doesn't have under the roof.
So there's even a little bit of sadness to it, too.
He takes this ride up to the North Pole and meets Father Christmas.
And then he gets home and the snowman disappears.
And it's a little bit of a bummer, too.
It's a reminder.
So have many kids.
No novelty.
Christmas has always has this sort of melancholy, bittersweet tone to it.
That's what makes it so special and connects with the heart so easily.
If you think of the holy family, they're going and there was no room at the inn, right?
And they were out in the at least the way we believe this time of year.
They have winter in that part of the world too.
And it was hard on them.
Absolutely.
And they were made to feel unwelcome.
I took the two older kids out today and we actually made a snowman.
We put one of those big old Soviet caps I had from my time studying abroad on top of them and put the right arm stick a little high into the right.
And we put a cape around him and Junior named him Johnny Snowman.
I was like, all right, Johnny works for me.
But anyway, Ahab had a couple films that he wanted to plug and do, I guess, brief reviews or highlights of.
I watched two of them.
So have out, buddy, and we'll jump on them a little bit.
Well, I don't know if I could do this brief, Coach.
I mean, you know me.
Have you ever talked to this man?
We got 20 minutes.
We have to run out a little longer.
Okay.
All right.
Because I didn't know we were going to talk about Jews on this podcast.
Or I thought it's Christmas.
For once, let's just keep it.
Let's just keep it, you know.
No, I have, because your podcast is family themed, I thought it would be nice to talk.
I'm, you know, anybody who knows me well knows like my second greatest passion after Hitler is film.
And I love movies.
And I'm a big film buff.
And yeah, I had five films that I will quickly, I'm not going to give you full reviews, but I'll recommend them as family films.
What do you say?
If only there were better movies with Hitler in them.
Yeah, well, I mean, you don't get much better than Triumph of the Will, you know.
That's, you know, greatest story never told.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
There we go.
No, well, it's funny you should say that because the first film on my list was actually released the same year that Triumph of the Will was made, which is even though it was released in 1935, it was about the 1934 party congress.
In America, there was a film called Babes in Toyland, which is also the alternate title for it is March of the Wooden Soldiers.
It was made in 1934.
It's sort of like The Wizard of Oz in that it's kind of one of these magical fantasy lands type stories.
There's a lot of great just costumes and characters.
It's a Laurel and Hardy film.
For anybody who doesn't know who Laurel and Hardy were, they were a pair of really, really great comedians from the actually from the silent era.
Nothing Jewish about these guys.
They're super goyish.
Stan Laurel was British and Oliver Hardy was American.
And they're both kind of like dumb guys and they get into these misadventures.
The funny thing is, what was said about, and Coach, you'll appreciate this.
What was said about the humor of Laurel and Hardy, I think Oliver Hardy said this.
He says, the reason they're funny is because everybody knows Laurel and Hardy.
He says, there's the smart guy who he says, there's the dumb guy who's so dumb that nothing bad ever seems to happen to him.
And then there's the smart guy who's even dumber than the dumb guy, but he doesn't know it.
And that's the fat one is Oliver Hardy.
And he's, it's funny because when I was thinking about that, I thought he's the midwit.
Like Ollie is the midwit, and Stanley is just the moron, you know.
But the midwit thinks he's smarter, but he's really just as dumb and he makes the same stupid mistakes.
But anyway, they were a great couple of comedians.
This particular story is based on a, I think, an operetta called Babes in Toyland.
And it's about this magical, mystical fairyland where there's all these characters from various fairy tales.
Like you have little Bo Peep and all these different characters all living together in the same town.
It's a musical.
There's some beautiful because it's based on an operetta.
There's some beautiful songs in the story.
But there's also a red pill side to the story that I actually didn't, even though I grew up on this movie, I didn't notice it until a few years ago.
And then I looked it up.
March of the Wooden Soldier is anti-Semitic.
And apparently a lot of people think it is.
Essentially, what happens is Toy Land in the story is like a village in the Swiss Alps.
It's this magical land of all this 19th century toys, the way they look very cozy and cute, very Swiss Alps sort of feeling.
And there's one guy in town who's the banker and who's very, he's not like, they don't make him a Jew in the film.
He's sort of like, I don't know, just like an old miser, but he's very Jew-like because his powers.
He's got curly hair.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's very Jew-like.
And he's got his eye on the young blonde beauty who happens to be Little Bo Peep.
And he's like really trying to use, leverage his money power because he owns the mortgage.
Like the little old lady that lived on the shoe, this guy owns the shoe.
He's got the mortgage on the shoe.
And he's trying to leverage that to make her marry him, even though she's in love with this other guy, Tom Powell and the Piper's son.
So anyway, long story short, and I don't think I'm spoiling the film.
He tries all kinds of dirty tricks, gets kicked out of the town by Stanley and Ollie, who are sort of like the town losers, but then they end up saving the day, which reminds me of our movement.
And then what happens is the wicked banker goes to this bogey land and he leads this army of subhumans.
And it's absolutely like a Bolshevik, like, it's well, or Black Lives Matter uprising of all these monsters, the bogeymen, who come and besiege the town.
And the whole thing is that the Stanley and Ollie, the little dumb guys that the story is about, they had screwed up, accidentally created this toy line of toy soldiers that are way too big.
They're like six feet tall.
And the big, I am kind of spoiling the film, but the big climax of the film is that through a miracle, the toy soldiers all come to life.
And so you have this great imagery where there's this Jew-like villain carrying off the blonde heroine with this army of like, you know, dark subhumans rampaging the town.
And then suddenly this like marching ranks.
They actually use camera angles that are similar to Lenny Riefenstahl of these marching troops coming into the town, these toy soldiers, to just clean out all the subhumans and the bankers and they save the day.
It's a very funny film.
It's an amazing story, but it's one that little kids just love the humor of it.
And you can find it in colorized too.
I prefer the black and white, but we watched it in black and white.
The kids sat still and watched it the entire time.
I remember when I was a kid seeing black and white films and like instantly being turned off, right?
Like, sorry, I'm a color kid, not colored kid, but yeah, our kids have a great tolerance for watching these older films and being entertained.
They got tons of belly laughs from the physical humor.
If you're red-pilled, it jumps off.
It's like watching They Lived, right?
They're like, they have this hat for me.
They knew what they were doing.
I finally watched They Lived a few weeks ago.
I hadn't seen that.
Yeah.
I was satisfied.
Yeah, yeah.
The ending is like a video game.
It gets so ridiculous, but it's still kind of cool.
Yeah.
But no, it's, and where did you find that coach?
Because I have it on an old DVD.
Did you find it on Neptune?
It was a free download on Amazon Prime.
I don't know if it still is, but two weeks ago, it was there.
So I have it forever now.
It's going to be a staple in our house around Christmas time.
It's just all the fairy tale characters, the physical comedy of them dunking the fats.
They dunk whatever his name was as punishment for screwing up one thing or the other.
And then he's so fat that it breaks and all the guards fall in and he's like bubbling.
I forgot not to laugh at the kids.
But yeah, it was wonderful.
That was the first one you recommended, Warren, and it was a total hit.
I'm glad you enjoyed it.
Well, you know, that one we usually, that's like people for some reason associate it kind of with Christmas.
We usually watch that one on Thanksgiving, but it is thought of as like a holiday film.
The next one I'm going to recommend is one that we always watch on Thanksgiving, but is sort of in the Christmassy thing in that it's a Charles Dickens story.
And this one is even more red-pilled than the last one.
It's the 1948 David Lean version of Oliver Twist.
This film, David Lean, of course, is a very, very famous British director.
Made, among others, uh, dr Chufago, Lawrence Of Arabia uh, I think he did the Bridge On The River, Kawaii.
He did a ton of and a lot of smaller films that are really beautiful, like uh, Brief Encounter and a number of others.
Passage in India.
David Lean is considered by like film people to be one of the greatest directors of all time and he frequently casts Alec Guinness, who most people know him from.
He was the original Ob-wan Kenobi yeah, and in this this is, uh.
The story of Oliver Twist is about a little orphan boy who comes from like kind of a nice family but his uh, he grows up in a horrible uh orphanage, a workhouse yeah Fagan, and then, and then yeah, and then he joins.
He escapes.
Well he, through a series of circumstances, he ends up alone in London as this little boy and gets roped into this gang of thieves that are run by this character, this villain named Fagan, who subsequent versions of Oliver Twist I mean this film, this story, has been remade many, many times.
Disney did its own takeoff on it and a lot of times they'll make Fagan into a sort of like a lovable character, but he's pure evil and he's a Jew.
I mean, he's very obviously a Jew and he's the kind of Jew that was that Charles Dickens knew from.
Back then.
That was a real, like low-class Jew who is sort of like a pimp and also like runs, this gang of.
I mean they don't say that in this film but it's clear like he's.
He's a receiver of stolen goods, he's a fence, he's a pimp, he's a, and he gets these little kids to pickpocket for him and because he can control them easily he, he acts like he's their friend and he manipulates them.
And the story is about much more than Fagin.
It's really about this remarkable little boy.
Um, it's an amazing film.
I think it's David Lean's best film.
I think it's one of the best movies ever made because it was made in 1948.
It has this great film noir sort of style.
It's a black and white film that's beautifully photographed, a lot of dark shadows and strange camera angles.
It's very haunting um, but your listeners, coach will, should watch it.
Just for Alec Guines doing this Jew Fagan.
I mean he does a better Jew character.
He does just about the worst Jew villain in in movie history because it's.
There's a scene again.
I'm not I don't want to spoil it, but you really see how he operates the as the Jew because he charms and then threatens these little kids that he can control.
And in one critical scene again i'm kind of spoiling it, but i'm not too much there's a moment in the film where there's this violent character uh, who is a uh like a professional bank robber and he's also a murderer named Sykes and he's a.
He's a terrifying character in the, in the in the book and in the story in the film.
Uh, in the movie he's played by Robert Newton who did the famous uh Long John Silver, if anybody knows the the Disney Treasure Islands really great character actor, and Sykes has An extremely violent temper.
And he has this wife, Nancy, who's really nice.
And Nancy likes little Oliver Twist, and she tries to help him get out of this situation when she realizes his backstory.
Anyway, Fagan finds out about that.
And so he wants to have Nancy killed.
But the way he does it is very clever because he has one of his little thieves, the Arful Dodger.
This kid follows Nancy and finds her speaking with this old guy about getting Oliver out.
And then what he does is when Sykes, the murderer, comes back, Fagan like primes him for like to deliberately work him up into a rage, telling him that, you know, your wife went and she stole off into the night and gave up all her pals.
You know, she, in other words, she told on all our operations.
He makes the other kid like spin it in a way, just master manipulator to set this guy off so that he will go and murder his own wife in like a rage.
And it's just such a classic Jew move because he doesn't get his own hands dirty.
You know, it's like a good example is like what the Jew neocons did to this country with 9-11, or really what they did in provoking what Roosevelt's Braintrust did in provoking Pearl Harbor.
It's the classic thing of to get it, that's what Fagan does.
He gets somebody in a murderous rage to go to take out his enemy, not their enemy, but his enemy.
This is what the Jew does.
He says, let's you and him fight, right?
Yes, two other people to fight.
Exactly.
And there's a lot more to the movie than that.
It's a beautiful, heartwarming, amazing story.
But that element is worth.
Go ahead.
Sorry.
Not to derail what you're saying, which is great.
But then now I wasn't even aware that there was an earlier version.
I was aware of the musical version.
I'm trying to remember the British composer's name.
Maybe you know it if you do say it that wrote the score to that Oliver is the name of that version.
Oliver, yeah, and I'm trying to think if you said his name, I'd say, oh, yeah, I want to forget his name.
But some of those songs, I know this is going to destroy my credibility with music, with all the hard music I listen to.
But if you listen to some of those songs and you tell me if you could listen to that without getting a tear in your eye or a lump in your throat, one of my sons, as a homeschooler, we participated in different homeschooling events with other homeschoolers.
And there was a talent contest, and one of my sons sang the song, Where is Love?
You know this song?
If you've seen the I'm not sure.
I've never seen the musical.
Oh, yeah.
Where is Love?
The child Oliver sings it.
It's like I say, you listen to that song and tell me if you're not moved by that.
How is Fagan portrayed in the musical?
I'm curious.
Yeah, no, it's the same way.
No, it's exactly what you were saying.
I was like, yeah, that's it.
Yeah, he's pure evil.
I mean, he's very absolutely.
And the funny thing is, if you guys can look up Alec Guinness Fagan, just Google that to see the makeup job that they gave him.
But it actually puts anything the Nazis did to shame.
They made him into the most Jewish character you will ever see.
And it's kind of shocking, actually, how much he got in.
In fact, the film was banned for a while after the war.
I mean, it was made in the post-war period, but I forget where I think I forget, but there was a huge outcry that it was an anti-Semitic film.
But anyway.
Yeah, and Babes in Toyland was produced by Metro or was put out by Metro Goldwyn Meyer, which is the Jewish fan.
So yeah, I was like, huh, well, is it possible that they snuck one by him or back then?
Like it was just like cost of doing this one.
I think has an all-Aryan director production, you know, all the whole people that made it.
It's a very just, it's a very goyish film.
You know, the values of it, the humor, the kind of sort of, I don't know, the imagery of it.
Both of them are real goyish films, even though, yeah, Babes in Toyland was.
I just noticed it at the end.
I was like, oh, okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, that's interesting.
Yep.
Yeah.
The picture of Alec Guinness.
Yeah.
He's got a gigantic nasal, what do they call that?
A probosis or the, by the way, thank you, Red Ice, for ruining Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer for me when they, when they did that breakdown on the different songs and like how that song is like, I mean, literally, it's like all the dumb reindeer that pick on Rudolph are blind and they don't see, but then Rudolph comes along with his nose and leads them all, you know, through the obvious.
That's like not a part of any Christmas tradition.
It was written by Jews.
It was just like a completely Jewish song, which I used to enjoy.
The stop.
I told you, I like animation.
I always like the stop motion.
Oh, yes.
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer.
I thought that the dentist character was the most Jewish.
100%.
He's got the problem glasses.
He's faggy.
He's not doing his work.
I just want to go do something else.
And they make the boss act.
Being a dentist.
But see, that's like, you know, I mean, what is it, Broke?
A lot of Jews are dentists.
You know, Broke would be, oh, isn't Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer a wonderful all-Aryan Christmas story?
And Woke would be, yeah, the little dentist character is a and then bespoke would be, but bespoke would be Rudolph himself is.
Sorry for the language there.
That's all right.
We'll bleep.
I forgot.
I forgot.
But anyway, family.
On to the next one.
The third one is a made-for-TV film.
And it looks like a made-for-TV movie, so I apologize for recommending it.
But actually, two of these are made-for-TV films.
So sometimes, you know, there's a lot of Hallmark crap that's put out there at Christmas time.
It's tons of holiday movies that are supposed to be heartwarming, and they all suck.
This one is really, really good.
It's called Mercy Mission: The Rescue of Flight 771.
And it was made in 1993.
It stars Scott Bakula in the lead, who a lot of people know him from Quantum Leap.
Also, well, Sam would know him from Quantum Leap.
Other people would know him from Star Trek Enterprise.
He was, you know, which was not a very good Star Trek, but he was the captain on that short-lived series.
But Scott Bakul's been in a million things.
It's another very goyish film.
That's not why I'm recommending it.
It's just a tremendous movie.
It basically tells the story, I mean, really quick, of a guy who is a pilot, a professional pilot.
He does like crop dusting and little odd jobs.
He's got a young wife.
They're expecting their first child.
It's right at Christmas.
It's a true story.
It's happened in the late 1970s, like 78, 79.
He got a job to, with a buddy of his, take a couple of crop dusting planes to Australia.
And the way they did it was four stops.
So they go to Hawaii, I think New Zealand.
They make these jumps across the South Pacific to get, and it's like an all-day flight in crop dusting planes, which are really not made for that kind of flying over the South Pacific, which is the largest expanse of ocean in the world.
And his buddy had a problem with his plane halfway through the trip.
So he went on alone because it was a lot of money and he needed it for his family.
And he got lost because of his equipment went bad.
And what happens is, in the story, again, I'm not giving away too much, but the only plane that's in the area that can help him, that can guide him, is a commercial jet that's flown by an older pilot who is really like in his Twilight years.
I forget the name of the actor who plays him, but he's phenomenal.
And they establish radio contact, and it's a pretty harrowing story because it's very, very tense situation.
I mean, I can't imagine anything more scary than being in a little single one-man plane in December in the middle of the South Pacific with nothing but ocean and sky.
And you've been flying for like 16 hours and you're way off course and you're running out of fuel and your equipment is malfunctioning and you're all alone.
Anyway, it happened right at Christmas, so it's a Christmas story.
It's one that it's just a really good film.
Aviation people like it because a lot of times in movies, aviation is treated kind of silly, like they don't get things right in this movie, like the different elements of flying.
I don't fly myself, but I know guys who do.
They've said that this film is pretty accurate with it.
The acting is just phenomenal.
It's a really good character study of this.
It's basically like a younger man and an older man talking.
And that's why I wanted to recommend it for your show, coach, is because it's very, there's a very strong message of like fatherhood because the older pilot becomes sort of like this father figure to the younger pilot who his father took off when he was a little kid.
So he didn't have any relationship with his father.
Yeah, I just wanted to.
You can watch it for free on YouTube.
Mercy Mission, the rescue of Flight 771.
The other thing that I thought I know a few people on this call would recognize on this podcast is that there's this dynamic where the husband and the wife love each other, but the wife is frustrated because she wants him to just settle down and be just a father and just make money and be a father.
And she loves him, though, for his daredevilry.
And he's a real Chad, this guy, as a pilot.
And that's why she fell in love with him.
But at the same time, they're going to have a baby.
And so there's a tension there because she wants him to sort of settle down and calm down.
And he's, you know, he wants to do his daredevilry.
And not just, but he justifies it by, that's what I have to do for our family, which is a lot of guys in our movement that have really great wives.
There's always a sort of dynamic there where, I mean.
And it cuts the other way, too.
You've got a lot of guys listening who want to be out there and doing more, but they're not.
And I'm not even giving them any guff, you know, because it'll cause trouble at home or raise risks.
Yeah, no, that's right.
That's right.
It's something that, though, I feel like it's a dynamic tension that is not supposed to be resolved.
I think that it's natural and healthy.
In other words, I think here's the way I feel about it.
I feel that for a guy, for a woman to be all like the girl holding the gun on the cover of the Turner Diaries, you know what I mean?
For a woman to be all like, you know, viva la revolution, you know, who cares about our baby?
You know, like, let's go storm the system.
I mean, we all kind of, I think, you know, we like the idea of a girl who is, or at least I know the guys on this call probably, you like the idea of a girl who is dedicated, who believes in the same things you believe in, who is willing to take risks, who has a lot of courage and a lot of guts.
For her to be a woman and to be the characteristics of a woman that make a woman great are in part her compassion and her ability to be a good mother, you know, and a good wife.
I mean, what a good wife is, in part.
I mean, this is not all there is to it, but a good wife is the one who worries about you when you go off to war and who, when you come back from war, she dresses your wounds.
You know, there's a nurturing quality there.
That for a woman to be so much like the she-wolf, you know, the revolutionary, it's just something very unnatural about that.
So you don't want a girl who's not going to sort of pull at you and be like, hey, you know, maybe you need to think about the family a little bit more.
Maybe you shouldn't be so much, you know, trying to commit suicide for this cause you believe in.
You know, by the same token, the guy also, for a guy to be just completely domesticated and just completely about the domestic life, you know, it's not healthy either.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, it reminds me of a quote by G.K. Chesterton who said he was reading in the newspaper that in America, they were giving the no-fault divorce and they're granting divorces on the basis that the parties were incompatible.
He says, well, then everybody's going to get divorced, right?
Because that's right.
That's the whole purpose of marriage is that men and women are incompatible in a certain sense.
That's right.
That's absolutely right.
And that's, you know, it's funny you say this, Sam, because if you think about it, I had this realization.
I think it was a People's Square or something.
I was talking to a stryker one time, and this realization that the system is not only making women into men, but it's making men into women, but it's doing it very badly.
So, in other words, men will never be as good of women and as good at the things that women are good at as women are.
I mean, just get your best training out there with the finest surgeon in the world.
He's not going to be as good at being a woman, at being a mother and a wife, and all the things that women should be, being as beautiful in every way, inside and outside, as a way a woman can be.
And the same thing real quick: no woman respects a domesticated guy.
If she asks him to be more domesticated, she's likely shit testing him and hopes he balks at it.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think that's a, I think there's a point, you know, where you have to sort of, there is some give and take.
You know, being married, you do have to, you sometimes do have to give and take.
But yeah, there needs to be that dynamic tension of the yin and yang.
And that, yeah, that's the other thing: is that men, not only men can't be more, I mean, men will never be as good at the things that women are good at.
Women will never be as good at the things that men are good at.
And I've been thinking about that a lot lately.
I've been thinking about this a lot lately in terms of I could beat Ronda Rousey's ass.
I've been getting into just lately, you know, Coach, I love history, and I've been reading a lot about the Napoleonic wars and really studying that period to where I'm, you know, it's kind of a confusing mess if you're not familiar with it.
So it's kind of been a challenge for me to untangle all the different factions and what was going on.
But one thing that's really striking is just that men back then were so like ready to go to war.
And I've thought about that a lot.
And I thought, you know, it's fine.
I mean, war is horrible.
No doubt.
It's awful.
But yeah, the whole everything that we have, every piece of land that we live on, every bit of freedom that we have, I mean, not to sound like a boomer, but I mean, everything we have comes from guys who were willing to wage war or did wage war.
And if men lose the not only the ability to wage war, but on some level, the desire to wage war in terms of when it's necessary, just to stake it all.
If you lose that warlike thing as a man completely, you'll just be overtaken by other peoples.
I mean, there's nothing glorious about that.
And that's the thing.
That's why you can't have the one or the other win completely.
You can't have a society that's just dominated by domesticated, you know, the urge to nurture and just be peaceful and be cozy and comfortable.
But you can't also, you know, and we're in no danger of this right now, but you can't also have a society that just runs on risk and danger and war and plunder.
But the dynamic pull is very important.
So anyway, this film, though, Mercy Mission.
Yeah.
Real quick, we're at an hour and I want to chew on that more in the second half too, because in keeping with the monologue that just kind of came to me, I mean, so many people listening appreciate us putting out a podcast, which is wholesome, has concrete advice.
And we all love doing it.
We're doing good work.
The data goes up, the big line goes up.
But at the same time, I feel woefully unsatisfied with the, not just personally, but just generally, right?
Like the world is in a really terrible place.
The white race is in a really terrible place.
And I feel inadequate in what I personally am doing, what we as a movement, as a cause are doing.
And networking is great, but it's like that classic thing, like number one, get involved, meet up with local people.
Number two, question mark.
Number three, total victory.
And I want to talk more about that in the second half too, what we actually mean by concrete involvement rather than sick tweets.
And part of this, too, is being back on Twitter and seeing the same damn loop-de-loop of memes and outrage and sick tweets and stuff like that, which has its place, but it's total time suck and it's utterly inadequate to what we are facing.
What was, if you don't mind, we'll wrap it there for the first half.
What was the fourth film?
We'll do a quick plug and go to the break and then get down to bigger business in the second half.
I had two more films, Coach, so we can go to our break and I'll make it short.
I'll make it short, but I can't.
I saved the best two for last.
So the most Christmasy stuff.
You know what, though?
If you want, we can talk about the thing you want to talk about that's probably more important.
And then we can go back to the films if we want to.
Of course, we can have to do that.
We'll circle back.
I got my control panel of notes here right in front of me.
My hands are warm.
This is great.
I'm loving life.
All right.
Let's pause here.
And this week we have a very special musical performance for you.
Sam, take it away.
Oh, yeah.
This is going back to the 90s, I think 96 or 97.
And in those years when my oldest children were young, we would make a Christmas song every year and we would put it on a cassette, you know, back in the, that's when cassettes were still going on and even CD burners were kind of just making their debuts, you know, so we would, we had a four-track recorder.
Last year, I hope somebody will remember that I played a Christmas song for you that was a song that I wrote, but the whole family performed in it and sang in it and played instruments on it.
And this year, likewise, is another song, though it is a cover, the very classic song, Oh Holy Night for Christmas.
And it is the oldest daughter.
She is singing the lead, but the whole family has a part in there.
I play a few different instruments.
So there's a guitar playing in there.
There's some brass instruments in there you'll hear.
And it's a song that we played.
So it's a holy night.
How old was she when you recorded it?
Well, let's see.
She had to be maybe nine or ten.
Not ten.
She had to be nine or eight, eight or nine.
It's beautiful.
All right.
Enjoy that.
Thank you, Warren.
We will be right back, ladies and gentlemen, with lots more in the second half.
Don't go anywhere.
The stars are brightly shining.
It is the night of a deep disburse.
Long live the world and send another pin till he appeared.
The soul felt its world a thrill of hope.
The weary world rejoices for yonder breaks on a one glorious morning.
Fall on your knees, the angels.
Oh night, divine when Christ was born.
Oh night, oh night, divines.
Oh, holy night, the stars are brightly shining.
It is the night of the deceased bird.
Long live the world and sin and till he appears and the song felt its birth.
A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices.
For yonder breaks on the one glorious morning.
Oh night, oh night divorce, And
welcome back to Full House, episode 72, special guest, Warren.
And we hope that you love that little, I maybe even call it a tearjerker tune from Sam and his fam.
I have done some calisthenics during the break to get the blood flowing in my lower extremities again.
Did a couple air squats and jumping jacks, no joke.
But it's nice being out here.
I don't care how cold it is.
I'm going to keep doing this.
And on the movie issue, I do hope, dear listener, that you, we all know that Hollywood is Jewish and screen time is bad for the kids, but there is something wholesome, especially when you pick a good one, putting your cell phones away, making a big bowl of popcorn, and just sitting there on the couch with the wife, with the kids, or with your girlfriend even, and just enjoying some of these older movies and having the patience to.
I know I watched a couple of the ones that Warren endorsed, and I was tempted once or twice to check my phone and kind of had to swat that away because they're not compelling from real to real, the entire thing.
But it's a wonderful experience.
And I hope you sneak in a few before Christmas or as Sam calls it, you know, all the way out to February is how long the Christmas season lasts.
And that's actually a wonderful thing to get you through these winter months.
Yeah.
And, you know, what's fun is discussing the movie.
Like you say, you're sharing there with your family.
That's what we do.
We'll talk about it and stuff.
Yeah, it brings people together, like you say.
Sam, you and I are very, we have a lot in common.
We really do.
A lot of your, just your, your, your whole way of living your life is very, I've never been to your house.
You've never been to mine, but I feel like we have a.
And Warren, I wanted to mention with my somewhat lengthy monologue, I could feel the good Dr. Pierce sort of coursing through my veins as I wrote that because I've been reading a lot of him lately and appreciating him and did the narration of his, well, I actually had to do another narration of his speech, Our Cause, coming soon.
But there's nobody who's written, at least that I've read, that just comes across with a perfect blend of edge and commitment and passion and emotion.
And he brings, he gave me more religious feelings than I got from years in religious education.
So to Dr. Pierce, and I know you and your family, your father knew William Pierce.
My parents were actually married by William Pierce, which I can disclose this now.
And in fact, they just celebrated.
I know his signature is on the marriage certificate, and they just celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary, actually, on the 8th of this month.
So that's quite a milestone.
So like I said, if it wasn't that milestone, I wouldn't have called it out.
I think my mom's maybe a little embarrassed by the fact, but yes, they were in fact married by Dr. Pierce.
And it was a marriage that has held strong.
In fact, I met another guy recently who also has met his wife during the same time period through the Alliance.
And they've been married almost as long as my parents.
So there was good, I mean, good value.
That speaks at least to the good values.
The Alliance back then really attracted very quality people.
That was one of Pierce's things was, you know, quality above quantity.
Well, that's kind of the thing about, you know, white nationalists is that we try to kind of take things a little bit more seriously than stupid normies.
Like just because you're allowed to get divorced doesn't mean that you're going to get divorced for no reason.
We understand that things are a struggle and a fight.
And, you know, you don't throw out a house because a light bulb burned out.
Which is a not, you know, I mean, Pierce himself didn't really follow that, unfortunately.
So it's not a cure-all.
It's not a case, you know, it's not, there's no one ideology, I think, that solves all life's personal and political problems.
But I will say, yeah, that's something the enemy always gets us wrong.
They think that white nationalists are somehow people that like want to go out and like bully minorities or something.
I mean, as a whole, it's funny.
Lothrop Stoddard, I'll jump into the national socialism a little ahead of schedule here, Coach.
Lothrop Stoddard in his memoir of Into the Darkness, where he went and he was referring to the blackouts during the war.
But he lived in the Third Reich during a certain period there, like late 1939, early 1940.
And he got to know all aspects of Nazi society.
He wrote a very objective memoir from an American perspective.
He's critical of them in some ways, but he's very honest in his whole appraisal of their system.
And it's a great book.
And one thing he said about the leaders of the party, he said, having gotten to know them, there's the question of, are these guys just cynics using this ideology to justify power or something like that?
And what he said was that having gotten to know them, I can say they are, for the most part, fanatical zealots, meaning they're true believers.
They're guys who really meant what they say and say what they mean.
And that's something about white nationalists.
They generally, they're people who you may disagree with their beliefs, but they're here because they believe in something greater than themselves, for real.
They're not just using that because they have some kind of a problem.
And the enemy, I think, if they were more honest about that, they might be better able to fight us more realistically.
But at the same time, I think they do.
Because when they talk about deplatforming, for instance, that's a tacit admission that you're dealing with true believers, that you're dealing with guys who really are consistent, have a message that's very strong.
Yeah, we cannot be refuted.
When our message gets out there, people join us.
So that's their only recourse is to stop us by any way that they can.
Yes, exactly.
So, you know, it's an interesting thing.
But yeah, I know a lot of great marriages through this movement.
I mean, just anecdotally, I know so many guys who have great, great marriages and much better than a lot of my so-called Normie friends, who a lot of those guys are still searching for the right woman or they've had unsuccessful or women friends I know that have had unsuccessful marriages or relationships.
So yeah, there's something about these ideals.
We're idealistic and the marriage, just like our own lives, our own careers, our own interests, our own hobbies, our own talents, don't serve themselves.
They serve a higher purpose, which is to serve our community, our racial community.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's, I mean, that's something that you can say it, but then when people, you know, I thought about this too, Sam.
I thought about how people I know that are, I mean, I don't want to say nasty things about people, but people I know who are my own generation, some people I went to college with that are not, that have a certain viewpoint, like a liberal ideology.
Now I'm at the age where, you know, I'm my late 30s, pushing 40, and so are my cohort generationally.
And I see how a lot of the people that have very liberal ideologies, they just, you know, that has informed their choice of spouse and how they've decided to have children or when they've,
if they've had decided not to have kids at all, or if they're putting it way off, way late in their career, they put so many other things And I look at people that I know in this thing who their ideology has guided them along a certain path.
And it's certainly not the only factor, but it has led to certain choices that have led to these wonderful little children.
And I mean, I have so many friends right now who have wonderful families with lots of beautiful little children who are really smart, bright, sensitive little kids.
So it really shows you that the ideas you put in your head and what you have in your heart have real material, real-world consequences in terms of the manner in which you live and then your progeny.
And then on into your own old age, you know, you mentioned the Napoleonic Wars there, Warren.
And one of my favorite quotes, I've said it on the show before, is from him, and it's there is no immortality, but the memory that is left in the minds of man.
Now, that's a little bit heretical.
Our religious friends will probably take issue with that, but I've used that with Junior to explain the idea that most people are not remembered by history, but they are remembered by their family.
So having a big family and being a good father and giving your kids good memories that they will want to tell their kids provides that sense of a continuity down through the ages.
And if all we do on this show is encourage more guys to get married and have bigger families than maybe polite society would encourage them to do so, we'll chalk that up as a win, even if I'm still grinding my teeth that that is entirely unsatisfactory.
And before we get into that meet, I don't want to skip over arguably our most important part of the show, which is our congratulations to all of our, we've got a bumper crop this time of year.
I don't know.
December minus nine months, whatever was going on there, maybe the start of, seriously, the start of the lockdowns.
The start of the lockdowns.
Exactly.
Wow.
Our COVID babies.
Yeah, baby.
All right.
Our pal, Billy Blankstair, let us know that he now has four beautiful white children.
Congratulations, BBS and wife.
Our pal, I'll just say Grogory Grugwater found out recently that his second is going to be a boy.
Congratulations, Grug and wife.
He's already got a painfully, painfully cute baby girl.
And now she's going to have a little roughhousing little brother to go along with that.
Iron Chef welcomed a beautiful baby girl.
I don't know if that's his, I think that's his second, but it's not his first, but Iron Chef.
Congratulations.
We've got so many people in this thing that the sock names are starting to pile up.
So to the other chef, if you're listening, come on, get cracking, buddy.
Iron Chef's got the clout now with the big brood.
Our pal GM welcomed a girl this past week, and he now has officially Irish twins.
Way to go, pal.
Oh, wifey.
Really?
Yeah.
I don't think they wanted one just that quickly, but it happened.
Also, our pal JW, he's from somewhere in the Rocky Mountains, had a boy this past week.
And our good friends, Dom and Ursula, are, I don't, she may have popped already.
I don't know.
They were still waiting as we went to take, but they're expecting their third.
That didn't happen yet.
Okay.
And we and we have another lady friend, Smasher, who's expecting her second or third any moment now, too.
I won't even, I don't know what sock name to call her, but she knows who she is.
There's like six babies waiting to be born that are all at this point, yeah.
All from the same group, too, I think.
You know, coach, this makes me think about, I read a thing about the Amish that the Amish have the highest birth rate of any group in the country.
And they have like on average, seven kids per family.
And so it's really funny because when I looked into this, I thought that the Amish were, I had seen the, you know, again, I'm film buff.
I'd seen the Peter Weir movie, Witness, which is a great favorite of mine.
And Harrison Ford, probably his best film.
And it's all about the Amish community.
And it's really funny because I thought, man, that was made in 1985.
And I wonder how the Amish are doing today.
Probably in the era of all this craziness, the Amish are really probably like a shrinking, dying thing.
And I look it up and no, their population is exploding.
It's going way up.
And it really cracked me up because it made me think about what we were just saying about how your beliefs lead to specific things.
And people have talked about this many times, but as far as this movement, how liberals are really like breeding themselves out of existence.
Oh, yeah.
It's really becoming more conservative.
That's been studied before.
Yeah.
And it's really, you know, I would gloat and cackle over it if it wasn't so tragic.
I mean, because these are people who are good people who I think would love so many.
I mean, I don't know anybody having a child.
I don't know anybody that wouldn't, like my son, he's in this thing where he points at me.
He's like, dad, dad, dad, dad.
And then he points at my wife and he's like, dad, dad.
So he doesn't have anything.
But when he's, when I laugh, though, because when he's upset, he goes, mama, mama.
So I'm like, dad, dad means like good and positive.
Mama means trouble.
But, you know, to have this smiling little cherub, this little angel, like, like, you know, laughing, giggling.
Yeah.
It's just like, I mean, is there a single person who wouldn't be happy?
I mean, maybe they say in theory, I don't want kids in my career or blah, But once you have one, is there anybody that looking at him a year into his life or her life, you would say, boy, what a mistake.
I really wish this, I could just delete this child from my life.
Yeah.
Well, you talk to some woman or a man where they've had, you know, like you say, the seven children, the average for the Amish or whatever.
No, none of those parents say, I wish I had had five.
You send those two back.
No one has that.
Yeah, yeah.
And you know what?
This is a if you want to talk about something else before we finish the movies, but this is a segue to my final film because I want to bookmark this, what we're talking about.
I'm going to piggyback off your Amish comment too.
So yeah, knock them out and then we'll get down to it.
Okay.
The fourth film.
So the third one was the rescue of.
So you can post these on your thing, right?
All right, right, Coach.
You can do it.
Okay.
That one's on YouTube.
The fourth one is also a made-for-TV film.
It's on YouTube.
And it's another real gem.
It's a totally underrated little gem.
This one's about 40 minutes long.
It's a short film.
It's not even an hour.
And it's called A Child's Christmas in Wales.
And it's based off the Welsh poet.
I'm a little, I'm partially Welsh.
The only Celtic blood that I have in me that Smasher and I share, that little itty-bitty connection of Celtic is the Welsh on my mother's side.
I'm about an eighth Welsh.
You don't have Celtic in you from Smasher.
Right, exactly.
I probably do.
Too many nights drinking together or something.
Yeah, sharing beers.
Get on a beer bottle.
It's the unpublished parts of the videos.
Right, right, right.
Exactly.
But this is a film.
It was made in, I think, 1984.
I'll find a year in a minute.
It has Denim Elliott in it, who 1987, A Child's Christmas in Wales.
It's on YouTube in full.
Denham Elliott is the actor who plays the sort of absent-minded professor guy in the Indiana Jones films.
I hate to mention Spielberg, but anyway.
No, it's based on a poem by the Welsh poet Dylan Thomas that Wikipedia says it's a bit of prose written by him in 1952.
It's an anecdotal reminiscence of Christmas from the viewpoint of a young boy portraying a nostalgic and simpler time.
It is one of Dylan Thomas's most popular works.
What they did was, for the film, they took this prose poem and they created a framing story around it where it's basically a grandfather and his grandchild.
And it's this grandchild who's like my generation.
He's in the 1980s and he's in Wales and he's really looking forward to Christmas.
And it's the night before Christmas and his grandfather starts telling him these stories of when he was a kid in the same house.
And Coach, this movie is to me like it's a light-hearted film.
There's a lot of humor in it, but it is like Christmas distilled.
Like I know a lot of people in particularly in this country have a thing about like a Christmas story.
A Christmas story is way too like commercial for me.
The BB Gun and all the rest of it.
And I know people have very fond memories of that movie, but so I'm sorry to, you know, I know it's full house and tourists, but I know what you mean, of course.
I know people feel about their Christmas films too.
You know, you grow up on it.
But this movie is like the essence of Christmas distilled into a story.
It is one of the coziest, sweet, it's like if I could show a person from another part of the world, like a Muslim or, you know, somebody from China or something who's intelligent and able to, you know, pick up on it, what Christmas is to us, I would show them this film.
All right.
It just captures it.
It's also a wonderful, like multi-generational thing.
The last scene in the film, without, again, giving, I'm kind of spoiling all these, but I'll just give a little hook so you guys will search this out and watch it.
The final scene of the film, the grandfather is recounting all his relatives in the house, how they would sing these Christmas carols.
And he's hearing them.
You know, it shows him as a little boy going up to bed and all his relatives, his aunts and his uncles, and his mother and father, they're all in the house singing.
And it goes back to the 1980s, and he's been telling the little boy this, and he's falling asleep in his bed, and he's asleep now.
And he still hears the music because it's this house he grew up in.
You know, it's his family home.
And he's an old man now, but it's like he's still remembering.
He's thinking back on all this.
So it's a film that's about that.
It's about like your family from long ago, an old man looking back when he was a kid.
It's just a tremendous short little film, a real gem, and it's one that I highly recommend.
It's very underrated.
Nobody knows about it.
So that's a child's Christmas in Wales.
The last one, the big one, as the one I saved for last, is, of course, a Christmas carol.
And it's a particular version of it.
It's the 1951 version, which was released as Scrooge in the UK.
It has Alastair Sim in the title character.
It is by far the best of the film versions of this story.
He's so good in it.
Yeah, you know what I'm talking about.
In a lot of them, Scrooge is sort of like an old, grumpy old man.
In this, he's very, he's got like a sarcastic sense of humor.
He's a sort of, he's got a lot of vigor for him for how old he is.
You see his bitterness at life, but there's a humor that comes through.
He's very funny and very likable in the story, even though he's like a real jerk in the beginning.
It is from the same period of film noir post-war where it's very dark.
It's actually like a movie about death.
It's very creepy in a lot of scenes.
The ghost scenes are very creepy.
Jacob Marley is very creepy.
And the music is very dark and intense.
At times, it feels like a horror movie.
It's very brooding on death, on a man like life and death.
And it's a man looking back on his life.
I mean, everybody knows the story of a Christmas carol, but this one really just doesn't.
He looks back on his life.
And it's relevant for the listeners to your show, Coach, because it's really something we were just talking about.
It's a man who has lived really for himself, who's been a capitalist.
I mean, it's kind of, it's sort of like the opposite of Ayn Rand's philosophy, you know, or Elisa Rosenbaum.
I should call her by her real name.
Since I'm going by my real name tonight, we can call her her real name.
It's the opposite of that in terms of it's a story about a man who, but he's not a man who is genuinely greedy.
It's a man who, and I think there are a lot of people today in our society who feel this way, who started out good, who was a sensitive person and a lonely person, and had, you know, his sister that he loved very much.
He had his fiancée that he loved very much.
But the world was very hard that he was living in.
It was filled with self-centered scum people.
And he had it tough.
And so he hardened himself to survive in the world and slowly shut out.
Yeah, he slowly shut out these things.
And he, this is very true of a lot of white people today: that he made the pursuit of wealth a goal, not because he really wanted it, because it was sort of forced on him by society.
And it was like the one thing he could do is really be like all about that.
And now he's an old man.
He's at the end of his life, or almost at the end of his life.
And he has nothing to show for it.
He has no, he doesn't even have any real friends, which that's true of a lot of people today, even in their freaking 30s, that they don't even have any real friends left because they've lost touch with the people they went to college with.
And they have their co-workers that they don't really, you know, would throw them under the bus in a minute if they were doxed or something like that.
They don't really have any real friends.
And big, empty old mansion of relationships.
Yeah.
Even because Scrooge has his little buddies at the banking hall, right?
And then when he goes back and looks and he's dead, he's not on the bench.
And they're just like carrying on, like, oh, yeah.
Yeah, they're talking about how, well, should we go to his funeral?
And the guy's like, well, if there's a meal provided, you know, but I must be fed or else I stay at home, the guy says, you know, and it's like, it's horrible.
And, you know, he sees because this is true also.
Something I often talk about, Coach, is, you know, what first brought me to this thing is when a lot of people in our movement would talk about Women who are childless past childbearing age and how they're like worthless and useless and you know are all going to be enemies.
And I really didn't like that because I know women like that who just really didn't choose to be like bitter or older.
I mean, they really tried.
They dated guys.
Sometimes the guys were pieces of crap, you know, and but they weren't focused.
They were, their heads were filled with this idea of you got to go to college, you got to get a career, you got to do this, you got to do, you got to travel the world, you know, you got to, you got to sleep with a lot of guys or else you're like a prude.
And girls that just burn through their 20s and their 30s, and then they're facing like their 40s, or maybe even they're into their 40s, and all they have to show for it is some crummy career that they're not even making that much money at.
And, you know, there's a anybody who's white, if you are willing to really realize these things and realize you're, if you have any family anywhere that you can, or if you know a family that you can be of some help to in some way, a young family.
And that's what it is with Scrooge.
Scrooge is too old to have kids.
I mean, he blew it with his fiancé, but he knows this family, the, you know, Tiny Tim.
And it's like he knows he can do some good for them.
And that's what we're talking about: is what you said, the memory of other, what you said that quote.
It's that Scrooge is like the perfect example of that because he's a guy who, even though it's that late in the game, he has still woken up.
And that's the thing.
It's never too late.
And you could be red-pilled, man or woman.
You could be red-pilled in your 70s.
Yeah.
And you, or even your 80s, maybe, who knows?
But if you, if you have some, you have some good to put into the world.
And not everybody is going to be cut out to be a mother or father.
And that's true of a lot of people.
I mean, that was true historically of a lot of people.
We were talking about War and Peace.
There's a famous chapter in War and Peace where an aunt saves this one young girl from making a terrible mistake.
She breaks up a relationship.
She was being seduced by this horrible guy.
And the aunt comes in and it's like, because her mother is like too simple-minded to, you know, she's just very indulgent of the daughter.
But the aunt comes in is like, you slut, you know, get away from that guy.
You're making a terrible mistake.
Get with the guy you were supposed to be with.
There's a place for aunts and uncles and older people in their life.
And like I say, if it's not in, let's say a lot of people, white people, don't even have very large extended family.
I don't even have a large extended family.
But what about maybe it's some kid of somebody you know, you know, some friend of the family or could be a co-worker of yours.
It could be an employee of yours like Scrooge.
But there's some good and you will not have, that's what I love about that story.
And this film version captures it better than anything.
The full horror of facing death with having like no good deeds to your damn name, you know, and magic, the magical end, it's, it's, it's arguably one of the best cinematic ends.
Of course, it comes from the book.
It's probably one of the best dramatic ends to a book, too.
It hits you right in the heart and you realize even if you've screwed up so drastically, you could argue it's a Christian redemption story that you can turn it around on a dime, even after a night of, you know, he attributes the seeing the spirits to having a bowl of bad porridge or something like that, an uncooked potato.
It doesn't matter whether you're hallucinating or whether the spirits actually visit you, that you can, you can change.
I could change, you can change, we all can change.
Rocky quote, but Real quick, that there was another very moving and painful scene in there, uh, even for me a little bit personally.
And it's when he uh he goes back to see the moment that it was either his wife or his fiancé cut things off with him.
Yeah, you had you had changed, you've changed, you've grown harder and colder, and you don't love me anymore.
You love your work or your money, and that is a cautionary tale for so many guys in our thing who do change.
And I'll get a little personal here.
I mean, when I got red-pilled or radicalized or awakened, whatever you want to call it, I did change.
I got a little harder, a little bit more cynical, and more angry about the world, and it impacted my marriage negatively at the time.
I grew to moderate it a little bit, and my wife grew to understand it and tolerate it too to a great extent.
Bless her heart.
But it was last show or two shows ago where a guy wrote in, you know, his wife was like, What's up with you, man?
I don't want to hear about this stuff anymore.
And Jayo said, just stop talking about it.
So be careful too.
It's not just about money.
It's also about getting so wrapped up in our stuff that it starts to cloud your judgment of everybody.
Well, you're not Jacob Marley.
I mean, you're not dead yet.
You know, Jacob Marley, he's like screaming and wailing in pain and agony because he's forever tormented.
Remember, the thing with Jacob Marley is he's tormented by what he could have done when he was alive.
And now he's dead and he's wandering between two worlds and he's seeing all this horrible stuff that he's powerless to intervene.
You are not dead.
You're like Scrooge.
You're not dead yet.
You still can do good into the world.
And that's why we're freaking here.
You know, I'm trying really hard not to curse them, but that's why we're here is to put good into the world.
And it's, yeah, so, but that by far, if you watch one Christmas movie, that's the one to watch, the 1951 Scrooge.
And the kids didn't like that one so much.
Real quick, my kids were like, it's a little grainy and the audio is a little bit rough, at least.
So it might be one to sit down and enjoy by yourself or with the wife or girlfriend.
And it's a perfect segue, speaking of Scrooge and buying the big duck and just being delighted by him by himself and for the family that he's helping.
But one of my favorite Christmas memories, it was just by myself.
It didn't involve the family.
It was sitting by our Christmas tree, listening or reading a Christmas carol, having a glass of good scotch and putting on the nutcracker sweet.
In that moment, I was sublime.
I recommend everybody do that too.
Perfect.
But yeah, pivoting off of Scrooge having his change of heart.
Sam wanted to talk about charity, which is extraordinarily important.
And it's not too late this season where you can get in your 2020 tax-deductible donations.
No, I'm not thinking that way.
Well, yeah, it's almost counterintuitive to what we were just talking about.
But I'm sure probably if you're listening to this show, you're smarter than this, and maybe you don't need to hear my advice, but you never know.
And I thought about this at different times, and I thought it appropriate to bring up here coming to the end of the year and Christmas time, charity.
You know, charity is very important.
And as they say, it is more blessed to give than to receive.
And that's true.
But you know what?
Part of this evil system we live under is that they've taken away this opportunity to be charitable.
Because if you are charitable now or if you're not careful about it, you are helping the enemy.
And I just wanted to caution people here coming to the end of the year, Christmas time, don't be charitable.
Don't give because you're only helping Negroes and Mexicans.
And I'm going to give you an example.
A friend of mine some years ago, his family, he has some siblings and the parents, everybody in the family is prosperous and successful in life.
And they were coming up to Christmastime one year and they said, or somebody's idea in the family: hey, you know, instead of every year, we rack our brains and spend money on each other to give each other things we don't need.
We all have everything we want.
And instead, why don't we make a good Christmas for a family in need?
Why don't we make it a good Christmas for a mother and a father and some children that the children would have gifts and the parents could plan a nice meal for Christmas?
And wouldn't that be a great Christmas gift to give rather than spending money on each other and all that type of thing?
That sounds good, right?
That sounds like a nice Christmas wish.
Well, so they did this.
I guess it was facilitated through a church or something.
Well, guess who you think got the good Christmas?
A Mexican family with escalade.
Some fat mammy with all her little buildings.
Yeah.
And so if when you do charity, you're only helping the enemy.
Don't do charity.
Think of like if you had, you know, materiel.
Let's say we, this is this is wartime and we have some spare ammo or something.
We have to, we have to desert our fortress or something.
Do we leave the materiel for the enemy to take?
No, we blow it up.
You know, don't be charitable.
Do not be charitable.
But the thing is, to be charitable is a blessing to the person who does it.
So think of we had somebody on the show who was injured and a lot of people stepped up and helped him.
That was a beautiful thing.
You know, a white family that is having trouble.
Maybe the father has lost his job or something like that.
Help those people.
Help somebody personally with money or goods or something like that.
Do not give to charities.
Maybe you know a budding political party too.
Someone's doing too.
Bitcoin's doing well right now.
You know, if you have a lot of people who are thinking about it, you know, sure, give to full house.
Sure, of course.
I'm not going to say don't give to full house, but that's something like that, something that you know is good that is having good impact on things or some white family in need that really does need a leg up or something like that.
That's right.
And we do have something behind the scenes that's going on to help out families in need, particularly if they have kids.
The hour is late with Christmas approaching, but we're drop us an email and we can connect you if necessary.
The good thing is there hasn't been a ton of people who are that hard up, which speaks to general material prosperity even in our ranks.
And I wanted to call quick attention to, we've done a roundup of worthwhile our guy, our cause charities before, but a group called Nevada Identitarians, I don't know who they are, if I've met them or if they're our guys, but they put a quick thread together on Twitter.
I'll link it in the show notes, but just real quick, you know, and he says, with a month, with Christmas approaching, it's important to remember that every major corporation supported a terrorist organization, right?
$10 billion to Black Lives Matter, God knows what else under the table to Antifa, etc.
And he just had this quick list and I'll rattle them off for people's to spur people's memories.
It's not too late to get gifts.
Mystery Grove publishing, Antelope Hill publishing.
The white people's press.
There is a great book on there called My Mirror Tells a Story, which is a great kid's book by a great author.
And we may have him on the show coming up soon.
So check that out.
Imperium Press publishes classics and philosophies.
There's Mighty White Soap, of course, which I believe is still operating and kicking.
And the candles.
That's right.
Eternal Flame.
Smasher, help me out.
What's the candle?
Rising fire.
Rising fire.
Thank you.
Eternal Flame was an 80s pop song.
There's a couple others in here.
I'll like it.
Schooner Creek Farm is another good one.
They are organic farmers who have been attacked by the system for their beliefs.
And I'll even throw out there the Asaratu Folk Assembly, who scored a big victory in Minnesota and were permitted to have another church.
And I've heard good things.
Whether you're a pagan or you're a Christian or whatever, I've heard they're great, serious, diligent people who are trying to carve out a place for themselves in this country.
Also, Laura Tallers in England with her tea.
Yeah, Alaska Chaga tea sounds good.
And Survive the Jive has great stuff.
Lena Loctuff sells stuff.
And Commando Store, close to Smasher's Heart, is a good source for patches, stickers, survival agents, etc.
Yep.
So, yeah, I think that's a pretty good list.
If you guys think any more right now or later, feel free to chime in.
You know what, Coach, I'll just throw this out there.
I'm going to really chill hard here now.
But while I mentioned that Emily put out her Telegram, she also put a Bitcoin address in there, which is the first time, like this woman, she spends an amazing amount of time putting these videos together.
And of course, now I'm married to her, so I'm involved in the production of them.
We spend a lot of time doing these.
She's like, oh, I don't want to ask for money because I don't want people to think that's why I'm doing it.
I'm like, well, yeah, sweetie.
You know, it's also nice to have food and pay the rent and everything.
So that's another thing.
Anybody that really loves Emily's work and wants to support her work, which is really our work right now, you can always throw her a little Bitcoin.
It would be very much appreciated.
Yep.
And we receive donations from time to time, sometimes big, sometimes small.
It doesn't matter.
It is almost the gesture as well as the material support to the cost and the time put into this thing to say, oh, man, that person cared enough to throw a few shekels our way.
And I'm not minimizing the donations whatsoever, but whether it's a little or a lot, it means the world.
And yeah, support your content creators as best you can.
But that gets back to the thing we were talking about before, which is extraordinarily important, which is, oh, yeah, the easiest way to get involved in our cause is to give money, stay anonymous, stay safe, even though there's maybe a little bit of risk with donating to edgy causes.
No, there's not.
Just do it.
Yeah.
And I had forgotten that NJP is taking crypto now.
So yeah, definitely check that out.
NationalJusticeParty.com.
Two founding members on the show again.
And to that point, I wanted to get to the point that, yeah, after donating, the second most common way to get involved is to network, to actually go and meet people in your area, get vetted, as we say, which is basically just making sure that you are a normal, reasonably sociable, non-hostile, bad actor.
I made it.
Yeah, if Smashing could do it, you could do it.
And there's lots of ways to do that.
We had Thomas from Patriot Front on last time for the younger guys who want to do activism.
There's the Manor Bund, there's the pool parties.
And you can always just drop us a line.
Like I've said before, we've got people crawling all over the woodwork out of the woodwork to make legitimate lifelong friends with.
It's been five, six years since I went to my first alt-right or dissident meetup.
It feels like it was yesterday, and it also feels like it was a lifetime ago because things have changed so much since then.
But that begs the question.
Okay, donate.
You can network.
You can support the National Justice Party and go to those events if you're vetted.
But what?
That seems you can create content.
You can craft memes and videos and stuff like that, but there's something like that's not going to cut it, right?
Warren, you mentioned the Amish, and the Amish have big, cohesive families and a cause that they ascribe to and stay committed to.
But at the same time, they are essentially powerless, living on semi-reservations, and they are allowed to exist as opposed to being in control of their own destiny to a certain extent.
They are pacifists.
Just sure.
Yep.
I will say, though, that's better than nothing.
I mean, that's better than a lot of good things about them.
Yeah, there are a lot of people that, you know, collect more guns than they do, you know, have families like that.
And that's, it's, it's really, I mean, that's those future kids, eventually we can convert them to national socialism, you know, but they have to be there for us to convert.
You know, if also there are black Amish and they are not against race mixing.
So coach, I want to jump in on your on your point, if I can, or did you have more you wanted to say about it?
Yeah, I just wanted to say that, yeah, it just feels like there's something missing, like it's inadequate.
And of course, the naughty Fed posters in the audience are like, oh, I have an idea, Coach.
But, you know, that's something that we don't talk about and probably shouldn't be contemplated.
Secession has come around a lot.
Obviously, Alan West talked about a secession movement.
Start a business.
Somebody start a business.
Somebody once said, it was our pal Quasragoon who said you balkanize, homogenize, and then reconquer.
I believe that was it.
I was like, that's a pretty nice formulation.
And then for me, I've always thought that, you know, the most elegant, simplest way may be to borrow from our old hag Ayn Rand and go galt only with a sense of racial identity, not out of some libertarian individualist nonsense, which is to literally drop out and only work for your family and your friends and your cause and your race.
But that too seems to be just putting yourself on a reservation of sorts waiting to get South Africanized.
So have at it, Warren, whatever I'm missing here.
You don't want to give the game away, of course, but yeah, help me out and the audience.
Oh, I'd be happy to.
I will say this.
You know, I feel very strongly about this.
I'll tell you a story, Coach, that a friend of mine, actually a friend of my dad's, an old comrade of my dad's who was involved with the National Socialist Organization years ago and still is.
He recently was talking to my dad about these guys that he knew a while back that would give money, but they would never get active.
They would never get involved.
And they would say, well, I'm not quite ready yet, but I'm going to be set up to do it here eventually.
The thing they would often say is, you know, well, I'm still, you know, working here, but when I'm retired, when I'm retired, that's when I'll do it.
Sure.
Because then I'll, you know, I'll be on social security and my pension and everything.
And then I can just devote my full time to the movement.
And they said, and, you know, he's kept in touch with these guys for decades because this guy's a boomer.
And they always would say that, oh, well, wait till I'm not working anymore.
Wait till I'm out of the job market.
Then I'll really full-time, you know, go to work for the movement.
And then he's Madonna syndrome for race.
Well, he talks to these guys.
He talks to these guys now.
They retired.
He says, okay, well, remember you used to say that?
And they say, oh, I'm too old for that stuff now.
That's what they say.
So this is what I would say is that we are not going.
What was it you said?
We network and then blank and then we come to power.
The missing step is political movement organizing, meaning all the things that people do in political campaigns.
Knocking on doors, for instance, going door to door, talking to people, organizing, going to events, holding meetings.
I mean, what is a political campaign?
It's really going out there, spreading the message, putting what was the Trump movement.
You know, Trump swept this country.
What did he have?
He had huge rallies with thousands and thousands of people.
He had an enormous organization of volunteers.
There is no way to do politics other than that.
For those of you who think, oh, there's no political solution, you know, that if you have studied any, you know, I'm not going to get Fed posting on your thing, but if you've studied any situation where things get to that point, there is some political faction that precedes it.
I mean, from the French Revolution to the Spanish Civil War to the Russian Civil War, there is always a period, you know, Castro in Cuba, there was a period where, what was the name of Castro's movement?
They named it after that day.
It was like the something, you know, 27th of March or something like that.
It was the name of the movement because that's when a bunch of guys either got martyred or imprisoned or something.
But basically, the Batista government crushed his up-and-coming political movement that was gaining support democratically.
And then Castro was forced to run into the hills with AK-47s.
But the point is that if you are not engaging in politics because you're afraid of what you have to risk, your damn job or whatever, but you think you're going to be any good for a civil war-type setup, I will say this.
That is much, yeah, the 26th of July movement.
There it is.
Yes.
You are, you know, if you're not willing to take these risks now when it's fairly safe, you know, the most you'll lose is some money.
Why should anybody expect you to take the risks later on when things reach that point?
And things won't even reach that point if you don't have a political movement.
In other words, we have to take politics in this country as far as it can possibly be taken.
And we have to either let the system drop its mask and show it to be the tyrannical thing that it is, in which case then we will discuss options after that, or we have to go as far as we can in building popular support.
We haven't even begun to tap into it.
And that's what the National Justice Party Project is all about.
But if you don't believe in the National Justice Party, let's say you think it's too national socialist, then go with Nick Fuentes in America first.
Go with something.
Go with the Groypers.
I don't care.
I don't care.
Or I'm not adopt a more serious ideology and become a National Socialist.
Right.
But I mean, what I'm saying is I thought you were going to say adopt the black child.
No, I mean, if you're in America first.
Well, listen, listen.
I'm bringing that up to make a point.
I will have, I don't think that's the way forward.
Okay.
But if you want to try that, if you want to really give your life to that and dedicate yourself to that, then I will respect you more than if you are on the internet anonymously posting 100% like you're Heinrich Himmler, but in fact, you're not doing anything.
I will respect anybody who does something over someone who doesn't.
And again, you can, maybe it's just sending money is all you can do.
And that's fine.
But if you, if you, if that's all you can do, please send money.
I mean, please at least do that because we desperately need it.
But if you can do more, and this is what I would say: set your life up to where you are dox-proof.
And what I mean by that is not like 100% where it doesn't, it's not going to affect you.
I just mean where your life won't be totally destroyed.
A few minor things.
I mean, I've doxxed myself over the past year.
And granted, it was easy for me to do it because of who my wife is and who my family is.
And my personal situation is such that I could weather the storm.
But I have to say, you're much better off doxing yourself than letting yourself be doxed, letting the enemy dox you.
It's better to dox yourself on your own terms.
It's better to prepare for it.
I knew I was going to do it.
I knew when I was going to do it, and I chose to do it.
But we have to have activists.
And I don't mean a handful of guys.
I mean thousands and possibly thousands of guys who are operating under their own name.
We're going to work with the NJP, me, and Smasher, and other members of the Central Committee to build a party that doesn't compromise in terms of ideas and ideology, but that presents our ideas in a serious way that anyone could look at it, at our rhetoric.
You saw the speeches we put out.
Me and Michael both spoke at our last meeting.
And if you have, I'm sure everybody here is on your show has seen the speeches, but share them.
I mean, my speech to the left particularly was geared towards the disgruntled Bernie voter, and it was radical.
I didn't hold back with what I, you know, I named the Jew.
But if you can't show them what I said in my speech, then how are we ever going to win?
How are we ever going to win?
I mean, what are you afraid of?
So I would say this: we are going to need thousands of activists, thousands upon thousands of activists who are willing to go out there and talk to people.
Our ideas are not that crazy.
You saw the 25-point program that we put out for the National Justice Party.
I've been watching the enemy discuss that program.
Everybody's there.
They're very disturbed by it because there's stuff in there for everyone.
It's National Socialist, but it's not.
It's very modern.
It's very current.
It's very for America, for our time.
And it's very common sense and it's very fair to non-whites.
And that's something that, you know, a lot of white people worry about either the perception of it or if they're really conscientious, the reality of it, that they don't want to treat minorities unfairly and that kind of thing.
Justice, there's a reason why justice is in the name of the organization.
Justice is near and dear to all of us, and nobody wants to see injustice done to innocent people.
It's not the innocent people that we are coming for.
It's the bad ones, the guilty ones.
So right now in this country, with the left showing its true colors and causing some seething resentment among their more radical ones with Biden's picks.
Yeah, he's throwing them peanuts.
He's like, yeah, thanks.
We got this now.
My fingers are.
Conservative, talk to the disgruntled Trump supporter at what bullshit you, I mean, sorry, what crap you see with Trump's embarrassing debacle here that he's made of his and the reality of his administration, which really didn't deliver on very much.
Get people to realize, though, even if they're still psychologically dependent on Trump, that the GOP has completely thrown him under the bus, that the GOP has, in a flash, without a, I mean, just without missing a beat, has returning back to their old ways.
And if it's a Democrat, if it's a liberal, if they are in any way sincere, look at how all that burning energy was just converted into support for Biden, which is support for Wall Street.
So, I mean, now is the time to strike.
And that's what I was going to say.
You know, the National Justice Party is not, we're not at the point now where we're vetting like and having huge members, numbers of people join our organization.
We will be, though.
We're going to need it.
We're going to need it.
So if you're listening to this podcast, particularly if you're listening to this podcast in the next year or two, think of ways you could get yourself ready to be a party activist for this organization.
And I have to plug my own organization, Coach, because I wouldn't have done it if I didn't believe in it completely.
It's critically important.
It's timed perfectly.
It has the special sauce of taking the best elements.
Yes, there are some good elements on the left, especially on economics and treating people like humans and with dignity, more so than you find on the right, as well as the legitimate social conservatism that is so needed in this country that you sample from the right.
So, and to get involved with the National Justice Party at this moment, it's not like you're just putting out, hey, come here on the state.
That comes later, probably, but you do have to be networked.
We have networked dozens, probably over 50 people who have just dropped us a line in the inbox saying, Hey, I'm in this area.
I'd like to get involved.
And then we do our best to connect them with people.
And maybe sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn't.
Depends on the person.
But that donate, network, support NJP, and obviously the prepping stuff that we've beat that drum.
Prepare yourself to be a political activist.
That's what I would say is the most important thing.
Prepare yourself with your life situation where you could go out if we ran candidates with the NJP, where you could go out and talk to your neighbors under your own name, and your life wouldn't be totally destroyed.
You know, it's okay to have it to where there's some consequences, but that's what you should be prepping for: for political activism, not for the Civil War scenario.
That's a long ways off yet.
Well put.
All right.
You're going to be a political activist whether you want to be or not.
Yeah.
You're watching.
Well, the old saying, you know, you may not be interested in politics.
Politics is interested in you.
You may not be interested in the political solution.
The political solution is interested in you.
Yeah.
If you're tweeting, you care enough to put your opinions out there, whether you're serious or you're joking or whatever.
And if you're already, I just got to add this, Coach, if you're already in that situation where you're ready to go to work for the NJP, because we've had a number, I mean, Michael knows better than I do.
We've had a number of people say that.
Just be patient.
Just be patient.
We're not trying to overdrive our headlights with this thing.
We're trying to go slow and careful and have this thing.
I mean, we don't want to have something that just blows up in a flash, there's a flash in the pan, and then we overextend ourselves.
We're going slowly and carefully and making sure it's all the best people and everything goes well.
So just be patient.
You know, stand, what did Trump say, stand by?
Stand down.
Stand down and stand by.
If you're ready right now to get involved, you will have opportunities.
I guarantee you, you will have opportunities to get involved in the NJP in the very near future.
Great stuff.
All right.
We're already at two hours.
The time is flying.
So let's move quickly to navigating the collapse.
And then we will land this puppy.
Mr. Producer, letter Rip.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
Water is the most important resource you need to make sure you have available.
While the average human can survive for three days without water, you'll start to deteriorate after less than 24 hours.
Your strength will deplete, your focus will wane, and bodily functions like processing food and regulating your temperature will lose effectiveness.
Here's a few ways to stay hydrated in the wilderness.
I shouldn't need to tell you that you can get water from snow and ice, but I would recommend melting it instead of eating straight snow, which will lower your body temperature.
The most viable source of water is streams, rivers, and lakes.
Of course, water should be purified before drinking, so make sure you keep that in mind.
Running water has a lower chance of containing bacteria than standing water, but you're still better off filtering or purifying it if you can.
If you're in the woods, stand still and see if you can hear running water.
The sound will carry very far in the woods.
If you're lost, always ask a local where to go.
You can follow animal tracks, bug swarms, and birds in the morning or evening.
They very well may lead you to a water source.
Look at the landscape as well.
Use common sense.
You'll have much better luck finding a stream in a valley than on top of a hill.
One of the safest water sources is rainwater.
Put out a tarp or other large piece of fabric and have it collect into a container.
If you're at home, have your roof collect rainwater through the gutters, although you may want to filter it before you drink it, at least a little.
You can collect water from leafy tree branches by tying a bag over the leaves.
The tree will draw water from its roots and transport it to the leaves, which will then evaporate and collect into your bag.
Be sure not to do this with a plant like poison oak or poison sumac.
And now, sections of the final statement of Rudolf Hess at the Nuremberg trials.
Some of my comrades here can confirm the fact that at the beginning of the proceedings, I predicted the following.
1. That witnesses would appear who, under oath, would make untrue statements, while at the same time, these witnesses could create an absolutely reliable impression and enjoy the best possible reputation.
2. That it was to be reckoned that the court would receive affidavits containing untrue statements.
3. That the defendants would be astonished and surprised at some German witnesses.
4. That some of the defendants would act rather strangely.
They would make shameless utterances about the Führer.
They would incriminate their own people.
They would partially incriminate each other, and falsely at that.
Perhaps they would even incriminate themselves, and also wrongly.
All of these predictions have come true, and as far as the witnesses and affidavits are concerned, in dozens of cases, cases in which the unequivocal oath of the defendants stand in opposition to the sworn statements of the former.
I ask you to listen to just a few more concluding words, which are of a more general nature and have nothing to do with the things I have just stated.
The statements which my counsel made in my name before the High Tribunal, I permitted to be made for the sake of the future judgment of my people and of history.
That is the only thing which matters to me.
I do not defend myself against accusers to whom I deny the right to bring charges against me and my fellow countrymen.
I will not discuss accusations which concern things which are purely German matters and therefore of no concern to foreigners.
I raise no protest against statements which are aimed at attacking my honor, the honor of the German people.
I consider such slanderous attacks by the enemy as proof of honor.
I was permitted to work for many years of my life under the greatest sun whom my people has brought forth in its thousand-year history.
Even if I could, I would not want to erase this period of time from my existence.
I am happy to know that I have done my duty as a German, as a national socialist, as a loyal follower of my Führer.
I do not regret anything.
If I were to begin all over again, I would act just as I have acted, even if I knew that in the end I should meet a fiery death at the stake.
No matter what human beings may do, I shall someday stand before the judgment seat of the eternal.
I shall answer to him, and I know he will judge me innocent.
Rudolph Hess, courtesy of Nathaniel Scott, there.
Powerful stuff.
Completely logical.
I never heard that one before.
Warren, are you familiar with that statement?
Very much, actually.
The whole statement by him, him actually reading the statement used to be on a recording of it used to be on YouTube.
It's probably gone now, but I'm sure you could find it on BitChute.
I remember that line.
He said, I had the misfortune to, or the good fortune to work under the greatest sun my nation has produced in its thousand-year history.
And he says, even if I go to my death at the stake, I always remember that, a fiery death at the stake, I would not act differently than how I had acted before.
I love that.
It's really, I mean, when you think of what Rudolph Hess subsequently did, basically like 40 years in solitary confinement, essentially.
I've often said, it's funny, Sam, what you said about, you know, you're a Catholic, and it's like the National Socialists in a secular political movement in a space of about 12 years accumulated as many martyrs as the Catholic Church did in its first 300 years.
In just 12 years.
I mean, truly saintly men.
It's really amazing when you think of that in the 20th century, in a modern war, in a modern time, people like that.
It just doesn't happen.
If the Holocaust is our state religion in the United States and anti-racism, et cetera, are its rituals, coming to terms with and learning and accepting that Germany and Germans and National Socialism, the cause and everything they did, that they were the good guys in World War II, is really a sea change in the way you look at the world and consider all the lies you're told.
It's an amazing thing when it happens, as tragic and sad as it is, nevertheless.
We got to wrap it, guys.
Warren, thanks so much.
Any last thoughts?
We didn't give you 20 minutes on what it means to be a national socialist in 2020.
You sprinkled it throughout.
Yeah, I was hoping that for once I could have a podcast where I'm not asked about, where we just talk about Christmas movies.
But I appreciate you indulging me, Coach, and letting me go off.
Because like I said, movies are a real passion of mine.
And I feel very strongly about it because this time of the year, it's very, I hope people will track down the films I recommended and watch them.
I hope you enjoy them.
And I wish everybody a very Merry Christmas, particularly you guys.
And but all your listeners have a very Merry Christmas and a very happy new year.
Right back at you, your lovely wife, and your beautiful and very bright son.
You could just tell that young feller is sharp, like his mama and his and his papa, and wish you many more too, pal.
Samuel, thank you, my friend.
Thank you, coach.
Merry Christmas to all the listeners and to each of you and your families.
And Smasher, Merry Christmas.
Merry Christmas.
It was great to be back.
In Zicio.
I put up a tree.
Put up a tree, Michael.
We're going to sponsor Samuel Company.
Yeah, somebody get this man a tree.
He has to have a tree.
It makes me sad, the idea of you.
You look like a young Santa Claus, you know, with the beard and everything.
The idea of you not having a jolly, I would say.
The idea of you not having a tree makes me sad.
All right, Smasher.
Do you have anything to say, buddy?
No, it was great.
I don't, yeah, I don't have anything to say that wouldn't just be repeating everything we've said already.
All right, buddy.
This time.
Look forward to seeing you soon.
And Mr. Producer, Merry Christmas to you and your lovely and growing family.
Thank you for everything you do for us.
You're welcome.
Merry Christmas.
Hey, real quick, not to do this to you, but what are we going to do about the schedule next week?
Yeah, I know.
Christmas Eve is Thursday, right?
Yeah.
Should we do an unscripted, God forbid, live stream maybe on the 23rd?
I'm down.
I don't know.
You're down.
I'm down.
Christmas Eve.
Yep.
And we do have a couple guests in the hopper.
So let me reach out to them.
Maybe we have a couple guests on and just do a fun, cozy one before Christmas Eve.
But thank you for begging the question.
Yeah, no problem.
That's why we have you here.
All right, everybody.
Full house episode 72 was taped on a snowbound December 17th.
Now, December 18th, made it through.
I'm cozy as a mouse in a burrow right now.
So I'm going to do this again.
Follow us on Twitter, Telegram, Parlor, and of course, find our stuff at full-house.com and bit shoot and YouTube.
And if you would like to extend your charity to us, we would be sincerely grateful.
And that's on the support us tab at full-house.com.
So to all our listeners out there who may be grinding their teeth, just like yours truly, with the knowledge of just how messed up everything is and maybe even feeling completely helpless about it, resolve to spit in the eye of fatalism and get involved right now.
Mr. Producer, we had our Christmas miracle of our own this past week with potatoes sitting still for the snowman.
It really was a special, beautiful thing.
And so it's only fitting that we go out to the signature track from that beautiful film from 1982.
This is Walking in the Air by Howard Blake and Peter Audi.
We love you, fam.
Merry Christmas to all Gut Yule.
And we will talk to you in less than a week.
Smasher, you haven't been on in a while.
Give us a good one.
Good night here.
We're walking in the air.
We're floating in the moonlight sky.
People fall asleep I'm arriving in the midnight green.
When finding I can fly so high above with you across the world,
the villages go by like dreams.
The rivers and the hills, the forests and the streams.
Children gaze open about, take a voice of voice.
Nobody's below in soaking in the air.
We're swimming in the frozen sky.
We're drifting along, the mountains floating by.
Suddenly no sad deep rousing up a mighty monster flesh.