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March 1, 2021 - Full Haus
02:04:21
20210301_Better_with_Rage
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Time Text
Lordy Lordy.
Now I just turned 40.
Sam just passed a big milestone of his own.
JO is right on my tail, but Smasher is planning to stay forever 21.
While it's tempting to get big, sad, or melodramatic, or even self-indulgent in response to aging, it's far better to get reflective.
Count your blessings for everything you've got and resolve to make the most of however many years you've got left.
And that, of course, includes fighting harder and smarter against those who seek to destroy us and poison our children.
We may be growing longer in the tooth, but we will never grow longer in the nose.
We are back, ladies and gentlemen, with sincere apologies for missing last week.
All blame rests squarely on the shoulders of Mr. Producer, of course.
So let's see if he remembers how to push the button.
Everyone to episode 80 of
Full House, the world's most pensive show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am, as always, your graybeard host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours dedicated to inspiring our treasured audience to live as meaningfully as possible.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, huge thanks to JB this week for his very generous support.
And also big thanks to working-class father and Fritz, two of the best fans a podcast gang could ask for.
With that, let's get straight on to the birth panel.
We got all the OGs with us this week.
First up, the only senior moments he has is when he smacks us all upside the head with a little bit of his old school wisdom.
Sam, you are the white wizard of Full House.
How are you, Bell?
Thank you.
Yeah, thank you.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
You know, I hope we'll have some moments to have some thoughts on aging there.
It's as you grow older, you do think about certain things and certain topics become more relevant to you.
But I feel great and I know you're great, Coach.
So, you know, there used to be this saying about turning 40.
That used to be some kind of milestone.
I kind of feel like that's not the thing anymore.
In fact, you hear people say something like, oh, 50 is the new 40 or 55 is the new 40 or something like that.
And I've thought about things like that.
But no, I feel great and I'm glad to be here.
And I just want to say quickly, coming up May 1st, there's going to be a great gig in the Pennsylvania somewhere around there.
ADS is putting on another great gig and they've announced it.
They've made it public.
So I don't mind making it public here.
You have to contact them to be vetted to attend it.
But I'm planning to attend it and I hope you guys will as well.
We had a great one last year and this one's going to be just as much fun and as well organized.
So check it out.
It'll be coming up May 1st.
Go over to the show.
Awesome.
Thanks for flagging that, Sam.
Yeah.
I'm going to be nervous as a, as a, I'll be as nervous as a school kid going to getting on the bus for the first time, going to one of those shows.
Oh, yeah.
See if I got the chops to survive.
Yeah.
Excellent.
All right.
Next up, and yes, we're going in age seniority this week.
He's cool under fire and also never one to shy away from it.
But every once in a while, he can be a little bit of a drama queen.
Jayo, you're still alive.
No, I thought I had Corona, dude.
I thought I did.
I can't.
Yeah, you're still thinking maybe I did because the tests are so frequently wrong.
I know a dude that got tested four times in one day on a Monday and a Wednesday.
On both days, it came up two and two.
So my test came back negative, but I've got some, you know, medical history that Corona's a little bit of a worry.
But no, turns out I'm all right.
You're like the George Floyd of white nationalists.
I can't taste the salt vinegar.
No, I couldn't taste anything and I couldn't smell anything.
Like when I can't smell diapers and vinegar, you know, it's serious.
Sure, something's up.
Yeah.
Jayo reached out to me.
He was a little bit concerned about his health.
So I comforted him by saying that he's just like an old oak tree that's shedding all of its acorns before it dies.
That was in response because he said he was feeling a little bit randy as he was edging toward the grave.
So I said, good for you, buddy.
Glad to have you back.
And with that, we will move on to last but certainly not least, the loose cannon of Full House.
And that's good because he doesn't just keep us on our toes, but he also keeps us honest.
Potato Smasher.
How the hell are you, pal?
I'm doing great, especially when my life is going terribly.
Judging by your avatar pic of you with a big bushy beard and your beautiful daughter there, I don't believe it.
Yeah, no, I'm just, I'm joking.
I've been listening to the Jocko podcast.
You guys probably are familiar with Jocko Willink, former Navy SEAL, but he's in, he's become sort of a meme because he's, you know, sort of an inspirational type guy where he's like, I wake up every day at 4.30 in the morning, something terrible happens.
I have a great day.
You know, he's that type of guy.
But I've been listening to his podcast.
It's actually legitimately very good.
Yeah, he's an embrace the suck kind of guy.
Yeah, very, very much so.
Very in line with Burning Souls by Leon deGrelle, which I've been reading.
And his, it's so moving.
I actually shed a tear at one point reading it, just this old man sort of looking back on his life in Spain, missing his homeland.
But also it's an amazing sort of emotion.
You can tell that he's all over the place with white pills and black pills and all the rest of it.
And it did get me thinking that we had never really addressed aging per se on the show.
Obviously, I just crossed a milestone, which I guess turning 40 would be when people start having midlife crises, which I certainly am not.
The night that I turned 40, I did sit and think for quite a while about everything.
I wasn't sad.
I wasn't happy either.
I'm not going to make a big deal out of the number itself, but I figured it was a good benchmark to sit and think about my life and how it's gone so far.
And I really did stop and appreciate everything that I had.
And I guess the one thing wasn't like a New Year's resolution of turning 40, but I did get the feel that I should be more serious about health and purpose and doing things for a cause than perhaps I have been to date.
I'm not giving myself a hard time.
It's just like, all right, you're really not a kid anymore now that you're 40.
And I guess that means no more D's nuts jokes.
Can't say that's what she said, or not with that attitude.
No, I'm kidding.
I will always keep doing that.
And just real quick, yeah, I remember when my dad turned 40, for some reason, I vividly remember it.
And I was like, wow, my dad's old now.
And right on schedule, he toured 40, and then he was like, all right, I'm going to start playing basketball again.
And then he tours, I was in the stands watching him play in this, you know, older men league.
And he tours Achilles tendon, like first time he went out playing basketball at 40.
And it was maybe a little bit downhill physically for him.
But no, we had a wonderful family weekend.
We went skiing in Appalachia with our family.
We took the kids out to go snowboarding or first time snowboarding for junior and daughter, Potato Too Young.
And I kept that dark shadow, stayed away.
I didn't think about the state of the world at all, but just enjoyed friends and family.
And it was a wonderful time.
But yeah, we're just going to plow forward.
And I'm going to occasionally remind myself that I'm 40 and not in my 30s anymore and hopefully use that as a motivator to do more and get healthier.
Because the one aging thing I've noticed is that if I stay up late or if I have a few too many drinks the night before, man, am I dragon ass the next day?
And that's no way to live life seriously.
And it's no way to be a father.
So just some musings off the cuff.
No big deal.
I did post a selfie of my wife and I.
That was when we were 39, but close enough.
And Sam, yeah, you crossed one of your own recently.
And go ahead and muse for us.
Sure.
Triple digits, man.
You know, Sam Dawson gray.
I didn't plan that.
I was just kidding.
And you guys see me when I'm on the camera.
I do not have gray hair.
I do not have gray hair.
You don't have a lot of hair.
So I do not wear eyeglasses.
I do not have gray hair.
I, you know, I am, I just went on a really long hike with the Manderbung guys over the weekend.
I mean, I feel I've seen you keep up with young dudes.
Yeah, see, so I feel like I'm the same way as I felt when I was 21.
But I do think that the way we think about aging is indicative of something that has changed in society because I can remember when I was a kid and even when I was in my teenage years and beginning to pay attention to things that were going on or understanding the dynamics of society,
40 was a milestone back in the day because it was a time, it was, it was not only just while you're halfway through your life, but it was a time when people had achieved a certain modicum of stability in their life.
They had become maybe stayed in their careers.
Maybe they had paid for a house or their kids had grown up or, you know what I mean?
It had things, but now we do not have that expectation anymore, especially as white people in this country.
You can't expect that you've had the same job and maybe your pension is now secure.
And when you're it at one time, it was turning 40 meant you would kind of reflect on life because you had achieved something.
Now people do not have that sense of having achieved something.
Can I say there's a two-way street there?
You know, we lament that the boomers had this opportunity that essentially you could graduate high school and go get a job that paid a living.
Let's not forget that a lot of those jobs would kick the dog crap out of you.
True.
You know, people when they were 40, Even 30 years ago, you know, people who were 40 when Coach was born were way more beat up, you know, they because of the work they were doing, you know, sort of like even pollution standard type of stuff within a workplace.
You know, every workplace was absolutely full of cigarette smoke.
Every mall, every hospital, if you could believe that.
And people didn't know as much about nutrition and hydration.
So 40 used to be a little bit more of an old man thing.
Really?
Yeah.
Well, maybe.
I don't know.
Guys, we grew up with had dads who died in their 50s.
Not all the time.
Well, I'm just remembering my grandfather, who was a postal worker, who worked his whole career as a postal worker and retired from the postal service.
And when he was in his 20s, he bought not 30-year mortgage, but he bought a house, a brick house on the south side of Chicago.
And my grandmother never worked a day in her married life.
And every few years, he would buy a car.
And by buy a car, I mean, pay cash and own the car, not with a car payment.
And so I guess what I'm saying is in a different time, in a wider time of our country, people could expect to live decently.
Yeah.
And he owned property in another area of the country where he would go on vacation a couple times a year.
He was a fisherman and a hunter and all those things.
And he was healthy.
And you'd have to make like eight grand a month and live like you were working class in order to be able to do the stuff today.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Can you imagine walking into a dealership and paying like $30,000 for a car?
Yeah, here's my suitcase full of hundred dollar bills.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like a drug deal or something.
Smasher, you're not at all concerned.
Sorry, Sam, I didn't mean to cut you off there, but yeah, go ahead, Sam, finish up.
Well, so I all that's all I'm trying to say is I think that now people don't, there, you know, I think life should have a have some regularity like that.
For instance, how many guys do we know?
They're in their 20s or their 30s, they're not married, no prospects for marriage, no children.
It used to be in another day and age, if you got to a certain age, we'd be fixing you up with people who would be married.
You'd be expected to be married.
And so I guess that's as I reflect on age, that's where things like being 40 or even expecting to retire at a certain age, those things had some regularity to them that people could expect.
But because I think of the erosion of institutions in our society, and that is tied to race norms and things like that, that people forget.
People forget that you were, it wasn't that long ago.
I'd say it probably really died off in the 70s and was buried in the 80s.
You were looked on with severe suspicion if you weren't married by a certain age.
Not like that you were even a queer or something, but just that nobody could like you.
You know, like you wouldn't get a promotion at your job.
Like you were expected to have a wife who was expected to be able to behave to a certain standard in a social situation.
And you were expected to be able to, you know, behave to a certain social standard.
Yeah.
All of these things were taken into effect.
If you were married and you had children, and depending how many children, you would be paid more based on your need.
And that's that's a more, you know, and that's taking in kind of a little bit of a socialist element that you might say, but it was like voluntary, you might say.
Like this is something employers who all had a vested interest in society and in their workforce and things.
There was a term the Catholic bonus.
Yeah, exactly.
That's exactly right.
And I can tell you, I do believe I've been the beneficiary of people, people don't do things like that anymore because these international corporations own everything.
And this is this is a take that I saw a while ago, and it kind of really rubbed me the wrong way.
I didn't like it.
And I did like it because it was right.
We're fighting to keep people from coming to America to help, you know, not only protect our ethnic makeup and et cetera, but also our jobs.
But like, you know, for the most part, what jobs are left?
Because they were already all exported decades ago.
So like we're here fighting to protect like our scrap piece of squirrel from like the vultures overhead.
Right.
At this point, we don't have like a fresh deer here that we're trying to protect.
We're fighting over like half a squirrel, maybe, maybe, you know, two-thirds of a turtle or something.
As I went to Costco today, not to always bring up Costco at a place that was once 100% white and its clientele, it resembled closer in urban Costco's in its appearance.
And I just thought, good God, it's spreading farther and faster with every passing day.
And it's about to get ramped up.
And the thing is, those Negroes will, they will pass, they will go, they will pass up three or four targets to go to the better one in your neighborhood.
Yeah, exactly.
The other thought that came to mind there was that we always talk about women and their biological clock and how they start to get a little bit antsy as they get older, you know, as the eggs are drying up in the oven or in the fridge.
But we know a lot of guys in their 30s who are either unmarried or they don't have kids yet.
And they sincerely are champion at the bit to get going either with finding that perfect woman and also having kids, including considering adopting white kids, which if you're listening to this, dear listener, and you have experience in adoption, we'd love to have you on whether you tried it and it didn't work out or whether you went through with it.
Because I think that's another thing that we haven't touched on at all.
Before we leave the aging thing entirely, you are our in-house experts.
So I started up saying I feel good.
I'm athletic in the sense of, you know, I think I have good stamina.
I'm not going to win any contest probably, but I do have good stamina.
I'm in reasonably good shape.
But as, and maybe I would like you to chime in after I make this point.
Like, you know, do you notice anything about aging?
And I will tell you one thing that I have noticed and a remedy that I have attempted is, okay, so when I was younger, I could look at, let's say, a page of data and I could kind of remember it.
Maybe not exactly photographic memory, but I could look at something.
And once I looked at that thing, that thing was in my brain.
There's more likely than not, I'd be able to recall it.
And if once I was off doing something else, if I needed to remember what was that data or that detail about, I could pull it up.
As I have older, and I'm talking just in the last couple of years, I have noticed that when I want to remember something, if I look at that page of data, I can remember it, but I have to make an effort.
Like I have to say in my mind, okay, what's on this page?
All right, remember that.
Take a picture up in your mind.
Yeah, I'm not as much.
I'm not as smart as I used to be.
Like, fundamentally, I feel like I have a lower IQ than I did 15 years ago.
Same.
And recovery time physically.
Yeah, well, absolutely.
To that point, Sam, I totally agree with you, but I don't know whether to attribute it to aging brain synapses or whether it's also the copy-paste syndrome where you're just so used to copying.
You know, you don't have to do as much mental memory anymore with, oh, I can't think of this person's name.
I'll just Google it.
Oh, I'll just copy-paste this string of numbers into my calculator, et cetera, instead of all the stuff that we used to do.
I used to be a great speller, like competitive spelling bees, that kind of thing.
Now it's embarrassing if I don't have spell check.
When I write all of our guys who are locked up, I the last time I wrote somebody, I did it on a computer dock, um, and then I hand wrote it because I didn't want to embarrass myself with it.
Two other, uh, go ahead, Sam.
Uh, well, I wanted to say, so you know, because and I'm not, I really am referring specifically to that thing.
Let's say I'm in one part of the plant, now I walk all the way over to the other side of a big plant, then I'm thinking, like, shit, where am I?
No, I just, I was just looking at that data over there, and I walk over here.
Now, wait a minute, did it say that, or did it say?
So, I was looking into this, and now I've been taking this for a while.
You guys maybe have even heard of it.
I think it's kind of trendy.
It's called Bacopa, super male vitality.
No, no, I don't have any problem in that area, but it's called Bacopa, B-A-C-O-P-A.
Bacopa is a, yeah, it's out there.
You can read about it.
There's, there's articles on it in the NIH, you know, National Institute of Health.
And there's, there's, if you just go on like health websites, you could read about it, but it is specifically for memory retention.
And it, it increases the electrical activity of the brain.
And it's ascribed with other good benefits, like it's an antioxidant.
It reduces stress.
It's good for reducing your blood pressure, this and that.
But specifically, they've studied this thing about it improves focus and especially that short-term retention.
And it won't help you, let's say, like all of a sudden you just start remembering everything in your life better, but like you learn something and then you remember it better.
And what excuse not to quit smoking weed?
Come on.
Sam, what's the name of the product again?
It's called Bacopa, which is an herb.
It's just the name of an herb, B-A-C-O-P-A.
It's like a flowering shrub from northern India.
And, you know, I've only, I bought a bottle of this.
I've been taking it every day for about, I don't know, three, four weeks.
And I don't know, maybe it's psychosomatic.
I feel like it is helping Helping me, but I'm sure you have to take it longer than that to build up the and that's that's that's Pacopa Sam.
I got Pacopa D's nuts in your palm.
Sorry, that's kind of gay, actually.
I am in the air with children.
How dare you!
40 is the new 30, everybody.
My old man, he's 40 is the new 16.
Right, there you go.
My old man once told me that his 30s were the happiest decade of his life because he was still in good shape and he had all three kids young and under the roof and still little kids, still innocent and all the rest of it.
And I thought that was a lovely sentiment.
But thinking back, it's also sad because it's like, okay, so what was it?
It's all downhill from here, dude.
Right, right.
So that was one of my, that was one of my thoughts.
I was like, okay, I'm going to make the 40.
I looked at my, my kids are still young.
And Potato, by the way, I owe Potato an apology.
Whenever Potato is with other people, he turns on the charm so much.
He's well-behaved.
He's cute.
He's a little bit mischievous, but not bad.
And everybody's like, Coach, you give him too hard of a time.
So Potato, I apologize.
I love you, little buddy, if you're listening to this.
As you get older, you get a little more secure with your view of the world.
Maybe not everybody.
I guess some people are screwed up into their whole life, but you begin to come to grips with maybe your ownnesses or your own situation and stuff like that.
And then especially now, the next phase is like when you get to be kind of an old man, you have the, I don't give a crap about what I'm going to say in front of anybody.
So that's that's kind of good.
That shows you you get kind of loose, you know, and like, what are you going to do to me?
I'm an old man.
Go ahead.
Mr. Producer says that his old man said the same thing about his 30s.
All right.
So that's not a unique thing to mine.
And another factor, too, for you guys who are getting a little bit older, my wife, who is a straight shooter, never a bullshitter, she says unequivocally, you are more attractive at 40 than you were at 30.
Looking back at pictures at 30, I look a little bit like a clean-shaven, goofy normie, which I kind of was.
And now I've got a little more wrinkles, a little gray in the beard.
A little more distinct.
That's actually true of men.
Their market value goes up as they get older.
Yep.
So don't lose hope, guys.
And we got a question for the audience.
I can tell you that was consensus, though.
Your wife's take.
More than one person made that observation.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, I know.
Whatever.
I'll take it.
Thank you.
All right, Jo.
Yeah, we've only had you in the first half irregularly here in the last month or two.
And you had something that you wanted to bring up, which is definitely a little bit dark, but also a good show topic.
So have at it, buddy.
Yeah, I think it's a good show topic, but I've almost half decided that I don't have a concrete answer.
But my question for the guys was, what would your kid have to do to make you like disown them or hate them?
And this is, you know, something that's come up in, you know, comedy and conversational circles forever.
But I didn't understand how gnarly Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker, was until I saw something about him a couple of weeks ago.
There's like this new documentary that everyone's watching.
And I generally avoid that kind of stuff.
But my mom asked me to watch it.
So I did.
Yeah, what's the backstory with Ramirez?
I'm not familiar with him.
Raping and murdering old people, children, regular aged people, men, women, just like every horrible act you can imagine.
He wasn't discriminatory.
That's very principled.
Right.
Yeah.
I always wait for Spatial.
He used equal opportunity, you know.
But I'm an equal opportunity rapist.
But he was.
God.
Sorry.
4 D D's nuts in my brain.
Okay.
Go ahead, Jayo.
But no, I mean, this guy was there.
There's not words.
Like, you want to call him scumbag, psychopath, whatever.
Like, there's nothing you could call him that would equal to how terrible he was.
He was raping, killing, torturing, all of this stuff.
And it's a trip because I have not gotten legitimately mad at my son to date for his entire life, right?
Things get frustrating.
He tries my temper a little bit, but I've never been mad at him.
He hasn't like really let me down or anything.
And I've tried to imagine stuff.
Like I try to imagine the dumbest stuff I've ever done in my life.
And if he did it, how would I feel?
Yeah.
And there's kind of like how I'd have to tell him I feel because I have to take corrective action.
But am I actually that upset about it?
Or if I am, how am I going to handle it?
But like if my kid was out there, like I don't even want to frame it like that.
If someone's kid was out there raping and murdering kids, how do you it's almost your responsibility to put down your own rabbit dog, to be honest.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I hate the thought.
I hate the thought.
Like I almost wish I hadn't brought it up.
I know it was dark, but I was like, all right, that's a good.
And I still don't have an answer, Jayo.
I got the first thing that came to mind was my sons and my daughter are my flesh and blood, and I would never completely abandon them or shut them out.
However, I have very few requirements of my children.
And one of those few requirements is to one day marry a white person.
And if one of them went for miscegenation, it makes me so sad.
It makes me so sangry at the same time that I would be tempted to say, if you do this, then I will cut you off and shut you out because I don't want to.
The bar is low.
Right.
Yeah.
I'm not.
It's like, what was it?
He was a judge or a congressman in Texas and his homosexual brother out at him.
And they're both like 60 or something, but I think he was a judge in Texas.
In his will, his kids only got access to the estate if they were married to white Christians.
And he ended up losing his job or whatever.
Yeah, like that.
That's a really low bar.
And like, don't rape and murder people, I feel is a really low bar.
Right.
Like the expectations, you know, if you're Richard Ramirez, the Night Stalker's mom, it'd be one thing like, if you don't believe he did it, right?
But like, if you know your kid did this stuff, I don't know how he's.
I don't know.
I might be unpopular here, but like I would never like condone the raping and murdering.
I'd be like, you know, that was kind of messed up, bro.
But I'd probably still go talk to him in prison or, you know, whatever.
Like you can't change it.
They're still your child.
You know?
But what if, what if you're go ahead, Smasher, and then I got a tough one for you.
Oh, but if they marry like a brown person, that's it.
Like they are no longer my child.
Or if they're a homosexual, like the first, the first thing I'm going to do if they're homosexual is find out who molested them.
The second thing I'm going to do is I'm going to kill the person that molested them.
And then the third thing I'm going to do is talk to them about why they are homosexual.
And if they can't come around to see, you know, logically.
Or just factually, like how homosexuals come into existence and they, you know, refuse to seek help for that, then at that point it's on them.
They don't want help, then they can just go have sex with a thousand people a day and I will never see them again.
I'm, i'm a little.
I ought to make sure that I understand you guys properly here.
This isn't a Ben Shapiro gotcha, but are you guys saying that you would disavow your kid for race mixing but not for raping white women?
That's what I heard from Smasher.
I feel like that's what I heard from you too.
I'm i'm, I will disavow the action, but like there's, there's nothing I can do about it.
I'm like I said, you know, i'm gonna, i'll be straight up with them and just be like bro.
That was like a terrible, horrible thing.
But I guess i'm still gonna talk to you in prison because, why not?
White libertarian fatherhood?
Yeah, it's like individual uh, free will.
Well yeah, go ahead Sam, I i'm gonna going to bring an angle to this.
Maybe you're not drop the hammer.
Were these women sex workers?
Because then it's not rape, it's just shop.
Let's say, go ahead.
Well uh, you know, you are considering some sort of way outlier type of a thing.
That's, that's probably unlikely.
I am, I am and and and, and these are things that that we probably won't really have to face.
But to put it in perspective or to consider some of those things, but consider in this light um, life is uh, a lot more complicated than that kind of a very binary type of uh scenario that we're raising, and it, I would say that it is likely for at least somebody uh, some offspring, somebody in this group, or at least, or a few of them.
You know, you get into that young adult years and then, let's say, you go to church and then that child might say, I don't want to go to church.
You know, I want to move out and I want to do my own thing.
And pretty soon, you know, you may, you may go through a period of where and it may be about something else even but where you go through a thing of where there's some separation between the parent and the child, like emotionally, physically and even intellectually.
That's the yeah, i've been there especially if you get into drugs like yeah okay, that end up apologizing a lot to your parents down the road too.
Let me tell you and I guess what I'm trying to say is, it is uh, brace yourselves.
I mean, it is likely that your children are going to wander a little bit, but that wandering away doesn't mean that they won't wander back, and so there may be a period of some couple estrangement, yeah, yeah, where you got to kind of let them go.
You're not, you're not totally writing them off.
Maybe they are hanging out with some weird people that you don't like, and you say, That's it, I'm not going to talk to you while you're hanging out with those people.
And there may be a little bit of going away, but that child don't remain children.
You know, right now they're all cute and little, and you play ball with them and stuff like that, but they're going to get big and they're going to be adults and they're going to have their own mind and they're maybe going to do things that you don't think are wise.
They may stop it.
There will be some drugs right now.
And, but, or even politically, what if they, you know, just out of rebellion to you, they decide to vote Democratic or something stupid like that.
Homeschool your kids.
And yeah, but even that, it's, it's no, it's no absolute bulwark.
And uh, but the thing is, so like when you say, what would you turn their back on them, write them off, and all that?
Yeah, if you, if for if, if you are going to be with a non-white, for the time that you are with a non-white, you are written off.
But if you quit that, and you, especially if you don't have kids and you quit that, you can come back and we can, we can work that out.
And if you, if you've been partying and doing some drugs and you realize that, hey, that's now you grew up a little bit and you see that I was right all along.
You can come back.
I'm not going to throw it in your face.
Ha ha was right.
No.
You can come back from that.
So I think you will all find that probably almost all, I mean, think of yourself, you know, when times when you maybe went, you became a little more distant with your parents and then came back to them again and things like that.
Absolutely.
It is a roller coaster sometimes.
Somewhat normal.
The thing is, some people they do overreact and they do this thing where that's it.
And they actually legally take them out of their will.
You are no longer my son or daughter.
And then that's really it.
I would say, don't do that.
Don't do that.
Maybe there is time you got to kind of let the person go their own way a little bit.
Let that happen.
I would say, you know, being the youngest, it's easy, probably a little bit easier for me to think back to some of these like teenage struggles.
And yeah, you know, I didn't listen to my parents about everything all the time.
I'd be a liar if I told you that I did.
You know, going out drinking, partying, lying to them, saying, oh, yeah, I'm staying at like Joe's house when really I'm at Sally's all night or whatever.
You know, Sally was a cool chick, dude.
Yeah.
But it was nice.
But these things are relatively inconsequential.
And I had non-white friends, but I don't think I was ever legitimately attracted to a non-white.
And I think I actually, quite frankly, I think that it is a non-issue in a default state.
Well, one, because we're going to win and there just won't be any non-whites left.
But in the country, and we're going to see our kids.
Right.
In our white, like controlled state, not, you know, not the.
But that'll come later.
If you don't.
We're trying to be older statesmen here.
That comes late.
Go ahead, Smash.
If you don't have somebody telling you to destroy yourself or get with a non-white or whatever, it's not going to be an issue.
You know, there was definitely some pause in the school system when I was going through it, but it's not nearly as bad as it was or is today.
And I was in a very white, you know, school that it was, you know, all working class.
So they weren't pushing the gay politics and stuff that I'm sure were definitely happening in other out there now.
Oh, yeah, dude.
The stuff I just see people posting in our chats of, well, I had to pull my kids out of school today because here's this thing.
Right.
Be less white.
So if you're, if your kids aren't being told to race mix or you're at least providing the proper counter argument to that, like it's going to be a non-issue.
You know, and I'll sound like a cuck here for a moment, but like, I don't really hate blacks, right?
Like they, they are what they are.
Like, yeah, sure, they're like stupid and violent, but that's not their fault.
That doesn't mean that I just want to be around them, but it's not their fault, right?
So like, I don't hate them.
I hate the Jew that forces us to be in close proximity because we all know that diversity plus proximity equals conflict.
But the blacks are not choosing that.
Like, you know, blacks never invented boats or wheels.
They wouldn't be around us if somebody hadn't intervened.
Mr. Producer says that he would only disown his kid if they turned their backs or caused irreparable harm to our people.
And he Big Bray in there says it would cover both race mixing and raping white women.
But then he says, on second thought, if my kid murdered a white person, I'm not sure I'd disown them.
So, you know, it's a tough one.
But I think it's important to set the standards early, often, and regularly.
And that also ties into another, got another really good question from an audience member that's a kind of a heart-rending one about his kid coming home with anti-white sentiments that were instilled in school.
So my kids are going to know the rules of dad's very few set standards, and they're not going to be surprised if they make a terrible, unforgivable life decision.
I say, I told you, I told you not to do that.
Yeah.
Well, and I guess that's kind of what my point is, is that like we're not these crazy radical foaming at the mouth, like white trash.
I hate to use that term, but like white trash pieces of shit that they say that we are, you know.
So when you explain things and you actually like take the time to teach your children these things that we believe and they understand it, they're probably not going to go out and do these things that we don't want them to do because they're not going to see it as like this crazy thing.
And then when they're told like, hate yourself, shove Oreos up your butt while you cut off your dick because of this commercial or this tweet or whatever, like they're going to be like, that is crazy.
I'm not doing that.
I'll just keep my head down and get out of here.
Yeah.
And one other, while we're covering this, audience member reached out the other day and said, have you ever, you guys ever talked about talking to your kids about this stuff?
I was like, oh, yeah, of course we did.
Episode 14 or whatever it was.
It was vaccinate your kids against pause.
But I take it for granted that in this ongoing dialogue that we have, you know, sometimes in my mind, I'm just checking boxes.
All right, we covered that one.
We cover that one.
But not everybody has heard those shows and they're still relevant today.
And we have New Year's all the same.
So when it comes to talking to your kids and also the risk of them rebelling against you if you set the rules too explicitly and too hard.
Okay, Dad, if you, I'll go do that thing that you tell me not to.
Yeah, it's on the Telegram channel, Vaccinate Your Kids Against Paws with old warrior Wailer.
So check that one out, if you will.
And it kind of segues into, I gave Smasher a homework assignment this week because it was up his ethnic alley.
And the gut-wrenchingly painful example of this frankly beautiful white woman, Irish white woman, Emma Murphy, who has taken her disgusting life decisions and sort of made it into a career of sorts.
Smasher, a lot of the audience will probably know what we're talking about, but go ahead, just lay it on us.
It's the very famous picture of the blonde white woman sitting on the step from her live stream or whatever with a black eye and her little mongrel, disgusting goblin mulatto child behind her.
Bastard, I think, the technical term there.
Yes.
So she was 26 years old.
She actually has two kids.
Both of them are brown.
And I don't know if this is the father.
I don't know if they have the same father.
I have no idea.
I couldn't find that.
But she was punched by Francis Asunga.
I guess.
Sounds Nigerian.
Yeah.
No, he's from County Cork, bro.
New Irish, as they say.
And so she took the opportunity to grift, and she's very famous now, at least in Ireland, for it.
She makes a lot of money being the girl that was punched by the filthy with her disgusting children.
Well, yeah.
And this came up because this great account on Twitter of Mudsharks posting their L's online had used her, her picture of the black guy with the bastard climbing up the stairs behind her as their avatar.
And she drew attention to it.
You know, like it's come to my attention that this account has used my picture.
And I was like, lady, you did the crime and then you, you know, and then you used it to self-aggrandize.
Yeah.
She double and triple down on being a disgusting mud shark.
You advertised your humiliation and then act outraged when other people take it and run with it.
And we always talk about, you know, your kids won't look like you.
And that's a little bit of a stretch sometimes, right?
You know, your mixed-race children can still technically look like you.
Her kids literally look like they were adopted from another planet.
Like there's no, she is a beautiful white woman who doesn't mind posting, you know, semi-scantily clad workout photos.
And her kids just look like they're from Africa.
And I was, I was scrolling through social media and I couldn't see anything about her having a boyfriend at all at this point.
97% of mud sharks are alone with their.
And it's even worse somewhere like Ireland.
Ireland is still probably more than 90% white.
I bet it's probably 97% white or so.
And then somebody responded to her with the modification of the are you winning son meme.
And it was this goblino looking in the door as this black fist is menacing over this white woman with a shiner and the goblino is asking, are you winning, dad?
I mean, it's terrible.
It's sad, but I laugh because it's good propaganda.
It's like, don't, I always say, you know, don't say we didn't warn you, ladies.
You know, you lay down with dogs, you're going to wake up with worse than fleas.
So Ireland has the highest birth rate in the entire European Union.
Are you?
Yeah, I mean, I was just listening to Myth the other day and they were ruining how quickly Ireland went down the tubes between their half-Indian gay prime minister to the rapidity with which abortion and gay marriage were both approved thanks to the subversion of the Catholic Church there.
Yes.
Well, it's not the same.
It's Goy.
Well, it's just the will of the people, Goy.
It's happening very quickly in leadership.
The votes were both extremely close.
A lot of it was because they allowed people to vote from afar.
I think legally they weren't allowed to, but like any kind of voting, they just fudge the numbers.
But it was still extremely close.
It was like 48 to 52 or something like that.
And Ireland is about 93% white, not 97.
There are many great remaining people there in Ireland.
But yeah, so Ireland is still 93% white as of their last census.
So the gayness is happening almost entirely at the top.
Now, I'm sure they actually, their schools and stuff, of course, like the big schools have just super gay academic class, right?
But it's not like America where all of our institutions, there's almost no institutions worth going to in America.
You can still find them in Ireland and you can still almost have honest conversations.
I mean, shit, there was violence in Ireland between Catholics and Protestants and Irish and British up until like 2003 or so.
So they're, I don't know, a little bit, their brains aren't broken, but you know, the way it is in America, where nobody can have a conversation about anything unless like you're just a Nazi, because we're the only ones that have managed to like realize our brains are being broken and break that conditioning.
Yeah, the videos of white women lecturing about racism and whiteness and systemic privilege and the teachers in particular is a daily pain.
And real quick, Smasher, before we go too far into Ireland, just before the show talking about the IRA's goals before independence were strictly or simply stated as an independent 32-county Irish republic, right?
That was what they stated.
Yeah, that's as far as I understand it.
You know, keep it simple.
We can sort out the rest later.
Yep.
Yep.
Same thing we should be doing.
We got a little bit of time here in the first half, so I wanted to bump up a question that I think JO would be good to contribute to.
And this is another one that we've touched on before.
Get the gringa, find your mate, how to do it, the best ways to do it.
And listener writes in, hello, full house.
This subject may have been beaten to death, but I got to ask, where should I be looking for a wife in these times?
To be more specific, is it okay to hop around churches if there are no prospects?
I'm spiritual, but not religious.
I'm 33, divorced, and childless.
Just got dumped by a lady who is both completely one of us and we were introduced by friends.
So, needless to say, I'm looking in the ocean right now.
The good things that came of that experience was I got back into working out and eating better and even flossing.
He says, Good for you, listener.
Uh, he's got a home with acres, he's got a network of guys.
I don't want to take the lady searching passively anymore.
I'm not excited about online dating, but I am setting that up as well.
How old did he say he is?
33.
33.
Check your uh local high school graduating class.
Well, make sure they're 18.
You know, sometimes you graduate early, 17-year-olds.
You better be careful there.
Pull up in the Trans Am playing some Dio.
Yeah, or sign up for a single class at your local community college, something where you think you'd find women that isn't paused.
Um, or it doesn't even have to be at a community college, like a local cooking class or something.
Just find something that might interest women and go do that thing.
Uh, churches, I'm personally a little bit on the fence about that when it kind of feels like poaching.
But if you met a woman who is a serious Baptist or Catholic or what have you, and you were you know willing to convert and like raise your kids in the faith and kind of take it seriously, then I would feel less scuzzy about it.
Um, and you have to be going in with the best of intentions, you can't just be making moves to pick up.
Um, go ahead, Jay.
I guess just go to your local area Craigslist and go to the missed connections, and you'll find some you'll find some wonderful things that you can respond to.
You, you know, things like you are a gorgeous dark-skinned female with wonderful nails that works for dominoes and a Malibu.
I was waiting for my son to get off the bus.
I really doubt you'll see this, but if by chance you do, I'd love for you to contact me.
You could just find wonderful things like that, and you can just reach out to these people.
I was gonna say, get a get a puppy and uh take it for walks in parks wherever women congregate.
I would almost like to do an entire episode of what do I do in this situation, what do I do in that situation, kind of stuff from single guys, or have it be its own show.
I know that you know, I'm in a chat for that kind of thing.
Um, maybe I'll hit you back privately too.
We have your email address because too many of these questions a lot of them can be kind of difficult to understand if I don't know more about you, your location, your social situation.
I can give you kind of broad overarching stuff, um, you know, where to look and openers, that kind of stuff.
Dog parks is a big one, even if you don't have a dog, because that's your opener.
Is man, I want a dog so bad, which one yours that sounds like a creeper thing, but yeah, well, no, because okay, so I smoke, right?
And when I developed the dog park maneuver, I lived directly across from a dog park and I like dogs.
I wasn't going there as a creeper, but I don't smoke in my apartment back then or ever.
But so I'd go outside to smoke, so I would just go over to the dog park because there's dogs running around, and that's more fun than just like standing on my porch.
And it's like literally a 20-foot walk.
And these are conversations that just came up.
This wasn't something that I initially developed as a move.
I then refined it, you know.
But smoothie joints, yoga studios, and like community college classes.
And it's a little bit weird during Corona, but I actually worked out a whole bunch of Corona openers with some guys.
Like using the whole like social distancing thing in your openers is brilliant.
And there's a million ways to have fun with that.
If you don't like cold approach, I have a harder time with it because I was never on the apps.
I always preferred IRL.
I was good at it.
And if you're going to do the internet stuff, what's been relayed to me anyway is you want to stay off the hookup apps like Tinder and Bumble.
And if you go to the paid ones, you're dealing with a whole different version of serious people, stuff like e-Harmony or Christian Date, or, you know, maybe in this listener's case, J Date.
I got them all bookmarked in my browser here.
So yeah, I'll just pull them up.
I would offer just a quick line or two of advice to this person.
You know, first of all, you got to pick up on things.
You got to pick up on how people are reacting to you.
I deal with women in all kinds of different ways in my daily life.
And if I had to meet women to try to date them, I know I would have no problem at all because I can sense a certain type of woman that is like, you know, like you kind of have a type, you know?
And so you got to be able to recognize when you're getting that from somebody.
And so really, like, just to build on what JO is saying, you just got to go where women are, but you have to know yourself.
And like this man said, he's working out and he takes care of himself.
Okay, if you're a cool dude and you're in shape, man, women are going to going to react to you.
And so you have to be aware of that.
And also, as JO said, knowing this man personally or talking to him or emailing him with him would help a lot.
Because if I was to look him in the eye, I would say this and Mr. Producer, you get ready with your bleep button.
If I was to look this guy in the eye, I'd say, listen, man, you want pussy or not?
I love you, Sam.
You're my guy.
It's out there for you to go get, you know.
And like I said, I talked to Tony Montana.
This whole city's a big, we're just waiting to get F.
Yeah, right.
I mean, you know, when I'm at a store, I'm talking to women at work or here or in business or whatever.
I can tell a certain type of woman, like, if I was single and we wanted to talk or date, we could, you know, so that's what you got to get in tune with.
They're out there.
You don't, you don't like you're, you're, you're trying too hard already, it sounds like a buddy recently, yeah, a buddy recently said that, you know, he wasn't a player, but once he cracked the code in his young and sewing wild oats days, it was easier than falling off a log.
Yeah.
It's, it, it becomes a script and you have to find out which one is going to work for you.
Yeah.
But it's like anything else, man.
Like you can get good at anything.
Yeah.
Because and it's not always just about like closing the deal or whatever.
If you just like to be out and you're an extrovert and you want to start conversations with people, like you can be out with how many times has this happened with us and guys in our thing?
You and four or five of your buddies are out, and you see four or five dudes over there that just seem like they would be cool dudes.
And maybe you're at some bar that has cornhole or something, and they're playing, and then you're going to throw in to compete with them, and you just end up kind of broing down with some normies, strangers, and maybe you're, you know, dropping some red pills or whatever.
Right.
Um, just knowing how to talk to people is a skill, and it's the core skill of talking to women, you know, but like you have to be able to talk to anybody.
It's actually a super good way because you can get into the whole prepare your bleep pussy nerd stuff with the pickup artist thing.
But one of the best ways, so if you see a group of people, let's say there's five people staying there, it's uh one dude and four women, and that dude is obviously the boyfriend or husband of one of those chicks, but you think one of the other chicks is hot, the best way to open a conversation with that group is not to talk to the chick that you're interested in.
It's either talk to the goblin girl, the gnarliest one, or you start talking to the dude, yeah, and dress well, of course, and all the rest of it.
Yeah, all that basic stuff, but like and I want to say that uh, I have heard as many people say, and somebody who's a close friend of the show has a very serious girlfriend now who may be the one.
Oh, how'd you meet her, church?
No, online.
I've heard as many people say that they met their girlfriend or now wife online as I've heard mostly our guys complaining that online dating sucks.
And I can't believe that.
But online means several things: there's the hookup apps.
I always suggest to people: if you are already active on social media, getting involved with like shared interest groups of things that you're legitimately into-Facebook groups, Twitter chats, what have you, you can fare well there.
And maybe some people are having some success with non-degenerates on Tinder and Bumble.
I don't hear a lot of that feedback, or the amount of it that I hear is negligible.
And I think a lot of it's not true.
Like, oh no, dude, she's totally not a slut.
She told me she's only had sex once before in her life, and she's 30, and she's on Tinder and has been for years.
I don't believe you, buddy.
But just pick the hottest one, just pick the hottest one on early trans and simp as hard as possible.
Yeah, yeah, no, but there are shared interest sort of things where you just start to feel like you get to know people.
Um, I know a dude in our thing who is uh married and his wife is pregnant, and they met in a Facebook group that was a fan group of the show Dark Mirror after its first season because he just saw this first season of the show and was like, Man, this is incredible!
Like, where do I want to talk about it with some people?
And he joins some Facebook group of Dark Mirror fans or Black Mirror, Black Mirror.
Um, it's like a Twilight Zone type of show, it is pretty cool.
I remember that, and he's like this, you know, based in red-pilled TRS guy, and he meets this normie girl in the group who's hot just because she loves the show, and then he starts dropping red pills on her, and they go and meet IRL, and now they're married, and she's pregnant, and it's great.
And it will happen for you, too, dear listener.
Yeah, we'll make it happen.
Just watch Blackmir.
And if you want specialized advice, personalized advice from JO, you do have to donate to the show first.
Maybe.
It would be nice.
JO, you should create a gumroad specifically for pickup advice.
what's not not uh it's like uh i've heard it talked about It's like Patreon, but they don't.
Oh, okay.
It's the new Hatreon.
Okay.
Oh, is it our guys actually?
I don't know.
It's just free speech.
You see a lot of our guys using it.
Yeah.
So what's crazy, dude, is I got behind the veil a little bit on Patreon, and they actually kind of let people cut loose on a lot of stuff.
If you're explicitly a race thing, they won't let you go.
But words like faggot and tranny are cut loose by like stand-up comics or what have you.
Well, yeah, of course, Jews can do whatever they want.
I see what you're saying.
Yeah, you're behind these paywalls and they let you go.
I think it's been a while, but I'm pretty sure that people that do like really spurgy HBD stuff and are like Rachel lists, you know, they're not us per se, but they're like, yeah, race is real and whatever.
You know, they don't get kicked off.
Right.
They like they won't get kicked off of Patreon a lot of the times.
Now, JF, obviously, he interacts with us quite a bit, but there are people out there that just spurg on it.
And they're like Stephanie Molyneux with data, you know.
Is JF still out there?
I haven't heard him.
Yeah.
I saw him on Twitter a few weeks ago.
Yeah.
All right, gentlemen, let's, we're at one hour, so let's put a bookmark in it right there.
Yes.
Thank you, JO, for joining us.
And we will hopefully talk to you next week.
And gents, we are going out.
I got to do it.
I don't care if the audience likes, hates, loves Electronica.
This one will give you tingles.
It's called You'll Be Okay by a British DJ named Gareth Emery.
Turn it up.
My daughter asked if I could put this one in her playlist.
So it's dear daughter approved.
And we will be right back with an awesome second half to come.
Don't go anywhere.
My plane could fall from the sky.
The world could tell me this is my time.
Count my blessings every day.
I'm more than I deserve.
Sing the song when I am gone.
I'll be in every word.
I don't know the light could fade from my eyes.
My plane could fall from the sky.
The world could tell me this is my time.
And if I should die here tonight, darling that you would save my life felt your love every day.
You'll be all
And I know you'll be okay.
You'll save my life.
And if I should die tonight, darling that you saved my life felt your love every day.
And welcome back to the second half of Full House, episode 80.
Hard to believe.
We've been through 80 of these things.
We're coming up on our second anniversary in April.
And that's a reminder that we're about to close out February here, which means it is almost springtime and gardening season.
So this year, it's absolutely at the top of my list to do way more serious gardening, both for beautification, but more importantly, for fruits and veggies, trees.
I'm going to be out there with a green thumb and dirty trousers from kneeling in the mud and in the soil this spring.
Come hell or high water.
In addition to getting fit.
So all these things to do now that I'm 40, got to get serious and buckled down.
And I'm looking forward to it.
It's not like a chore.
It's going to be exciting.
That was, of course, You'll Be Okay by Gareth Emery.
Hope you enjoyed it.
And pivoting to congratulations.
We have only two this week, and they're extraordinarily top secret.
But I just have to tease them because we have them.
And just like somebody who is very close to the show has a serious girlfriend who may be the one, knock on wood.
Hope that it works out for him.
We have another good friend of the show.
He and his wife have been trying for some time.
And he let us know recently that she is pregnant.
It's still early days, but he felt comfortable sharing that.
So you know who you are, you two.
Congratulations.
And we're extraordinarily happy and proud and genuinely smiling through our microphones right now.
And Sam has one that's so, so secret, he doesn't, he didn't even want to touch it with a 10-foot pole.
So good thing that he touched it with a 10-foot pole.
Ugly.
But yeah, to that very special couple, way to go, guys.
Very happy for you.
Congratulations.
So that's all we got this week.
Let us know if you got one on the way or you recently had one.
We're honored, happy, overjoyed to share that on the air.
Before we get into too much more meat here in the second half, I wanted to flag that we got a listener submission called The Way by a guy who goes by Jim Foster and wasn't exactly what I would write, my cup of tea.
He's very Christian, and he said that accepting Christ and raising your kids in that way is the easiest, best way, and most likely to victory.
With, you know, he has a couple priors that showed in the writing, but I posted it anyway, even though I didn't agree with all of it, because it was still heartfelt.
And we're not all on the exact same page, and we can reach new conclusions through reading each other.
So if you have something you want to see published online to be more permanent than the vacuous musings of a bunch of dads on a podcast, feel free to let us know at fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
If you just go to full-house.com, there's a contact us tab up there if you didn't catch all that.
And finally, I wanted to flag, I finally had a decent hour and a half to sit down and watch the latest, hopefully not the last, Murdoch Murdoch.
I'll admit, I haven't watched all of them.
Sometimes I get started and I stop.
Sometimes they're a little bit, maybe a little bit autistic for me, but I truly enjoyed this one.
They put so much heart, effort, time, and spirit into it.
And it was awesome from start to finish.
Lots of William Luther Pierce historical characters.
Go ahead, Smash.
I was just going to say, what's their, where can we watch that now?
Because I had their website bookmarked and it's now offline.
You bet.
I will put it in the show notes.
There is a Murdoch Murdoch episode archive on Telegram that has all of their episodes on there.
That's the easiest way to do it.
And then somebody sent me a link.
It's like Cheeky Videos or something.
I don't know.
They have their own website too.
Cheeky Breaky.
Something like that.
Yeah.
But so good.
They had Steve Winwood playing in the middle while they were riding the tiger.
Check it out and it'll give you a little shot in the arm too.
The ending is epic.
A lot of Fed posting in there, too.
I was impressed.
And I think that's all my housekeeping here at the top of the second half.
Samuel, you had something that you got something from a listener that you wanted to share, please.
Yeah, I was at a party and was talking to this very nice lady, and she was giving me her own takes on things we talk about, but especially she urged me to talk about just the relationship with the parents to the children.
And she was urging this point that you must give the children the feeling that you have their back at all times.
There cannot be this separation or perception that the parents are against the children and the children are very sensitive to that, that you have confidence in them and that you believe in them.
And even if they do wrong and maybe you get angry with them, but you have to leave them with the sense that you're together with them in whatever the issues are.
And it's especially so with daughters.
And that was really the context we were having the conversation.
And she was saying, especially with the daughters, you must give them that sense of confidence and that they can rely on you because otherwise they will go and they will race mix or they will become homosexual or whatever it is.
And That especially with daughters are more emotional, more sensitive, and more at risk for that type of feeling with the parents.
And I have to say, honestly, that really cut me because, you know, I went through a sad breakup years ago, many years ago now, but my daughters were little at the time.
And, you know, that all of those things go through my mind or went through my mind at that time, especially because the time with them was not easy.
The times with them were not consistent and what we would hope to be normal.
Sure.
And so I listened to what she was saying, but it hurt inside to hear that.
And with my daughters now, as adults, with two of them, we are good with each other.
But with one of them, there is some separation right now.
And the way I'm looking at it is, as we were saying a little bit there in the first half, sometimes you got to let people go their own way a little bit, at least.
And in the hopes that maybe they will come back as they mature a little bit and as they experience the world, and then they will see that, yep, you were right about a few things.
So sometimes those things are out of your control or get taken out of your control by circumstance.
And so our lady friend was right, but I have to say, it did hurt to hear that.
No, I feel you, Sam.
I mean, one of the nice things about doing this show is that it gets your noggin jogging to use the cliche.
But I think about a lot of things just via talking things out on the show.
And I suspect that that helps listeners as well think about their own issues, whether it's in their, you know, in their marriage or with their kids.
I worry that I'm too lovey-dovey with your daughter, which comes more natural to a father in terms of being supportive and kind and a little bit gentler.
And I worry that I'm a little bit too much of a hard ass with Junior, A, because it's a father-son relationship, B, because he's tough and can be stubborn and he's sharp.
But it reminded me, I found a little note that I wrote to him probably a year or two ago.
He had done something very impressive that struck me, and I didn't want it to just be vocal reinforcement to him.
But I just sat down and, God, you know, we talk about writing prisoners.
Write to your kids too.
I just wrote a short little note.
I should do this way more often.
I'm not shooting my own horn, but I just said, you know, I was extremely proud of you for how you handled this or what you did.
Great job.
Love dad.
And just the other day, he fell on the playground.
They were playing Monkey in the Middle, which I was relieved to hear that they still use that nomenclature.
And yeah, he got scraped up pretty bad.
And the nurse said, oh, he didn't cry.
He wanted to stay in school, but then it started bugging him.
So I went to pick him up at school.
And he was pretty stoic about it.
He's like, it looks pretty cool, Dad, doesn't it?
I was like, yeah, scarface.
The girls are going to like it.
Oh, dad.
You know, that's not actually it.
So, yeah, absolutely.
We have to, we have to do our best.
Nobody's perfect, right?
Constantly reevaluate your performance.
Don't beat yourself up over it.
Job one, keep them safe.
Job two, keep them healthy and well-fed.
And then all the other, there's no perfection.
There's no perfect way to do it.
You just try to do your best and be fair and certainly not cruel or inconsistent.
I guess that's the other killer of parenthood is just having these rules all over the place and being sweet and supportive one day and then a mean SOB the next.
So we will make it through.
And that reminded me that a Twitter commenter, I posted some, oh, God, it was Rand Paul interrogating the trans Jew appointed to assistant health secretary or deputy assistant health secretary is that creature from Pennsylvania.
And I just said, you know, the simple fact that a U.S. senator has to question a political appointee about whether underage, you know, youth hormone therapy and actual genital mutilation should be on the on the table.
That that says everything.
And a listener or a commenter said, I worry about having kids with that stuff.
I said, ah, stop right there.
You should, you need to have more kids as a result of seeing these horrible things, not back away from it.
And he said, no, I get it.
It's just, you know, anxiety.
And yeah, don't blame you.
The horror stories that we see certainly makes it a dawning proposition.
All right.
Let me stop there and we are going to go to a particularly brief and moving question from the audience.
Subject is teaching my son.
It's from Jimmy.
Jimmy writes, hey, guys, wondering if I could get your input on how you as fathers would handle this situation.
My oldest son.
No, you can't.
All right.
Come on, Smasher.
I was establishing dramatic seriousness here.
Anyway, he says, my oldest son, who is 13, recently told me he was ashamed of being white.
He told me this comes mostly from school and media and the way our people are depicted and talked about.
I explained to him that he had nothing to be ashamed of.
I told him his ancestors were conquerors, inventors, pioneers, and builders of nations.
I felt that was at least the right start.
Thanks, Jimmy.
Yeah, Jimmy, that's definitely the right start.
Sam, I'll give you first crack at this.
I definitely got some stuff too.
Well, get the book.
My Mirror Tells a Story.
I just bought that book and a few other things from White People's Press.
Nice to meet you today.
Nice job, guys.
I was very impressed and thoroughly enjoyed it.
So that's talking about exactly what the listener is saying in his letter.
Yeah.
The fact that your son is 13, he's stating this and explaining why tells me that he is absolutely mature enough to go further than your ancestors.
I suspect that just saying the righteous, virtuous memes that we use about ancestors or conquerors, et cetera, that is true and good and a good start.
But I think if you understand it all, Jimmy, our issues and our cause, that you can go all in.
13 years old is what, seventh grade.
I would explain to him why that school and propaganda and media indoctrination is out there.
I would explain who is largely behind it.
I would explain the demographic assault.
Maybe break it up into chunks.
You don't have to do it all at once.
But 13 is certainly old enough to get in there with your son and mentally shake him out of this funk and tell him to tribe up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I would say, obviously you want to give him the red pill, like you just said, Coach.
But I think step one is like teaching your son and really reinforcing the fact that like it's okay to not hate yourself.
He doesn't have to hate himself.
And the people that are teaching him and telling him that he is evil and his ancestors are evil are in fact evil.
Like break it down, break it down, uh Schmidt style.
Good guy, bad guy.
These people are telling you that the people that you love are bad.
Therefore, they are bad.
End of discussion.
I am a scurdriver record.
There you go.
Take them down to the pub.
No, don't do that.
Yeah, watch some epic white glory movies.
Ahab recently recommended Epic History on YouTube, which has some really cool digital recreations of everything from Alexander to Napoleon and all the rest of it.
I think that could possibly be a cool thing to get into.
But yeah, it's kind of miraculous that he came to you and revealed this.
He's basically giving you an opening.
So play cool, Jimmy.
But I would say, yeah, you got to seize the opportunity to set him right and get him on our path smartly, too, so he doesn't get in trouble at school.
Just do the big, do the big-brained, how could our ancestors be evil when they defeated the Nazis?
Very good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just be like, you exist because how many white people before you struggled through famines, droughts, wars, et cetera?
You are the direct descendant of, I don't know, however, thousands of generations upstream.
And for you to shrug your shoulders and look at the differences that are as plain as day between the various peoples of the world and say you're ashamed of it is the exact opposite thing that you should be feeling.
And yeah, we'll get him right.
And once he turns 18, then you can get him in networking.
I was going to say take him to a bar, but this is not 1970.
That is kind of a good segue into another issue, more upstream in the childhood thing.
I think it was Ricky Spencer on Twitter the other day who asked if your parents gave you the talk about the birds and the bees growing up.
And that I think used to be something that was standard protocol that parents would do with their kids right around puberty.
And I suspect is strongly out of favor now.
We either outsource it to sex ed classes in high school, or we assume they just get it from their friends, or it's just totally so cringe and uncomfortable that everybody decides to do away with it.
In my case, it was probably around 13, maybe 14, definitely junior high or freshman in high school when my parents like tiptoed toward me with trepidation in their eyes and broached it.
And they're like, you know what?
They clearly didn't want to do it.
I knew exactly what they were about to broach and I stopped them dead in their tracks.
I said, stop it right there.
I don't need it.
I know exactly how it works.
We have this stuff in school.
And I thank you very much for your time.
Please, it wouldn't be too painful for both of us.
And they backed away gleefully that we didn't have to go through that.
And honestly, that I think was fine.
Like, what was I going to get other than extreme embarrassment and cringe from my parents telling me stuff that I did know already?
So that was my experience.
And I don't, I've actually, you know, with our kids, they haven't explicitly said, where do babies come from, but we've, it's come up in conversation.
And they understand that like two white people make a white baby.
And that if you're a black person and a white person, make a, you know, make a brown baby because it's a blend of the father and the mother.
And I have just couched it as, yes, when two people love each other, you know, they come together and they have a baby that's that's half of mom and half of dad.
And they've taken that at face value.
And I figure they'll figure out the viscerals themselves down the road, hopefully not through Jewish pornography.
But Sam and Smasher, did your parents give you the talk?
And do you plan on giving your own kids a talk?
Or did you, Sam?
When I was little, I was at the era where the sex ed stuff was being introduced into schools.
And it was actually, for me, it was the school did it in, I think, a very tactful way.
It was done segregated.
The boys had a, it was done under the health class type of auspices.
And the boys were instructed alone and to, you know, with together with the teacher.
And then the girls were similarly instructed with the teacher.
And it was, it was, you know, I'll just repeat, tactfully done.
It was not, you know, there was no agenda.
They didn't talk about gay stuff or birth control or condoms or any of that stuff.
It was, it was just the basics.
And I think it was kind of appropriate because it is awkward to talk about those things with your parents.
I never did talk about those things with my parents.
As far as with my own children, the babies were, you know, we had children over a fairly wide span of time.
So there was kind of an awareness and an understanding of what it was about without having to spell it out.
So I did, I never had the talk per se, but it is, it was understood.
And I think the mother, she did talk about it with them a little bit.
Sure.
Smasher still actually does not know how babies are made.
So they just spring from the ground like potato sprouts.
Did they try it with you, buddy?
I got a really ham-fisted, it wasn't even, it was like a question about it.
And I was just kind of like, yep.
And there was like the short attempt at elaborating, and I gave no response.
And yeah, it was like the most awkward thing ever.
It's like a cultural rite of passage that parents feel obligated to at least broach a little bit at some point, I think.
Yeah.
And like, I mean, I just straight up lied to my mom about it.
And I was like, no, like, I'm totally this innocent child that you want me to be.
Oh, so they want, they were feeling you out to see if you knew about it yet.
And you were like, no, I don't.
And that was okay.
Yeah.
And, well, no, because then that's when it got awkward because she started explaining and then I was just like, I got it.
I got it.
Yeah.
Then it was just kind of like a silent car ride from there.
And I was like, man, I wish I had just been honest.
Yeah, I wonder how the Third Reich handled sex ed and what age did they do it and how specific were they, you know, about everything.
That would be a really good idea.
I might look that up after the show.
Well, I think it's best when it's like I was describing with my experience with the health class, when it's a male instructor teaching the boys about it.
And then the girls are taught it alone with a woman.
I agree.
Because then it's not awkward.
And coming from your parents, it's awkward.
Yeah.
We had, I remember it was two lesbian phys ed gym teachers doing health class in seventh one year and then the next.
And the, you know, the moose picture of the ovaries and then the picture of the one thing and the other thing and the inevitable cackles and stuff.
Stuff.
But yeah, I don't, I'm not religiously, quote unquote, opposed to any school doing that because it is human anatomy and very essential functional information that our kids should have.
So, yeah.
All right.
So I think we have a consensus that it's, you can like broach it and then you don't have to go into all the details.
I remember I was hanging out with a neighbor who happened to be, he was a Mishling, and we were looking at comic books.
And then out of the blue, he told me how it happened.
And I was shocked, utterly shocked that such things could go on.
And I was probably like nine or ten, and that robbed me of some innocence there.
But whatever, you know, you got to find out one way or the other.
I mean, some Jew is going to expose your children to porn before you have the opportunity to talk to them about it, anyways.
So, yeah, better that I got it that way than seeing some, yeah, utterly put in front of my eyes with no warning whatsoever.
All right.
We got another question from a dear listener about preschool.
And I think they have their first on the way.
They said, Coach, you haven't talked at all about early life education or daycare in particular.
You know, you should know our stance on early life education.
Do share.
All right.
I see where you're going.
How did you not get that?
I'm just, frankly, I'm disappointed in you.
We're going to call it because it's cold out here in the gazebo, and I'm always thinking about the next thing coming up in the show, Smasher.
No.
No, I just didn't pick up on it there.
Grugness.
But we have experienced the whole gamut of pre, we'll call it pre-K care.
Our first went to daycare from the painful early age of, you know, three, four months, whatever, and my wife had to go back to work.
Broke our heart.
He turned out okay.
It was a ton of money.
He was there for painfully long hours, especially when my wife was on travel.
I'd have to go to work, drop him off, go to work, come back, pick him up late in the day.
And that absolutely felt wrong.
Although I think he got decent care and he was always smiling and seemed to be in good shape at the end of the day.
We had not live-in, but daytime nanny help for our daughter that was, I found that kind of weird to have a relative stranger in your house taking care of your kid, but that was what needed to happen because we were both working at the time.
And then with our third and our toddler, he's gotten, you know, mom and or dad more or less from the get-go.
And what I reckon, these people both work or are going to have to send their firstborn to some sort of care or get in-house care.
And we did have excellent, I had, when I was a kid, I went to a half-day Christian, I think it was Presbyterian preschool that was wholesome.
I have very fond memories of going there and doing all the arts and crafts.
It's only half a day, so that's not really a huge help for working parents.
But we also sent our kids to a half-day pre-K preschool just to get them the experience and do the class plays and all the art projects and stuff like that.
They seem to love it.
It was a good little toe in the water for school.
Now, I know homeschoolers are not going to be happy about that.
But the ideal is that you keep them home and then maybe do a little half day here or there if you want to get them experienced to other kids or a homeschool co-op.
But yeah, that was our experience.
Sam, did yours all stay home for years?
Yeah.
Yeah, they did.
I mean, If you can make it work and you live in an area where there's some other thing, I don't think any of us would be against that.
It's just the reality that for most people, or at least if you live in a city, I don't know how you send your kids to any kind of daycare or public school with all the other races there and all the pas going on and society, colds.
Yep.
Yeah, all that stuff.
I just, I just can't even imagine it.
Yep.
Here's my question: is like, do you really have to send your kid to daycare?
Are you, you know, what's it cost to put your kid in daycare or whatever?
Like for us, even with a bachelor's degree, my wife's not going to be able to put, well, we have two kids, but we couldn't put them in daycare for it to be in it be worth what she would come out making.
She just wouldn't make enough, you know.
$300, $500 at the end of the month isn't worth putting your kid into daycare.
I happily sacrificed that $500 knowing that my children are one home anytime that I'm home, essentially, but also being taken care of by somebody that I trust not only with my life, but the future of my family lineage.
Yeah.
So I would kind of consider that.
One kid is going to be, you know, significantly cheaper.
But we, and we're sending the twins to preschool here coming up in the fall.
Oh, I didn't know that.
That's going to be awesome.
Yeah.
Hopefully.
Yeah.
It's going to, yeah, hopefully it's going to be good for me.
I mean, it's a white area.
So, yeah.
But it's mostly because the second set of twins, my, you know, my wife was like, I just for like the first year or so when they're like really needy babies, like, yep, to have the toddlers go and even, you know, I don't know if it's half day or full day, but like just to have a couple hours with them out of the house will be a huge, you know,
it would basically be a disservice to the new set of twins if the toddlers were around all day.
Yep, absolutely.
And go ahead.
Oh, I was just going to say, so there are legitimate reasons to send your children to daycare or preschool or whatever, especially if you live in a good area.
Oh, yeah.
They do have Shishi, what was it called?
La Petite Academy.
God, it was so expensive.
But it was clear that they took their job very seriously and it was like boutique treatment for infants.
Now, the other thing that's out there is in-home daycare, where you can, it's literally a woman in her home who takes on a small number of rug rats from various ages, usually in a big, nice, kitted-out basement.
And we know, or we knew, a lot of places like that where the parents raved about it.
The mother or the woman was delightful.
And clearly, you have women who just love spending time with kids and teaching them and treating them well.
Caveat, of course, is that you have to trust, but verify reputation will take somebody a long way, but you got to inspect for yourself too.
So, you know, you got to do what you got to do, working parents.
And keep them home if you can.
If you got to send them out, do the best you can by them.
All right.
We had one more question from an audience member that was, I laughed at it because it was so close to home.
I almost thought he was trolling me.
Here we go.
Divorce lawyer.
I won't say his name.
Says, hey, I was on a thread asking for help finding a good divorce lawyer the other day in Insert, specific area of the country where I personally live.
And he goes, and I was told by someone there that Full House might have resources that could point me towards since you focus on family advocacy for men's rights.
I'll have to check out your podcast.
Thank you to whoever was in this thread and recommended our show.
I'm new to this.
So this guy ended up.
Thanks in advance.
Have a great weekend.
Hope to hear from you soon.
So this guy's divorce lawyer shopping and keeping a good attitude about it.
He's pretty chipper.
So she must be a real battle axe.
But we have not talked about divorce.
Now, I don't know, Sam, if you were on the show.
I was not, but there was a guy, well, whatever.
There was a guy on the fatherland who was a divorce lawyer who came on, and I thought that was an excellent show.
He talked about the realities of how often the men get hosed and how you have to stick up for your rights.
And you have to get a good lawyer.
But we've never talked about that on the show.
So if you're listening and you have either gone through a divorce or you are a divorce lawyer and you're willing to come on anonymously, get in touch with us, just like anybody who's gone through adoption, because that's an important one.
I couldn't help this guy.
I'm not in the divorce market, knock on wood.
I would think you could find somebody that this is such a racket for the horrible way that our society is about marriage.
There's plenty of divorces, so there's plenty of divorce lawyers, you know, and you get one and you're going to pay dearly for them, but then they're going to fight for you.
And that's just what lawyers are in it to do.
I would say the thing that's important about that whole subject is when you find yourself having to take that type of a measure, very often, if you're a decent person, and if you're listening to this show, you're probably a decent person.
You have like a sense of denial, like you don't want to go through with this.
You don't want to believe this is happening.
You hate this.
This is the thing you hate.
And here your hand is being forced into it.
And that's all very natural.
And that's because you're a good person.
That's why you feel that way.
However, it will be very important to act decisively and quickly.
And if you talk to anybody who has been through all that, the only regret that they will say is that they didn't act sooner and with greater determination in their own behalf.
That's the lesson to learn from that.
Sadly, I've known guys to go through it.
I had to go through something like that myself.
I even know a guy right now that's very sad because you're just not even in a fighting spirit when you're going through that.
But you have to bring yourself to it to defend yourself and defend your rights.
That's right.
Get yourself into a self-defense situation.
And within your lawful rights as a human being, defend yourself by any means necessary.
That's right.
With a GoPro on at the time to or you could just Todd Mullis her.
You guys probably don't know who that is.
No idea.
He's a guy.
His wife served him divorce papers and he killed her with a garden rake.
This happened at some point last year, but I just remember it because the whole garden rake divorce avoided.
Yeah, just do like Tony Soprano did and call every single divorce lawyer in your area, which at least in the Sopranos, I don't know if this actually happens in the real world.
I guess Carmella, all the lawyers like the will was poisoned.
They couldn't take her on as a client because he had called everybody.
But in all seriousness, I think something like eight out of ten divorces are initiated by the woman.
And I, you know, it's painful enough to just have that topic broached.
And then, you know, you think, oh, well, we're both grown adults.
And especially if you have children, we'll just work it out to do what is right and fair by the kids.
But yes, it does not seem to work that way.
To answer this guy's question seriously, certainly you have some kind of family lawyer.
It could be a real estate lawyer.
It could be somebody has got some kind of lawyer that reviewed somebody's will.
Every family, every person has some amount of dealings with lawyers.
Ask the lawyer for a referral or a recommendation.
They will know a good divorce attorney that can help you.
Yep.
Get on it, buddy.
Defend yourself and everything that you have going.
All right, laddies, let us move to navigating the collapse.
This one is in the hopper from last week.
Our good old Nathaniel Scott had it ready for the show that never happened.
In reality, we were considering doing a show the night before my birthday, but family stuff got in the way, and then we were going to do a live show around the Yeti.
But everybody was having a good time and didn't want to break that up.
So here we go with Navigating the Collapse.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
The time may come when you're camping in the woods and need to keep a fire going without giving away your position.
Here's some tips on smoke and fires.
Smoke is formed when there's not enough oxygen to burn the fuel, or when there are liquids or gases in the fuel.
Smoke is a sign of an inefficient fire, although it has its uses.
Smoke can be used to signal, to smoke meats, and to drive away annoying insects.
There are several ways to make a smokeless fire.
One way is by using charcoal, which naturally puts off very little smoke.
Light the charcoal with a bit of newspaper or other starter and go from there.
This method might be best for heating your home when you don't want anyone to know it's occupied.
Other than charcoal, the best fuel is wood that is as dry as possible.
Small, dry twigs work best.
Feed the fire slowly and avoid adding sticks thicker than your thumb.
In the woods, make sure you have a large solid backdrop behind your fire and an opening directly opposite in your fire ring.
This will ensure that a steady flow of oxygen reaches the fire, reducing inefficiency and smoke.
If you have more time, build the Dakota fire hole by digging two holes about a foot away from each other and connecting them underground.
Make a fire in one hole by filling it about halfway with fuel, then lighting the fire on top.
The airflow between the holes will reduce inefficiency, and having the fuel under the fire will ensure that gases released by the fuel are burnt up instead of being released as smoke.
You can translate this technique above ground or in your fireplace as well in what's called an upside-down fire.
And now, Eustace Mullins, an American writer the SPLC described as a one-man organization of hate.
His work, The Secrets of the Federal Reserve, was the first book burned in Germany after the Second World War, and a copy was found in Osama bin Laden's hideout.
Here are select quotations from The Biological Jew, 1968 Since the parasite depends upon its host for food, we would suppose that it would do everything within its power to aid the Gentile community to become richer and more powerful.
But, overriding every other consideration is the parasite's determination to keep its position upon the host.
For 5,000 years, History has recorded the efforts of Gentile hosts to dislodge their Jewish parasites.
Empires rise and fall, continents are discovered, wildernesses are explored and settled, and man makes progress through new inventions.
Yet through it all, one factor remains constant.
The Gentile host, fearful of the damage which it is suffering from the presence of the Jewish parasite, tries to dislodge it.
The parasite has prepared for such efforts, which it always foresees, by attaching itself so securely to the host that the host only damages itself in its wild struggles.
In some cases, the Gentile host destroys itself in these efforts.
The Jewish parasite prefers seeing the Gentile host destroyed instead of leaving peacefully from a still living host.
If the host dies, the parasite looks for another host.
It has no feelings of any kind for the host which has provided it with food.
What is the function of government?
The function of government is to provide the people with essential services, to guide the defense of the nation, and to promote justice and free enterprise.
Now, what is the function of a Gentile government which has come under the direction of the parasite?
The chief function of a government controlled by the parasite is to guarantee his right to feed upon the host, to protect him against being cast out, and to allow other parasites the right to come in and feed upon the host.
Thus, the chief function of such a government is bound up with campaigns for civil rights for minorities, liberalizing all immigration laws, and attacking other hosts who threaten to cast off their parasites.
All other considerations of government are swept aside in the performing of these functions, which are so essential to the well-being of the parasite.
Thus, in the United States, we find the Federal Bureau of Investigations ignoring the mounting crime rate while its agents spend all of their time in battling those Gentile reactionaries who are reacting against the harmful presence of the parasite.
We find that the American government has become a vast tax-collecting agency for the benefit of the parasites, and that 84% of the Gentiles' earnings are forcibly taken from them and given to the parasites.
We find that every department of the government has interested itself in the added function of guaranteeing the parasite's continued security in its position upon the host.
They have set up many new economic subsidiaries whose task is to funnel all of the nation's economic resources into the hands of the parasites.
We find that the Department of Defense, instead of guarding our nation, is punishing the nation with a tremendous bloodletting by sending many thousands of our finest youth to be slaughtered in jungles many thousands of miles from our shores in wars which the Jewish parasites have conjured up for this sole purpose.
Instead of providing equal justice for all, the courts of the nation have become rubber-stamp star chambers for the persecution of those Gentiles who react to the presence of the parasite.
These Gentile reactionaries are arrested on some pretext or other, or evidence against them is planted by FBI agents, and they are sentenced to long terms in prison.
What about education?
We find that the Jewish parasite makes a fetish of education.
There must be universal education, education for all.
But what sort of education does the Gentile host receive in a state which is dominated by the Jewish parasite?
First, he is taught that he must never think for himself, because this is the original sin.
He is carefully instructed on how to be a docile slave for the rest of his life, a robot-like zombie who will never be able to use his mind for his own protection or advancement.
Why does the Jewish parasite have to control the native intelligence of the Gentile?
First, the Jew is not invisible.
He has high visibility.
He knows that the Gentile is bound to see him, to become irritated by his presence, and to wish to cast him out.
The Gentile has only to look down the street on any main street in America and see that most of the businesses are owned by Jews.
The place where he works is owned by a Jew.
He pays rent each month or a lifelong mortgage to a Jewish bank.
He knows that he is being mercilessly exploited by a foreign body known as the Kingdom of Israel.
Look at America before 1860, when the country was largely free of the parasite blight.
A young nation which was the hope of the civilized world.
Look at Germany today, where it is a crime by law on the statutes to mention the parasite by name, and to compare it with the Germany of 1800.
Germany today is a nation of despair, because the parasite has once again fastened its tentacles deep into the host, with the aid of foreign occupying armies, and poisoned every aspect of German life.
Thus, we must admit a fundamental law of nature.
If the host cannot dislodge the parasite, it sinks into a slow degenerating trauma of sickness and death.
If it can dislodge the parasite, it quickly soars to new heights of accomplishment and prosperity.
Amazing.
I had never heard the name Eustace Mullins before in my entire life.
All my hatred, all my bigotry, all my xenophobia.
That guy was off my radar.
Sam, you must have known about it.
Yes, I'm familiar with Eustace Mullins.
Yeah, great stuff.
Yeah, that was awesome.
A one-man hate organization?
That's ghouls AF.
Squad goals get on Eustace Mullins level.
I looked him up while I was listening to that.
He died in 2010, wrote a couple books, and he looked like he could be a preacher or a politician.
Looked like a normal, handsome white guy.
Born 1923 in Roanoke.
Another one of these guys, I had never heard of Louis Beam.
Oh, man.
Louis Beam.
That guy's even hotter.
I mean, you want to talk about a guy.
That guy's got pure fire.
If you could find some of his speeches on wherever, probably not YouTube, but if you could find some of his speeches, yeah, he is great.
Yeah, Jim Foster, who, you know, some of the criticism was, oh, you know, we don't have to be kind to these people, etc.
He quoted Lewis Beam in there, basically.
And his quote was: Our biggest problem is not the Jew, but white weakness.
To which, you know, we might say, why not both?
Right?
Yeah, sure.
Point taken.
Lewis Beam, Eustace Mullins.
There we go.
I think Antelope Hill might need to resurrect or bring back some of their classics.
But thank you.
On the subject of fire, I think every single time I have made a fire at my place, Potato Smasher's autism has taken him over and he's come over and reassembled it.
And frankly, you know, put it together a little bit more rationally than me and my slapdash newspaper sticks, big wood.
Yeah.
Can't help himself.
I can't.
Speaking of Potato Smasher, go ahead.
Oh, I was going to say completely unrelated, but apparently we printed $11 trillion last night.
Yeah.
Money printer go burr.
Yeah.
I have no idea what it's for.
I just was scrolling while listening and saw that.
And I don't know what it means.
Something about the way like money is counted and whatever.
It's a bunch of nerd stuff that I don't know about.
Yeah, there's funky stuff going on across the board from the trading restrictions to treasury yields surging right now, which is a sign probably that inflation is coming because people aren't willing to take those low treasury bond yields to give the government money to hold and give them interest to this like, yeah, hiccups and money transfers and everything.
So, man, the listener who wrote in to say, I would not get too excited about your long-term financial planning there, Goy.
They can yank the rug out from under you.
And today we had the biggest market drop since March 2020 when the coronavirus freak out was getting into full speed.
So, yeah, hard, hard assets, ass, gas, and brass.
Invest in ammo.
I've been saying this since I was a teenager, and I will say it until the day that I die.
Ammo is the best form of currency because you can trade with it.
It's valuable.
It has an objective value.
And what you cannot trade for with it, you can take with it.
Yeah.
And if hyperinflation comes back, you need space.
You need to be able to generate your own electricity, ideally with a generator and a propane tank.
You need long-term food storage.
You need a lot of things so that you are not the person going into the FEMA camp starving or showing up at your buddy's house empty-handed.
Oh, you don't want to give me those antibiotics that I need to give to my child who has an infection?
You're not willing to accept three full magazines of 556?
Okay, well, then you can take three rounds of 556.
And now my child has access to everything that you own.
Yep.
Don't forget, guys, it is definitely serious out there.
It's getting worse.
Not that you can forget this, of course, but use it to fuel you and motivate you.
Sometimes I'm good about that.
I'm sort of on a sine wave where I will go through good, positive, constructive, long-term activity.
And then other times I get bogged down in the little stuff that isn't that important but needs to be done anyway.
So the whole purpose of this is to get you guys motivated, having big, strong, and defensible white families.
So get at it.
Before we close, I did want to circle back.
I told him I would do this.
Big John is a regular listener, father of many daughters, and he's supported the show in the past, and he took serious issue.
He takes issue with a lot of things.
He's a bit of a contrarian, not everybody's cup of tea.
But when we answered Joe B the other week about his mid-20s daughter and the younger guy who was, you know, I guess living with her, dating her, but hasn't popped the question yet.
And we, as the birth panel, operated under the assumption that the kid was doing something wrong, Big John said, hold your horses there.
Joe B should be kicking himself in the ass for having his, you know, mid-20s daughter unmarried, teaching.
And it's not, the kid's not doing anything wrong.
He's got a pretty girl.
He's getting the milk for free, et cetera.
It's on Joe B and his daughter.
It's not on the young guy.
So he sort of inverted our argumentation.
And he wrote out a lot of good stuff, but I just don't have time to read it.
And I don't want the audience to get bogged down on it before we close out.
So just food for thought there.
Yeah, it's incumbent upon fathers, not giving Joe B a hard time, but it's incumbent on you to not just be good, loving, supportive fathers, but to steer them in the right way and try to cut off problems early on.
Now, Big John thinks that women should get married and start having kids really young, 18 to 20.
Whereas I'm not going to lose too much sleep if my daughter is early 20s and I'm married without kids.
But point taken.
Yeah.
Within reason, in principle, yeah, earlier is the better.
And we will be connecting our sons and daughters with our friends and their beautiful children across the movement.
All right, gentlemen, let's bring this puppy home.
Samuel, thank you.
As always, really nice job.
We cracked up about your comment.
We'll make that a drop.
Your advice to our guy who's out there shopping for tail.
Well, good.
I hope I excuse me.
Yeah.
I hope I helped him.
And it was a great discussion all around with our four panelists here.
So thank you again.
It was all the better because Mr. Producer didn't say a word, to be honest.
Smasher, what's up, brother?
Did you know that Obama helped hospital nurses on strike for better wages?
Search Obama Hospital Strike to learn more.
Okay.
I'm going to leave it at that.
Obama Hospital Strike.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
It took me a second, but I got that one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was like the, oh, yeah, Obama punched somebody in the nose when they called him a racial slur.
And somebody was like, you should see what he did.
Yeah.
Oh, I'm giving it away.
Yeah.
You should see what he did to Yemen in 2012 or whatever.
The hypocrisy knows no bounds, but our honesty also knows no bounds, fam.
Thank you so much, everyone.
Full House episode A was taped on a, I don't know, we're about freezing out here right now, 32 in the full house gazebo, February 25th, now, February 26th.
It's almost a full moon out there.
The snow is almost entirely melted, and spring is in the air.
You know where to follow us.
And if you'd like to support the show, please do go to full-house.com/slash support or the support tab and donate if you're feeling like we've earned it.
So to all of our listeners growing older and wiser by the day and by the full house episode, but also feeling a deep-seated anxiety as the clock ticks on our people's prospects, take this quote from Leon deGrill to heart.
Short or long, life is only redeemed if we have no cause for shame.
At the moment, we have to give it back.
I think that says it all, fam.
Live your life so that you're not going to have regrets at the end of the show.
JO's not here, so we can't do the confidential informant series that I had planned.
That Slacker has to stay for the second hour for me to do the bit, and mine comes last.
So instead, I'm going to leave you folks with this track.
It's called Japan by Tycho.
Listener to the show was asking, Hey, what's a good Pandora station to play that the mom and dad will like and the kids will like too?
And I suggested Tycho.
So I went over to check out Tycho, and this is one of his newest tracks.
It's awesome.
It's beautiful.
I hope you love it, guys.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Can't wait.
Smasher, please do the honors.
YOLO when you landed.
I don't know how it happened.
You got me spinning round for you.
I'll tell you the truth.
So you can't say I didn't warn you.
I'm bad, but I'm good.
I'll be so good to you.
Hey, yeah, oh, oh, oh.
Hey, stay as she goes.
Oh, me.
This house is called Jacko.
But don't wait for me to come back.
Couldn't break it down.
She don't mind at all.
She don't mind.
Couldn't break it down.
She don't mind at all.
She don't mind at all.
She don't mind.
Came home from Japan on your own when you landed.
I don't know how it happened.
You got me spinning round for you.
I tell you the truth.
So you can say I didn't warn you.
I'm bad, but I'm good.
I'll be so good to you.
Hey, yeah.
Oh, no, no.
Hey, yeah.
Stay as she goes.
Oh, me.
This house is touching.
But don't wait for me to come back.
Couldn't break it down.
She don't mind at all.
She don't mind.
Can't break it down.
She don't mind at all.
She don't mind.
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