Say, how come could you go from a ground man who did pretty little cartoons for Sir Brown to a Nazi?
Well, because I found out that the communists are doing to my country just what they did to Germany in the 20s.
Exactly the same.
The same inflation, the same insanity, the same destruction of law and order, the same inflation is almost here.
The same riots, the same bedding, and the same Jews operating it.
These are the same Jews.
Same people that were over there here now.
The gas six million, most of them are over here running the civil rights movement.
Same people.
I found this out to be a fact.
There's no argument about it.
It is a fact.
And when you look at it as a fact, what are you going to do about it?
Just let it go.
Well, the only thing I could see to do it first, I became a conservative.
And I promptly became thoroughly and totally disenchanted and disgusted with conservatives.
They are the most cowardly bunch of fakes that I have ever had to deal with.
Our country is drowning in hypocrisy and cowardice.
Now, when you tell me how a cowardly, hypocritical conservative says, I love Jews and Negroes are my best friends, how is he going to save his country from hypocrisy doing that?
If Israel is a Jewish country and has the right to be Jewish, if Ghana is a black country and has the right to be flagged, why don't we have the right to keep a white country white?
And Christians, well, how long do you people think you'd last if you went over there to Israel and campaigned in the Jewish schools in Israel against singing Jewish songs?
And yet they're over here campaigning against us singing Christmas carols in ours.
As a result of all of this, ladies and gentlemen, they are destroying law and order.
And they have got millions of good, sincere Americans, like many of you out here, helping them to do it because you really believe you're helping to build a better world.
This is the way they work all over the world.
They tell you you're helping build a better world, and they play the violin.
They tell you about these poor Jews in Germany, all the terrible things that happened.
They don't tell you what the Jews did to Germany and what they're doing to our country here.
And anybody who tries to tell you, then they use terrorism to shut him up anyway at all.
Cut down his audience, raise hell, do anything you can, but don't let him get to the people.
Because I've said, if I'm wrong, show me and I'll quit.
But quit calling me sick and calling me names and trying to punch me in the face.
It will never stop me.
It has never stopped our forefathers.
No American in the history of this country has ever backed down because somebody beat on him.
On the
episode 82 of Full House, the world's most George Lincoln Rockwell respecting show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
I am, as always, your spring-fevered host, Coach Finstock, back with another Lord knows how long show celebrating the breeders and future breeders among our people.
That was, of course, the legendary GLR to open us this week, saying the same things 55 years ago that you and all your little internet buddies have been saying for a few years.
The commander would have turned 103 this week had he not been cut down in his prime.
And we owe incredible gratitude to those precious few who knew the score so long before us and who had the courage to speak out about it.
Before we meet the birth panel this week, though, big thanks to Joe B and also to BJ for their kind support of the show.
BJ was the first full house listener to utilize our new post office box, real innovations going on around here.
And he sent along a kind note as well.
He said, guys, I appreciate what you are doing with the Full House podcast.
You fill a very important niche in the movement to secure a future for our people.
Keep up the good work.
We will, BJ.
Thank you, buddy.
Bill Gates once said long after he was a multi-billionaire that he felt chained to the mast at Microsoft.
And that's a little bit what it's like here on the show.
We too are chained to the mast amidst the storm, but with smiles on our faces, determined to keep adding value and entertainment in a dark sea of evil.
But that's enough of me.
Let's meet the birth panel.
First up, sit up straight and listen up.
You, yes, you.
Because he once breathed the same air as Commander Rockwell.
That's right, Tim.
We're going to say you're a contemporary of his.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Probably a newborn baby when that he was alive.
But yeah, that's a great choice to start off the show.
And boy, I would really tell the listeners, encourage listeners, go find those old recordings.
I have a bunch of them on recordings.
You can find them out there.
And especially the Brown University speech is just pure brilliance.
And you play that for an army, and you better just be ready.
You're going to have a Nazi on your hands when you're done listening to it.
Yeah, good.
And it's amazing how the issues are the same, the same today as they were then.
The very same.
Whether you read his book, White Power, or you listen to a speech or the old recordings, it's the same issues over and over again.
It's brilliant.
But hey, coach, my son, he's a real comedian.
And I'm talking about a little routine.
He can tell jokes in a conversational manner.
And he came up to me and he said, Hey, you know, if I could talk to these Jews that are trying to hurt our people and stuff like that, you know what I'd tell them?
I said, no, what?
He said, I'd say, you go Yahweh, and I'll go mine.
That's pretty good.
I like it.
Yeah, the delivery was good.
But I said, why don't you tell that on the show?
He was like, no, I don't want to do that.
And I understand, like, because we actually believe in God and we believe in the God of the Bible and the Old and New Testament.
So, so in a way, it's like making fun of it.
And we don't like to do that.
I was even hesitant to even say the joke, but I thought it was funny, anyways.
So it's great to be here.
Absolutely.
Welcome back.
And my oldest wrote a poem on his own and he gave it to me just before the show.
And I said, Holy smokes, this is good.
So if we have time in the second half, I'm going to read it.
He approved.
And it's, of course, family friendly and wholesome.
But yeah, it blew my socks off.
So we'll tease that possibly for later in the show.
Good, good sons we got there.
That's right.
Next up in the military, his call sign was Widow Maker.
But in white nationalism, his call sign is the Twin Maker.
And Papa's got a brand new whip too, Potato Smasher.
Welcome back.
It's the same Jews.
I love that.
I love that.
So honest and earnest, right?
It's like you can hear the outrage.
And he's just like, are you people retarded?
Like, it's right there in front of you.
Yeah.
So GLR and Pierce are the two people that like when I realize, you know, I've told the story before how I, you know, independently fact-checked the Jews and found out that it is verified fact that it's the Jews.
And instantly decided that I was a National Socialist.
And I was like, well, I don't speak German well enough anymore.
So I guess I'll listen to Pierce and Rockwell because at the time you could still find all their stuff on YouTube.
And so I'd go into my office if I wasn't flying or whatever and lock the door, put the speaker on and just listen to Pearson Rockwell for hours at a time.
So hearing Rockwell again has been really refreshing.
Absolutely.
Yeah, it blew my hair back too when I heard it.
I was like, holy cow, how long ago was this?
And it sounds exactly like today.
So depressing and inspiring at the same time.
And you want to talk about the new ride or not so much?
Yeah, no, we're making white Isis real.
Careful.
I know.
I know.
I joke.
I joke.
It's a Tacoma.
And, you know, just like the picture of the painting company or whatever, where his work Tacoma ended up in the Middle East.
And it was a big thing.
Tacoma, very famous, very famous truck in the Middle East, but incredible trucks.
Really happy with it and really excited to be in the Taco Club.
Don't crash it.
I won't.
All right.
Next up, he parachuted.
I didn't crash.
I didn't crash the vehicle that I was driving.
The engine blew, blew a spark plug out of the head.
It's a problem that I've dealt with before.
And the car had 180,000 miles on it.
And we're like, it's time to just put this to bed.
So didn't crash the last car.
It died.
All right.
Don't get cocky there.
All right.
Next up, he parachuted into the show last minute.
We're always happy to have him, but I got nothing snappy other than to say he has banged the drum harder for our people to write our political prisoners more than any drum circle guy I know in a park in Philadelphia selling illicit narcotics.
Jo, welcome back.
Hey, yeah, well, we'll put the addresses and contact information or whatever in the show notes, I guess.
But yeah, everyone always says, how can I do something?
This is something you can do.
And to the GLR thing, again, I just want to apologize to anyone listening who might be listening to this who tried to red pill me before it worked because it's so frustrating.
And I can only imagine the frustration.
Like it's all laid so bare and it's so obvious here now today.
Imagine being Sam or one of the guys who's been preaching this gospel for generations.
And, you know, it's just got to be so frustrating because it's the exact same problems, however many years later from the exact same people.
It's incredible.
Exactly.
We do have a new power in our pocket, of course, via social media.
And despite the censorship, there is some like, I'm not techie enough to be wise to it, but the same sort of decentralization that made Bitcoin happen is happening in the social media sphere too, to platforms like Odyssey, where it's technically impossible to censor someone unless you literally went to kill them or cut their internet access or something like that.
So knock on wood.
We'll keep at it.
And it's happening.
More people are waking up every day.
That's not rhetoric.
That's not propaganda.
That's just the truth.
And finally, our very special return guest.
He bravely joined Full House in the summer of 2019 to talk about the challenges of conceiving.
He is as kind as he is committed.
And he has now replaced Jo as the proudest husband and father I know.
Franz, welcome back, new dad.
Congratulations.
Thanks, man.
Good to be here.
All this time later.
And after a very significant milestone, my first son into this world on, well, recently.
We couldn't be more thrilled.
Yeah, we get a lot of new white life notifications on this show, but when we got yours, I did the Nintendo Switch face.
He's a beautiful, healthy baby boy.
I said that I saw your wife at first, and then what was it, like a week or two later, your face started to pop out, you know, just one of the magic, many magic experiences that you get, especially with the first one.
And yeah, we talk all the time about saving the white race, which of course is how it should be.
It's right and proper.
But too often we talk about it in the abstract or in the political realm.
For every single one of us, it's personal and it's immediate.
It's about perpetuating ourselves.
And if you're having trouble in that area, even if you're married, it can be brutal, can be an experience of self-doubt, expensive medical intervention, and just plain sadness.
So, Franz, the fate of the white race is on your shoulders tonight to enlighten the audience about, take us, give us a little bit of a history tour of when you guys started trying, how long it took, and how you made it happen, big guy.
Yeah, sure.
So we started trying significantly, I guess, you know, about a year after we were married and kind of thinking, you know, that we, that it was probably going to happen immediately.
You know, you just kind of have the perception.
I don't know.
I feel like most people have the perception growing up that once you start trying, it just, it's going to happen pretty much immediately.
Obviously wasn't the case, but we moved into a different house.
We got all ready.
We set ourselves up for our growing family and just didn't happen for us.
You know, had a few three early miscarriages, which were, you know, tragic and really difficult, especially the first one, obviously.
And, you know, after that, months and months and months went by, faint pregnancy test lines that then faded into disappointment.
You know, countless tearful sessions on the sofa, just trying to, you know, encourage each other and keep the hope alive.
And then I'd say probably after a solid year of not getting any results, when we stopped even getting the positives, not getting the miscarriages and just not getting pregnant, started seeing a doctor at this local fertility clinic that's a pretty significant, pretty reputable fertility clinic not too far from my area.
And, you know, went through the normal stuff that works for 90% of people.
And then a few other things that work for the 95% of people, the 5% of people that didn't just get pregnant from the initial drugs that they give you.
And, you know, nothing was working.
Nothing was working.
We did, let's see, I think it was two rounds of interuterine injection, which, you know, is about as one plus one as it gets as far as natural conception, just taking the highly concentrated sperm out of my jiz, putting it into the cervix.
The turkey baser, right?
The full load, right, where it needs to be on target.
And twice, it didn't work.
And we were just like kind of at a loss after a solid year of on and off, you know, doing different things with this doctor and, you know, trying that stuff.
And then what really ended up turning the corner for us was that my wife had, you know, years prior had been, you know, gluten-free.
She had gotten, I think, diagnosed with celiac at some point.
And then slowly over the years, as we were hanging out after we got married and everything, sort of slowly started creeping the beers back in or the pizza here and there and you know eating stuff again and kind of being like, hey, you know, it doesn't really seem like it gives me the digestive issues it used to.
And, you know, just kind of, but of course, you know, when you slowly get back into a bad habit, you don't notice each step along the way.
Creeping up on you.
Yeah.
You don't notice your fingernails starting to grow until you're just like, oh my God, I'm just, you know, but in any case, she thought back to that and she was reading this book about autoimmune disorders and then just got,
you know, as my wife does, she's a, yeah, she's a big reader and she just kind of went down this massive wormhole of reading about inflammation and autoimmune disorders from common dietary and inflammatory, you know, you know, gluten being one of gluten and dairy being the most common.
And eventually became convinced that like, hey, it seems, you know, just like, just like you diagnose your car, you know, you listen to what's going on, you consider what you've done, what you've checked, what you, the evidence that you have, and then seems like it might be this.
So how do we find out?
So she cuts out eating any wheat products.
And three months later, we get pregnant naturally.
No kidding.
I didn't know that detail.
I thought that it was actually the fertility.
Yeah.
I mean, I didn't want to probe.
Oh, yeah.
No, pun intended.
Yeah.
I guess someone else was already doing that.
Plenty of probing going on.
And I had gotten a semen analysis and everything was, you know, I got great grades on that.
So we just figure out why.
Well, I'll tell you what, man.
It could be, you know, for a given individual, sort of like a wheat, gluten, celiac sort of thing.
But I can name without thinking about it three women, your wife included, just from our tight friend group, not even our broader friend group, but like just counting women who were at the beach house who were told you're not going to be able to get pregnant or you're going to have a very difficult time getting pregnant.
And then they just got pregnant.
You know, like, I don't know if they're out here lying to people.
I think there's a lot of broad, broad definitions to disorders.
And like, like these days, every single woman, she has PCOS.
And that makes it hard to get pregnant.
Like, I don't know if their doctors are diagnosing them with this stuff because I know people on the internet love to self-diagnose, but are doctors diagnosing everybody with this stuff?
I don't know.
I forget what it stands for.
I just know it makes it hard to get pregnant.
Polycystic barrier syndrome, I think, that you've got.
Yeah.
The women are fringing at the men talking fertility and like details.
They don't call it the medical practice for nothing.
True, true.
Franz, how about the psychology when you guys were going through this?
I know that there are couples, married couples out there who are probably going through the same thing.
Were you guys, you're one of the nicest, like most loving couples I know, not buttering you up.
I assume that you weren't giving each other a hard time.
It was just sort of a mutual sadness.
And how was it?
And how'd you deal with that part of it?
Yeah, that's, I mean, that's the best way to describe it.
Like, obviously, you know, the, you know, her being a woman, me being a dude, like, there's a natural difference in how we kind of deal with the stuff.
Like, I'm a fairly sensitive guy, but still, like, she, you know, when you're not getting pregnant, like, regardless of whether or not you know who the problem is, you know, so to speak, they're just, they're going to feel guilty and they're going to feel like, you know, they're not fulfilling their purpose or they're unable to do the one thing that like culmination of what they're, you know, striving for,
what they're built for, whatever.
And they get really down on themselves.
And, you know, we definitely, you know, had some of that.
And it was just, it required a lot of on my part, just kind of staying solid.
Sure.
It's you have to, you have to, you know, when one person's down, the other person has to stay solid.
That's how, that's how, that's how it's always been with us.
And it's something I think you can, I mean, one of the biggest things that we learned from this, and, you know, not that we were bad at it, but it really exercises your ability to remain hopeful.
Steadfast, steadfast, and don't give up.
Yeah, yeah.
And don't let the other person despair.
That, you know, more than anything, it's like we're going to trying, but like, we've got to continue to inspire each other and like encourage each other and inject that hope into the situation so that you have, you know, a reason, like a deeper reason to continue trying and believing that it's going to happen.
And how about for yourself as a dude?
Were you, you know, giving yourself a hard time about manhood and whether your boys worked and all that?
Well, I mean, maybe not once he got it checked, right?
Until that point, it just I didn't have any reason to believe that because we got pregnant on.
So I knew that we had the stuff there and it was functional.
And I didn't see any reason why she wouldn't be considering.
And then once I had the analysis done, it was like, there's no reason why this would not the thing.
So it was confusing.
And it was, you know, just confusing and frustrating because we're doing everything right.
We're doing everything we can.
We're doing the works for the vast majority of people.
And it's just not happening.
Mr. Producer asks whether you were trying when it finally happened because we have so many anecdotal and real stories about people who gave up and stopped trying, quote unquote, trying, and then it worked because they weren't beating themselves up and stressing themselves out about it and making it an assignment instead of a fun activity.
No, I think that was certainly the point at which we were kind of relaxed about it because we had done all the treatments and all this stuff.
And then I was really, when she explained to me what she thought was going on with her body and, you know, looking into the science of it and how this could potentially work, I just started to kind of chill out and say, okay, well, the only way we're going to know anything is if we just have a lot of sex for a few months.
And until then, you know, we know what I mean?
Like, all there was to do was wait and see.
Like, is and from what I understand, like, 90 days is sort of a period of time in which all the health in a like in a structure in the body have recycled themselves over.
So you're dealing with fresh material, basically.
So it makes sense that the timeframe that we saw would have corresponded with the type of inflammatory kind of uterine environment that her diet may have been causing.
So it sort of supports the thesis or the hypothesis that we were operating on.
And but yes, all we had to do was just wait.
And we did.
And then, you know, had to reassure her a few times, like, you know, it's only been a month.
Right.
You're probably sweating it that the same problem.
Yeah.
Whatever we were waiting to happen, it wouldn't have necessarily taken place by now or a week from now.
Let's just ride it out and see what happens.
And it happened.
Outstanding.
A couple quick questions before we pivot on to new fatherhood and that joy.
MP says, props for not giving up, man.
Yeah, absolutely.
I'm smiling through my microphone here.
Did I don't even know that I should know this?
Did health insurance pay for fertility treatments?
Yes.
Yes.
So I definitely was definitely fortunate and blessed that I didn't feel like I wasted a whole bunch of.
I really didn't have to come out of pocket too much.
So that's good news, especially considering the solution was free.
Yeah.
But how would we have known?
Like the doctor never, ever even considered mentioning dietary changes or he doesn't get paid when that works.
Here's the thing: our health insurance covers like IVF and fertility stuff and adoption.
That's cool.
Doctors are greedy Jews.
Well, and like a lot of people, the ones we know.
Yeah.
A lot of the doctors that deal with fertility are Jewish.
Like that's a lot of vagina doctors.
What the hell are they called?
Ob GYN.
Ob GYN.
Ob G, a lot of OBGYNs are Jews.
Like, so they're like, hey, man, I can make a dollar.
Let a jigga hold some fiat.
Well, yeah, there was that infamous recent story about the Jewish fertility doctor who was mixing his own special sauce in with like 40 women.
And things are so disgusting that the, I think it was the New York Post or some rag found a woman who was supposed to get somebody else's and got his and she posed for a photo with him.
This old grizzled, hook, hook-nose, wrinkled rabbi relative.
I saw another thing.
There's this dude and he's like, he's like a doctorate in something or another, whatever.
He's got like, you know, hyperborean genes or whatever.
So he made money through college by being a sperm donor, but they told him his stuff would be used no more than five times.
And he lives in Oregon and they said his stuff would be used on the East Coast.
Well, 23andMe and Ancestry become popular and everyone's matching genes and they've already found like 60 something of this guy's kids in the same tri-county area as him.
Like they were using exclusively his stuff and now all of these half-siblings are finding each other and there's a big class action lawsuit.
Yeah, you can't trust any of those companies, man.
Incels in the audience are furiously Googling sperm donation services as we speak.
Franz, if it didn't happen, you gave up the seeing the doctor and the treatments.
What if it didn't happen after 90 days a year?
Were you going to just stick with it?
Were you thinking adoption or were you going to go back to the docs?
No, we were definitely, we had brought up adoption over that two-year time.
It had come up a couple of times as like, hey, I mean, you know, if for whatever reason this really does end up to be our fate here, which is just, I just don't believe it.
But if it did, you know, I still want to raise a child that, you know, that a white child, even though they're a premium, like there's a lot of discount Ben.
To be honest, your plan was to convince me to go to Syria and then Princess Diane, my wife.
Princess Diana, my wife.
No, his plan was to adopt you because little teaser for the audience.
Next week, we have coming on two first-timers, one of whom tried to adopt and found the system to be a nightmare.
And the other one who is a product of the foster care system and the adoption system.
So we're going to get both sides of the coin.
A guy who lived it and a husband who tried to go that route.
So we're going to answer the mail on that one.
Definitely want to talk about the experience now.
You're a first-time father going through it.
We haven't done this in a while.
I think J-O was the, well, we know plenty of friends of the show who have had kids recently, but Jayo, after his son was born, that was right after your episode, maybe when we talked about his experience and his wife's experience.
But yeah, what did you guys do?
Hospital at home?
How to go?
Well, we had kind of decided back from before we even started trying that we wanted to do a natural home birth kind of situation.
And with the circus that the whole medical world kind of went into in 2020 as we're getting, as we were getting, you know, coming to terms with the fact that, hey, we're pregnant.
This is happening.
We're past the first trimester.
We're doing it, you know, and just seeing the absurdity on so many different fronts.
And, you know, the idea of having to go into a hospital and like have my wife breathing through a mask.
I get mad every time I think about it.
Yeah.
With like, maybe if I'm lucky, me in the room, you know, just underneath like blasting fluorescent lights with a bunch of like disaffected whatever nurses.
That's what's really wrong with like Americans, modern Americans, is that pretty much every American alive today has been born under fluorescent lighting.
And that's it.
That's just, you're just done at that point.
There's so much, there's so much nuance to it.
Like, there's so many things that you kind of get little things that you kind of get cheated out of when you're in a hospital.
Like the amount of time that you get to spend like skin to skin with your baby immediately after they come out, the amount of time that you get hassled with questions and like stressful situations, even and then they come they come in and they ask you if you want to cut your son's dick like eight times.
Yep.
Yeah.
No, I don't want to cut his dick.
I just want to hold him because he's beautiful.
Well, Franz said for religious reasons that, you know, he they had to cut the forest skin off a junior.
I'm joking.
He did the traditional practice of using his own teeth.
Oh, okay.
All right.
Yeah, back up on track.
All right.
So, Fran, so you had, so you went with a midwife and a home birth and our midwife was anti-circumcision too, which was a nice little conversation.
In my experience, from all of our people who have used midwives and doulas in various situations for home birth, the person, the doula, midwife, whatever, is always anti-circumcision.
Yeah.
Because we always ask the question, sir, did you get any pushback about circumcision?
And whenever it's someone attending to a home birth, it's like, no, they were like, hell yeah, I'm with you.
And then I tried to, you know, maybe drop a little red pill there and I don't think she picked it up.
She kind of seems like a shitlib, but I tried anyway.
Yep.
We've got lots, lots of positive, healthy stories about home births recently, but I'm sure you had the conversation.
If something went wrong, you're just going to, if something goes wrong during a home birth, you call 911 or you erase her to the hospital.
It depends.
I'm sure you had that.
We would have just got her in the car and gotten her there in 10 minutes, you know.
So, you know, like our outlook was like, we've got no reason to think.
The nice thing is, like, when you're reason to believe there are serious complications, go to a hospital.
Yes, yes.
And we, you know, our midwife, we were getting, getting ultrasounds done up until like the semester.
And then we were constantly going, you know, every week she'd go in and get the position checked.
And she was doing exercises and stuff to reposition him.
So he was always, you know, facing the right way.
Whenever, you know, more and more as the time came, she was like taking supplements and eating stuff.
She was like training for this mentally, reading about it, like reading different accounts and listening to different people's, you know, the varying ways that it can go.
Like a rocky montage, yeah.
Totally.
Whenever I tell the story, I picture it.
And, you know, as you can tell, I'm just like, I'm super proud of her because she put in so much work to do the thing that she was born to do.
And she, and then, you know, the time came.
We were actually that night, my brother-in-laws were over, and we were chilling, drinking a little.
And we were like, hey, you know, this must have been like, well, whatever.
We were looking at the calendar.
We're placing bets, like, hey, let's make, let's put a wager on birth date possibilities.
So we were all throwing them out.
They said this, they said this.
The other guy says this.
I say like, you know, four days from then.
And they were like, oh my gosh, like, you're going early, huh?
I was like, yeah, I think he's going to come early.
And then an hour later walks into the room with this look on her face.
And I said, did your water break?
And just like immediately knew.
And she's like, yeah.
So 11 o'clock, her water broke.
3.30.
He was delivered that same night.
So roughly four hour labor.
I was almost there on a first.
Yeah.
That's not bad for a first.
which are usually the toughest and the longest.
Yeah.
So yeah, pivot, pivot to the warm glow of new fatherhood, man.
How are you feeling?
How did it feel then?
How is it now?
Are you all tuckered out and tired?
He's not sleeping or how, how, yeah.
Give us more fuzzy.
Awesome.
Like from day one, just like waking up the next morning, like he's born at three.
You know, I go to sleep at five with him like just sleeping on my chest.
And then the next day we wake up and just start a new day, but we've got a baby.
And it's been fantastic.
He really has not been too difficult for us.
Like as far as sleeping, he sleeps pretty decent.
He's not too fussy.
You know, when he cries, there's a reason why he's crying.
And we help him out.
And, you know, my wife gets up when he needs to feed at night and takes care of it.
Sometimes he sleeps almost through the night.
Sometimes it's two or three times getting up.
But, you know, it's just been amazing, though, man.
Like, seeing that.
These events are so much fun, man.
Yeah.
Well, especially now he's at like six, six, seven weeks, and he's starting to track us with his eyes.
He's starting to like, he's starting to smile, not, you know, clearly.
He's more than just a loud burrito.
Yeah.
A wicked little thing just kind of articulating and moving his joints and learning how to operate in the atmosphere.
And now he's starting to get it a little bit.
There's something about the cry at that age that like doesn't bother you.
It's like you want to, you want to fix it, but it's not annoying, right?
But like my daughter threw her first tantrum, her first like real legit tantrum yesterday or the day before.
I can't remember.
But she's crying for like, I don't know, 15 minutes in the hallway, like can't be consoled.
She's like, she's like a prisoner of war, like fighting to get out of you, out of your hands.
You know, it was, and we were just like, okay, I guess we're just going to sit on the couch.
And like, it wasn't, it didn't annoy us because it was so funny.
But like when she, when she cries too much, you know, over something stupid, it does get annoying.
And like, you know, you don't, yeah.
You just deal with it because like it's a toddler.
It's my child.
It's annoying, but whatever.
But like when they're that young, like they cry for, you know, they whine and stuff now as toddlers.
But when they're that young, like they cry all the time just because they can't communicate.
Yeah.
It was so lined up to his cry.
He did like the lip quiver.
It sounded like he was like, do it a bit.
Or they'll do like the I'm going to interject something from the mailbag real quick because it's on point with this fire firebrand Jay wrote us and he said, hey, coach, it sounded like Sam there.
Something wonderful just happened.
My baby boy just laughed for the first time.
This is all exclamation marks, by the way, talk about, you know, new dad joy.
He's made little happy sounds before, but this was the first time I've really gotten him to laugh.
This is the best thing ever.
I never thought being a dad would feel this rewarding and so soon, too.
Thanks for all that you guys do.
God bless you all.
Again, all exclamation marks.
I'm going to go make him laugh again.
Thank you, Fireman Jay, for sharing that.
That's what I, a week ago, I guess a couple of weeks ago, I guess it was when I saw him smile really for the first time.
And I got a picture of a subsequent one.
I sent it to my mom, and I was visiting her recently.
She was talking to me about it.
And she said, Now, from here on out, now that you've seen him smile, you will never stop trying to make him do that.
I was like, Yeah, let me tell you, let me tell you, that never gets old.
That never wears off because I work with one of my sons.
And just today, I was getting animated, saying something, and he started laughing, you know.
And it's the same thing as what you're describing.
One of the lucky things about raising this little boy in particular is that every time he looks at me, he smiles.
Every time.
If I leave a room for 10 seconds and come back and he looks at me as I come back in, he's beaming again.
Like you can almost like play.
Yeah.
It's just, it's so great.
He had his little cartoon on earlier, and I was washing some stuff in the sink.
And he'd watch his cartoon for a minute.
And then I'd bang something around some dishes or whatever in the sink.
So he'd look over and he'd smile like, hey, I know you.
And then he'd go back to his cartoon.
I'd bang something around again.
He'd look back.
Oh, man.
Hey.
I engage with him every time and then he'll start cracking up or whatever.
And I could do that all day.
And to the joys continuing throughout their childhood, Junior and I, baseball season's about to start.
Baseball season last year was a wash.
And I remember getting out there with him, having a catch last spring.
And he was doing the standard thing where the ball is a scary thing.
So he was moving his body.
He was catching it, but he was moving his body out of the way.
So I kind of mentally prepared him for this.
And by the way, this is the Sam, have a catch with your kids meme more than a meme.
And this year, what a difference a year makes.
No fear of the ball.
He's catching.
And it's the first year of player pitch.
And that's one thing that I remembered getting outstanding instruction from a wonderful man who taught me how to pitch.
I can remember it like it was yesterday.
So I walked him through all the steps.
And son of a gun, we used a little frisbee out in the yard as home plate.
And he's following my instructions to a T and sending it right over the plate with good speed.
So we got a pitcher on our hands.
Couldn't be prouder.
And he was the silver slugger on his team the last time.
So, all right, proud Papa Moment.
Does he know the stealing home story?
Yeah.
Other than marriage and first kids, best memory of my life.
I'll put a bookmark in that one.
So, Franz, before we pivot to a somewhat darker question, anything else you want to share with the audience?
I guess that's about it.
Experience up till now.
And, you know, it's all the more rewarding for the pain that it took to get here.
But just soldier on and do what you got to do.
Sure thing.
Evaluated as things change.
And I would like to add on, you know, what Franz is offering is very important about the experience he went through having to come to the understanding about the wheat allergy and things like that.
I know that there are people listening who have this problem of infertility, and you have to keep investigating and trying different things.
You cannot trust the medical profession like they are all powerful or all-knowing.
And if anything has revealed that in more obvious fashion, it's been the past year.
So, yeah, like, and I've tried to give my own life experiences of things I've learned with my own health that no doctor was ever going to tell me.
They would just be ready to prescribe pills or other worthless things.
And you need to do the research and the reading and understand your own situation, which may be unique to you.
But don't be afraid.
Because maybe whatever your issue is, isn't gluten and inflammation, but it might be just as simple.
Yes.
Yes.
Franz, one last question.
I know you just had one.
It's fair to say that you guys are in your 30s.
Have you talked about how many you want to have or when you're going to try again?
Yeah, I mean, we're already talking about the next.
You know, we've got time at the family size that we want, but only if we kind of bang them out, you know.
So we're hope to be pregnant by, I don't know, maybe the end of the year.
All right.
Irish twin gang.
Good for you guys.
Go get her, Tiger.
Yeah.
And last, last, last question, Chatty Kathy, here.
What's been the hardest part so far, honestly?
The hardest part of fatherhood.
Yeah.
Well, it's just been kind of that initial dealing with kind of my temper.
Like it's one of those things where just in the very beginning, like the crying and the wailing, like acclimating to the fact that this person just only can communicate this way.
And it was just sort of a nice little, I had to go through a period of just stifling my temper and re-evaluating my perspective on it.
And because it's like, I'm not going to be a dad that's getting all freaking out of shape and pissed off and like bringing negative energy into my family and my wife because I'm irritated about something that we're both, you know, have to deal with.
She takes like the nicest guy I know.
I don't believe you have a temper.
You don't have to knock yourself down a peg just to seem human.
Well, when you get sleep deprived and things like that, it definitely puts you tests your limits of things.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Sorry.
Yeah.
But that, but that's where I would say you're not supposed to do this on your own.
You should be having family coming in.
There should be mothers and mothers-in-law and sisters and sisters-in-law and things like that.
No one is supposed to do this on their own.
So, for the listeners that are approaching this, you've got to engage that support network around you, too.
I had a wonderful childhood with two loving parents, like no complaints.
But my dad, one day, he was like, Oh, I got a dark one to share with you, son.
I was like, Oh, what is it, Dad?
He's like, One day when you were crying as a baby, I got so angry that I punched the mattress.
I was like, Okay, you know, he didn't touch me.
He was just like, And that's exactly what I'm talking about.
Like, I can't really.
My move for that is to tell the kid exactly how I feel, but do it in a sing-song fun voice.
I'd like to throw myself off a 10th floor balcony, buddy.
I'll give you something to cry over.
If you don't shut the I will mail you to Timbunk 2.
All right.
Thank you.
Go ahead.
Oh, I was just going to say, never feel bad about walking away.
Never feel bad about walking away.
I have a severe temper, but I go from zero to 100, and then I go immediately from 100 to zero.
So there's a lot of times where like I just have to like hold myself together for half a second so I can turn around and walk away.
I might like take my anger out somewhere else, but I try to not do it in the same room.
You know, like if I'm if I'm going to have a my own temper tantrum, I'm going to do it away from the kids, just get it out and then go back and just be like, okay, let's address this again, toddler.
You are not defeating me.
Well, the thing is, kids will cry.
They are going to cry.
And I've heard some people say, oh, I don't know if I can handle kids.
I can't handle the crying.
Well, if it's the crying that is really the holdup here, that's, you know, we just turn the music a little bit louder, drown them out.
I mean, they can cry for a little while.
It's not going to kill them.
But with infants in particular, it's the bottle 99% of the time.
Right.
They need some.
The bottle or the boob.
Got to get it to them.
And it's that simple and it stops immediately.
Yep.
But if those things don't work, they can cry for a few minutes.
It's okay.
And like, they're not sad.
No.
It's an instinctual siren.
Yeah.
You know, that just says like sleepy, hungry, whatever it's saying.
Butthole.
All those biases.
To do our next topic justice, we're going to move it to the second half.
And instead, we're going to take a question from a listener that I originally had planned for the second half.
And basically, what happened here is a listener emailed in.
And quick funny story before I read his question.
This is a guy who I actually met up with about two years ago.
And he's pretty OPSEC, cautious, and careful.
So we moved Frank.
Yeah, Frank.
So we go to meet at a Chick-fil-A.
And I think I was there first.
So I'm sitting near the door, you know, scanning, looking for, you know, something white guy, Chad.
And he walks in the door.
I'm like, that's got to be him.
You know, he just had the confident walk.
And one of the Chick-fil-A ladies behind the counter was like, oh, hey, Frank, good to see you again.
He knew it was me.
He just rolls his eyes, docks before he could even say a word.
But anyway, I swear to God, that happened.
Frank wrote in and Frank is dating.
And he says, hey, coach, I went on a date with a beautiful, tall, kind, very solid Christian.
She's a virgin.
She's German, and she was very receptive to the red pills I was throwing her way.
As I was telling her that I want to have a bunch of kids, she stops me and says that she isn't able to have children.
And he told me later it's medical, like it's not going to happen.
This is not like her thinking she can't.
She physically can't.
Both of us are early 20s.
I make good money and she does pretty decent.
I'm not an incel.
It's not like this is my only option, but she checks every box, but the most important one.
Am I a retard for even considering pursuing a relationship with this girl?
Yes.
I believe that she believes the medical reason she can't have kids.
And maybe she did go into detail with you about what it is.
It may be a hysterectomy, but I'm not 100% sure.
Unless it's something that dramatic, I'm not sure that I believe it.
You know, like, oh, I can't have kids.
I have PCOS.
Shut up, you know.
But if this is true, like if she did have a hysterectomy because like she had, you know, like childhood cancer or whatever the hell happened, then I'd say you got to walk away.
That was my, yeah, that was my gut reaction.
If you found out about it after you were already, say, married to her or even just in love with her, I'd say, you know, figure something out, adopt, you know, what have you.
But especially if you have options on the table, dude, come on.
I know it's a bummer.
I know.
Now, get a load of this detail, though.
She's got a sister who does not have the condition.
Give me her number.
Two for one.
I mean, in this case, you know.
No surrogate.
Yeah.
Like I said in the chat, dude, she can't be the marriage.
She can't be marriage material, but she can be in the harem.
So you claim that sister and reproduce, and you know, other sister goes in the harem.
Well, in all seriousness, say, say the infertile one is perfect.
They love each other, and her sister is willing to be a surrogate.
Is that too frank in science for us?
No, but he has to do it the traditional way.
None of this weird science stuff.
Like, you just gotta, you know, the traditional way.
Yeah.
Mr. Producer says that PCOS is actually Windows 10 for guys keeping.
I could see my wife rolling her eyes as she's listening to this and laughing too.
You got to go to the vagina doctor.
Come on, we're not seven professional.
By the way, there is a new iOS security update that is apparently critical.
And I check in every once in a while.
I'm like, oh, yeah, thanks.
Always update all your devices.
Don't put off updates.
A lot of the time, those updates are because, you know, three days ago or seven days ago, someone found a very serious vulnerability in that particular app that wants to update.
And you don't want to wait three minutes to open that app.
So you skip it over.
Meanwhile, there are automated crawlers walking all over the internet and all over your computers and phones.
And you don't have to be targeted.
You know, you're going to think, well, who wants to hack my app in particular?
Well, first off, if you're listening to this show, you got the whole world trying to come down on you.
But even if you're a nobody, they're not targeting you.
It's automated.
They're trying to exploit that flaw in every device on every app that they can.
So update everything all the time.
Jokes on them.
I already sold my identity on the deep web to buy a truck.
I wish we had the Samuel L. Jackson drop.
Ooh, look at the big brain on Brad here.
Jen has our in-house tech guy now.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, Microsoft, like Microsoft Exchange servers.
That's just a coincidence.
I mentioned Bill Gates at the top.
Yeah, like the biggest company with the unlimited number of Pajit programmers.
Yeah, the Chinese got like everything.
So Gab got hacked the other day.
Yeah, I saw that pretty badly, like 70 gigabytes of data.
And to put that into perspective, I mean, everybody here probably could easily have 70 gigabytes worth of bull crap on their computers, right?
Between songs and pictures and videos and like 800,000 memes and whatever.
70 gigabytes of Holocaust denial.
You just live your life as a saint and get doxed and you got nothing to worry about, right?
Yeah, go ahead, hack me.
Yeah, yeah, hack me.
Yeah, like what's the dead pedophile rapist from that Kyle Rittenhouse shot?
Like, hack me, nigga, hack me.
Careful what you ask for.
But for like, for something like Gab, when they say they got 70 gigabytes of data, that is almost entirely like personal information.
Text.
Text data does not fill up a lot of space.
So 70 gigabytes is a freaking lot.
Yeah.
Change your passwords.
Change your passwords.
Often don't use the same password on any two things, any two anythings, any two email addresses, logins, whatever.
Keep them complicated and write them down and post them on your mailbox.
No.
Be sure you have at least one capital.
Have unorthodox characters.
How about a password manager?
Somebody recommended that.
I don't know how the hell they work, but they automatically generate them and remember them for you.
I don't like it because what if someone gets into it?
Right.
That was always my problem with password managers.
I don't know.
Maybe they're harder to get into you, but I feel like if I've got a place that has all my passwords, even if they're extremely complicated 64-character passwords, like you can still just get in there, right?
Yep.
We're still waiting for the, remember the parlor freak out where everybody was like, oh my God, if I ever had a parlor account, I'm getting doxxed.
And, you know, not that hasn't been up.
And don't ever use biometrics for anything.
No.
You think your phone is secure because you need a thumbprint or it has to be looking at your face?
No.
Someone just puts your thumb on it or points it at your face and now it's open.
Right.
Like there's a pretty good chance that I could knock you out, which means that I can just point your phone at your face.
Exactly.
Well, yeah.
Speaking in the case of law enforcement, this is Barracks law.
So don't take it as complete fact.
But apparently law enforcement can make you use biometrics.
They can't make you put in passwords.
But again, I don't know that for a fact.
Yeah.
I've heard that as well.
It sounds a little like an urban legend, like too good to be true.
But yeah, for now.
Speaking of operational security, Full House does now have a PO box.
Obviously, I'm not just going to share it.
But if you are relatively well known and you've preferred to mail something to us instead of email or anything else, drop us a line and we can possibly give that to you.
And yeah, be careful out there, fam.
Make lots of babies.
Don't make it easier for the enemy.
Oh, JO, somebody was talking to me tonight and he's like, I'm sick of this.
Like, I'm just going to go for it.
Like, even if they attack me, I'm relatively whatever the talib, anti-fragile.
And I said, you know, I used to think that too, but as my old pal Jo said, you know, make them work for it.
Don't give them anything for free.
So remember that.
You got a, you got a roll, buddy, in the second half?
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
No worries.
Thanks for coming on.
Thank you.
All right, guys.
In honor of Franz Franz Jr. and Mrs. Franz, of course, Mr. Producer, if you would please put on Homegrown by the Zach Brown Band.
This one's happy, wholesome.
Your kids will love it.
It's great for this time of year.
Get outside.
Spring is in the air.
And whatever you do, don't go anywhere because we'll be right back.
Lots more full house.
Lay back and smell the sun, warm up the Georgia pie.
Be so good to me, taking it easy.
Why would I ever leave?
Cause I know I got some good friends that live down the street.
Got a good-looking woman with her arms round me.
Here in a small town where it feels like home.
I got everything I need and nothing that I don't.
Home gold.
We got a fire though down by the riverside.
Sip whiskey, I've been pop.
Living like we'll never die.
Come on and stay a while.
If you don't believe me, why would I ever leave?
Cause I know I got some good friends that live down the street.
Got a good looking woman with her arms round me here in a small town where it feels like home.
I got everything I need and nothing that I don't.
Oh no.
Home go.
I got some good friends that live down the street.
Got a good-looking woman with her arms round me.
Here in a small town where it feels like home.
I got everything I need.
And nothing that I don't.
Everything I need.
And nothing that I don't.
It's the way that you carry from the things you think you want.
It's the way that you carry from the things you think you were.
It's the way that you carry from the things you think you want.
I got everything I need.
Nothing that I don't know.
Everything I need.
Nothing that I don't know.
Everything I need.
Nothing that I don't know.
Everything I need.
And nothing that I don't know.
Welcome back to Full House episode 82, new White Life Special Edition.
Perhaps we are, of course, overjoyed and honored to have Franz on with us just under two years after he first came on to talk about struggling to conceive.
That episode was entitled Strength Through Struggle to Conceive.
If you want to hear the preceding story, and then the happy ending here on this show.
Right after I announced that Zach Brown band's Homegrown Would be the break music, Smasher immediately interjected that he hates Zach Brown band.
And I don't necessarily disagree with him, little cheesy.
I hate that.
What I really hate is Chicken Fried.
If I could delete that song from our collective memory, that's a pretty gay song.
I'm about to Fed post.
I can't believe you even said that.
I know.
Remember when our buddy was like, Chicken Fried is a really great song?
And we were like, and I told, I told him that I would eat his face.
Talk about cringe, bro.
You like chicken fried.
Yeah.
That's like saying I read counter currents.
Hey, hey, hey, our pal, I know what you mean, Smasher, but Carl Thorburn, Thornburn, the Bitcoin master.
I reached out to him because we are in Bitcoin mania, hopefully just the early days with plenty of entry points for noobs and long-term holders to increase their wealth.
But Carl said he would come on.
Does Carl write for countercurrents?
He's associated with him.
I don't know.
See, I didn't know that.
I like Carl separately on his own merits.
For instance, I'm not gay.
Yeah, I defended Greg.
A lot of people are going to be butthurt about that.
Whatever.
Hey, there's a ton of good stuff on Countercurrents and Greg's writing was formative and waking me up or answering certain questions.
Greg is legitimately smart.
He's legitimately smart.
And Countercurrents does actually have some good content.
Have you ever seen Greg Johnson and Richard Spencer in the room at the same time?
I don't know, but I've allegedly heard them on podcasts together, but you know what?
Can anybody tell that we're different people?
Who knows?
We are perfect strangers, Smasher.
We got to do a reality show at some point.
And the thought occurs: I've never played softball nine on nine with all white nationalist families in the stands.
Have a couple cold ones on the sidelines.
Next.
I have a couple of cold ones in my system.
In your dugout.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
All right.
Hey, I realized that we strayed a little bit from our audience or our listener question about his likely infertile girl.
And in all seriousness, assuming that she really is incapable of having children, yeah, you're young.
You're good looking.
Go elsewhere.
As our always insightful Mr. Producer said, if she can't have kids, let her go find some guy that doesn't want to have kids.
Don't get caught in that and dull.
She's a flashlight.
That's all she is.
She's a flashlight.
No, no.
Yes.
Yes.
If she can't have kids, she's a flashlight.
Because no, I'm, and I'm not, I'm not saying that to say that like she doesn't have a personality because every woman has a personality.
Every guy has a personality.
Like she, she might be a nice person.
She's a nice lady, but she, at the end of the day, is a flashlight because all she brings to the table is a personality that everybody else has and her ability or inability to give you children.
She's a flashlight.
All right.
I'm still, I'm, I'm still going to cock on this one and say, come on, it's not her fault.
Like, she could be.
No, I'm not.
I'm not blaming her.
She can be a wonderful person, but at the end of the day, if she can't give you kids, she's double flashlight.
All right, she can contribute in other ways that are important.
Yeah, yeah, no, she's a valid person and she exists, but she's a flashlight.
All right, we got it, Smasher.
Cut his mic.
I haven't had to say that in a while.
All right.
I was going to give you open mic night at the end of the show because we don't have a navigating the collapse this weekend or this week, but that's out.
I might do it anyways.
I don't know.
Go ahead, Franz.
All right.
Congratulations this week.
I'm just going to say V, because this guy is very OPSEC paranoid.
But to V and his wife, they welcomed their fifth child recently, beautiful baby boy.
Yeah.
And he said, no, everything's great.
But now I got to shop for a minivan.
The horror.
So, yeah.
Serious advice on the minivans.
Not every minivan, I don't know how many car seats that this guy needs to have, but he's got a bundle of kids.
The Quest of Town and Countries will not hold four car seats.
They will only hold, I think, three tops.
Yeah, that's.
I have to get a new minivan.
Honda Odyssey's will hold four.
And I believe Toyota Ciennas will hold four.
And Toyota Sienna's and Honda Odysseys are the only ones that you can get an all-wheel drive, which is weird because you'd think that when you consider who drives minivans, that they would all just be all-wheel drive.
You know.
But that's some years ago.
We had a conversation about that.
And that's where all of this car seat legislation and the way people are thinking about that is a big racket.
You know, how many families have been limited because the parents had to think about, oh, well, you know, if we have another child, we won't be able to fit the child in the car.
Look at our car has this many seats.
And how are we going to fit this many car seats?
Because they got to have the car seat up to up until a certain age.
And this is, I remember when I was little, nobody wore seatbelts and there was no such thing as a car seat.
It was just like unheard of.
Yeah.
But and then and then the whole rigmarole around car seats.
They have an expiration date.
Did you know this?
Like, well, yeah, don't pay attention to them as long as you're not an accident, right?
Yeah.
Right.
But, but I mean, yeah, we know better, but there are even when you're in an accident, I mean, like, come on.
There will be a lot of people that there's probably some concerned young mother that, oh, we can't use this car seat.
Look at the date on it.
We have to buy a new one.
You know, it's all this bureaucracy that is weighs on people's minds.
And there will be people who are swayed by that.
Oh, we don't have enough room in our car.
Oh, can we afford a bigger vehicle?
All that, all those types of questions.
You can get a really nice Ford Transit for like $35,000.
Yeah, and a new minivan is going to cost more than that.
Yeah.
The Ford Transit, you can customize on the Ford website and actually make really, really nice ones.
Just get the A-team van, is my professional advice.
Mr. Producer says 10 years is the expiration date on car seats.
And after 10 years, you cannot use a car seat because of the accumulated chicken nuggets and other food there.
You actually start getting fungi growing up.
10 years of vomit and McDonald's chicken nuggets.
Sippy cup spills.
What I did as far as a bigger vehicle, I'm just throwing this out there because this may be an idea somebody can use, is that at one point in my family's history, I bought a 12-passenger van from a dealership where they have, you know, the type of van I'm talking about, that it's, it's maybe used to pick people up from the airport or trip.
Yeah, that's one of them.
Yeah, the one I'm talking about is maybe a little bigger than that.
Well, I don't know how many fat seats, but the one I got at the time was 12 passengers, and it was a couple of years old, and it had maybe 20,000 miles on it, but it was 12 passengers, and that was perfect for my family at the time when all the kids were still little.
And that's what I bought at the time.
And so maybe somebody might like to think about that type of idea.
But my point is more of families and parents that are in the stress of the moment and they're thinking, what do I do?
All these ideas don't come to the people at the right time sometimes.
So, but if you're listening and you're in that position, think about that.
You know, you get one of these gigantic passenger vans because a lot of times it's not just you and your family.
What if I want to bring my mother with us or some pick up some other people?
You know, 12 passengers was perfect.
We could all go somewhere together and we could even take a couple of people with us.
That's right.
You pick up your buddies on the weekend and go for a booze cruise.
That's not the driver's course.
Right.
Yeah.
All right.
To the new Tacoma, it's got two cup holders that are connected and they look like your normal cup holders.
And then there's one that's slightly thinner.
It doesn't fit bottles.
And I couldn't figure it out.
And then my wife looks at me and she goes, oh, that's for your beer can.
And I was like, oh, yeah, duh.
You got to have a road beer.
Check your local laws on that one.
Yeah, definitely.
If the government, if we believe that our government is not legitimate, then rules and laws against drunk driving or drinking while driving are not legitimate.
I'm just kidding.
Just kidding.
Drunk driving is anti-white.
That's right.
Anti-nap is anti-white as well.
And I'm not talking about the non-aggression principle.
I've been getting a lot of guff from people.
Oh, Cochi, you need your little midday siesta.
It's dreaming.
Go ahead.
Go ahead, Smasher.
I told my wife.
She's dreaming about fondling Megan Markle anti-white?
No.
Oh, God.
Megan McCain.
Megan McCain.
Yes.
All right.
Here we go.
Cards on the table.
I figured Smasher was going to approach this at some point, this show.
I had a very vivid midday dream today.
All right.
Yeah.
And, you know, basically, Megan McCain took it upon herself to hop into my bed.
I was alone.
It was a very loud thump.
It woke me up from a slumber.
It was like a cannonball.
And yeah, she was basically asking for it.
And even in my dream, dear listener, I said, no, no.
I'm sorry, ma'am.
I'm a married man.
But in my arms of Morpheus state, I did cop a feel of those big sweater puppies.
Anyway, there you go.
All right.
Yeah.
That's about as blue as we get on the full house.
Oh, you did say Megan McCain.
I read that it's Megan Markle at first.
Oh, you read the no, could go.
Yeah.
Straight to the curb.
Well, I blame the one chat because they were talking about the royals earlier, I think.
Yeah.
On the one hand, I love to see that dust up about, yeah, oh, God, yeah, they were racist against me and all that stuff.
And Piers Morgan getting raked over the coals.
But it's, again, it's just bread and circuses, right?
It's just, yeah.
It's retarded.
And they all trip over themselves to say, no, we're not racist.
We welcome her.
It's just this, that, or the other thing.
It's this guy.
We banned her for being annoying.
Yeah.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
The same reason that they ban people that are allowed at movie theaters.
Maybe she's a nagger.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Annoying.
Just annoying.
All right.
Well, I'm just going to drink this Miller Light then if this is going to be this kind of show in the second half.
Well, I want to say that it's actually kind of a shame.
Like, I don't really care for the British Royals.
Of course.
I didn't.
Yeah, I didn't.
Before, it never interested me because it's kind of in lieu of celebrity gossip.
Like, that stuff has just never interested me.
But listening to a podcast the other day about a guy, basically a guy that was in the British SBS, the Special Boat Service, the British Navy Special Forces.
He went through a few classes and is actually personal friends with Henry Harry, whatever that dude's name is, whatever the oil driller's name is.
And I guess he is actually a good soldier.
He, I believe, is an SBS commander now, technically.
Went to Afghanistan or volunteered or insisted in theory.
Yeah, yeah.
And so he's actually a really good soldier and whatever.
And that kind of gave me a little bit of respect that I didn't know that I even harbored for him or had the capability to have for him.
And so it's a bit of a shame to just see these traditional European things broken down.
And, you know, if you think Prince Harry sleeping with an American Nigress is anything, same difference.
Canada is just our biggest national park.
If you think that that's anything but like just part of the humiliation ritual, you know.
Yeah.
Whoever photoshopped a real life goblino on their first child, that was so well done.
I believed it at first.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But anyway, hey, let us remember that that kid didn't do anything wrong.
It ain't his fault that his parents decided to get jungle fever or had it forced upon them.
Who knows?
All right, back on track, gentlemen, here, so we can get on to the marriage question.
Son and Steele have their second child on the way.
I once thought that Sun was maybe the wife and Steele was the husband, but I think the son of a gun took two names for his sock.
But regardless, we're over the moon for them all the same.
And he said, well, I won't go into specifics, but he said, you know, he was not a perfect man when they had their first, but he's a much better man now.
And that's the reason I mentioned that is because so many of us beat ourselves up for past mistakes or things we did wrong or dark times in our lives.
And it's never too late to turn it around, no matter what you did.
So stay hopeful.
But never be a perfect man.
You'll never be a perfect man.
But you can always strive for it.
That's right.
Very good, Smasher.
And also from our overflowing mailbag, we got a couple more here in the second half, but we got this one.
Hello from the deep south in old French territory.
I'm not even going to try to do a Cajun accent here.
I've been listening for a little over two months.
Great content.
My wife will be giving birth to our sixth this week.
God willing, everything will go fine.
Keep it up.
And at the end, he says, Hail Franco.
All right.
Hail Franco.
Yeah.
Certainly better than the alternatives for Spain.
And yeah, and they were supposed to have theirs today, actually.
So, good host that I was, I actually reached out to the busy son of a gun and said, Hey, hope it went well.
So let us know.
Hail Franco.
Okay, with that, let us go on.
Is Franco going to be the name of the kid?
You know, oh, that recognized sure.
Frank, Franco, Frank O'Shaughnessy.
All right.
So before we get too silly here, Mr. Producer dropped a grenade in the chat the other day and then promptly ran away, as is his wont.
And he said, Hey, guys, we talk about kids and fatherhood and all this stuff.
We touched on it a little bit last week, but he said we've never actually talked about marriage as such, the institution, the practice, whether it is the solution.
Now, before our listeners revolt and say, Oh, my, you know, we got a little bit of pushback from the show last week talking about divorce on multiple fronts.
One, one guy even said that, you know, by broaching it, we somehow legitimized it because these guys got divorced and went on to have happy families and good marriages.
I said, Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
No, Sam.
If you don't get a divorce and remarried, you're not red-billed, okay?
No, I said Sam said it very clearly.
We hate divorce.
And Smasher took no fault divorce to the woodshed.
So, but he was respectful too.
Maybe a little bit picky there.
But regardless, MP raised the fact that marriage causes a lot of problems.
It's much more difficult.
It's not as cut and dry today as it used to be.
Divorce, the problems after divorce, possibly the fact that people are getting married for cultural as opposed to religious or procreation reasons.
And I still, I've given it a lot of thought.
I will say here up at the top that we are, to a man, to a T, 100% pro-monogamy and nuclear family.
Even if, and here's the thing, right?
Like women are inherently, yeah, well, they're inherently going for the top provider.
And as our good friend Big John often mentions, like, men, if you aren't keeping it locked down and being the alpha dog, like they will leave you and go find somebody else.
And men, of course, being the wide-ranging cavemen that we are, want to spread our seed to the wind to increase the likelihood that we have heirs before we get killed by some virus or hacked to death in a bloody battle with a neighboring tribe that is deep in our DNA.
But similar to religion, marriage came about as a civil as a civilizing function that was rational and was the best thing to raise healthy offspring and building a stable household.
So I'll leave it at that.
And I guess my instant guess is that, you know, it's better than nothing.
Yes, we should still go for it.
But I'll let you guys kick around it.
And then there's also the question of the big one being monogamous, but not getting married.
I have a short interesting thing that I was talking about with my wife, just based on what you talked about about getting killed, et cetera.
We were talking about, you know, how do you, or how does the body decide, you know, what sex is the child going to be?
And I know sperm obviously is a big part of that.
But there are things about a woman's body that can help determine that.
And we are just kind of speculating on like stress levels and things like that.
And this goes back into like when women are stressed and they fail to get pregnant, you know, why is that?
Well, it's like, you know, we would have evolved in a way that like when you're when you're stressed out, you're not going to get pregnant because it's like, well, I can't get pregnant right now because I'm stressed.
And that tells me that there is some type of existential threat to my existence.
So why would I get pregnant right now?
But when you are undergoing stress and you get pregnant, it's more likely that it's going to be a boy because boys are hardier.
They're warriors.
And we don't, you know, this is just, we were just having a conversation about it.
And that's kind of the conclusion that we came to.
But just interesting, and you made me think of it when talking about getting killed by a warring tribe.
Right.
And then going in with the talking about getting pregnant earlier.
Sam, this one is in your wheelhouse for sure.
Lay it on us, big guy.
Yeah.
Well, when the topic was broached there in our chatting with amongst ourselves and other people associated with the show, and some of the guys were chiming in honestly, I think, about even the question like, if you had to get married again, would you?
In both senses, like in your current situation, imagine that you could go back, would you marry your wife again or not?
Or if you were suddenly single, would you get married again?
Different guys gave, I think, some honest answers that were, you know, really, it's not to say that you're not happy where you are and things like that.
But, and it's, it's kind of a silly question in a way, like we can't roll back time, of course.
But, you know, it's, it, there are some thought-provoking things in there because in, and, and, and before anybody jumps to conclusions, I, I am, first of all, starting the context of this question or these thoughts in our present day and the way things are between men and women and this Jewish society we live in, it is a good question, I think.
Does marriage serve my interests as a white man or not?
And I go ahead.
Sorry to interject, Sam.
Yeah, I won't give responses from guys who aren't on this show.
No.
But some guys said, if this marriage failed, I would absolutely not get married again.
Right.
And, you know, if my marriage failed, God forbid, I absolutely would try to find a new wife and have another family for myself.
You guys don't have to answer if you don't want to, but sure.
Just because I don't, you know, I'm a little bit of a traditionalist, despite being a rebel.
Like that's, that's what you do.
You, you get married, you have kids, you know?
Yes.
Sorry, Sam.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
So I, you know, that, that is a very good question that I think people should talk about and think about.
Does marriage, as the way we have it now today in the current year, in this society we live in, does it serve a white man's best interest?
And I could, I have the answer for myself, but I could understand that people would have different answers to that question.
And if anyone on the panel here wants to reflect those other sentiments, that would be great.
But for me, I'm completely consonant with the sentiments of the show that I think marriage is good and everything like that.
But I will only say this when I went through the breakup I did, which was, well, almost 20 years ago.
At that time, my thinking was, well, I guess if I have to be alone for the rest of my life, I have to find a way to accept that.
At the time, I was very heartbroken and to say the least.
And being somebody who has religious sentiments and a believer in marriage, my own ethics on this thing became, I became an enemy of myself, you might say.
My own beliefs came against me, which was that I didn't see that I could get remarried or, you know, I just couldn't even see the light at the end of the tunnel at that time.
Things changed, though.
I think I talked about it before.
I don't know that I should go into it now.
But I suppose my sentiment then, which is my sentiment now, is if I somehow was suddenly single, that that would be up to God if I'm supposed to seek another wife or remain a celibate person and be a service to our race in other ways.
Do you think you would, Sam?
Heaven forbid, if you lost your wife, do you think you would get back on the horse one last try or do you think you would coast into the sunset, at least in terms of procreation and marriage?
Well, I would try.
Well, let me put it this way.
I really enjoy sex and I would really like, I really like I'd really like to be with a woman, you know, but I have to consider really truly what God might be calling me to, what kind of life he's calling me to.
And the thing is, whatever situation we find ourselves in, God is well capable to give us the grace to meet that situation.
You could be in a car wreck and be turned into a paraplegic tomorrow.
And, you know, that you, right now, you can't even imagine living that way.
But if you were presented with that, then God would give you the grace and you might find out that you're a great, you become a great chess player or something, you know, or so you discover some new talent, some new ability, some new meaning in your life.
And so that's how I would look at the marriage question in that way.
If my wife ran away or she was dead or she was dead because she ran away.
My wife ran away and unfortunately she died.
Very untimely.
Both things could happen.
I have no information related to this.
What we're hinting at here, dear listener, of course, is the concept of God.
Joe, satire, yeah, it's never out of style.
But what we're hinting at is the concept of just not getting married, but still living monogamously and having a beautiful family.
Right.
Now, that's another question to this: we might, and as our white nationalist community grows and matures and becomes more viable, maybe our guys and gals may choose not to get, as I call it, Zog married, because maybe in the future, or maybe now even, there's less and less benefits to being Zog married.
But even if Zog marriage loses its benefits or allure to us in the future, as a white community, we may want to regulate marriage anyways, as far as who would we allow to be married?
You know, adults and children, or certainly we wouldn't allow whites and non-whites.
You know, we would have pre-marriage blood tests.
Yep.
Yeah, we would have an interest in marriages.
And then, and, and let's just say that, okay, we're all white.
There's no problem.
People are getting married, but we have an interest in the viability of those marriages.
So, we're not, once you get married, whether, you know, even if it's without this blessing of the Zog state, we're going to expect you to live as a married person.
And your wife, both the husband and the wife, have rights under that.
So, and I've known people that have gotten married, which is real, as real, if not more real, than this silly Zog marriage stuff.
I have known people to get married that way, but it is not a quote legal unquote marriage.
And, you know, there is certainly nothing illegitimate about that.
It's just a matter of: are there benefits under this system that we have now that are worth taking advantage of?
Absolutely.
And things are dire enough that being opportunistic and a little bit cynical about institutions and labels and certifications is certainly worth Orthodox Jews do it all the time.
Orthodox Jews live in these ethnic neighborhoods and they are just spawning grounds, nests, breeding pools, nests.
And, you know, Shlomi might make $6,000,000 a year as a rabbi giving motivational speakers at Harvard, but his wife makes $6 a year on paper and she's got 14 kids.
And she lives on record, she lives in an apartment that Shlomi actually ends up owning anyways.
And somebody else lives there.
And all this, you know, all this straight up fraud that, of course, like a Goyam is going to be charged with.
But they do it all the time.
So why shouldn't we?
Why shouldn't we try to?
And stuff like that.
Yeah.
Smasher has one Jewish friend.
He's one of the good ones.
His name is Shlomo, but he calls him my Shlomi affectionately.
Smasher, all seriousness, if, God forbid, wifey passed, we know the meme answer is that you would go on to be a barbarian harem builder.
What do you, in your heart, do you think you'd go to remarry?
Yeah.
This is a really hard question.
You know, I maybe don't talk about my family as much as I should.
Not even on the podcast, but just in general.
Yeah.
But I'm just a very compartmentalized type of guy.
And so like my family box, you know, it stays where it is.
And then I open it whenever I want to open it and just revel in it.
And, but, you know, I love my wife.
We met when, shit, I was probably 17 and she might have been 16.
It might have even been 16 and 15.
So we've known each other for more than a decade.
We've been together for a decade, I guess.
And this year, we got married in 2012.
So this year will be our ninth anniversary.
You know, I can't imagine what my life is like without her.
I can't imagine there are there's basically one situation in which I can imagine we get divorced, you know, and that's adultery, which she's not going to do.
I'm not going to do.
So there's no situation in which I can imagine we get divorced.
But hey, all seriousness, she's got twins on the way.
That's higher risk than most pregnancies.
Right.
Not to be.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
So look, what if she dies, right?
Like I can't stop working because I got to pay for these kids.
How am I going to pay for these kids?
You got to pay for that whip.
Yeah.
Forget the kids.
Yeah.
You got to make that cop payment.
Yeah.
Well, the rap videos will cover the carpenter.
But yeah, how am I going to pay for them kids?
Right.
You know, sure.
Who's going to take care of those kids?
Yeah.
You got to do that.
Right.
I've got family and whatever.
And she's got family.
And we have a good relationship with all of our families.
And like, if she died, you know, obviously there'd be no hard feelings between me, me and like her family.
So I could, you know, probably rely on them a little bit.
Yeah.
Whereas like in a divorce, it's like, hey, I want custody of the kids.
You want to watch them?
Like, bro, you divorced my daughter.
You can, you can get the hell out of here.
Right.
So, you know, cut to the chase, Squirmy.
You going for it?
I don't know.
Yeah.
You know, I don't, I don't know what it would be really hard for me to get back into dating, right?
Of course.
Yeah.
I don't think I would necessarily have a problem like, you know, getting women or whatever.
But to find a woman that I really was like, you are worthy of raising, helping to raise these children that the most important thing in my entire life gave to me.
You know, to find a woman worthy of raising the kids, that the best thing that has ever happened to me, like, that's a, you know.
Nobody likes their stepmom.
Yeah.
Right.
And so I would, I would want to find a woman that is going to be a good stepmom and that the children could at least appreciate.
You know, I won't even say love, but they could appreciate.
That's, that's a tall, that's a very tall order.
You know, I would probably go slay some gash, but to to to replace my wife is impossible.
And I would, I would probably settle eventually.
I think that's just probably the way that it does go, especially considering I'm only 20.
How old am I?
90.
I was born in 93, 27.
I'm 27.
I'll be 28 this year.
So I think I have enough time that I would settle down and remarry before I'm out of my reproductive window.
I know that theoretically it goes on for a long time, but my ideal reproductive window.
You know, maybe I would find a 30-year-old single mom that is not like garbage.
You know, maybe she was married as well.
And then we have a nice blended family and have some kids of our own or something.
You know, I don't know.
I don't know.
Fair enough.
I think on a long enough timeline, the answer is yes.
On a short timeline, it's like, uh, probably not.
I appreciate, I appreciate that sincere answer.
Uh, very thoughtful and yeah, not just uh cold-hearted like me.
Like, yes, I move on, but uh, but that's but that's true too.
My wife knows it, and she probably understands that it's rational too.
Yeah, the rational, the rational side of me is like, I'm going to get an 18-year-old girl and like give her LSD to brainwash her into loving Hitler as much as I do, right?
Like, that's the rational side of me is like, do that, but then I have, but then it's like smart, I'm right, that's really smart, but at the same time, it's like I'm a white nationalist, which means I'm not like a disgusting piece of shit.
Not that you're a disgusting piece of shit, you get what I'm saying, yeah, like that's what a Jew, a Jew would do that because Jews are literally the ones that developed like this brainwashing spiritually.
I'm a Jew, yeah, right.
Franz plays a nice guy on podcasts, but he is actually uh scheming right now to replace his current wife.
Uh, big breaking news for Franz, real quick before we move on.
Your thoughts on my spot like that, yeah.
Well, hey, you have a temper, apparently, so you know, who knows what other dark secrets you're hiding under your kilt.
It's the whole one and done thing, right?
Like, she gave him a kid, and now it's time to move on to the next piece.
Go ahead, buddy, real quick.
That's the cream, that's the cream of the crop right there.
I've gotten the best out of her.
So, no, I uh I'm I love my wife so much.
I, yeah, she's she's my best friend, and it would me too.
It's hard to, it's hard to conceive of.
I go on waxing poetic about that whole thing and how devastated I would be if anything ever, you know, separated us, which would be a death.
Um, it's unimaginable, yeah.
I just have shuddered at the thought of uh what I would be free to become if she were ever removed from my life and it was replaced with the that level of grief.
But yeah, I just think that you know, would I be open to having another partner and having another, you know, companion to deal with the adversity of this sick reality that we live in?
Absolutely.
Would I be open to having a maternal figure in my children's lives?
Absolutely.
Would I go out expending energy and effort deliberately trying to find that person?
I don't really see that, you know, but I would certainly, you know, because I just got, you know, you got kids to deal with, you got to work.
I just can't imagine being a single father.
And yeah, if no, yeah, it makes you feel nauseous just thinking about it.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's like if the, if, if the perfect woman crossed my path and, you know, it worked out, like, I'd be more than open to, you know, the companionship and the love and the affection and the just the utility.
But I can't see myself like going on a mission to find another mate.
I'd just be too occupied trying to keep my household from falling apart.
That's kind of where I come from.
I sincerely wonder what our wives would say.
You know, if we were to pass tomorrow, would they not or be eager to go shop?
Well, not eager to go shopping again, but you know, welcome it or somewhere in between.
If my wife dies, a listener is obligated to give me their daughter.
If I die, a single listener is obligated to marry my wife.
Wow.
There you go.
Got it.
All right.
Yep.
So give that one some thought, some thought, fam, because yeah.
Yeah, there are situations where not getting married, but staying together and raising a family does make sense for numerous reasons.
We got a somewhat long, that's not that long, email from a longtime listener, great guy.
I've never met him, but we've corresponded for years.
And it was so heart-wrenching that I didn't think in a million years he would want me to read it on the air.
But he said, no, absolutely, please do, because it's a cautionary tale that even when you think you've got everything under control, you've been a great dad, and your kids are doing well, that's not always the case.
So I'm going to read this one in toto in the confidence that this is going to be useful for the audience.
It says, hey, coach, I'm listening to the latest episode and it's killing me.
This was the one we talked about divorce.
The subject of what it would take, or no, this was JO's disownment, hypothetical.
The subject of what it would take for a parent to disown his child is something that I've had to deal with personally.
I was a young Buck private a million years ago, and like Buck privates do, I hooked up with the wrong woman.
I married her and knocked her up.
Shortly thereafter, we divorced.
I did my best to stay in my daughter's life.
I was honest with her about life and especially about boys once she was of age.
We were very close.
Mind you, these were my normal days, so I was your average burgers, beer, sports ball, Merica white guy.
In her teens, she got into roller derby and MMA.
She wasn't blessed with intellect, but she had athleticism and spades.
Sports kept her out of trouble and away from the bad influence of her mother.
All her life, I'd hear, man, you're such a good dad.
And I'd always say, the work ain't done yet.
I kept my foot on the good dad pedal until she graduated high school.
And I think this is where it went sideways.
We started losing touch, which I chalked up to her becoming an adult.
And I accepted this as just part of life.
Then I got a mug shot.
Turns out she had been shoplifting at the quote-unquote NICE mall.
She might have not been noticed, but her and her half-sister were in there looking like Chola Goblina gangbangers.
And it broke my heart.
I immediately got her on the phone to figure out what was going on.
She was standoffish and unrepentant.
I couldn't believe it.
After more fighting, I wished her the best of luck and hung up.
I know my Irish temper was up, and I didn't want to say anything I couldn't take back.
I left her alone for a while until I got a call from her roller derby coach.
My daughter had posted a sonogram and a due date on her Facebook page.
I died.
That was absolutely the end.
I knew she hung out with all the beaners in our area and knew that one of them had to be the father.
Sure enough, one was.
And of course, shortly thereafter, he disappeared.
In talking to my family, they told me that I needed to be there for her.
And I was shocked.
There for her?
Here's a child who had more opportunities to get away from her situation than anyone.
She'd graduated high school and joined the National Guard.
I'd be damned if I endorsed or enabled her decision to be a single mother of a goblino.
That's where my family turned on me.
All except my mother.
Every now and then, she'll call with an update about my daughter, despite my telling her not to.
The most recent update was that she had hatched another goblino from another baby daddy.
I tell you this to tell you this.
Had I found a pool party years before, I believe I could have saved her.
Since I didn't, I try to at least talk to the lads about the importance, above all, of selecting the right woman with whom to breed.
I don't want to be 65 looking at lads my age now, 45, stuck in the same position I'm in.
I'm not that bad off.
It could be worse, but had I been choosier earlier on, I'd be here telling you about my five kids and how proud I am of them.
Instead, I'm the father of a sand shark who's the mother of two goblinos.
If I can't contribute anything else to our thing, hopefully my story will be something that can keep some of the young'ins listening to the show on the straight and narrow.
Paying child support all those years kept me from investing in myself or in a family.
Not picking the right woman cost me a shot at having a bunch of kids.
Now, since black pilling is gay, I'll end it on a positive note.
I'm two months from finishing trade school.
I have a decent woman in my life, and I'm heading north this fall for a bow hunting trip with her for some bear.
Keep up the great work.
Y'all are killing it.
And he signed it respectfully, old Jack.
I think I can say that.
Thank you, old Jack.
Yeah, reading it again gave me a lump in my throat.
Yeah, I lost sleep over this email, dude.
Well, I'll say this.
First of all, the man that wrote this letter is a good man, and he's taking it hard.
He's critical of himself.
But I would say that no one knows how it's going to go.
And you did the best that you could.
Yeah.
And no one is promised anything.
You might think you're marrying the perfect wife and maybe she gives you kids.
Maybe she doesn't.
Maybe she is a perfect wife and you have trouble having children.
You could only have one child or two if you're lucky.
You just don't know how it's going to go.
So the person who wrote this letter is a good man.
But it is a good cautionary tale, as he says, for the listeners to take to heart.
But also, don't give up.
Don't give up.
There's all kinds of things.
There's all kinds of twists and turns your life can take.
And the thing that matters is that you don't give up.
The thing for me was not making a bad decision about a mate so much because when you're young and dumb and in love or in heat.
You know what?
He was in the military and that's a that's we say that we used to say that all the time talking about privates doing dumb shit, right?
Oh, like like Nikki said, yeah, these women just like latch on to soldiers and get knocked up and then either go crazy.
Hey, at least he never bought a brand new Camaro at 30% interest rate.
It's yeah, but the story about the daughter.
I only have one daughter and I sincerely hope that we're not having any more kids.
And it's not like I hope to have more daughters in the future.
I hope that she's my only daughter with my only wife for the rest of my life.
But the thing that struck me was the idea of once they graduate high school, they move out of the house, et cetera.
You lose contact.
You don't have the daily observation to see what's going on.
The horrible specter of, you know, my beautiful, innocent, sweet daughter going sour once she's out there in the world was, and I thank you, old Jack, for this, a good reminder, a good kick in the pants to keep them close.
You know?
Well, look at how our society is.
Our society makes this possible.
In a different day and age, your daughter would have needed you well into adulthood until she could take a husband who would then take care of her the right way.
So it's, you know, the part of these things are people's bad choices, and part of this is society structural problems.
Yeah, it's like it's hard to hold a young soldier accountable for doing what young soldiers do.
Like, yeah, sure, maybe in a better society, you know, soldiers wouldn't be running through questionable women.
But, you know, quite frankly, I don't believe any society has ever existed where young soldiers didn't run through questionable women.
Even Nazi Germany, like, you know, those guys were like every chance they got, they were going hog wild.
That's just how you are.
When you're a high T individual, that's just what you do.
You know, and that's the role that questionable women have always served in society as well, right?
Like, to be completely honest, like they've always existed.
We won't ever be able to completely get rid of them.
But at least for the most part, in a healthy society, it's a very short relationship between the two.
Nothing happens.
And, you know, the more honorable person can go on and have a wife and whatever.
And then the old woman, when she stops being available for those things, I don't know what she does.
Maybe she goes and works in a restaurant or something.
I don't know.
But, you know, these types of relationships have always existed.
And when you live in a world that we live in, like you can't really be held at fault for that.
And you did your best, like to believe everything that you said in your email.
You did your very best.
You know, you're a good person.
You did everything that you could.
And the Jews just have created a world in which it is, you know, you could, let's assume that he had stayed with the baby mama and the child was his daughter was raised in a healthy, normal, functional home.
The results are probably just as good that she ends up in the position that she's in.
Well, he said that he had a good relationship with her through high school years and things like that.
And so, I mean, you know, that's unfortunately when a son or daughter goes to a certain age and they're going to be able to make choices for themselves.
And they, and our society gives a lot of opportunities to make bad choices.
And that's, that's the thing we want to change.
Hitler talked about this in his book.
He's, he talked about at the time the problem with syphilis and people were sleeping around and things like that.
And he said that, you know, society should be ordered to follow nature's pattern.
When a man is 18 or 19 or 20 years old, he has a strong feeling to be with a woman.
But can a man of 18, 19, or 20, can he buy a home?
Can he provide a home for a wife that doesn't work and stays home and has children?
No, in very rare circumstances, would that even be possible?
So our society is not ordered in a way to be harmonious with nature.
We have to make our society so a man, just like my grandfather, when he was, I don't know, 20 or in his very young 20s, he took a wife and he bought a house, cash, and he bought a car, cash, and he worked his whole life in a certain profession.
And okay, so if you make it so that people can do that, they will do that.
Some may not, like Smasher's saying.
That's always been the problem of militaries and wars and things like that is that you have soldiers that go out and do the wrong thing with women.
It's just, that's how it is.
But we can minimize that by making sure people have the good avenue to do the right thing, the thing that nature itself is telling them to do.
Yep.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
I'm not going to go into hypotheticals of what happens with my daughter, but whoever will marry her will be the absolute alpha chad of one of the many wonderful couples, husbands and wives that we know in this thing.
That's right.
We got a quick, I'll be quick about this.
There's a young guy who's all up in our inbox with enthusiasm, and I appreciate that.
I see you there.
He may even be using his real name, so I'm not going to say it.
He asked where to find hardcovers of books approved by our movement.
He noticed that Antelope Hill is growing, but not that big.
So that's one.
He also says, keep up the awesome work.
Your show has helped me spread subtle and wholesome red pills to my coworkers and family.
That's wonderful, youngster, but be careful out there.
We do get edgy sometimes.
So, and I'm being serious.
I think some people come in.
They're like, oh, this is great.
Like a candid show where they're not afraid to talk about race and the JQ.
But remember that you're not in Kansas anymore as one of our most popular shows was like you're in very dangerous territory.
So be careful.
We're all like canny about what we do.
And a bunch of us are doxed.
And, you know, so, you know, it's, it may, we're making it look easy, I guess.
And a white pill here to transition towards the end of this puppy.
He says, you would be surprised by how many guys my age are unknowingly based.
I guess that means undercover based.
So many of them are right on the edge of greatness.
Exclamation mark.
All right.
Thank you.
Thank you, T.
And he says you guys should do a segment on getting younger guys to join the movement.
For that, I would just refer you, sir, to our Patriot Front episode.
There is a lot of reluctance on the part of older guys to interact too closely with younger guys for numerous reasons.
One is obviously legal.
We're certainly not talking or influencing or engaging with people under 18.
There's obviously the issue of we often do have some adult beverages when we get together and under 21s are of concern.
But also young guys are still figuring out the world.
And there's also an intergenerational difference.
Check out the Manor Bund dispatch where Nom Apache and Towns talked about the Zoomers and how, you know, the boomers look down.
You get a bunch of old dudes talking about Zoomers.
No, I'm kidding.
Yeah, I know, right?
But it's, no, it's, it's unquestionable that there are severe differences between the boomers, the Xers, the millennials, the Zoomers, and God knows what the hell comes after the Zoomers.
Hopefully the National Socialist Hitler youth.
But thank you for that, youngster.
And also, a quick comment from the mailbox.
Hey, the divorce episode was good.
Thanks for that.
In my mind, the two situations that were presented, though, were kind of slam dunks, a legitimately crazy wife and a drunk cheater.
I think a lot of married people are in situations where the marriage is just incompatible or the other spouse is resolutely blue-pilled and they're concerned about what he or she would teach the kids.
Hearing from guys that went through that and how it was resolved would be great.
Thank you.
So, we don't want to revisit divorce too quickly, but go ahead, Sam.
Well, I would say this.
Yeah, I've, I've, I've gotten different variations of that type of observation through the years.
And what I will say there, there is, okay, when you got together with this woman, it was hot and heavy.
You couldn't get enough of her.
There was love and all those things.
And then at some point, now you're telling me, uh, we just were not in love.
I am not attracted to that person, whatever the thing is.
But I'll tell you this from the perspective of someone who has been married for many years, those things come and go.
So, like, when people fall out of love, that's the same thing as like falling in love.
It's going to happen numerous times.
So, you're going to go have these ups and downs.
Hopefully, your ups and downs are not too great in their amplitude.
You know, hopefully, there's more ups and things go down a little bit.
But that's just normal.
I would say if people are going through a time and they don't feel in love or they don't feel compatible or whatever the word is you want to use, don't worry.
It'll come back.
Well, that's that's you were you were together long enough to decide that you could get married, and now all of a sudden you decide that your marriage is incompatible.
That's bullshit.
You're retarded.
Yeah, stop being a gay retard and like get over it and work through it.
You don't get to the point where you go, I want to marry this person, and then a year later or two years later, you're like, This marriage is incompatible.
Even 10 years later, this marriage is incompatible.
Right.
Like, bro, you've been married for 10 years and you decide you're going to get divorced.
Like, you are a retard.
Right.
Smasher, have some confidence in your outlook on the world.
Yeah, and I've talked to guys who've been different stages of this thing.
And here's the way I see it.
Now, let's say we were starting from scratch.
We got to meet a woman, right?
How we're always pushing guys to get married, right?
So, okay, you got to meet a woman, you got to court her, you got to do this, dress this way.
You finally pop the question, you get married, you bring her along, you start telling her about our thing with the white nationalism.
Think of all the work that's been put into this person, and now you're coming to like, nah, it's just incompatible.
That's like, I'm looking at it as how do you talk to your significant other and get to the point where you're like, okay, well, my, my red pillness is not compatible with their blue pillness.
Like, bro, have you not been talking to them about this shit?
Like, well, if you've just been like, hey, all of a sudden, I have this, I have this worldview, and I think Hitler's really cool.
And I know that we've been dating for three years or we've been married for four years, but I kind of want to tell you about Hitler now.
Like, bro, what have you been doing?
It's your, it's your fault.
Like, if you, if you get to that point, like, it is a major bra moment and it's your fault.
Well, I'm looking at it like this.
Okay, let's say, all right, fine, you're incompatible.
But I'm looking like we got one.
We got this woman on the line here.
What can we do to save this thing?
We've brought her through all those steps.
And now you're at this point where there's, okay, you've run into a problem.
Let's not just kick her to the curb, right?
We took a lot of work and resources to find her, court her, get her to marry you, and bring you up to this date.
That's the way I'm looking at it.
Sure.
How'd you do it without talking about Hitler?
I talked to an older guy the other day and asked if his wife was aware of his views.
And he said, aware of my views?
She's 1.0.
I was sort of a blue-pilled normal and she kind of red-pilled me.
So it's not always us.
Yeah, there's a lot of great women out there for sure.
Amen.
All right.
On that note, let us bring this puppy home, which is apparently my euphemism for ending the show.
Real quick, though, Jim Foster let us know that the Croods 2 was based to high heaven on the JQ.
He said he has no idea.
It's a movie.
He has no idea how it was made.
So that sounds a little bit like Angry Birds, which Angry Birds, if you haven't seen that with the kids, is unquestionably our guys doing it.
So consider Croods 2.
Jim, was it Jim?
What the heck was his name?
Yeah, Jim Foster said he submitted the way, which I didn't completely agree with.
But another listener reached out and said, Hey, coach, I have something I want to write for the site, but I'm not sure if you'll agree with it.
I said, get out of here.
Send it my way.
Send it our way to fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
As long as you're not dumb or exhorting calls to violence, then we will consider it for sure.
I mean, obviously, if you're espousing things that we are absolutely against, but if you have certain heresies or things that we might disagree with, we would certainly consider it publishing in the interest of the discourse.
All right, so let's go around the horn here to our new father.
Second time, I guess, second time, third time, did you come on a live stream?
Regardless, Franz, we're so happy to have it.
That's right.
Yeah, you were sitting in the back of it.
It was hard.
Yeah, you were like furthest from the microphone.
Yeah, yeah.
Happy to have you on, buddy.
And again, congratulations.
He's beautiful.
Your wife, God bless her for sticking to it and all the rest of it, man.
Yeah.
Thank you, guys.
Good, good hanging out with you.
Happy to have you anytime, brother.
Mr. Producer, thank you, sir.
Thank you.
And good job on the MQ.
All right.
Thanks.
We tried.
Yeah.
Didn't delve too deep into the benefits of not getting married, wink wink, but don't want to touch that one with a 10-foot pole.
And thank you, MP.
Added a couple more videos to our library that I uploaded to YouTube.
And we are encroaching on a thousand followers.
We haven't really boosted that too hard.
I'm not butthurt about the following on YouTube, but we could live stream there relatively soon.
We are overdue for a live stream.
And the man down under, man of the hour, Thomas Sewell, did reach out the other day after his dust up and said he does still want to come on.
It's just a scheduling issue.
So that is still in the works.
And maybe we'll live stream that one, although that gives me a little bit of anxiety because he is he goes hard.
But if we can live, if we can live stream with Smasher, we can live stream with Thomas Sewell.
All right.
And Samuel, thank you, sir.
Yes, it was a great discussion.
And it was wonderful to hang out with one of the truly excellent people in our movement, Franz.
Thanks for being on the show.
Thank you.
So true.
Despite scheming to replace his wife, other than that, sorry, wifey.
You know, I'm joking.
Smasher, you're okay yourself.
Hey, stop being gay.
Stop being a gay retard.
Man up, do what you have to do and fight for the white race.
Thank you, Franz, for coming on.
You're a good friend of mine.
It was great.
Yes, sir.
Amen.
And Smasher's avatar makes me so happy.
It's just him smiling with his daughter every single time.
Awesome posting.
Full House 82 was taped on a gloriously warm March 11th, now March 12th, 2021, just in a hoodie out here in the great Appalachian gazebo.
Follow us on Telegram for sure now that the Twitter is dead and six feet under.
We've got the S-Posting channel with other serious commentary.
And we've also got all of the episodes for easy download up there.
They're also, of course, at full-house.com, available directly through Libsyn.
We post them to YouTube a week or so after the fact, whenever Mr. Producer decides that he decides to put into a little decides to put a little elbow grease into this show.
Rarely.
Sorry, I have to stick with the meme.
It's all good.
And to all white husbands and wives struggling to conceive or maybe just getting a little bit impatient, first try to relax and let it happen.
If that doesn't work, consider going the fertility route.
If that doesn't work, take our buddy Franz's experience to heart and re-examine your health and see if there's not something under the hood that might be preventing you from bringing forth new white life.
So, in honor of all new parents with cranky newborns, and to wash a little bit of the electronica out of your ears from last week, a couple people complained.
I know, I see you there.
We're going to go out with a late 80s banger this week.
First time I heard this song, I was playing Uno with Potato Smasher and the kids at the beach.
So, from 1989, please put on Stayed Awake All Night by Crocus.
Oh, wow.
Remember, parents, if your kids can't sleep, just play this one at about 150 decibels.
Works every time.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
See ya.
See ya.
In my cool, cool, cool up a moment.
That's when I'm coming home.
Stay awake all night.
Stay awake all night, night long.
Stay awake all night.
Stay awake all night, night.
Stay awake all night.
In my cool, cool, cool up the email.
Gonna take all night.
Gonna take all night.
Gotta take all night, night, long.
Gotta take all night.
Gotta take all night, night, all night.
Gotta take all night.
Gotta take out a check on the tonight.
Listen to the matter.
In the cool, cool, cool of the moment.
Well, that's when I'm coming home.
Stay awake all night.
Stay awake all night, night long.
Stay awake all night.
Stay awake all night, night long.
Stay awake all night.
Stay away.
Stay awake all night.
Mr. Producer has like some kind of sound drop of him doing that.