One of the greatest challenges we face is the stigmatization of our ideas and our associations in the eyes of our people, which is perpetrated by Jews in control of the commanding heights of media and academia.
From the KKK to National Socialism, from skid heads to the alt-right, the enemy has worm-tongued whites around the world to associate advocacy for our people and defense of our legitimate group interests with thuggery, delusion, and evil.
And yet, you cannot listen to this show, whether friendly or hostile, and honestly conclude that we are anything but normal, intelligent, well-informed, and mostly well-adjusted.
The world is sick, and we are the healthy ones.
Now, we don't have to deprogram every white person to win.
Some are too simple, some too set in their thinking, and others are willing collaborators in their own destruction, feeding the crocodile and probably even accepting it eating them last.
But we are peeling off our best from certain perdition in increasing numbers.
And you know who knows it.
Hence the censorship, hence the gay ops and kangaroo courts, hence the full court anti-white propaganda.
But if our cause were hopeless, or if we were lying or spreading nonsense, they wouldn't go to such lengths to snuff us out.
We are being marginalized, demonized, and replaced in the countries our forefathers built and died for by deliberate policy.
And damn it all to hell, we will not go quietly smiling stupidly or cowering in the face of our destruction.
So help us, God.
And in that spirit, we are honored to welcome a real-life skinhead and family man in the white room with us this week to dispel some Jewish misconceptions and get to the bottom of their cause, past, present, and future.
So, Mr. Producer, turn it to 11.
Welcome, everyone,
to episode 90 of Full House, the world's most inclusive show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
I am your open-minded host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of good times with hard men amidst hard times.
Before we meet the birth panel this week, though, big thanks to Capitan Tight Pants again for his donation this week.
He just likes hearing his name over the air, I think.
Thank you, Mikapitan.
I don't mind saying it either.
But don't wear those pants too tight.
You don't want to restrict your boys.
Dad pro tip there.
Now, maybe some Russian wisdom, too.
Yeah, you don't want them to be too cold, too hot.
Let them fly casual.
All right.
And finally, our transoceanic footsie paid off.
Our new pal, Andreas from Nordic Frontier received our mails, and he said he'd be happy to join us for a comfy and laid-back show sometime soon.
So we're looking forward to it, buddy.
We'll get that scheduled shortly.
And with that, on to the birth panel.
First up, he almost wet his pants this week when he heard who we were having on the show.
And he exclaimed, finally, a real tough guy to join me on this damn show.
Sam, come on.
All right, man, that's good.
Yeah, good.
You know, that was a great opening speech there, Coach.
And it made me think of our dear uncle when he said, A moral man in an immoral society will seem himself immoral.
And that's certainly what we're up against.
Amen.
I was, yeah, I was just thinking about our guest and the imagery that I had pre-implanted or pre-programmed in me about skinheads.
And it, funny enough, it didn't contrast or it didn't compare with what I experienced with my own eyes IRL.
So, yeah.
And before we get too far afield, you know, we had Mother's Day just here recently, and I wanted to express my love to all the mothers out there, my own mother and my wife, who is a mother.
And they are the reason we do what we do.
They are the reason we toil the way we do and take on the troubles the way we do.
In fact, our personal pursuits would be meaningless without them.
So salute to the mothers.
Amen.
Thank you, Sam.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Good one.
We put out a Telegram poll a couple of days ago, and it looked like maybe just under 10% of those respondents on Telegram, which I assume is a white male heavy clientele there, were listeners or fans of the show.
So I suspect that it's higher than that.
But regardless of the- Well, the wives listen with their husbands, probably or boyfriends.
There you go.
Or they may not be on Telegram yet.
Get on Telegram.
No, you don't have to get on Telegram.
They don't have phones because their husbands are based.
There he is.
Next up, he applied to become a skinhead on his 18th birthday, but his application was rejected.
It came back and said, too nerdy, likes anime.
Potato smasher.
You're not nerdy anymore, but you still like anime.
Welcome, buddy.
I still ended up with a shaved head.
There you go.
I should try to dig up my basic training picture.
I look rough.
Down to the skin.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Bleeding head and all.
With a bic or an electric razor?
No, just an electric razor.
Yeah.
When you go through your in processing, they sit you down in a seat.
Guy just has like a shot back hooked up to his like wall clippers or whatever that haven't ever been maintained.
So they're dogs.
Oh, strip all your hair out.
Oh, yeah.
It's a good thing.
It's rusty.
Yeah, that's what I cut my boy's hair with.
Rusty old pair of walls and the attachments are all like half broken and stuff like that.
Were you aware or into the skinhead scene at all growing up, or is it more later in life you saw the dog?
I always thought American History X was really awesome.
And I loved the scene where he stomps on the dude.
And so that was about my mind too.
Yeah, they show that in high school.
We watched that in high school as some anti-racism lesson.
I don't really remember like thinking, oh, now I like Nazis or Skinhead's Evil.
It's just like, okay, it's a movie.
But.
All right, brother.
Well, finally, you ruined what I was going to say for my introduction because I had to respond to you.
I was hoping you would just give me something I could ignore.
I'm terribly sorry.
Would you like to try it again?
Well, I'm just going to say it now.
I'm saying it because of our guest.
This is included in the CD of theirs that I have.
Fired.
It's a little quote.
The only thing I have to say about Alan Berg is, regardless of who did it, he has not mouthed his hate-white propaganda from his 50,000-watt Zionist pulpit for quite a few years.
It's David Lane when asked about the murder of Alan Berg.
I think of that every once in a while, and it makes me chuckle.
Yeah, it's a pretty good one.
It's a good one.
All right.
There he is, our very patient and very special guest.
Sorry for being so chatty at the top here, pal.
He is such a berserker, such a madman, that after Mr. Producer sabotaged our show by calling out last week, our guest said that he was relieved because he was quitting.
Let me check my notes here.
Caffeine.
And then when I stupidly rescheduled the show for Mother's Day, he said that he was such a badass that he couldn't come on because he had wholesome family things to do during the day.
Representing, representing American Defense skinheads and the band Fascine.
John, welcome to Full House, buddy.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's a pleasure.
And just for the record, I thought that was supposed to be just between me and you, man.
That's really, you're totally, you're totally haunting me here.
Yeah, you're docs now quitting.
You're ruining my image, man.
No, I know.
I thought that was very, I was, I mean, you know, I knew that you weren't a bad guy, but I was like, man, you're quitting caffeine.
Why the hell are you quitting caffeine, John?
Just got to get your life back together.
Yeah, it's really taking a toll on my marriage and family.
Just one less thing, you know, one less thing to have over my head.
You know, it's, it's nice to be rid of, or at least, you know, on the, on the, you know, on the way to brushing it off, you know.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
It's good self-discipline, right?
Even if caffeine's not going to ruin your life or anything.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hats off for that.
All right, John.
First time on Full House.
Please, I can guess your ethnicity, but I won't.
Your religion and your fatherhood status, please.
I am a proud Slovak American.
My family comes back or came over during the, you know, the typical East.
PA has many, many, you know, Eastern European families, but my family came over along with them to work the steel mills in the late 1800s, early 1900s.
And luckily, we've been able to maintain our identity, you know, very, very proud of our heritage.
And I actually got the chance to visit the town where my family comes from.
That was a very long answer to your very short question.
I would have guessed you were.
I thought for sure you had some Italian in you, but you're pure Slovak, huh?
Pure Slovak, yes.
But you know how things are over there.
I mean, the lines have been redrawn so many times and, you know, populations displaced through war.
So, I mean, there's always a chance, you know, of, you know, far back.
But yeah.
But yeah.
Pure Slovak and I am a father of Soon to Be Two.
All right.
Congratulations.
And Slovaks, I guess, this is terrible that I don't know.
I'm guessing that they are more Catholic than Orthodox.
Actually, Byzantine and Lutheran are the primary two.
So, you know, Byzantine, like you were almost there, you know, under the Pope, but, you know, Orthodox too, as far as Byzantine's a very strange, tricky, complicated religion, you know.
Yeah.
You still, were you a believer?
Are you still one or not so much?
I am.
I'm actually a Lutheran.
I was born and raised Lutheran.
My dad's a Lutheran pastor.
But the Lutheran church has gone through many changes over the years and it's become liberalized and very anti-traditional and biblical, I would even say.
But there's still some Lutheran synods that are holding strong.
And me and my wife found a good one down the road from us who it's the Missouri Synod who still adhere to Luther's strict principles and theology.
And obviously the Jew and their lies, that's very popular.
And every couple of weeks you hear the pastor talk about them and name them every now and again.
It's fun.
It's fun.
We go out shooting together.
I'm actually on the elder committee of the church.
Just got asked to join last week and gladly accepted it.
So now I kind of have, I'm behind the steering wheel of the church, which is kind of cool.
Outstanding.
Well, thank you for your service there.
I was excited to have you on for a number of reasons, including the music, including the history.
But just, you know, full candor for the audience, you know, I definitely had that Hollywood stigma or caricature of skinheads in my head for, you know, probably up until like a year ago of tattoos, criminal, up to no good, you know, heavy hitters, et cetera.
And then there's anything wrong with that.
And then, you know, lo and behold, meeting a couple of your guys at various events, I was like, oh, man, they are rough and tumble and they look like they would, you know, stomp you if you stepped on, if you looked at them askance.
But they're also nice, hardworking, blue-collar, not going to call you sweethearts, but just nice guys.
So that was, I was like, huh, okay, there's another one.
You know, it's not often you get surprised in this world anymore when you're in this thing.
So if you would, John, talk about, well, what is a skinhead in your words?
And then so your chance to define it and what it means and what you guys do, and then how you came to be one, if you would, please.
Well, first of all, I'd like to say I'm glad we had that, we left that impression on you.
That's actually why we, ADS as an organization, exists, you know, to kind of provide a real example of what a skinhead was back, you know, in the day before all the negativity and drama and as well as providing good music.
So it's nice that you're not the first one, but it is that that came out from an event and said that.
But that's still great to hear because that's exactly what we are trying to do as well as rebuild that image and culture.
But anyway, to get on to your question, to me, skinhead, and this is how everybody, whenever I answer, ask this question, everybody, every skinhead under the sun always starts it out with, to me, skinhead means, but that's really how it is on an individual level.
You're attracted to it.
You're attracted to it for various reasons, you know.
But to me, it's all about, I mean, but however, there are definite points that you, there are definite, you must meet some conditions, you know, not anybody can just shave their head, put on some boots and a flight jacket and become a skinhead.
You know, first, I would absolutely say that working class, I think being blue collar or at least blue collar roots is very important.
It's very street-wise, and which comes along with a blue-collar living, a living in, it doesn't even have to be in the city.
It could be in the, you know, even the burbs or the small towns.
It doesn't really matter.
but just a very, or even a blue-collar work ethic, something related to the base of the country or whatever society or nation you belong to.
It's just very working with your hands, creating something and also being screwed by the man.
Go hand in hand.
Yes, yes.
So that's very important.
Two, I would say that you have to be action oriented.
You have to be able to back your words up with action and be willing to put time in and work in.
That is very important.
It's not sitting.
And I mean, of course, in our world, due to the blue-collar influences and it ends up being, it's, you know, out in the real world, you know, confrontations with antifau or ARA back in the day, anti-racist action, you know, picketing, just being very out.
Obviously, the way we dress is very militant.
And you can look at us even when we're dressed nicely, you know, with a Ben Sherman polo shirts and the flight jacket or even like a Harrington jacket, you know, even when we're dressed sharp, you can still kind of tell that, you know, we're, you know, you look at us and you'd be like, all right, that's a skinhead right there, you know.
And John, if I could interject, if you will recall when we met back over a year ago, it was because of the way we were dressed, the way I was dressed, that we happened to make our contact.
I thought I might recount that very shortly here for the show, which is I had gone to a very wonderful restaurant.
I'm not going to go into it too much because we don't want to cause any problems for them, but I was with my son.
Yep.
A great place where you can meet guys like us, probably.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
So I went in there.
I happened to be wearing a hoodie with some skinhead band name on it.
And so I go in there and with my son, we go and we sit at the end of the bar and I hear from over my shoulder, hey, I like that hoodie you're wearing.
So now I'm from out of town, so I don't exactly know what to expect, but I do know this.
You're either going to have a friend or a foe that's telling you that.
So I turned around and it was these guys, a couple of nice guys and a gal sitting at the bar.
And we just got to talking.
We hit it off real well and got in touch with each other.
And we've been friends ever since.
And but so that's just the type of thing that I've met so many people in life because I was sporting the skinhead gear.
And you get into conversations and things like that.
I would only say with caution to anybody out there who thinks that they are going to signal that way is you got to carry yourself in a certain way and be ready for certain types of things and know how to handle yourself in certain types of situation because you will get noticed, let's say.
Absolutely.
I mean, it's either it's a friend or foe, like you said, you know, there's no, you know, you're going to bring people over, you know, and be like, oh, what's up with that?
And you're going to get into a conversation about it, or you're going to turn around and get pepper sprayed in the face and get into a fight.
Exactly.
But that is a way that, you know, especially before the internet and all that type of thing, this is a way that, you know, somebody could know how to get in touch with what you're representing maybe more than any other way.
And I've met tons of great people this exact way.
I have friends that are friends of mine today because I met them because I was wearing something like that.
I'm just offering that to use that with advisement to the listener.
But consider that, that the way you represent yourself, people see that and people are going to react to it.
Give the audience a little bit of the history.
Where did it come from?
I think I asked Sam in a previous episode, skin obviously sounds like an epithet that maybe your guys agreed and amplified.
You're like, yeah, sounds cool.
Okay.
Well, yeah, we'll keep doing that.
And that goes back as far back as the 60s as a reaction to hippies and the counterculture.
But yeah, wrap on that a little bit, if you would.
Yeah, it happened back in 68 is typically where people draw the like, you know, the watermark of the skinhead subculture and or the watershed, sorry.
And people attribute it to, you know, of course, it was a reaction to hippies and, you know, their liberal, you know, peace nick garbage.
And it was literally an opposite reaction to it.
You know, peace met with violence and aggression, long hair versus short hair, or, you know, dressing dirty and in ragged clothes and loose-fitting clothes versus dressing sharp, you know, polish your boots, cuff your jeans a little bit on the bottom to accentuate it.
You know, just really present yourself with pride and like you care, you know.
And I was going to interject.
You know, I came into this kind of in the punk rock phase, you know, like the mid to late 70s.
I remember I was in seventh grade and we had to sell things out of a catalog for school, you know.
And I remember seeing in there the Ramones.
And so I bought the Ramones albums when I was in seventh grade.
And that was, that kind of got me really started on all this because a lot of those early bands played with this political identity thing.
Now, I'm not trying to say the Ramones were something you should follow or latch onto.
As far as I understand, they were all Jews.
But they constantly played with these right-wing icons.
You know, they had songs like Blitzkrieg Bop and The KKK Took My Baby Away.
And I'm Against It, where they said, I'm against it.
I don't like communism or I don't like communists.
That's what it is.
And a lot of songs.
Well, sorry.
I didn't mean to hijack.
But as far as the look and all that, the thing of the skinheads, it was like kind of a DIY, what we would now call DIY, because maybe you would go to a vintage or a secondhand shop, and maybe you'd see some kind of cool vest with a tartan pattern on it, or you'd find some wingtip shoes or something like that.
So the skinhead thing always had this kind of a like a neo-traditionalism, maybe adopting some of the look that maybe our grandfathers or great-grandfathers might have used.
Sure.
You know what I mean?
And it was like taking something old and making it new again.
So the skinhead thing was very much a reaction, like you're saying.
And we were doing our own music.
We didn't have the highly produced music of the big rock and roll bands and things like that.
You know, these bands, these were, this is music made by men, real men.
You know, like we were saying before the show, when you go, when you go to the concert, all these guys are Chads there.
Every single guy is a Chad, you know, and the music is real earthy music made by real men and real women.
And so it just goes with this DIY ethic.
And everything about the look is very practical.
Like, for instance, the braces, you know, if you're a working man, wearing a belt is you bend over, the belt cuts into your side while you're working or something like that.
The braces, that's for a working man.
You can work in them.
And similarly, all the things, work boots, they could be work boots, but they look sharp anyways.
And when you say braces, Sam, suspenders to the spinner.
Okay.
Quarter-inch braces.
Quarter-inch braces.
All right.
Yeah.
And you touched on something really that I wanted to say prior is that is when he was asking me my, you know, what I felt skinhead was, was that I think it offers, I think one of the biggest things it offers is kind of like a warrior culture.
It pulls people in and kids in, turns them into men, essentially.
You know, you fight with your hands, the brotherhood, you know, and it's something that society is lacking, you know, it's, and I think that's why a lot of people are attracted to it.
You know, society, our culture is lacking manhood and lacking that warrior culture and brotherhood.
And the skinhead subculture offers that.
And it's reflected in the music.
It's reflected in the shows, the dancing.
You know, it's very, very aggressive, you know, and yeah.
Yeah.
Now, John, you, you are a tiny guy yourself.
It looks like a stiff, you know, gust of wind could blow you over.
What happened?
Did you get beat up on the playground and then like some skinheads came over and were like put their arm around your shoulder and like, we'll show you the waist on?
That's romantic, man.
That's romantic.
Yeah.
How did it work for you?
How'd you get involved?
I got it.
I was, I got into punk and stuff as a, as a young kid, you know, in middle school, I'd say, you know, and it kind of just back then it was kind of just a natural evolution.
You know, you get into punk rock and you'll start listening to old skinhead bands like Blitz and the Four Skins and even Screwdriver, you know, and it kind of just kind of just moves on from there.
And it was mainly just that, you know, like I was going to shows as a young kid.
There were skinheads around and I would look at them, you know, like the older skinheads and be like, I want to be like those guys right there.
You know, like they all looked like they were running thick as thieves, you know, and they weren't afraid of anybody.
And I wanted to be a part of that.
And eventually, you know, I just started hanging out with them and was top the ropes and everything, you know.
Yeah, the music seems intertwined with the with the cause.
And we'll talk about the music a little bit later.
And you, I'll just flag that you did a show with Stryker and I think Borzoi delving a little bit more into the art and the counterculture, which we'll touch on, but probably not as deep as that one.
Okay, sure.
Let's deconstruct Skinhead.
I'm sure that some of the caricatures or the generalizations have some truth to them, right?
You guys have some rough and tumble history and men who have gotten in trouble in the past.
But what, yeah, I mean, was there a bad era of skinheads where they went off the rails a little bit too much?
And I'm, of course, not asking you to throw your own people or your own movement under the bus, but whatever you're comfortable with talking about, was it too rough in the past and now it's a little bit more focused and law-abiding?
Whatever you feel appropriate to add there.
I'd say there was no really bad time.
I'd say there was some dead time and, you know, just where it's died off.
But first of all, I'd like to say that, you know, I think the bad image, of course, it's just a caricature.
And I would also like to point out why the heck would people who understand the media at Hollywood to be run and infiltrated and directed by Jews against our collective interest, why would they believe what they say and show us to be?
Why is that even a thing?
It blows my mind.
Obviously, they're trying to smear us, you know, and of course, a little bit is based in truth.
But that also comes whenever you're to be a skinhead, you are going to be on the outs, on the fringes of society.
Our ideals and our outlook on life and the way we carry ourselves is not common.
And that's exactly what we want.
And so you're going to attract, you know, fringe people, anti-social people, and there's going to be criminals and there's going to be fights and there's going to be drinking and just stuff like that.
But everybody does it.
And I think that, yeah, it does.
But as a result of getting those people involved, it damages – it does damage the reputation for sure.
And that's also – go ahead.
Go ahead, man.
Go ahead.
I would say that there have been good phases and bad phases, you know, and there's good and bad exists at the same time.
It does, just like anything, it does attract some people who are maybe looking for an identity or people who are insecure or desperate in some way and things like that.
So I would say right now we are definitely in a very good phase and groups like ADS are very serious and very professional and are definitely doing a service to the genre and to the style of skinheads.
But there is, yes, sir.
And there is a type of person.
I have been around for a long time and I have seen there is a type of person that is intoxicated by violence.
And the rush that you get from somehow being part of violence is, I would say, addictive to a certain type of person.
And I have witnessed before that type of person who is cruel and not violent for any good reason, but violent in a very predatory type of way.
And so I would say that anybody who would say, hey, this skinhead gig thing, that sounds fun.
I want to go to a skinhead gig.
Yeah, definitely.
But you've got to know how to size up situations and how to read people and stuff like that.
Now, if you're coming to some kind of gig that ADS is doing, don't worry about it.
You're going to have a great time and they're very careful about organizing this type of thing.
But I'm just saying, if anybody after hearing the show is very enthusiastic to hang out with some skinheads or look further into it or even try to get involved, definitely there is that element to it.
And this is a psychological condition that you find in other places.
I've seen it before.
Let's say anyone who has worked for a sadistic boss, let's say, this is the same impulse expressed.
And it's also expressed in other avenues, let's say.
So just to acknowledge some people who might have a legitimate concern, maybe they even have had a bad experience with skinheads.
Maybe they got a boo-boo at a show, perhaps.
Right.
I mean, I hear you, and I understand the concern, and that's it's not a it's not an empty concern, but I would say the good far outweighs the bad.
And certainly, when you meet great guys like John and ADS guys, it's it's uh you will know the truth then.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you for being candid about that, Sam.
I mean, it makes sense, right?
Every group attracts certain uh elements that may not be 100% wholesome and well-behaved all of the time, and that's okay.
Uh, it reminds like it's almost so obvious that it doesn't need to be mentioned, but we literally have been living for the past three or four years with uh masked, masked gangs of stinking, balaclava-covered, you know, violent rioters and looters across this country.
And it reminds me of us when our pal Marcel, I think, made a meme where it's like these nice white guys boarding up a shop, and it's like, hurry up, board up the windows.
You know, the white nationalists are coming, or the skinheads are coming.
Doesn't happen.
Yeah, yeah, worst case scenario, they're going to be stomping on some commies.
Well, I think, yeah, I think people are hungry for real identities, and I think being a skinhead is a real identity, right?
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
So, people get attracted to that through the other things in life that they like, be it, you know, music or being white or whatever.
And so you discover it and it just kind of sticks.
Yeah, it's an organic, it's an organic creation that Jews in Hollywood then lampooned as opposed to the other way around.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, and it's also it strikes fear into the heart of our enemies, right?
So, uh, you know, you can say what you want about skinheads and critique them, but uh, a Jew will never be a successful skinhead.
Not with that attitude.
I'm sure there's one.
Uh, well, you know, there's always one.
That's a good, that's a good segue, Smasher.
I mean, John, it's no secret that the alt-right was a preppier, arguably more white-collar, you know, maybe more college-educated, quote-unquote, uh, type that probably, you know, to what extent they even understood or knew about skinheads was probably just what they assumed as 1.0.
And the flip side of that coin, of course, is I'm sure that skinheads looked at the alt-right as maybe a bunch of soft internet, you know, upstarts, et cetera.
So, are those things start?
I think I'd like to think at least that those misperceptions are starting to get corrected.
But what have you seen in your years in the scene?
And also, yeah, how long have you been in it?
Well, you're absolutely correct.
I mean, there's been a lot of skinheads talking down on the alt-right and the upcoming generation of national and as, oh, they're not out in the streets.
They're not, you know, bashing commies, you know.
But I've always, me personally, I've always completely respected and even identified with the alt-right myself and followed its progress and work.
And ADS as a whole, I'm only speaking from ADS because there's the whole skinhead movement, whatever, whatever that is, you know, spokesperson.
Exactly.
So, and but everybody, all the skinheads and uh fans who come to our gigs, I would assume, feel the same way now, especially after the last one, um, due to a special appearance.
But they're coming around and ADS is very active, I would say.
And me personally, I am very much a fan of bridging that divide between the two camps because I believe that both sides are absolutely necessary and crucial to success.
That suits cliché, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, true, but truism too.
Tell us about American Defense Skinheads, what it is.
And is it, you know, whatever you're comfortable with?
Is it a membership organization or is it more just a loose group of friends?
What do you guys do?
What's it all about?
Well, we're pretty official, I would say.
You can tell by the way we kind of conduct ourselves and present ourselves.
And we have numerous things going on, like a record label and we put on gigs and help out other organizations whenever they want us to.
And I'd say, but we don't have like, you know, a membership list and we're not a mass recruiting organization.
We don't even go out looking for people.
If someone's interested, likes what we're doing, they can come to us and find us and we will give them a shot, you know, if they look the part and act the part.
And obviously, you know, you can't, you know, you can't be looking like Smasher there and be like, yeah, hey, ADS, all the way.
I look like a Viking king.
Like you said, it's all about looking aggressive.
It's probably a lot, it's a lot easier to fake being an internet dork in the alt-right than it is to fake being a skinhead.
Oh, yeah.
I'm not disparaging our internet dorks.
Excuse me for playing stereotypes.
But no, it's not like a mass recruitment organization.
It's very much elite, you know, very much exclusive.
And we want it that way.
We want to pull off as much as we can with the best people that we have.
And we only want the best.
We want the best.
And someone who has not lost the identity of skinheads, someone who has not lost the mentality and historical perspective of the skinhead subculture also.
So it's very important.
And we want to keep it going.
And it seems that we're doing okay.
We're starting to attract younger people into the organization.
Skinhead is kind of aging worldwide, but we are up on the up and up with the younger crowd.
Sure.
I think that's a testament.
I think that shows that we are right in what we're doing.
All right.
Be honest.
Do they have to shave their heads and get tattoos?
Not tattoos, but you got to shave your heads or at least have it low.
I mean, don't get me wrong.
There's a fine line, to be honest.
You can have a little hair.
You can have a little hair.
A number one would be okay.
Number one's good.
Even like a number three, some of our guys.
Oh, you guys are going soft.
I know, I know, I know.
Number three.
Yeah.
I keep it number one on the sides.
Serious question.
Are all skinheads national socialists and at least admirers of the Third Reich and Adolf Hitler?
Or is that optional?
Is it all intertwined?
Absolutely not.
There's a thing.
There's different camps of skinhead.
You have sharp skinheads against racial prejudice who go for the whole, well, it's a reaction to the whole National Socialist Skinhead thing in the 80s and 90s.
But you can kind of just go for your, you know, you can figure that one out for yourself.
And essentially, they're just commies.
That's really all it comes down to.
Then you have red anarchist skinheads who are straight up communists, and there's fewer of them.
And you have the trad skins who are like, oh, Spirit of 69 listen to, you know, reggae and dress all proper and look all pretty all the time.
And, you know, they're kind of just like the computer nerds of the skinhead identity, you know?
Skinhead schisms.
Now I've seen it all.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But the thing is, it's like a subculture.
You know, it all started from a common point.
And it all over the years, it branched off.
And people argue as to the origins being, you know, Jamaican influence due to, you know, the early skinheads used to listen to reggae and rock city.
And then in the 80s, got into punk rock.
You know, and but if you look back, it's always been white working class.
You know, of course, there's been black skinheads every now and again, but in Britain, they used to go around, you know, trashing and packies and like packy bashing and smashing up stores and they wanting supporting Enoch Powell.
You know, give me a freaking break.
So it's always, despite what the naysayers say, if nothing else, it's always been predominantly a white working class subculture.
And you are married.
You are married.
Go ahead, Sam, and then I'll ask my next question, please.
Well, I was just going to build on that a little bit.
You know, the skinhead thing did not appear in the world fully formed and things like that.
These were regular working class people in a lot of ways.
And I remember back in the 80s, you know, in urban areas, there used to be such things as what you would call white gangs.
Okay.
You don't really see them so much anymore.
But in Chicago, they had the Uptown Rebels, you know, and these were like real white gangbangers, but they were racist, you know?
And anyways, we got to know these guys.
So we went to, we were going to go to a party at their apartment.
And so we didn't know exactly what the number was, but we, or we, we thought we knew what the number was.
So we're going.
And so we go up to the door and we could hear Michael Jackson music being played, you know, loud on the radio or on a record.
And we said, well, this can't be it.
You know, this cannot be the right apartment.
So we kept going.
Well, we couldn't find it.
So we said, well, this must be it.
So we went in there.
And sure enough, that was those guys.
That's what they were listening to is Michael Jackson music.
So is somebody going to look back now and try to tell me that the Uptown Rebels listened to nigger music and they were really race mixers?
I mean, it's what's on the radio, man.
They listened to whatever music was available to listen to.
Yeah, exactly.
So if they did listen to that, you know, but like I say, once it got into the 70s, it got to be more DIY and people were making bands and it became the true beat of the street, you know?
Yeah.
And maybe we get more into the music at a later point in the day.
Absolutely.
We're going to move on to the music next.
But since we are full house, I wanted to, you know, John, whatever you're comfortable with, but you're married with a kid and another one on the way.
And I would imagine, again, with my preconceived notions, that families and wholesomeness did not go hand in glove with the skinhead movement.
But put a little personal touch on it.
Has it been troublesome to be in the movement and have a family and raise kids, or has it been a help?
I assume that you guys get together with your families and do wholesome things just like the rest of us.
Yeah, of course.
I mean, we're just normal, normal freaking dudes, man.
We're just working guys.
Come on, give me a break.
Sure.
No, I don't.
Families are great.
And it's been a huge help.
And of course, like, you know, having ADS and everybody else that we're friends with, you know, we all support each other.
It's all networking.
We all talk and get along.
I mean, they go hand in hand.
How can you be a national socialist or a white nationalist and not be family oriented?
That's just absurd, you know?
So, and like me personally, I would say to answer that, I would say they don't conflict at all, at all.
They only do if you let it.
I'd say, you know, some years ago, I stopped drinking, you know, 100%, gave up the booze.
But back then, I would have, you know, my life revolved around, you know, I would, I would look forward to fighting, you know, just getting in a, you know, just getting into trouble, you know, just that excitement of life still, you know, but it obviously dalled over time and, you know, just revolved around booze, I would say, you know, and I think that happens sometimes in our subculture, to be honest with you.
Yeah.
And God, God knows that white nationalism is a problem for more of our highbrow guys too, right?
With their families and their wives saying, what the hell has happened to my husband?
He's become a crazy person with these Jews.
And I've heard the ADS crew is doing well with the producing the babies.
Oh, absolutely, man.
Like we're there for each other, you know?
So a lot of guys, you know, they see everybody else having kids.
They're like, oh, hey, I want to have a kid.
Come on.
I feel left out.
All right.
Beautiful.
So right now we got.
And most babies come out bald too.
So that's a good thing.
Absolutely.
Not like Smasher.
He's an involuntary skinhead.
He's bald skin.
Yeah.
He's involuntary and balding.
Smasher is an involuntary a bunch of things.
Yeah.
He's like, why am I getting picked on?
I'm just sitting here not saying a thing.
Good stuff.
All right.
So I'll be candid here.
And I do like certain classic skinhead tracks.
Sam sends them to me all the time.
And I like probably, you know, just full honesty, I like about 25% of them.
The other ones, it can be a little bit rough and there's not a ton of melody, I guess.
Maybe there is, but it's, you know, it's, I like punk rock, but only some of that and skinhead rock is rougher around the edges than that.
But the music is intertwined with the movement.
It seems to have stayed true to its roof, to its roots, which is, you know, earthy and loud and rough and rough and tumble.
Yeah.
But why, why is that?
And talk about your band too, please.
I got to say, it cracks me up hearing you talk, hearing you describe.
Well, yeah, Mr. Rogers, like anthropologist, right?
Dad.
It's a little scary.
It's a little loud.
It hurts my ears a little bit, you know, but yeah.
But no, the music, the music is, is, I think, the main draw, you know, and it's how we get our message out.
And aside from, you know, being active in other ways, of course, there's other ways, you know, but reality, like, well, it's a subculture, you know, everything's included.
The music is, the experience of the show is definitely involved.
And also the aggression of the music and artwork.
You know, artwork is a big thing.
It's all very propaganda oriented, you know, and it all goes hand in hand, but it's definitely based around the bands, I would say.
And that's because the music forms, of course, it's like an outlet, but it's also, it gives us an alternative to, you know, listening to the Jew radio, you know, listening to pop, pop music, you know, and of course I like classical too.
I don't know, we went into it on on the other podcast, but uh, obviously I don't, I don't just listen to RAC and OI, you know but um yeah, but uh, it's just what you identify with it's it's, it's how you feel.
Um uh, you can, you can relate to it.
And also, of course, I listen to like, German bands, and Italian bands and Spanish and and Slovak bands, and I don't understand the damn word, but but you still get that feeling.
Is there's a spirit to it?
You know, there's that absolute spirit.
Well, and um, there's this saying, uh, form follows function, you know.
So yes, that's where even even the baldy bands, even these illegitimate, so-called skinhead bands, to the, to the, the naive listener doesn't know what they're listening to.
It's going to sound nationalistic, oh yeah totally totally, even though it's like total enemy propaganda.
But the, the form follows the function yeah, of it.
And as far as I totally agree if somebody says well, I heard some skinhead music and well, it was too rough for me, or something like that.
Well, what constitutes skinhead music this?
This is a very wide range of things anymore.
There's very melodic things to.
There's some some bands who have a female singer uh, other bands that are yeah, right.
There's the more harsh or more rough um, some bands that incorporate violins and synthesizers and you know, there's all.
It's huge, huge spectrum of and yeah, and I I, I would even uh mention a band that I kind of got listening to over the last uh oh, I don't know, year or so, that some of the listeners to the show were saying oh, you should listen to FLAK, and that was a band that I had.
I saw their stuff out there.
It's just not one I had gotten into.
It's a German band, but uh flex yeah, you know, really like uh, some of it's very choral kind of, a choral type of a sound, you know, with love harmonies, the guy's got a great voice.
So I mean it's it really spans a wide thing and I, I would say the main thing that animates it is that this is our music.
This is like a true nascent white expression of music, going all the way back to the punk years, like I said in the 70s, when people started to make their own bands and people were breaking away from the record labels and and it was kind of even an evolution of the technology of being able to record music like, let's say, on cassette tape or uh or uh reel to reel tape or later digital music,
that all these things made it possible for uh people to have their voice heard who otherwise couldn't work through the channels of corporate record labels.
And it was like Martin Luther and the printing press.
You know right yeah, you know, now the masses can read the Bible.
Finally, you know right, same thing.
You know and, and a lot of those older bands.
You know, when I was a teenager there there wasn't all the skinhead stuff known so much, but even bands like Black FLAG.
They had this song, White minority.
You know, that pricked my ears uh, when I was that age, and then uh, like I was mentioning the Ramones Moans.
And then a few years later, and that there was a band called Minor Threat, and they had a song Guilty of Being White.
So all these bands in their earliest years played with this kind of a Nazi imagery.
And even a band, and when I started noticing this, older guys would tell me, oh, yeah, all the bands were like that.
Sex Pistols, they had the song Belson Was a Gas.
You know, they're kind of making walk around in Swazi shirts, you know?
Yeah, stuff like that.
Now, you might say, well, that was not like very deeply held ideals or anything.
Yeah, I know, but that was what people wanted.
That's what people, that's what people responded to.
Even bands like the Dead Kennedys, believe it or not, were white power when they were first coming out because that's what inspires people.
So even though all the lot of that punk stuff ended up being garbage and everything like that, the impetus of that was always this white power idea.
So it was just like a very natural progression.
And my young ears were just hearing that, you know, and later into the 80s, as I was in high school and then in college, that's when, you know, as those things became more and more available, I just gravitated to it very naturally.
And credit to those guys for seeing the writing on the wall so long ago when Johnny come lately's maybe eager to sneer at them as you know uncouth or whatever, but they knew the score long before we came along in the 2015, 2016 page.
Sam, I did make a note here of flack.
Grandpa, that sounds like the kind of band that Grandpa here might be able to.
Yeah.
I mean, it's easy listening for me.
Yeah.
Just get in my easy chair and put on some flak.
Awesome.
Yeah.
Another well, just another big band that has a song with Nazi themes.
They're not quite punk, but Slayer has Angel of Death about Mengele.
And like, I know that they deny, you know, that they're Nazi sympathizers or whatever, but it's like Hanneman, his explanation for it was that he was reading books on Mengele when it came time to write music.
And it was like, okay, bro, why were you reading books about Mengele?
You just cooked because you knew that if you were like, yeah, he was a cool guy.
Well, I stopped getting sheckles.
I think that a liberal who would read those lyrics would say, oh, look at, well, it's because he's evil and they're painting this evil picture.
But when you listen to that music, it's making you kind of not sympathize, but it kind of inspires you, you know.
Even though the lyrics are kind of ugly to that song, you might say that would not be the lyrics we would write as white nationalists.
But to a teenage person listening to that song, yeah, they're not looking at it as Mengele as the bad guy.
They have this, you know, this backwards, ironic way of liking it.
Right.
Yeah, no, the first time I heard it and then looked up the lyrics, I was like, this is badass.
Yes.
This is awesome.
To benefit the Aryan race, sign me up.
Right.
Well, how can you deny?
How can they even deny?
Did you ever, have you ever listened to their cover album?
And they covered Minor Threat, Guilty of Being White.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Yes.
And they changed it to Guilty of Being Right.
You know, like, it's white is right.
All right.
Come on.
Certainly.
Yeah.
And I wonder.
I wonder because isn't Carrie King a Jew?
I don't know.
I've never liked them enough to know anything to know much about them.
They're not guilty until proven otherwise.
Yes.
I think that they were putting that stuff out as because they know people would like it, but I don't think that they necessarily identified with it.
I think they sensed that that's what their fans wanted, and their fans feel that way, like we feel that way.
And so often at entertainment, too, they reel you in with good stuff in the early years or the early episodes, and then they pause it up later on.
I'm reminded of Pantera's lead singer.
I don't know when the concert was, but he gave that sort of unscripted pro-white boy speech at a concert once they caught on video and then he had to walk it back.
Probably told him they would yank his record contract if he didn't.
Well, he was wearing a t-shirt with the triskelion on it.
What's that?
He was wearing a t-shirt with the triskelion on it.
Oh no, I heard you, Sam.
I don't know what the triskelion is.
Oh it's, uh, it's like a three-legged swastika.
Ah okay cool, like a triple sevens.
I'm learning all the time.
Yeah, all right, ignorant me.
Well, that's the Dropkick Murphys.
Uh, allegedly used to run around with uh skinheads in Boston and as soon as they started to gain traction, they dropped it all and went full like anti-racist.
Yeah we uh we, I still like them, though I don't care, I still, I still support those guys.
I can't listen to them.
What I, I what honest, to be honest with you, I buy their records just because, like a, they're living the dream, you know, playing their music, making a living off of it.
Also, Al Barr from the Bruisers, you know one of my all-time favorite skinhead bands.
Oh yeah, you know they were violent, vicious up in Boston, but they and they wrote some killer music and he's the lead singer now.
You know like how, how insane is that?
You know they but yeah, they used to roll around with all kinds of you know racist skinheads up there.
Real quick interjection here.
We have a one-week HULU free trial that I got so that Junior and I could watch Attack On Titan.
It's become junior just watching Attack On Titan, the Uh Based anime series, I I just could.
I couldn't sit there and watch that many hours of anime.
I started to drift away.
But he's still at it.
And the ad, the ads are so bad, they're so disgusting.
It's blacks in almost every single ad.
It's every manner of degeneracy and race mixing and things like that.
And i'm just thinking, as you guys are talking, i'm like yep, I would rather my son be immersed in skinhead music and punk rock than the garbage, the mass produced Jewish garbage, that's out there right now.
Yeah uh John, you guys have done a series of shows uh, or I don't know, I don't know how long, how far back they go, but you get together with other bands at uh, undisclosed locations across the United States uh, and we have tee, we teased your most recent one, that I believe.
Uh, someone on the show had the stones to attend, including yourself, of course.
But uh yeah uh tell, tell the audience a little bit what uh, one of your big underground shows is like and uh yeah, that that whole experience and and whether non-skins who are of our ilk can go in and feel comfortable and enjoy themselves too well, first of all you're gonna walk in is down on the basement.
It's a long, dark stairway down to the depths of Hell.
Oh god, walk in this room.
It's completely dark.
And then we jump out and yell surprise and, you know, everybody's having a good time.
But no, it's, it's, it's a great event.
People from all around the country come.
Usually the majority of them are made up of locals or the tri-state area, but I mean, huge, huge, there's a big, all types of people come, you know.
Of course, the majority of them are skinheads or, you know, RAC music fans or, you know, and but the, but recently, and we've been making it a point to do, is reaching out to non-skinheads to expose them to RAC music and the skinhead subculture the way that we want it to be presented because we think we're right.
So, and it seems to be working.
It seems to be a very positive response and everybody keeps on coming back for more.
And it's just a good time, man.
It's everybody gets along.
Unlike most skinhead and nationalist events in the past, there has been no drama or fighting yet, you know, and we run a pretty tight ship.
And we also are kind of making, we make sure to invite organizations and people who we know are as serious as we are and don't want to stoop to that petty level of infighting and or just, you know, just pettiness and taking steps back, you know.
So it's all inclusive, man.
It's all inclusive.
And we are trying to actually our events, we're trying to create an atmosphere of, you know, of acceptance and just open dialogue.
And just you can let it all hang out and not have to worry about using your online handle or hiding your face behind a mask or looking over your shoulder.
You know, it's a very, I hate to say it, you know, but it's a safe space.
I was going to say, yeah, you're going soft, John.
Liberal wishy-washy bullshit.
I was, yeah, no, it's.
It is, man.
It is.
I mean, of course, it's full of freaking, you know, pissed off skin, drunk skinheads, you know, after a while.
But I mean, and the dancing is aggressive, you know, people get jacked up, bloody noses, you know, sliced by a beer bottle last year.
You know, a couple people walked away with, you know, wounds.
But no, like, it's, it's, it's all, it's, it's all fun.
You know, nobody gets, you know, anyway, yeah, it's, it's an experience, man.
Friendly injuries.
Friendly injuries.
Yes.
Go ahead, Sam.
That's what I'm doing.
I was listening to a guy who was doing kind of a man on the street, you know, he was documenting the gig and one of our guys, it's a great show, actually.
You should listen to a Wolfpack Radio.
And he was talking to a young fellow there, and he was asking them, you know, being a newer person coming to shows, a young guy coming to shows, what does he think?
And the answer I thought was very good.
He said, it's like coming to a family reunion.
And that's exactly it, because even if you don't know somebody, you just turn to somebody, you start talking, and you're going to have a new friend.
And everybody's there to have a laugh, maybe have a drink, and listen to some great music.
That's really good to hear.
That's a huge compliment.
Huge compliment.
Yeah, Smasher and I, in all truth, really did want to go to the most recent one.
Junior had a baseball game here.
There was no way I could make it in a reasonable time.
And Smasher had to take a nap that day.
So he must have given me about 10 different excuses why he could have missed.
I don't think I've had a day off since the last NJP event.
I even worked yesterday on Mother's Day.
Oh, man.
It's all good.
You can hear it in his voice.
It's a different punish Smasher.
All right.
Hey, we're at an hour already.
It's flown by, John.
But I don't want to overlook our delightful Telegram questioners.
And I have to admit, some of these, it's like reading, it's like Greek to me.
I'm like, what happened to the rest of Rajoa after George left the scene?
All right, but so Strike Shack was the first one to ask that.
Some of this is inside baseball, but what happened to the rest of Rajoa after George left, John?
Do you know?
You don't want to ask me.
I couldn't care less.
Okay.
There you go.
But George is back.
He's playing with many folk.
For what it is, it's good stuff.
But a lot of people don't really care too much for him just because he turned and came back.
You know how some people are like that, you know.
But I like it, man.
I like his new stuff.
He did go out of the scene for a while and was kind of questionable.
But you know what?
He never ratted anybody out or screwed anybody over or ripped off anybody that I know of.
And so even though, you know, people get put under tremendous amount of pressure if you get put under the spotlight or you are getting harassed or things like that.
So I would say maybe just look at it a little bit in a balanced way.
Well, that should kind of be meta here.
Like, I don't hold it against people when they need a break, right?
Like, right.
Especially if you're a public figure and you're just like, dude, I need to take a vacation.
It's like, yeah, I don't blame you.
Yeah.
It's only when people disappear and then reappear on the other side or they disappear and then some really questionable things happen that they kind of have their fingers in.
And then it's like, okay, what's really going on here?
Parachuting back in with a totally or a slightly different worldview.
Yeah, for sure.
Walker Percy Wyndham asks, very self-aware, this guy like me, what's the best way?
Oh, just lost it.
What's the best way for squares in the millennial and Gen Z set to get into RAC oy skinhead music?
And that reminds me, I don't stupid me.
I should have done more prep.
RAC.
I'm like, what does that mean?
Racially aggressive, cool.
Rock against communism, man.
Jeez.
I don't know.
Racially aggressive, cool.
I like that.
You like that better.
But yeah, what's the worst way to word it?
And go ahead, Seth.
Well, just to give a little background on that, RAC, people might say, why is that such a recognized term?
Back in the 80s, the lefties had this music festival called Rock Against Racism.
And people like Elvis Costello and Sham 69 and other notables of that era were in on it.
And then so the skinheads got together and they said, oh, we're going to make our own kind of a touring festival and call it rock against communism.
And that's how it got started.
And it was the skinhead bands.
So.
Got it.
Thanks.
But how about that one, John?
Good way for Square, you know, Skinhead for beginners.
Where would you point him to?
Fessine, of course.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fessine to get him a hold of us, get into touch with ADS, I would say.
And honestly, you know, I like to point people in the direction of Screwdriver and the ballads.
You know, that's a very good starting point.
Mistreat.
Mistreat.
Like, I like to point him in the, I like to point him in the direction of like the more melodic and ballad type stuff.
You know, kind of like wet their whistle a little bit.
I think the bully boys, they just sound like they have a really good production value compared to a lot of yeah.
You know, I think I think their music just sounds really well done.
And that's kind of one thing that's always attracted me to it.
Plus, like White Pride is probably my all-time favorite like pro-white song.
White Power by Screwdriver may have been the first RAC song I ever heard.
And it instantly made my pupils dilate and get into a frothing frenzy of, yes, racial pride.
It actually gives, I remember hearing that whenever I was young and you're listening to it and it feels like it just broke through that veil, you know, like, but you're pro you're reprogrammed, you know?
It was, it was unbelievable.
Bad religion with no Jews and no fedoras.
Yeah.
Yes.
If I could.
Official narrative respector asks, what's the best razor brand?
All right.
Behind the scenes, John, what do you use to get that shiny dome?
Yeah.
This guy thinks he's funny.
I like Gillette Fusion myself.
Oh, Gillette.
Yeah, I know.
There's like no Razor company that's probably not paused.
I know.
What are the ones where they mail you the razors?
Like Dollar Shazam.
I use Dollar Shave Club.
Well, I don't really shave much anymore, but back in the day when I had to shave all the time, I used Dollar Shave Club mostly just because I could just blow through a pack of razors and it was only like five bucks as compared to like 25 or 30.
So it's like, you have to use a new razor every week instead of like counting coins to buy a razor just to not change it for a year.
Yes.
Do the hardcore guys ever wax their heads just to flex on everybody else?
That is not a thing, man.
You know, I'm just thinking outside the box.
Yeah, that's a small box.
All right.
And we're not going out on a negative here, but there's a lot of my neighbor is an ex-felon Peckerwood, Aryan Brotherhood character.
He's got all these problems.
You know, maybe I shouldn't have even raised it.
But, you know, you do have, let's just be candid, trashy guys who may identify as skinheads.
Do you try to weed those guys out?
Are you trying to lift them up and help them out?
Or do they not get in in the first place?
Are these old-timers, you know, still reliving the glory days?
That's a tough question, I know, John.
Yeah, I mean, what group doesn't?
You know, I mean, the alt-right has the same problem, you know.
I mean, it's not, it's not, you know, exclusive to skinheads.
And, but first of all, the Aryan Brotherhood and Peckerwood, well, you know, there's some cool, admirable things that they do, you know, as far as prison stuff.
But I mean, I mean, I don't want to say pro or con.
I don't want to say anything at all about that aside from that that's not really skinhead.
Those guys, there may be skinheads involved in them, but they are not.
Whenever you see a Peckerwood or AB, you're probably not going to think Skinhead, you know?
It's separate.
It's separate.
That's all.
Fair enough.
And we don't weed them out.
And that's part of the problem, but also a good thing.
There's no bouncer at the gate, you know, or at the door.
Anybody optics check.
Yeah.
Yeah, dude.
So, I mean, of course you're going to get jack wagons on, you know, like it's just the way it is.
And you deal with it, you know?
They usually usually take care of themselves, you know?
Sure.
Fair enough, brother.
All right.
For the audience, we'll put them in the show notes for sure, John.
But any links or other things you want to boost before you are, of course, a blue-collar working-class guy, so you've got to hit the sack.
So, we do.
We Peckerwoods will continue on in a second hour, but it's been great having you.
Yeah, go ahead and plug your stuff, please.
Fasseen, we just came out with an album called Reclaim.
It's actually almost sold out worldwide.
It's on Rebel Records out of Germany.
It's had a very good response, and I think that's awesome.
Thanks, dudes.
It's kind of funny just because we never didn't even write that expecting the response.
We just kind of were like, oh, let's do something different, see how it goes, put it on, put it on Vino or CD.
But so, check it out.
You can, it's getting a little hard to find, but we have some copies.
You can email adsshirtservices at yahoo.com for info, or there's also our Telegram channel.
Just look up American Defense Skinheads.
There is our website, www.adsservices.org.
O-R-G.
All right.
And there's also Birthright.
I'm in another band called Birthright, and we play a lot of gigs and have releases out as well.
Outstanding.
Well, John, it's been an honor having you on Godspeed with your new white life on the way.
Congratulations right now.
Let us know how it goes for sure, and we'd be happy to have you back anytime.
Thank you.
Excellent.
Thank you for having me on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Take us to the break.
You're DJ on the break this week, John.
Let us know what we're listening to.
This is Arresting Officers, Working Class Patriot by the Arresting Officers from Philadelphia, huh?
Yes.
Old Philadelphia working class skin headband from the 80s.
Thank you, John.
God bless you, audience.
Stick with us for the second half.
We'll be right back.
When one day someone will make it off, so take a man.
I will tell you, and the foundation is strong.
We're all in the backup, and the wind does not belong.
Why, why, why, working class, working class, good.
Why, why, why, working class, working class that we love.
But the rich man tries to mix us up to keep his power flow.
He wants to see the battleflames rise into the sky.
Because he knows where we're at.
This name will be our time.
Why, why, why, working class, working class, patriots.
Why, why, why, working class, working class, we're live in,
all the soldiers, but one the rich man setting out generations, our people built this land.
Why, why, why, working class, working class, patriots, we're alive.
Because we know the way of the outside fell, we'll live a life of sacrifice, new ways of hell.
Take up the bitch, having a little sound.
We're gonna make them be.
And once again, our best benefits will be all over to me.
Why, why, why, working class, working class, Patriot, White, White, Why, working class, working class.
We're alive, why, why, working class, working class, patriarchy, why, why, working class, working class, we alive, why, why, why, working class, working class, patriots,
why, why, why, working class, working class, we're alive, working class, working class, patriots,
we're alive, why, why, why, working class, working class, patriots, why, why, why, working class, working class, we're live and welcome back to Full House episode 90, first half special skinhead tour de force edition.
Big thanks to our pal John from American Defense Skinheads from the band Racine.
And also, John does the Book and Rifle podcast as well, which we just remembered or learned during the break.
So, lots of great work out of those guys.
Not the Hollywood boogeymen that you thought they were, unless you thought that those boogeymen were cool, in which case they are.
And also, audience, I did want to apologize for the delayed show this week.
I was not kidding about MP leaving us in the lurch on Thursday night.
And I was not kidding.
It was my own damn fault for rescheduling to Mother's Day when our guest was like, coach, it's kind of a family.
Well, he doesn't have a Sam accent, but he's like, it's a family day.
And on Thursday night, I can't do this show without my gay, retarded friend, Mr. Producer, holding my hand through our tour de force every week.
Hold my hand, boss.
It's just like the Green Mile.
I'm Tom Hanks, and he's that big book behind bars that we put him in, or something like that.
All right, stretching the analogy perhaps a bit too far.
Let's get right to our new white life announcements to our pal Grug.
Now, there's a lot of Grugs out there.
Multiple men have adopted the Grug moniker proudly.
But to Groggery, he already has a precious baby daughter.
And then his second was a beautiful baby boy who will be his name-bearer going forward.
Congratulations, Grug.
Son and Steel already have a very handsome young Aryan-looking boy who I said he looks like a Hollywood star already.
And he appropriately answered he will never step foot within 100 miles of Hollywood.
But congratulations, Sun and Steele, on another baby boy.
And we also learned this week that Immortan Joe, another man for whom there are many avatars and there are many Immortan Joe's, who I guess is the hero.
Yeah, he's the hero or the villain from Mad Max, right?
Yeah.
I don't know.
I did love Mad Max Fury Road.
That was one of the best movies I've seen in the past 10 years.
But regardless, let's not skip over Immortan Joe here.
Congratulations.
He's got one coming this fall.
Also, I wanted to give a hat tip to our pal Bryce.
You may recognize that one.
Bryce emailed a couple months ago asking for tips on getting people together, sort of doing his own.
I don't think he mentioned pool party, but just IRL interaction with people.
I guess he had normies or right-wingers in his life who he wanted to sort of take the next step with.
And it sounded like he had a pretty good barbecue where he was able to push things closer to the end line.
So congratulations, Bryce.
Keep at it.
Never slacking.
Don't let those guys backtrack.
That happens a lot.
They get a little bit of edgy commentary and then their wives give them an earful when they get home.
And they show up the next time with their you know what tied behind them or something like that.
All right.
And also, Samuel, I am putting it down here.
I am just going to post the remainder of your autobiography this week on the site.
The whole installment thing has kept me up in fits, and I'm just going to post.
There's only about a quarter left, I believe.
So teasing that for the audience, rather than doing the one-page, two-page, three-page, and the different URLs, we're going to put that whole baby out there.
If that's okay with you, of course, my friend, boost it on Telegram and the rest of it.
So you can see Sam's story from beginning to end without any of my damn delays.
And we also got an awesome written submission about the realities of race in America in 2021 by our dear friend Odysseus, who we would love to have on the show one day.
We see you there listening or virtually, our friend, and we'll get that up on the site this week too.
All right.
Let me just make sure we got everything.
Yeah, we got a bunch of things in the mailbox, but I wanted to go back to Sam because we went long in the first half hour.
I do think that we did a damn good justice to the skinhead movement and all the various issues surrounding it.
But we didn't talk about what it's like too much to be in the audience at one of these shows or anything else, Sam, that we missed from your decades in the scene.
And yeah, it's fascinating in its own right whether you like the music or not.
And these people in the scene were pro-white and putting their necks out there for years, if not decades, before a bunch of us.
And I was being a little bit flip in the first half about a non-internet alt-right white-collar guys because, you know, that's that, you know, that was me.
It was the internet.
I was white-collar, et cetera.
And now we're all on the same team.
But by all means, my friend, please fill in any gaps that we missed.
Sure.
Yeah.
Well, my whole intention of talking about skinheads on the show is to get this a little bit of more background to people.
In no way am I trying to say this is the only thing or the best thing for you or it's for everybody.
No, it's more of just that, and it goes the other way too.
The skinheads, when I have talked to them in these last few years, they didn't know too much about the alt-right, and some of them didn't know anything about it.
So they can benefit from knowing about that end of things.
And then also the alt-right people can learn something from the skinhead scene and at least appreciate the good music because a good soundtrack is part of any good movement's development.
Yeah, you know, that first hour was great, and it's something I thought a lot about these questions, and we could probably do another hour or another whole show on it.
But I met a lot of great guys during my weekend there.
In fact, I was traveling and I was traveling with some other people, and we saw a guy, you know, he was wearing some of the gear.
And so I nudged some people and I said, hey, look, look who's here, you know.
So we ended up talking to that guy and we made a good friend and I introduced him to our show and I told him, Hey, you got to listen to the show coming up because we're going to have John on and we're going to talk about skinhead stuff and everything.
So I talked to a lot of people and at least introduced our show to them.
So I know that we will have some people listening to the show.
Maybe other ADS guys and stuff like that, people that just, because John was going to be on, you know, so it was a nice opportunity there.
But the show was a tremendous amount of fun.
I've been going, I go to these shows whenever I can, when I can, if I can.
And it just works out because I was traveling to an area where I have a son who's going to college and stuff like that.
So I visited with him during that same time period.
And the gig was fantastic.
As I said before, the energy in the room is just through the roof.
And the sound of the show was among the, I would just say it was the best I've ever heard, but usually I don't take note of it.
But it was especially crisp, clear, not overdone where your ears are ringing.
It was, and the man doing the sound was somebody we know.
And I'm not going to mention his name, but he did a hell of a job, a great job.
And he does.
Hats off to that producer.
Yes.
Yes, indeed.
And he does sound for other events without, I don't know how far I could go to mention other things he does, but we'll just leave it at that.
That he's an accomplished guy and he did a fantastic job.
And it was noted by many people.
Yeah.
You know, aside from listen to me, like blubbering, but aside from intellectual curiosity and knowing that John was a good guy, the audience may be like scratching their heads.
Oh, why are you guys spending so much time on skinheads?
Well, one, I already mentioned in the first half was to dispel misconceptions.
Two is that when you see these guys at a show or at an event, you have you get a little bit of a sense of comfort from seeing, you know, hard-eyed, steely, sharp-dressed guys who look like they would mess up somebody who came to try to mess with you, which is the case for a lot of our guys in white nationalism, but not all of them for sure.
So I'm not going to make some cheesy movie reference, you know, but it's like another tribe in the civilization or whatever coming together.
And it is important, so important for us to not get so caught up on our preferences or, oh, we're going to spook the normies or, oh, the music's pretty loud.
And who wants to mosh and stuff like that?
Moshing is so much fun, dude.
Absolutely.
What's really, really refreshing about the skinheads is that you can tell that they're being authentic, right?
So it's not like, oh, everybody's like dressed up, trying to, you know, look their best and be super impressive.
And like the guys don't look like crap, but you can tell it's just, you know, it's authentic, it's real, and they're all real people.
Yeah, you want them on your side inside the tent pissing out and not vice versa.
Smasher, let's talk about that a little bit because it's no secret, I think we can say that they have played at at least two NJP events.
And, you know, if that's not your musical scene, you know, you go outside to talk or you do something else.
Other guys are in there getting sweaty and banging each other about in the mosh pit.
But this was the first time that I did see a couple well-intentioned questioners say, yeah, why were those guys there?
Like, that's kind of a turnoff to people who are unfamiliar with that or whatever.
And I kind of scratched my head.
I was like, really?
Like, I didn't hear anybody complain about that.
You know, if it's not your thing, you just go do something else.
But was there a calculation there to have them in?
Should people just get over their hang-ups?
Or, yeah, what's the deal there vis-a-vis NJP?
Well, it's a lot of fun.
A lot of people enjoy it.
Even all the pregnant women enjoyed it.
So if a bunch of pregnant women can enjoy a skinhead show, that means that you can too.
Yeah, they put their bellies right by the speakers there.
No, they did not do that.
They stood back to back in the middle of the mosh pit.
No, it's we have to, it's big tent.
We have to cast a wide net.
You know, it is good music.
It is authentically white music like John talked about a bunch in the first half.
And so why shouldn't we do it?
It's pretty, it's local music a lot of the times too, depending on where we're at.
It's pretty good music in my opinion.
I picked up their CD at the last event and I play it all the time.
I play it at work.
A couple guys at work are even now like, oh, this is good.
You know, it's just a lot of fun.
And it's, Sam, I don't remember if it was during the show or not, but you're talking about like the energy of the show when you go to one of these shows and what it's like.
And it's like, it's just like the same kind of like white, excited energy that you get at an NJP event when the speeches are done and everybody's hyped up and you're just feeling really white-pilled and excited and you're surrounded by your brothers and sisters in arms fighting against Jewish tyranny.
And then you get to rock out with some hardcore pro-white music and it's like it's powerful.
Yeah, and it's like a measurable, it's almost like measurable energy.
Like you come into the room and you just feel it.
Right.
And I mean, we've gone to, not as the NJP, but we've gone to concerts before, like classical music concerts and stuff, the symphony orchestra and whatever.
And that's fun and that's exciting.
And that's great music written by white people, you know, basically exclusively a Jew here and there.
But that's also fun, but it's a completely different type of energy.
You know, I don't know that we could have a string quartet at the end of an NJP event and have the same effect as, you know, this high-energy.
We could have a string quartet, but it would have to be like before the speeches, you know.
Play Welcome to the Jungle orchestral version.
Yeah.
Sorry.
Apocalypto, whatever that was called.
The Apocalyptica.
Yeah.
The Metallica cello quartet.
Yeah.
Like everything I know about the scene has either been what Sam has told me or what I've seen at NJP.
And, you know, I'm not eager to go get right up to the speakers and get in the mosh pit, but they're different.
It's a very joyful expression.
And, oh, and the other thing, I forgot to mention this when John was on, but off, it was on mic, but off camera at one of the earlier NJP events when one of their guys got up and gave a very heartfelt, off-the-cuff speech about his experience in life and how, you know, he has had some hard knocks and he almost got choked up.
He was getting emotional, but I didn't see a single drop from his eye.
And he just said, you know, it's been the support of good white people like you in this room and my brothers in the movement that have kept me on the straight and narrow and kept me out of despair at least a couple times before in my life.
And yeah, maybe I got misty.
I was projecting on him, but that was exactly the spirit coming from a working class guy with a rough background that if you turn that away or you might say, oh, look at those tattoos.
I think you have to re-evaluate your approach to white nationalism.
So like now I'm now making myself angry thinking about it because it's like, look, dude, every country on this earth is controlled by Jews.
Every single one.
And if you disagree, you're a retard.
Even Bhutan?
Poor Bhutan is under the heel too?
Sorry.
Probably.
If they're not controlled by Jews, they are so brown that they're useless.
There's just no reason for Jews to be there.
It's a beautiful mountain countryside full of Buddhists.
But anyway, go ahead, Smasher.
Yeah.
I didn't mean to.
So it's us versus the entire world.
Like nobody is coming.
We don't have reinforcements on the way except for like the children that we are creating.
But that's no excuse for inaction.
And so if you want to turn your nose up at somebody that is as pro-white, just as pro-white as you, because you don't like the way that they dress or you don't like the type of music that they play, like you're gay and you don't deserve to be here.
And that person, the people that you're saying you don't like these skinheads are actually better pro-white activists than you because they're out there using their faces and their names and they're creating culture and trying to change what's going on in the world.
And you're sitting wherever you are, whether you show up to an event or you're on the internet or whatever, and you're boo-hooing and tutting people.
And you're gay and you should feel bad.
And the problem isn't that there are skinheads at an NJP event.
The problem is that you're at an NJP event and you're gay.
So change your attitude.
Stop contributing to the degradation of the forces because we only have so many forces.
This was all part of my plan to get a little rise out of Smasher.
He has been Working Man's Dead, Good Grateful Dead album.
But yeah, glad to hear the fire buddy.
And I will soft pedal that just slightly to say, I get it.
I had that programming too.
But it's something else when you see him in person and it didn't spook me.
Well, they're all spooked.
They're genuinely really nice guys.
Right.
That's the only thing.
If you put any of them in a suit, like they might kind of look funny in a suit, but you would never like, no, they're well spoken.
They're all good guys.
Yeah.
All right.
It's fun.
Like, it's just fun.
Like, you know, I got fired up.
You know, obviously, I don't think anybody was saying that to be like a gay retard and be like, no, the NJP is terrible.
Like, I don't think anything, you know, nobody was saying that.
And a lot of times we think out loud when we're in these chats, right?
We're just like, you know, we're testing the waters and floating ideas.
Yep.
But I would say, and with anybody that is kind of like, that's not really my thing.
Like, just relax a little bit.
Just, there's our events.
I have never been at a really small venue.
And if they are, we're probably not going to have a concert at one.
You know, so there's enough room that you can go outside.
You can go to another part of the venue.
The last venue we had, there were multiple floors and we had access to all of them.
And so people were coming and going to where the concert was going on.
And, you know, you could go to another part of the venue, and it was perfectly fine, not bothering anybody.
Yep.
No Satanists, no druggies.
Extreme drunkards are discouraged and booted and shamed.
Well, there was a Satanist there.
Tony was there.
It says it right there in the eyebrows.
Yeah.
I missed our good pal, S.S. Grizzly.
He's not actually a good pal.
I don't know this gentleman, but he wrote in and said, I'm sorry, I missed him in New White Life.
Listen to you guys on the old podcast, then rediscovered you about eight months ago.
I'm early 20s and recently got engaged.
And you guys swayed me to jump the gun by about three months before we get married.
And now we're expecting our first.
Still early on, but I'm already excited for my first little boy or girl, one of many to come for us.
So, SS Grizzly, hail you, sir.
You know, hey, you know, as long as you get married, I don't personally, I don't even care.
You know, as long as you're committed to the woman that you're with and procreating with, that's good enough for me.
But yeah, ideal, whatever.
You get married before that little munchkin pops out.
If she's got a baby bump at the wedding, it's cute.
Is that that's not drad?
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
Another nice one here from our.
Oh, go ahead, Sam.
Did I want to?
No, go ahead.
Go ahead.
I'm sorry.
Not at all.
All right.
Let's see here.
Frog of War wrote in and said, Hey, coach, thought you might like this.
And he recommended an article, which I'll put in the show notes.
I put it on Telegram.
He says, Congratulations on two years.
You guys are all naturals.
And we didn't pay him to say that.
I appreciate Sam's.
This is Rich where he breaks this down.
I appreciate Sam's wisdom, your humor, and ability to keep the show moving along.
Yeah, I know.
I'm just the process guy here.
Smashers' humor and left field commentary.
Yeah.
And MPs, well, there's really nothing to appreciate about MPs like Lost Their Efforts.
It's true.
I see.
Yes.
I like Jack Nicholson shaking my head.
Yes.
We're going to make that meme real.
He says, I kid.
I appreciate when MP gets on the mic.
He has a grounded and common sense approach to life.
Very true.
One of his very few attributes.
I'd be remiss if I neglected to mention the contribution that Nathaniel Scott makes with navigating the collapse.
Terrific work.
And the quotes he finds are always top shelf.
That's enough.
Smoke up your skirt for now.
Third anniversary.
I'll get you somewhere.
All right, Froggy of War.
We are in for another year just to see what smoke you can blow up our skirts next time around.
And we got another full house love connection submission.
Here we go.
He says, Please don't put my email on the show, even though he's got like a totally a non-email.
All right, we adhere to your requests.
Just checking to see if there are any good girls out there in the San Francisco Bay Area or Austin, Texas.
Perhaps a businessman there.
Yeah.
Early 30s, family-oriented.
Our guy looking for a girl younger than me that lacks tattoos.
Keep that in mind, ladies.
Very important for some guys.
I don't know.
Don't mind.
What was the meme?
Debt-free virgin without tattoos or something.
That meme was pretty good.
Yeah.
I guess I will try the white date too just to see what that looks like.
Great show 88 was fantastic.
Indeed, it was.
And he says, hail the NJP.
So, San Francisco Bay or Austin, Texas, indeed, hit us up.
We had our friend from Northern Virginia last week.
The Telegram poll results.
Yeah, we have a lot of single white dudes in the audience and a lot of ladies too.
But, you know, if one out of 10 of our listeners are female, I'll take that.
That's not bad.
I mean, we're like dudes talking about dude stuff.
But we will make it happen.
Drop us a line.
And finally, our good pal Cale, who came on the show to talk about his wife's struggle to conceive, overcoming and skipping adoption because of the process, put a little rejoinder onto our full house hunting from last week.
He says, hey, coach and crew, I enjoyed the latest show, but disagree on the advice given for buying a house.
There's always one guy.
No, I'm kidding.
One of our guiding principles is to avoid debt at all costs.
When buying a house, you should put down as much as you can and pay it off as fast as you can.
My wife and I drove shitboxes, lived humbly, avoided vacations, et cetera, to pay off our mortgage early.
And I cannot describe how great it is to owe nothing to the scumbag bankers.
By putting only a small amount down, your monthly payment is pretty much entirely interest, at least early.
And worse, you're hit with a monthly PMI fee sometimes, which is like setting your money on fire.
Yes, there are some who believe in leveraging up their debt in order to invest in the stock market or chase other investments, but we've had an unusual period of money printing by the central banks.
The party will end at some point, and only the bankers know when they will pull the rug.
Paying off debt, on the other hand, is a guaranteed lifetime return.
I agree with Caleb in spirit and in the ideal situation.
But at the same time, my life experience has been that if you use debt wisely and responsibly, it can be a major life help to you.
So paying off your credit cards every month, taking on a mortgage if your stuff is appreciating.
I know it's never guaranteed, but there's a little bit of, you can play the game and come out ahead, and you can play the game and lose terribly.
So, yes, I agree.
Live without debt if possible, but don't be afraid of it like the boogeyman if it's going to hold you back from necessary things in life.
I don't know.
I'll just leave it at that for the listeners to make up their minds as to who's right, Caleb.
The answer to debt is to overthrow Jewish hegemony.
That's the answer to everything, Smasher.
Yeah, that's why I tell people I have the answer to everything.
Very good.
Before we go to navigating the collapse, I have a new segment here, which is where I just talk about something, but it's called Coach's Country Comfy Corner.
And we're having new adventures in agricultural production here in the great Appalachian, I don't know, countryside.
I'm in the gazebo right now.
I don't know if the frogs are allowed tonight.
But my father-in-law took it upon himself to ship my wife and me 10 guinea fowl Keats.
Keats are baby guinea fowls, which is a it's not exotic, but it's an ugly looking bird, native to Africa, and their behavior reflects their origin.
The mother guinea fowls are notoriously bad mothers.
They like pop them out and then don't really care for them.
They're loud.
They lay their eggs all over the place.
They don't use nesting boxes like regular chickens.
And they fly up to the top of trees when they get in trouble and they don't take instructions very well and they're not particularly friendly and they boss chickens and other things around.
So anyway, these things were foisted on us.
We got 10 in the mail, drove to the post office to pick them up.
I, of course, being a good paternal figure to humans and fowl alike, got them all set up cozy in a little bin, straw, feeders, etc.
And these little things kept dropping off on me.
One, then two, then three.
So we're down to four, and I was really racked with guilt.
I said, what the hell am I doing wrong?
But the last four are healthy as hell.
I'm going to check on them after the show.
And they're squawking and trying to flap their wings.
So I don't know.
It could have just been, you know, that they were damaged from the shipment or whatever.
But point being, if chickens are too high maintenance for you or you're worried about the care that they require and the runs and stuff, guinea fowl are a noisy and perhaps annoying alternative if you want some eggs.
And they also eat ticks and they will kill snakes and they will even gang together to like chase off a dog if a dog's in the area.
And they also act apparently as like an early warning system.
If the wind blows the wrong way, they will start squawking.
So this is all, yeah.
I did promise the audience, you know, I got my seeds in.
I got all sorts of stuff coming up, but I just wanted to share the wild and hopefully wonderful world of guinea fowl keys.
I'm sure I'm going to get a lot of emails about how I'm stupid for having this, but whatever.
They were foisted on us.
I have to admit, like they're not particularly pleasant.
You're supposed to keep them in the enclosure for many weeks so they get accustomed to sleeping there rather than up in your trees and in theory pooping on your head.
But I was like, it was a beautiful, warm day.
They're native to Africa.
They like to be warm.
So I have a heat lamp on top of them and all the rest of it.
And I let them out and the three of them just sort of acted like normal birds.
They were flying casual.
They were looking around like, ooh, what is this wonderful?
And the other one just took off and ran under the enclosure.
And I had to get down there in the dirt and mud and grab that little sucker from like the back of his ass to get him because there's only four left and I was really desperate.
Anyway, enough about guinea fowl keats.
If you have any questions, are you familiar with them?
A friend of mine has them and they're just such words.
They're all dead now.
Well, yeah, and that's the thing, because they're particularly wild, like predators get them.
You know, they're not like chickens going home at sunset every night.
Yeah, this was like we're slaughtering you.
You guys are too much.
Yeah, we'll keep you posted.
I don't know.
We're going to give it a shot.
And yeah, hit us up.
Maybe we'll do chickens next.
Sam, please go ahead.
You had at least one more in the hopper before we do NTC months.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just rounding out my weekend there that I had going to the concert.
I had traveled to go to the concert.
I visited my son who goes to college in the area.
And it was a wonderful weekend.
Like I said, we started out.
I met somebody at the airport.
So it was, you know, it was from the from the start, it was a lot of fun.
And on Sunday, after the gig and everything, and everybody said their goodbyes.
So then we met up with my son and we went to the Latin Mass that was in the area.
And that was a very lovely time because that particular church was having their May crowning.
Maybe some people don't know what that is.
May crowning is not any particular day in May.
A lot of times people will, the parish will have it coincide with Mother's Day.
But May is also a month where you might have Pentecost or even a late Easter or something like that.
So the May crowning day will just be moved to an available Sunday in May.
So I'm just mentioning that it's not a particular day because the parish I normally go just had it this last Sunday.
And so then the weekend before that parish happened to have it on that Sunday.
So I was at two May crownings.
But so we went to this beautiful Latin Mass, my wife and my son and I.
And I didn't know they were having their May crowning, but then we started to put it together.
And there were the, so we were sitting there and all these children line up.
And I'm talking at least 30 of them.
Let's say, you know, two by two.
And I'm talking little kids, like let's say age four to age eight.
And so they're little children.
And the girls were so beautiful.
They had their dresses on and they all the girls had a chapel veil on.
And the boys had a nice shirt and a tie.
And each child was holding a flower in their hands.
And so they were all lined up.
And so we were watching them.
And then we had the little flyer that said May Crowning.
Oh, okay.
It's May Crowning.
And then one of the little boys, he started crying.
It was so cute.
He started crying because he was getting nervous about standing in line.
He's by himself or, you know, the mother's not right there with him.
And then the must have been his sister turned and was comforting him, you know, to encourage him to go on.
And so he was okay.
We just thought that was so cute.
And so then the children all processed up the aisle together and they each laid their flower in a basket by the statue of the Blessed Mother.
And then one of the girls, she climbed up the ladder and put the wreath on the head of the statue, you know, to show the reverence for the Blessed Mother.
And it was just so moving, you know, and I couldn't help but sitting there.
And I was, and I mean, we were like, and honestly, I would challenge anybody to maintain your composure watching this, as it was difficult for me to maintain my composure.
In fact, I was trying to tell somebody the story.
I couldn't even tell them the story because I was getting choked up, you know, just trying to tell it.
And so, and, but, you know, so why am I telling this whole story?
Well, anyways, I just can't, I couldn't help but think, and these are all white children.
I probably don't even need to say that at this point of the story.
But, and this whole, and those weren't the only children there.
There was the whole place was full of young parents and their beautiful children, beautiful families.
And I was sitting there and I just couldn't help to think my son, we even said this to each other.
We're fighting on the right side.
We're fighting on the winning side.
Sure.
Because it's 0.0% chance that we can fail with this feeling that I had.
Amen.
Yeah, those warm feels.
In all candor, I don't have a ton of great memories or feelings when I think back to getting dragged as a kid to church, to Catholic Mass every Sunday, but I do have a few.
I always loved when the priest would take a break and encourage everyone to shake hands.
Peace be with you.
Even as a little kid, I thought that was really cool that your neighbors or the people around you would just stop and look you in the eye and give you a handshake.
That was crazy.
Well, we don't do that at the traditional Mass, by the way.
Is that a Vatican?
Yeah.
Of course, Coach only likes the Jewish Vatican II stuff.
Being myself, of course, I always got really excited after I had received my first communion.
Going up to get that wafer after a long homily from the priest.
It's like, all right, it's snack time.
I enjoyed that.
And there was one time where I was younger and I was with my mom and I think I fell asleep in the pew and I fell asleep on the arm of an older gentleman who happened to be next to me.
And he sat there and let me nap on his arm rather than going up to receive communion.
And my mom woke me up and told me about it.
And I said, oh, what a nice guy that he, you know, he skipped salvation this week to allow me to sleep.
You know, I wish in a certain sense that I liked it more or appreciated it more or had more faith, but I can't, yeah, I can't change the way I am in my view for now at least.
Yeah, I don't want to crack the door and give false hope or like tease that I'm going to become Catholic or Christian again.
But yeah, there's, I completely get this special reverent aspect of it.
And ceremony is so important too.
God, you know, I joke with Stryker, if Stryker would become a WN televangelist, I would, I would go to Stryker church every Sunday without fail.
Well, then, then we went on to, we went, we went downtown to the, to eat somewhere, and there was a Negro tranny that walked right by us and he said, I don't know if it was to me, though.
I, I was the one that heard it and looked at him at whatever.
It was, it was very, very gross, but it was, it was a beautiful day and all that.
And I'm just trying to wrap up.
Well, apparently.
There was a group of us standing there, so I don't know who he said it to, but I was the one that looked at back when he said it.
But so we had a couple of hours.
So basically the day was wrapped up there, but we had a couple of hours and it was so beautiful.
So we went to a nearby forest preserve and we had maybe an hour or two to kill before we had to go to the airport.
So we walked around this forest preserve and we got, you know, we went deep in, then we went off the path and then we had relations.
Oh, nice.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm not going to go into detail, but it was, you know, it was primal and it was passionate, you know.
And, but I just mentioned that that that's, you know, you got to surprise your wife once in a while and do something kind of daring and fun like that.
And it certainly was well worth it.
Nature took its course, Mr. Producer says, yeah.
It did.
I don't think Wifey and I have had a romp in the woods since our 20s, and there may have been a certain smokable plant involved.
Yeah, shameful.
It was fun.
Sounds like it's time.
Minus, yeah, minus the plant, yeah, for sure.
Smasher, all seriousness, buddy, you have been a little bit quiet on the most recent shows, partially because of the nature of them, but also I know that you are dragging ass a little bit.
But in all seriousness, how is everything in your life?
You just rising and grinding every day?
Rising and grinding almost every day.
Are you learning new things or is it like all old hat by now?
I got to install some new flooring that I'd never done in this really disgusting house.
So it's a brand new house being built.
And the guy that the homeowner is a quote designer, unquote.
Whatever that means.
He's married to a woman.
She's white.
Adopted kids.
No idea what they are.
I haven't seen pictures.
Haven't asked.
Yeah.
And just this ugly cube, very modern monstrosity.
And so the stuff is, it's like vinyl plank, but it's got a wood veneer on top.
So it's got like a thin layer of actual hardwood.
And it's the floor that he picked out in particular is ugly, but the stuff seems to be pretty nice.
But it's a really, really big pain in the butt to work with.
Sure.
He's not doing any trim in this house.
So it all has to be put in perfectly, which cost him some extra money.
So you love doing this stuff, but it's also a pain in the ass.
Is that a fair characterization?
I mean, I hate doing that stuff.
It's like down to my DNA, shamefully.
But you revel in it.
But I imagine getting up every day to, you know, Garfield Monday back on the job site.
You have to drag yourself out of bed or you get excited to go work with your hands every day.
It depends on the job.
Yeah, I get job fatigue.
So if I feel like something's taking longer than it should, I get fatigued and I don't want to do it anymore.
And it's like, can I just walk off this job site?
And that would be great.
But when I'm done, it's like, I look at the before and the after picture and I'm just like, oh man, that looks really good.
All right.
You got any openings in your time slot for poor Finstocks here?
We're living in the dirt.
Yes.
We need a roof over our head.
I don't have any.
We'll talk more about it offline.
Of course.
Yeah.
Speaking of fatigue, this one's unwholesome or uncomfortable, but fatherhood makes it comfortable.
Junior, of course, is playing baseball up in the big leagues or the majors, as they call it this year.
And he's the youngest and one of the smallest on his team, which is a testament to him having a good tryout.
And it's been a rough season for him predictably, but he's baseball crazy.
It's baseball documentaries and learning about Babe Ruth.
And literally every single day after school, he wants to have a catch.
So today I was on my haunches trying to take care of these damn African birds freeloading on my property.
And he cut them.
Yeah, if we don't do it, the coyotes or the foxes are going to get him.
But I'm sitting there like taking care of these damn birds.
And he comes up again with the glove.
And I said, Junior, like we've had a catch every, and I was, as I was, as it was coming out of my mouth, you know, that Cats in the Cradle song sort of like appeared off in the distance.
I was like, oh, I zipped it.
I was like, okay, it's going to be a short one, though.
Okay.
And he's like, okay, dad.
So we went and had a short catch.
And I've been trying to mix it up.
I've been, you know, just to get him comfortable with the ball, giving him hook shots and behind the back throws and knuckle curves, even though I can't throw a knuckle curve and all this stuff.
And he's got the same gene quirk that my wife does, where he gets uncontrollable giggles at like physical challenges and stuff like that.
So he's sitting there giggling in the field.
I'm like, all right, I'm glad that I had a short catch with Junior, even if I wasn't in the mood.
So that's not a humble brag.
I didn't want to do it.
Junior, if you're listening, you know, a catch every single day gets a little bit tired.
Let's move on to a football or, I don't know, something else, javelin.
That's what we do.
We mix it up.
We'll play basketball one day.
We'll play football another day.
We'll play soccer another day.
Get a javelin.
I'll teach you how to throw a javelin.
There you go.
I got out there with a chainsaw today, cut up some wood, planted some more bushes and flowers and all the rest of it.
Oh, I got a chainsaw.
Did I mention that yet?
Nope.
I got the Milwaukee one, though.
So everybody's for getting battery powered.
But I don't have land.
If I had, you know, if I had even five acres, I would go for a gas because I'd be able, I'd have a lot more to do.
But like, I throw a 12-hour battery on and I can just go cut things.
And as long as it's sharp and there's blade oil in it, like I can just put it away for the winter and not worry about it.
You would be perfect as a spokesperson for Milwaukee.
If it weren't for that pesky racism and affinity for National Socialism, they might hire you.
Anyway, I thought about sending them an email and being like, hey, sponsor me.
Because you can do that.
You hit them up and you're like, hey, this is what I do.
Here's some pictures of my work.
Will you sponsor me?
Yeah.
But I didn't know you that well when you showed up and just started throwing logs around like strongman competition.
I was like, all right, that's pretty cool.
Pretty cool for Smasher.
Did I say that out loud or did I just think that?
Get a javelin.
I'll teach you and Junior how to throw it.
I used to throw a javelin.
I was really good.
Awesome.
Bruce Tranner used to throw a javelin, didn't he?
Was he a decathlete?
He probably did all that stuff.
Probably.
There you go.
You know what's funny?
Turns it.
You know what's funny about Bruce Jenner now that we're thinking about it.
Like, you know what?
I'll be honest.
I don't even think Bruce Jenner is Caitlin Jenner.
Like, not like, oh, some weird body switching gay op stuff.
But like, I think for whatever reason, he decided that that would be a good idea for Clout or somebody told him to do it.
Something, some type of thing like that.
Like Bruce is intact, as far as we all know.
No reason to believe that he actually has a set of tits in there.
You know, like he probably goes home, takes the wig off, and it's just like, oh, man, I can breathe again out of these women, take off this woman's clothing.
Because if you listen to him talk, he doesn't even, it's not even trying to fake it.
It's a very low effort.
Trannies are still being born with the right stuff.
He did sound like William Luther Pierce at the beginning of that Caitlin for California ad.
The thought crossed my mind is that when you see men get older, and especially if they keep shaving their faces and they like their hair gets a little gray or whatever, men will tend to look, get a little bit more female presenting, obviously, because their T is dropping.
They're getting a little droopier.
And Bruce Jenner, in particular, on like those, you know, when I used to watch, when I had cable TV, keeping up with the Kardashians rarely out of the corner of my eye, he looked kind of like an old woman.
You know, and I wonder, I wonder for, I'm sure that most of it is attention getting and God knows what hooks people have in that family to have all those women dating Africans and for him to go through this humiliation.
But it was so surreal to watch that ad and see him delivering boilerplate conservative garbage talking points in a dress with an Adam's apple.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like it's like that gif of one of the guys from, oh, what the hell's the name of the band?
Blink 182, where he's wearing the wig with the mullet.
Like, what the fuck?
It's just surreal.
It's so surreal that Nathaniel Scott has joined Mr. Producer in the Scalaweg column and actually does not have a navigating the collapse.
Now I know how the TRS guys feel when Meraki doesn't deliver.
That's all right, Nathaniel Scott.
We'll keep you around for one more week.
If there's nothing next week, you're out.
I'm kidding.
All right, let's wrap this puppy up and go around the horn.
Samuel, any last thoughts, my friend?
Oh, boy.
What a great discussion and a great time to hang out here together.
Yeah, I appreciate it.
Thank you again for the show.
It was great having you on, Sam.
And thanks for co-piloting with John and adding necessary context there.
And you are proof positive that you can get into this thing early, be in it for all of your life, and still be a happy, normal, productive, fecund, upstanding white father.
Yep.
Absolutely.
Just don't go to jail.
We'll screw it.
No.
Don't go all Derek Vineyard on us at this stage.
Potato Smasher.
Thanks, buddy.
Always a pleasure to have you.
It was a great show.
Glad to be here.
Glad I got a little bit more energy this week.
And closing comments.
Shout out to the Palestinians that are buttonheads with the disgusting Jews that are trying to genocide them and implement a system of serious supremacy.
You know, they boo-hoo and tut-tut white supremacy.
But look at what Jews are doing.
They are disgusting.
And I hope the Palestinians win.
And Iran helps them out and wipes Israel off the face of the map.
Okay.
Definitely.
Not mincing words there.
Yeah.
Saw dancing Israelis there as the Al-Aqsa Mosque or the Temple Mount was burning at some point as we went to tape.
And we also talked about this during the break.
And the temptation to get excited over happenings and clips is serious.
And just like with the pipeline getting shut down from a ransomware attack, it's like we get whipped up into things, and then nine times out of ten, they amount to nothing.
But sometimes they do add up to something.
So stay tuned.
And yeah, what the Jews, what the Israelis do to the Palestinians is a concentrated and focused example of what they are doing in a broader and more diffused sense to white people all over the world.
And that's 100% true.
No doubt about it.
They just happen to have the focused power in a tiny area there.
And the rest of it is longer term and just as nasty for all of us.
Pains me to say it.
Nobody likes to play the victim or cry poor mouth.
It would be much easier to just say, oh, yeah, they're just good people, you know, looking out for themselves and their religion.
But if you're listening to this, you get it.
All right, Mr. Producer, thank you, sir, as well.
Hopefully, you keep that muzzle on, but now's your chance to take it off if you want.
But we love you, Paul.
He's like, screw you, bastard.
No.
Glad you're feeling better.
Thanks.
All right.
Full house.
Sorry, it took me 15 minutes to find both mutes.
I was like, oh, man.
Yeah.
Yeah, thank you.
All right.
Thank you.
Full House episode 90 was taped on a chilly May 10th, now May 11th, 2021.
Follow us on Telegram primarily, Gab secondarily, and YouTube and DLive third and fourth hourly.
Full-house.com for shows, article submissions, Sam's autobiography coming this week, as well as the realities of race in America 2021.
So, to all listeners who may still have some mental hang-ups about certain aspects of white nationalism or just opposition to Jewish power, listen to us.
Whatever you would say about us, we are not lying and we would not lie to you.
Mr. Producer, we got a white power double shot this week, just like the old FM radio stations would do with the classic rock tunes.
So, this week, please take us out to Smash the Cosmopolitan.
This is John's recommendation.
This is fascinating.
Fascinating, yeah.
Yep, yep.
Yep.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
See ya.
See ya.
Bring this cable to the wild.
Remember the murders of the bird, and thus their spirit found.
British city to the wild.
Sworn to bring its destruction.
We are duty bound.
As a trench who is a heap of ruins of what men create.
The cheapest the wealth of nations and turned to plastic ushered fate.
Where once there was identity, community, a life, now a rutless creation dwells, a taking for destruction.
Bring this kingdom to the world.
Remember the murders of the bird, and those their spirits found.
We are duty bound.
Delip with your progress.
Down with your wealth.
Down with the new world order.
They lose large, but wait walk with the sword of truth.
The blow will fall back into hell.
His Jewish masters are not of you.
We are the sideboard of the land.
We're all just a national law.
The spirit can't be heard out of our every breath.
Your destiny is drunk by the strong.
Break the skill to the plough.
Remember the motors of Durham and wish your spirits found.
For the city to the plough.
Swords and prayer against destruction.
We are duty bound.
Break the skinny to the round.
Remember the motors of Durham when your spirits found.
For the city to the plough.
Swords and prayer against destruction.
We are duty bound.
We wish to remember and honor those who have came before us, who dedicated their lives to the cause of our people.
George Lincoln Rockwell, Robert J. Matthews, LaBoy Fitaka, Matthew Cole, Dr. William Pierce, Rudolph Hess,