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Aug. 21, 2021 - Full Haus
02:36:32
20210821_Burgeoning_Borzois
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It's four years since Charlottesville and two decades since we invaded Afghanistan and the cracks in the system's foundations are getting bigger.
Whether you think this is a controlled demolition designed to break us and usher in total Jewish control, or that the elites really are losing control of things, we unquestionably live in the most dangerous and turbulent times since the civil rights and Vietnam War era.
Almost certainly more dangerous.
I am personally impatient and frustrated by the gauntlet the system has laid down.
Even if we live virtuously, procreate, do the best by our abilities, and for the benefit of our children while obeying the law, whatever that is now, the gears keep grinding on us.
Our avenues to victory within the system have certainly grown narrower, even if they ever existed at all.
Seaville and unprecedented censorship revealed that the First Amendment is a farce.
The 2020 election showed many thumbs on the scales for a geriatric senile boob with a dark, cackling witch of a would-be successor everyone hates.
And well-intentioned, if misguided, middle Americans who dared enter the people's house are being treated like white ISIS, certainly worse than the Taliban, as our neo-KGB pivots from radical Muslims to white Americans.
And in case you missed it, the census reported this week that whites are now just 57.8% of what's left of this country and rapidly declining in absolute numbers.
And with our southern borders still a sieve, opiate overdoses still raging, and a huge new batch of Afghans inbound, the white genocide project is running full steam.
In sunny times, I tell myself not to worry so much and enjoy the decline and inevitable fall.
In darker ones, I hate myself for not doing more in the face of such manifest evil as the id cries out for revolt.
As parents or soon-to-be ones, the conflict is always there.
Do what is safe and supposedly smart, or do what is necessary and what the times seem to demand.
Whatever your calculation, you can always do more to help our cause.
This week, we welcome dissident newlyweds and new parents, the Borzois, no slouches in the cause themselves, to talk not just new birth pains and new white life, but this madhouse that we inhabit.
So buckle up.
It only gets rougher from here on out.
Mr producer Goose IT welcome everyone to episode 98 of
Full House, the world's most resolute show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole Biofam.
I am your sunny host, Coach Finstock, back with good friends, new parents, and hopefully another two hours of spine-stiffening white demographic boosting content.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, real quick, sincere thanks to Big John for his generous support this week.
He sent us a kind note to the P.O. box.
Don't forget that is an option out there.
Let us know if you want to use it.
And also a big E for our Telegram channel.
Not quite an F because we're still there, but we did get device banned on Google and Apple simultaneously last week.
A brutal digital double tap.
Just quite the honor when you think about it.
The Morse code is still working.
There he is.
He couldn't wait.
He's like, let's get the show on the road, Coach.
If you're on Android, download the app straight from Telegram and you'll be able to see our content.
If you're on Apple, it's a little crappier.
You have to use web.telegram.org and make that a home screen site link.
And it's pretty clunky, but do it.
Deny them the ability to deny you.
All right.
And that is enough from me for now.
Let's get on to the birth panel and our very special and very patient guests.
First up, he is deservedly back atop the pecking order this week after Smasher's temporary promotion.
While he may play a wise, avuncular Nazi shaman on this show, behind the scenes, he is nothing but caustic vitriol for our audience, deriding them as no-kidders, insufficient breeders, and peckerwoods even.
Sam, or should I say DJ Sam?
Welcome back, brother.
That's all true.
100% true.
Man, that was a sobering intro there.
Your little monologue coach is like making me figure out what I better be doing or not, you know.
But hey, you know, the thing is, like you say, watching the decline of this disgusting, satanic Jewish system.
Just, I mean, yeah, this country's going down the tubes for sure, but we're not part of that system.
Our stars are rising right now.
So, you know, try to look at it that way.
And instead of being sobered or get overly serious, you can rejoice in all the great things that our movement is doing.
Look at our community.
I mean, you guys are like brothers to me on this show.
And think of all the great things that we do and our guests with their family and everything like that.
I mean, so definitely everyone should be energized and encouraged.
Right now, I'm tilting back some Setrovka.
You know what Setrovka is?
It sounds Slavic.
Well, it is.
My son makes it.
I guess it's a Polish thing.
And it's lemon juice, honey, and ever clear.
And it's really, really strong.
And nutritious and intoxicating.
He keeps it in the freezer.
So it's like, it's like syrup kind of, you know?
Yeah.
But really, really good.
So there's that.
You know, one of my sons is making that.
You see, we got all things going for us.
But yeah, I was on the White Power Hour recently.
So definitely check that out.
And it's also called Wolfpack Radio.
So you can search for it either way.
That's right.
That's right.
That was a lot of fun.
And I'm going to go back on there too.
So definitely check that out.
It's a lot of fun.
And we want to have Jay Haight and Mark Thorson on our show.
I gave them a date.
So we'll just, as we get to that, closer to that date, maybe end of September or beginning of October, that'll be a lot of fun.
And then I'll go on their show again.
So outstanding.
Yeah.
Thank you, Sam.
Yeah, we'll talk.
If you have more, go ahead.
That's it for now.
Thanks.
All right.
Good deal.
Yeah, we'll talk a little.
We'll talk a little bit of collapse with Borzoi after we get through the tedious family stuff.
No, not at all.
I'm dying to hear this story.
But yeah, I went from like, we have to win through elections on Elect Trumpets.
The last chance to save our entire society, our entire civilization, to what is pushing must be fallen.
And now things are so crazy.
I'm thinking like I might actually do that onion article, you know, like white nationalists just kicking it on the couch.
Like, you know, they don't even have to do anything just yet.
I do have one more thing.
I mentioned as we were chatting, you know, I'm off tomorrow, actually, and that's why I'm tilting back a little more harder stuff tonight.
But I took off tomorrow because tomorrow I'm having a backyard gig with my band.
And we do every semi-regularly a backyard gig and we do a rare book giveaway because I have all these tons and tons of books.
I think I mentioned before my deceased father-in-law, he was in the movement for a long time and he's got like a ton of books that if I don't even know that you could go buy these, you know, but the fact is, I've my house is full of books and then I have a shed that's full of books.
And the ones in the shed are going to go in the garbage one of these days because they're going to go rotten.
So my idea is to give them away so that somebody will read them and hopefully tell me what's in them.
And so I know by the time that this reaches the air that the gig will be over and the giveaway and the drinking beer and everything will be over.
And I was tempted almost to put it in our secret chat, you know, and let people DM me.
Maybe I'll do that next year or next time we do this.
I just didn't have the guts to do it.
I guess it's kind of private, though.
Our local guys are all coming to it and everything.
But maybe if people egg me on next time, I'll maybe try to find a way to invite more people to it and give more notice.
Sounds good.
Yeah.
All right, Chatty Kathy.
Sitrovka would be talking to a nigga this time.
Finish that whole thing by the end of the second hour.
We'll see what happens.
Oh, yeah.
I probably get sleep.
Next up, double your family, double your pleasure, double your fun.
That's right.
The Smashers are living the old juicy fruit jingle.
Brother, welcome back.
And I got a pop quiz for you.
Your World War II knowledge and dates and stuff was a little bit off last week or two weeks ago.
Complete the sentence.
The Americans stormed the beaches of blank on D-Day.
Normandy?
Normandy's nuts.
Walked right into it.
Didn't see it coming.
Crucified.
I almost went full autistic and was like, what is Omaha?
Normandy, Sword, Omaha.
Yeah, yeah.
Juno.
There he is.
Yeah.
Junior got that with me.
We watched Dunkirk and I was talking to him about how the British escaping in at least some part contributed to their ability to go for D-Day, even if technically America probably could have done it by itself.
And he got me deadpan with Normandy's nuts.
So I had to spread the pain.
What's up?
D-Day was also my grandfather's birthday.
Not, he was born before D-Day, but the date.
Born on the beaches on Normandy.
Yeah, very.
I wonder if anyone was conceived on the beaches that day.
Now you're black pilling me.
None of my family was born in that disgusting country.
Yeah.
Did you ever say if a Jew told that story, it would be Canon.
I was born on the beaches of Normandy.
Yes, seriously.
The eagle dropped me and I landed on the beach and a strong American man impregnated me.
Oh, God.
Porzoy, are you still doing any pause buttons?
I have a kid.
I don't know what you want from me.
Just Dunkirk would be fun.
When are we going to do it?
We're going to do full house.
Screw that.
Screw that.
We're doing full house movie reviews now.
Borzoi ain't gonna pick up the slack.
Yeah, Dunkirk was a stupid movie.
I didn't, I was not huge on it either.
Obviously, well, we'll hold it.
Yeah, keep your powder dry there, Spatial.
We'll do a dunker.
The kiddos sleeping better during the night now, so I might have time to start working on that stuff again.
He sleeps from like nine to seven, literally.
I don't know what we did right, but all right.
Well, you hear him there already.
Our special guest this week is, of course, the Borzois.
He is a newlywed, a new father, and has carved out a very unique niche whereby everyone either loves him or loves to hate him.
Bold move there, Borzoi.
Welcome back.
And she, like a shield maiden riding into the rescue, like a Valkyrie, plucked him from the clutches of dating black pillory to say, damn it, Borzoi.
She grabbed him by the collar and said, We are going to create a blood legacy.
Verily, the Florence Nightingale of our people.
Mrs. Borzoi, welcome, guys.
Hello.
I'm sure.
I don't know.
I don't know if it's Valkyrie as much as some kind of bizarre Irish meeting ritual.
I don't know.
I definitely made the first move for sure.
That's something Irish women do.
I don't know.
Borzette, you.
Yeah.
Hey, Borzette, you haven't been on the show yet.
So cards up.
Cards up.
Ethnicity, religion, and motherhood.
You know what she said to me like an hour before all this?
Like, this is the way she talks to me.
Because we were looking at memes of the Apu Pepe and Aspy, the cute autistic girl.
And they had like one that's like, I'm in love.
I have tried to say, I love someone with autism.
She said she's going to get a stick of that and put it in her car.
No lies detected.
Yeah, no lie.
Sorry, babe.
All right.
Put your cards on the table there, Borzette.
Ethnicity, religion, and motherhood status, please.
Okay.
Irish all the way down.
I have like one Scotch great uncle.
You're basically 75% Irish, 25% Scott-Irish.
Yeah.
So we're saying Irish all the way down.
Catholic and mother of one bouncing baby boy.
There you go.
Congratulations, guys.
And yeah, we'll get into how he came into the world and all that lately, but it was a pleasure to curse.
I can't hear that.
No, he was talking about.
When a man loves a woman, you George.
We'll explain when you're all in bed together.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
But it was a pleasure to meet the little lad.
And you can just tell with babies sometimes whether they are sharp or average or, you know, he had those big wide eyes and was looking around the world and soaking everything in.
So not a surprise given mom and dad, but congratulations again.
I'm glad you felt that way.
I wasn't sure if it was because he's just got a big fat head he got from his dad.
Yeah, he's got a peek wagging, but he got his mama's eyes.
I have huge peepers too.
People always comment, oh, he or she is so alert.
You know, that's what they always look for to see whether that baby's a dullard or not.
And you're like, oh, please be alert.
Please be alert.
More than alert.
He's definitely observant.
He's really soaking things in.
You can tell.
Today we played him Beethoven's third symphony and he was loving it, sitting in his high chair, listening to Beethoven.
Amazing.
Yeah, he's good.
We're priming him to be the leader of the future.
Mrs. Borzoi, I wanted to back up to the beginning because it seems counterintuitive that someone could experience romantic longing by reading and listening to Borzoi.
It seems impossible, but apparently it wasn't.
Take us back to you reaching out to him after being a content consumer of his.
What made you reach out?
Were you nervous and all the rest of the irony of all that is?
You always think I'm a sentimental fool.
No, I mean, you can't shame people for their kinks, okay?
She's just really into autism.
Well, I will disclose that I have been married before, which is something that I can talk about later as far as men that are looking for your perfect virginal woman.
She might not be like, you know, quite as perfect as you're hoping, but good women are out there.
Even if I don't want to say like the package is damaged, that sounds so bad.
But the person I was married to the first time was not a nice person.
And so that's a way I'll describe it, I guess.
So here I am listening to this person who just sounded so understanding and so like the politics were all right.
They were exactly what I was looking for.
And then he just sounded like someone who would be nice to me.
That sounds really childish, but women are basically big children, I guess.
So, so not the jerk, the jerk gets the babe situation for you, at least.
No, and you know, I know a lot of a lot of guys come out of the manosphere.
And I've actually been emailing back and forth with Ruch V. We've become kind of friends.
And yeah, I understand the appeal of that, but no, don't be girls don't like jerks.
Don't, don't approach that way.
I mean, you can, you can have an air of cool disposition or aloofness or yeah.
Well, I kind of also want to mention something since I wasn't, didn't know if you were going to bring that up.
Well, since you don't, I, because I know that the people who love to hate me are going to seize upon that stuff because there's certain manosphere, you know, and talking points in terms of like, well, they're going to, I mean, they're going to try to use that to like attack or mock me that I married somebody who was already married once, but you know, I'm in my therapy.
Yeah.
I'm not going to like, you have to, I, I decided what are what what's completely a no-go for me.
You didn't have any of those issues.
And was I okay?
I decided, I thought, I asked myself, am I okay at this?
Thought about it, decided I was.
And well, the person I was married to the first time was like a true sociopath and like very charismatic.
And I was just a young kid when I met him and was like totally taken in.
And then, you know, you learn things as you go along.
So, you know, women sometimes we have a harder time seeing what's right in front of us.
So let me say that Borzoi is a true melancholic, like Coach and I are, you know.
And yeah.
And Borzoi is the type of guy when a woman really figures out what she really wants in life.
It's going to be a guy like Borzoi.
You know, intelligent, good feeling, patient, good listener, smart, sharp.
Yeah.
I mean, he's everything on my checklist.
And he's, he's not a bad looker either.
Yeah, you didn't.
And also, I mean, like, you didn't sleep around.
You were, you were devoted to, I mean, it was his fault.
You, you were devoted to your first husband.
Yeah.
And you didn't sleep around.
You didn't do any of that kind of stuff.
So no, I had a good, I have a very, very good father, which helps a lot.
So I never went through any of those phases.
And also, you didn't have children with him either, which is a big thing as well.
Right.
True.
So, yeah.
But yeah, no, my, my criteria changed as I got older.
And instead of, you know, someone that can speak French to me and has a, you know, a law degree and is very debonair and handsome and a psycho, you know, I thought, well, you know, maybe I should, maybe I should change what I'm looking for.
And Borzoi is also filthy rich, so that helped.
Oh, yeah, we're rolling in dough here.
Picked a movie buff.
You know, I could see how you'd go from, you know, what you had to a movie buff.
It makes sense.
Netflix and chill with Roger Ebert sitting at that radio podcast, honey.
Yeah, the thought occurs that, you know, maybe, yeah, for women in their late teens and like early 20s, the wild man berserker jerk, Chad, has a better chance.
And then as women mature, big shocker, you know, their expectations and what they're looking for mature.
Well, that wasn't even, but like, I mean, I don't want to keep talking about your ex, but that game, he wouldn't, even he wasn't even really like that.
That wasn't why you even got with him in the first place.
He just seemed like a fun, good person, wasn't it?
Well, it was just very charismatic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And, you know, when someone picks you out and you, you, you, they make you feel like you're the center of the world.
And then, uh, oh man, the terrible things, terrible things that happen.
So, uh, but that's okay because that's all done.
And I, I, I ended up with a very good husband and the most beautiful baby.
Oh my gosh.
I don't really know what I did before motherhood.
I know it was only recently that I was like not a mother, but now I can't imagine like what I do with myself before children and after children.
Yep.
Yeah.
I can't imagine my life without him.
Oh, that's just such a common thing.
Like I remember, you know, immediately after the first set of twins were born, and we were like, what did we do before this?
Like, life must have been so boring.
So much free time.
It's, it's true.
Like with my wife's case, her and her mother and her father were all at odds with each other.
Her mother and father were divorced and she they all fought with each other and that once she got married and and uh had a child everyone kind of made up with each other, you know, very beautiful.
Yeah.
You were you worry less too about what other people will think about you, what other Spurgs might think about you.
And just because like, what, well, you're mad online and I'm holding a baby.
So I right.
Yeah.
The best owned.
Good one, Borzoi.
Yeah.
And to the single mom or the previously married question, just last week we had a listener from Sweden right in who said, look, I was a flawed person.
I wasn't particularly great.
So the idea that I'm going to expect perfection and no blemishes in someone's past to find my mate is, you know, essentially ludicrous too.
So you have to just, you know, it's like real politics.
I just remember talking to Borzoi.
We were sitting on my couch.
The week I stayed with you.
Yeah, the first week he came and stayed with me.
And I just remember thinking like, all right, this guy basically has it all figured out.
And somehow we were talking about online guys and like what they're looking for.
And I grew up, I'll just say near farms and I have a lot of farmer friends and including like these literal church going like blue polka dot dress wearing farm girls.
And if they encountered one of these like online Spurgs like thirstily seeking after a trad wife, they would run.
Oh, I'm sorry.
They would run for the hills.
Okay, no, no swearing.
Do you want to show me your feet after Sunday?
After church?
Show me your feet.
One dollar, one dollar in Junior's education savings account or 529.
Well, what anyway, yes.
Well, as I recall, what I, what I said to you pretty much was like, they wouldn't know how to treat a girl like that in the first place.
They wouldn't know.
And they would be shocked when they discovered that their father, that the fathers of those girls are not going to let them near them.
Yeah.
So, I mean, you just have to, yeah.
It just, it made me realize that he understood because I'm, I've never been an online person.
I, um, I shame on it.
I, I don't, I didn't, I never did Facebook.
I never did MySpace.
I'm kind of dating.
Why are you on Facebook?
Why are you on Facebook?
Why are you on MySpace?
Why are you on MySpace?
Yeah, I didn't have any of that.
I was radicalized by AIM.
Yeah.
Oh.
You might be old if you remember AOL and Simpson.
Yeah.
Well, my parents, yeah, they didn't allow any of that.
Thank God.
They were, they, they are like your pretty normie Fox News boomers.
Although, like, my, my, my dad.
You're not giving your parents that much credit.
They're a lot smarter than that.
They are.
They're very smart.
They're both doctors.
And my, my dad's from like deep South Alabama.
So like he is, he is very racially aware.
And my mom is too.
She's like a super racist libertarian.
But they, so they, they didn't exactly see the writing on the wall, I'll say, but like they did a very good job raising me and my brother.
No, no, no TV, no, yeah, not unfettered internet access.
Like we, we had a good parents are very good people and I and I feel safe leaving our son with them and in terms of the values that we have.
Yeah.
And they know all about Borzoi's politics and are like, all right.
You know, they're often, they're sometimes like, I don't agree with what he says, but it's his right as an American to say it.
Yeah.
My mom is a, she, like me, is a classically trained musician.
So I studied piano before I was a nurse.
And so she's always like, what about the Jewish piano players?
Would they have to go to kids too?
Your mom's main objection is she thinks that if we have power, we're going to gas Felix Mendelsohn again.
Yeah.
She's just worried about like the Harold Blooms and the Rubensteins.
And, you know, so she has some issues with that, but I don't know.
The more tranny stuff she sees targeted at her grandson, she's like, yeah, I think I see what you're talking about.
They had concerts in Auschwitz, so there are plenty of opportunities.
Yeah.
When people conduct the orchestra at Auschwitz.
Yeah.
What about the Jewish musicians?
It's like, what about them?
It's funny.
Well, what's funny then, like, you bring up Schoenberg with her and she gets really mad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So she, you know, they're, I won't say they're like 100% based, but they are definitely, we, we are free to discuss just gotta be careful.
Politics around them.
Yeah.
You gotta do it diplomatically.
Yes.
Let's let's go to the to the courtship a little bit quickly.
And obviously yours is a little bit unique because Borzoi is semi-famous and you, you know, you're you discovering him is not the typical way that people connect online.
But I assume that you did talk or did you video chat for a long time before deciding, hey, this is worth it.
This seems legit.
Let's let's meet up.
And Borzoi gets in his pacer to go drive out to you and break down.
I think there was like 110 emails before I was like, yeah, come on.
That's not, well, yeah, it's not an exaggeration.
It was at least 50 emails.
No, no, it was 110.
Oh, you're interested.
Yeah.
50 from you.
I remember what a blessed number right there.
So you were just emailing back and forth.
Did you talk on the phone a lot?
Video chat?
No, no, no, no.
I just, I mean, we send videos sometimes.
Yeah, sometimes videos, pictures, you know, just some pictures.
Family friendly.
Do you want that Snapchat?
Well, that's well, that's how you don't have to.
So, because she's kind of bearing the ladder, this all started.
I, I, I didn't check.
I'm really bad about checking my email.
And this is like a week-old email.
And I see this.
And people who have who haven't missed the third rail will remember the email from the nurse I read on the air that I got.
You know, it was really touched me.
And she had included in the email a picture of herself.
And I just found it so weird.
And I thought, I think I was just so paranoid.
Is this an elaborate honeypot here?
I didn't even know what that word meant.
I didn't even know what a honeypot was.
But because she, yeah, so I just like she gave me her actual name.
I googled it and I was like, okay, so she's a real person.
But is this like a trick in and of itself?
Sure.
I'm 50% certain this is a trap.
What's up, Sam?
This being able to send pictures and everything like we can do now is very powerful.
I mean, censor that, Mr. Producer.
Say I'm $100, $100 in your youngest education fund.
Yeah, because no, actually, our pictures were pretty, were very wholesome.
And I mean, I guess it's weird to like fall in love with a voice, but everything he was saying was just so, I guess, I don't know how much I can, I mean, I can reveal about how I got into like don't talk about that stuff.
And then I was buying the Turner diaries and then I was, you know, before I knew it, I was like, I mean, when I, whenever I go into something, I go like, whole hog, I'm all in.
Chips are in.
I'm, yeah.
So I was, but, you know, actually, some of this content is hard to find, especially if you're not an internet person.
That was the other reason why I was 50% certain you might be a fed.
Yeah, because I don't have any internet presence.
Like, I didn't, I don't have, so I had to start seeking this stuff out.
And somehow I came across Keith Wood's YouTube channel and his Twitter.
And then I saw this like exchange.
And I just thought Borzoi was so funny.
And any, there you go, guys.
If you can make a woman laugh, the pants are off.
There you go.
That's exactly what I've said.
You know, you got to got to be funny.
As soon as you can make somebody laugh, it's like we have a moment that we share together, right?
If I say something funny, we both laugh.
It's like we had a little moment together.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
No, it's done.
It's a done deal.
So he was funny and yet very sincere.
And I listened to Third Rail for a couple months before I got up the Moxie to write him an email.
So you two, gentlemen, can get a wife.
You simply podcast for 1,000 racist hours.
No, obviously, most people aren't going to do that.
It was more of his pause button, his movie reviews.
And I just thought, oh man, here's someone that's approaching culture in a way that I really like.
So that was what really did it for me.
Yeah.
I was kind of unaware.
Women being online, being feds or being honeypots or traps, not that, but and you do have to be careful.
But so many of our guys have literally done, not even through dating sites, but just in the DMs in our circles with a little bit of caution and paranoia at first.
And lo and behold, yes, there aren't like legions of women out there seeking to entrap and dox you and the rest of it.
As one guy put it, I warned him.
I was like, just be careful.
And he's like, bro, I'm going on a date with a woman and we're just going to talk and have a meal and see how it goes.
You know, she's not going to kill me at the table and she's not going to be able to dox me like the minute I walk in the room.
So just wanted to leave the single listeners with that takeaway.
Don't be so paranoid and afraid.
Just do your due diligence, really.
I mean, networking's how.
And if you can get somebody to vouch for them, that's a little bit harder.
But yeah, that's why networking is so important.
Yep.
Yeah, there are lots of, and I can say there are so many women out there that, that don't know how to articulate their frustrations with what they see and might not do exactly what I did.
Like, because I'm very aggressive in my, like, whatever interest I have.
Well, why don't you also tell them?
I mean, this is for the audience because we had a, I had a listener once who asked me, like, how do I, where do I go to find a woman that's worth marrying?
And I asked you, where, like, where, where do, where do women like you tend to go?
Like, if you're not listening, if like you don't somehow stumble upon like a podcast, like, where do, where do women like you tend to tend to be?
I mean, I would always go to classical music concerts.
I would, um, I'd be, I mean, I don't want to tell you to like, you know, if you say like historical society, yeah, historical society, library, um, I know, which I know sounds like really cheesy, but I mean, I, I was a volunteer at my local library for years.
Um, and there are wholesome, just try not to meet a woman at a bar.
It's just, I don't know, not to say it can't happen, um, but you know, you kind of reap the seeds you sow.
So just be cautious.
Where you sow them.
Yeah, I took the kids into a library the other day on a whim.
It was just like, all right, we are going to the library.
And there are only women in there.
It was just me, the kids, and the women working at the library.
I won't come in.
Were there any drag queens there?
No, mercifully.
There was, there was some obesity, truth be told, but some very, some very nice and maybe even a couple attractive single ones.
I don't know.
I didn't ask.
Yeah, but no, I mentioned that just because it's like, huh, yeah, add the library to your, you know, plenty of guys try to find the Latin Mass or whatever else, but add the library to your hunting ground.
Oh my gosh.
Oh my gosh.
There's so many good women at Latin Mass.
Yeah.
Every time we go, so we go to church every, we go to Mass every Sunday and we check out different churches.
And we go to different churches and we go to Mass every first Friday of the month.
I mean, I'm like keeping track.
And like the last two Fridays, there have been like five or six separate, not sitting together, but separate, like really beautiful young women sitting alone, no ring on, like just like with the, with the doily on, like the beautiful lace around them and like the modest dress, just, I mean, just obviously begging.
Begging for a suitor.
If you can't meet a woman there, if you can't meet a woman there, you are gay.
You are literally gay.
Challenge, challenge laid down by Sam.
Yeah.
I mean, and I know, I don't, I'm sure I don't know the like the makeup, the not demographic, but like the religious makeup of your audience.
But because I haven't been to Protestant churches and they operate a little differently.
And also Protestant women are, I don't, I don't know.
I don't have good experience with like you're like, well, you'll likely find similar phenomena at an evangelical church or like some of the low Avoid Protestants at all times.
That's the only issue is like when you go to evangelical church, you're also dealing with evangelical politics.
So your mileage may vary on that.
Yeah.
I'm so lame.
I'm thinking what a church pickup line is, like comparing your favorite Bible verses or talking about the homily.
But there's plenty of material there to work with, I guess.
Oh, yeah.
So how about that state of Israel?
God's real chosen people.
Gosh, I just love Israel so much.
Oh, really?
Will you marry me?
Oh, God.
Take it back.
Don't meet your waifu at church.
No, I'm kidding.
All right.
But most of these, and you're going to have to, you know, again, I'm just thinking about my farm girlfriends who would like, you know, not even, I still don't understand a lot of like internet speak and lingo and like memes and jokes.
I don't.
She didn't find out what an image board was till about last month.
I don't, I don't understand.
I know what Greek is.
About Naxalt.
Do you know what Naxalt is?
I don't know what.
No, I don't know what that is.
All X are like that.
Oh.
No, I don't.
I don't know a lot of the stuff.
So don't don't come at her with like, you know, I don't know.
So don't talk like I talk, basically.
No, I mean, you know, outside the, when you were unplugged from the internet, you are actually like a very normal person.
Yeah, like a lot of people always have to discover that.
I'm not, I'm not like, I'm not, I compartmentalize.
I'm not the insane lunatic constantly that I am online.
No, he's actually, he's very quiet.
He's, he's an introvert and I'm an extrovert.
So we're, we're like a good balance.
But yeah, no, I highly endorse church.
Go to church, guys, and meet a good woman there.
She'll give you lots of babies.
Take it to heart.
Okay.
Happy hunting.
All right.
So you guys, you guys got together.
Borzoi's car broke down.
Very romantic story.
And you hit it off.
And you, we don't have to go into the whole details of like engagement, pregnancy, birth.
Pregnancy happened first, then the engagement.
Sure.
You know, we don't, it's a, we're 90% wholesome in this.
Well, we were always going to get married.
We thought we had time to plan it out.
And we, it turned out we didn't have time.
Well, there was also pen, you know, COOF stuff.
So like nowhere we couldn't like schedule a ceremony like we were planning on and everything got, you know, screwed up last year because of, you know, COVID stuff.
So don't get married in the eyes of the state anyways.
Yeah.
I mean, well, if Zionists are.
We're married in the church.
So that's what.
Yeah.
There you go.
Yeah.
Okay.
Did you just for the Catholics that are kind of, yes, her marriage is the previous marriage is annulled.
Like that was a clear-cut case.
So.
Yeah.
Serial.
Actually, well, yeah.
No, we don't need to, we don't need to go into details, but that we, that was taken care of.
That's back out annulled.
Did the thought ever cross either of your minds that you should consider not bringing a baby into the world because of the state of the world and that whole thing?
Okay.
Well, I always think about, I mean, because I'm a big history buff and I'm, I'm sure, I know like our guys obviously focus on like, you know, mid-20th century history, if you catch my drift.
But so like the medieval and Renaissance era were what I grew up learning about the most.
And you, you pluck out a day from like 1451 and like, no, things don't look great.
I mean, so at any time in history, you could say like, oh, crap, like it's, you know, I might as well throw up my hands.
Like, we've got a plague.
We've got, you know, there's still still the Js.
The Js have always been there, you know, interfering.
And at any point in history, you, a mom could have said, like, well, what's the point?
I never succumbed to the black pill.
No way.
Yep.
Invalid operating assumption to even let that enter your mind.
There's no way to go beforeward.
Why would you ever be black pilled?
That's right.
Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
When you hold your baby, when you hold a baby in your arms, like there, there are no pills.
Like, it's just all, it's just all beautiful.
Revolt.
But the big kahuna here, MB, Madame Borzoi, is that you had quite the dramatic, maybe even traumatic delivery experience.
And that was really the meat that I wanted to sink into here in the first half was the, you know, I won't even call it a home birth fad or trend, but certainly a lot of people are enthusiastic about that instead of going the traditional lining up the hospital where you're going to go and having that whole plan.
And as it turned out, that probably or definitely would have been right for you.
So walk us through what was the planning beforehand.
No personal details are necessary about the lady party.
I mean, we can kind of get into how this is my approach with most things.
And I'm like trying to talk to people about this with all things medical now, especially with vaccine mandates, et cetera.
Like parts of the medical system are very good.
Parts of it are very bad.
So we have to just try not to throw the baby out with the bathwater, if you know what I mean, which I have been, I've been an ICU nurse for many, many years and I hate hospitals.
I mean, I love my job.
I would never do anything else.
It's the best.
But like the sterile, cold clinical nature of the hospital is just not where I envisioned having my baby.
I wanted to do it like by actually by my fireplace.
I had all these images in my head of like the conception and delivery by the fireplace.
Yes.
My husband there and like the midwife like encouraging me on and so beautiful.
But, you know, when you when you have problems, modern medicine is there for a reason.
Yeah, like I said, like I said to my mom after the whole ordeal, like, I'm always neutral on these questions because I have to acknowledge the reality that 100 years ago, you would have died.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, maybe 50 years ago.
Yeah.
I mean, so I tried to do this home birth.
My water broke at 10 a.m.
My contractions didn't start till 3 p.m.
So it was already what's called like a dry birth.
So that was already an issue.
And then before I knew it, I was looking at the clock and it was 10 p.m.
And then it was 3 a.m.
And I'm struggling on the floor.
And I have very vivid memories of holding you up as we try to push this baby out.
Yeah, my midwife had all these like different positions I was supposed to get in.
And what I remember most is just pain, ladies.
It is pain like I have never experienced.
Cause obviously you were unmedicated at home.
And I mean epidurals during a home birth.
Is that a standard thing?
No, almost by the time I went in at 6 a.m.
So like I said, my water broke at 10 a.m. and I finally went to the hospital at 6 a.m.
I was almost hallucinating.
It hurt so bad.
And then I got there and I was flailing around and something just didn't seem right.
And my midwife was not really encouraging of me going to the hospital, but Borzoi's mom was there.
And even though she has zero years of medical experience, he was like, I'm going to drive you to the hospital now.
It's time to go.
We're just going to take a little stroll down to the hospital there.
Yeah.
She was very sweet and so calm.
And she never gets ruffled ever.
So she was like, Yeah, it's time to go.
We're going.
We're going now.
So she took me in her car and dumped me off at the ambulance bay.
And they go in there and they're asking me all these questions and drawing my blood.
And oh my gosh, my white blood cell count is about 10 times what it should be, which means maybe there's some sort of infection.
And then they open me up and the doctor kind of peers his head over and is like, What happened?
And by this point, I have a spinal and I have fentanyl, which is a you know a narcotic infusing.
And I'm like, oh, I feel.
Well, thank God Derek Chauvin wasn't there.
I feel great.
So what it happened?
I got it was yours, Borzoi.
Yeah.
What had happened was that I had cancer when I was younger, as a kid.
I was a St. Jude patient when I was younger.
And everything was okay as far as tumors removed, but I had a lot of surgeries when I was younger.
And so somehow my bladder and my uterus had like fused together into this one tissue blob.
Yeah.
And apparently also the radiation treatment.
And this is this was something we should have been more proactive on.
Like obviously we're looking at this in hindsight and like could have done this, could have done that.
The radiation had affected her uterus so like so badly that that baby was never going to get pushed out.
Yeah.
No, it was too weak to push out.
And so my uterus was in tatters.
So they left it in initially.
And then I went back to my room and then I started bleeding.
And then it was a lot of bleeding.
And I looked up at my at the little monitor like beep beep beep.
And it was my heart rate was like three times what it should be and my blood pressure was in the tank.
Didn't you say, didn't you say to like the attending nurse?
Like, I don't, I don't think things are going well right now.
I said, but I was still real jokey because I never take the last time I took any kind of pain medicine was when I had my wisdom teeth out at 16.
And so I'm very like, they call it narcotic shy.
I don't.
So I was like, I was just still on cloud nine.
And of course, I have my baby.
Like, baby is there and he's doing, he's doing so great.
So all I care about is I have him like tucked in in my arm.
He was perfect, by the way.
He had no issue.
Oh, yeah.
He came out 100% fine.
And so he developed, yeah, perfectly.
None of this stuff showed up or were you getting regular sonograms and the whole shoulder?
Yeah, I still got ultrasounds and like my lab work done and everything looked fine.
Just one of those things, I guess, you just don't think about.
Yeah, you couldn't see it.
It's not something that you can really visualize on an ultrasound.
So in hindsight, looking back, knowing that you had that issue, were you overconfident or hubristic or whatever about doing the home birth?
And does that, you know, is there a lesson there for our ladies listening?
Yeah.
Well, just don't.
Yeah, there, there is.
And especially because I've done nursing for so long.
I was like, I can handle this.
If a problem comes up, you know, I'll know what to, what I need.
Of course, not realizing, you know, you don't have your resources at home.
And I know that there is, I mean, modernity today is hell world.
We all know that.
Like, it's a, it's a terrible system that we live in.
It's an ugly system.
But that doesn't mean that the gifts of the previous white men, honestly, and they have left us with so many treasures like penicillin.
And those are not to be disregarded.
So a lot of people have worked very hard.
And I know when you look at pharmaceutical companies and hospitals now, we know who's running them and who's behind them.
But in the past, it was our people that ran these things.
So a lot of the medicine and technology we have today was actually developed by our people.
So those are gifts to us and we should not take them lightly.
I would say cripple or lame without modern medicine.
The first time I tour my ACL, lamer than I am already.
But no, when I tour my ACL, my knee was so jacked up.
I literally walked with very market limp and without them being able to open me up and put in a new tendon from a cadaver.
Who knows?
I may walk like that for the rest of my life.
I was courting my wife.
I went, I got on a plane to visit my wife and was like limping around in Los Angeles, like going to like these nice places.
And she's probably like, oh my God, like, what's wrong with this guy?
They had to give me a chair at some places to sit down and rest my leg.
But yeah, lo and behold, here I am.
You know, there's a lot of women today, they have this thing they call the birthing plan, you know, and it's something that's the way they want it to go.
And they've read books or they know other women and they have an idea, very strong idea.
They have a strong idea how they want it to go.
And they have, you know, all these choices that they've made along the way.
But you never know how it's going to go.
And it was that way with my wife.
She wanted to have natural birth and do this and that.
And the thing is, right at the end, the baby changed position and he was breach, you know, and so she had to have a caesarean section.
And yeah, you don't, I mean, you don't know.
The Monty Python boys say nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition.
That's right.
Yeah.
So you just have to be flexible and take it as it comes.
And realize it's not a failure.
You know, there's lots of women in our thing that have fertility issues and have to do IVF or whatever.
It doesn't matter.
The outcome is the same.
You have a family at the end.
And that's, yep, honestly, that like, and there it probably is some modern thing, weird things going on in terms of what's happening.
I mean, obviously there's health issues.
There's probably some environmental issues that are causing problems as well.
But really, though, if you if you become, yeah, yeah, but if you become acquainted with like with history, especially history of childbirth and fertility and all that, this is like the problems that a lot of women, that our guy, a lot of our guys, women have, none of this is new.
No, no, it's not.
I mean, 40%.
That is in 1900, 40% of mothers and babies died.
And now it's less than 1%.
I mean, that's massive.
And a lot of women had trouble getting pregnant.
A lot of, that's just, this has always been an issue.
Yeah.
I mean, the plastics and the estrogens and the food and all that.
Yes, that is real and it doesn't help.
But, you know, life has always been very fraught with, I mean, oh, and I, not to bring up Winston Churchill, we all know he's not the good guy, but I just remember something that he wrote about when he was inspecting the troops.
This is after World War I, before World War II.
And he was like, they were so riddled with rickets and scurvy.
And he was like, who are we going to muster up to do anything now?
I mean, the ill health has plagued humanity for the longest time.
So we should embrace the Faustian spirit and try to overcome, you know, whatever nature throws at us.
And I'm here because, well, an older white doctor, white, walked into, walked into the room and saved my life.
What's going on here?
Yeah.
I had all these residents, like these, these student doctors in my room, and they're literally sticking their hands up inside me.
And every time they pull out, more blood is gushing out.
And they keep doing it.
I'm thinking, like, maybe you shouldn't be doing that.
I mean, not that.
But I'm joking the whole time because I'm still like on this pain medicine.
And I'm just like, oh, this is crazy.
What was odd for me was like learning all this after that because I had been up all night.
So I, my, my phone had basically died and it was on silence.
So I went to sleep and I woke up to my mom knocking on my door because nobody could get a hold of me.
Yeah, I had sent him home because he had been awake for 30 hours.
And I actually sent him a little voice message on the phone that said, well, you know, things are not going so great.
I'm okay.
Or baby's okay.
Okay.
Borzo is catching his beauty sleep as his new bride is bleeding out.
Yeah.
You were like witness to your own vivisection there.
Yeah.
And I, yeah, I knew that.
Well, I said it was like, hey, baby, I'm going back into surgery right now.
I guess there's not a complication right now.
I don't want you to worry, though.
I'm sure everything will be fine.
No, I mean, you must be, and I see you, you must be calm.
I mean, no one wants to see the nurse panic.
No, no.
Yeah, you don't want to look up from the bed and see panic in her eyes because that's not good.
So in the face of whatever, you should be, you should have your nurse dress pressed and nice and calm and like ready to tackle whatever.
It was very odd when the other, one of the nurses or surgeon, I forget who exactly was telling me everything that happened when I finally got there and basically like trying to break the news to me about your hysterectomy and all that.
And because all this had already happened, and I'm a person who kind of, who doesn't, who kind of just processes things very like it takes, there's a delayed reaction on that kind of stuff.
And also just my general perspective on things.
It's like, okay, it's just, but she's okay.
Then kind of go see her.
It's like, okay, I guess she lost the uterus.
That's yeah, they did tell me.
They did tell me as they were rolling me back to surgery.
They said, if, well, they were sitting here with me.
I had two, two giant machines pumping blood into me.
I got nine units of blood and a bunch of other platelets and plasma, all the stuff.
And so they said, well, if we take you back, I don't know if we can save your uterus.
And I just, I looked over at baby and he was sitting there.
Sorry.
I'm sorry.
Baby, baby boo.
I looked over at baby boo and he was just laying there so sweet.
And I thought, well, I already got what I wanted.
So, I mean, I'm okay.
I know.
I mean, it's a hard like theoretical choice when you're given like a lifeboat situation, right?
But like in practicality, and I, it's like, I'll take being a dad of one kid over being like dead.
Probably, probably dead.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and that's, I mean, when the famous Linkula quote, you know, he's literally positing a lifeboat scenario, but to him, like he was speaking to like the general mental illness of liberal society.
But to him, it was like any, any sense of, he called them people who love life, people who love and respect life.
They'll take the axe and begin severing hands that cling to the lifeboat.
Yeah.
Well, I took, took the axe.
Exactly.
You, you, because you love and respect life.
Yeah, no, I mean, versus future babies in the bush.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I, I, I mean, I, I, I cried later holding him and realizing you're going to be an only child.
Um, there were many tears after that.
Um, but you know, he's, he's perfect.
Um, I wanted a bigger family.
But and I'm hyper conscious about not helicoptering or over spoiling him.
Although if you saw baby's room, it's it's like that's their time.
I'm sorry.
If you saw baby boo's room, it's like pretty, I mean, there's just like I he has, I have enough, I've like basically planned his entire education now and I have all these, I bought him a book today, Herodotus for Boys and Girls.
You got to start early.
So he has like an entire library already built and all these beautiful toys because I've worked very hard to like to give him whatever he wants and needs.
I'm just going to have to approach this differently because I feel like a big family kind of keeps you in check and siblings keep you in check.
He's got cousins, he'll be fine.
But, you know, so I don't want him to grow up spoiled and or lonely.
I'm, you know, so what do you think about the argument that the first, I think I'm floating this idea.
I'm not stating it.
The first delivery seems to be the most difficult for most women.
So far as I understand.
What do you think about the idea that women should go to a hospital for their first childbirth?
And then after that, if they want to go the home birth route, that's more, it's safer.
Well, and the way that it, the way that births are done now, and of course, you know, we, we had gone to an event with some of our folks in November, and one of the girls was planning on a home birth and hers went beautifully.
It was her first kid.
She delivered in like six hours and she had no issues.
So I'm not saying you won't draw the lucky straw if you want to do it at home.
Don't have cancer, first of all.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, yeah, my medical history is unique, but the point is that when something bad happens, and I'm sure Smasher can attest to this with like medic or military background, like it can change in literally five minutes.
And sometimes the ambulance can't get there in five minutes.
So I'm Smasher wanted to do a home C-section with him as the attending, but wife is even though I sharpened my channels and everything.
It'll be too much, baby.
I didn't know about that.
You can actually have it both ways.
You can do home births at the hospital, though.
We found this out later.
Yeah.
I mean, they make them into like these very cozy rooms.
And like, they don't look like hospital rooms.
You can have a midwife present there.
Like, why would you not do the best of both?
Especially if you're like a lot of our people live rurally, rurally.
So if you're like an hour and 10 minutes from a hospital, like I, and I, I was looking at all these YouTube videos, watching these beautiful home births.
There's someone that lives in like the forest of Norway and, you know, near like 100 miles from any kind of civilization.
And she, she and her husband did it at home.
And hats off to those people, but we have to be realistic too.
And it's not like you gain trad points.
You know, this is not like a contest.
This is not a contest to see like who can be the tradest and the whatever, the most anti-modern.
Like, do you want to be a library or even do you want to have a kid with brain damage?
All it takes is that cord being wrapped around for five minutes.
And then your kid is anoxic.
And then you have a brain damaged child for the rest of your life.
So I've known several women who've had multiple home births and everything went perfect, but that's them.
You know what I mean?
Just like you're saying, I mean, it could easily go the other way and it depends on your health and a lot of different things.
And I like the idea of having the children in the hospital.
And at the time that my children were being born, it was called the alternative birthing chamber.
And it looked just like a hotel room.
There was a rocking chair and a comfy sofa, and there were no medical instruments visible.
And so, boy, you know, why not do it that way, that way, just in case, you know what I mean?
Just in case you need the medical instruments and all that, you are in the hospital because you could bleed to death in a matter of minutes.
Oh, yeah, it can happen very, very quickly.
You can have them in less than a minute.
So then I heard him say the birthing chamber.
All I could think was just Sam writing a children's book, Arian Potter, in the birthing chamber.
Well, that's what it's called.
They called the ABC, alternative birthing chamber, you know.
But I wanted to mention quickly, you mentioned Herodotus.
I believe he was the one that said that Negroes are half child, half devil.
Oh, yeah, endorse.
No, that's, he's wrong about that.
Women.
Well, not literally.
We are big children.
We are big children.
I will, Schopenhauer had it right.
Yeah.
He's my favorite philosopher.
He's, he hit all the nails on the head.
He was pro-animal kindness, anti-Jew, and anti-wamen.
But not in like a, he loved, he was like very kind to women, but like positions of authority.
Like, oh, no, no.
No.
We want women to be like the way they are.
We want them to be that way.
We don't want women to be like men and we shouldn't expect them to be like men.
Yeah.
Warren and I talked about this on Modern Politics the other day, which isn't out yet.
And this episode will be out after that.
So it's okay.
But yeah, we were talking about this, how it's this like synchronicity that you really are shooting for.
You know, this like wonderful building off of each other relationship where the man does lead, but like there's definitely things that my wife is way better at.
And I will stand there like an obedient dog until she tells me what to do.
I know that she is, she's got it handled better than I do.
We need women and they need us.
So, and that's absolutely.
No, I'm very pro division of labor.
I mean, you know, like the way I, the way I talk to somebody maybe who doesn't believe in God, and I say, listen, if there was not two sexes needed, there wouldn't be two sexes, right?
We need both.
And that's why there's both.
If we needed three, there would be three.
If we needed one, there'd be one.
There's two because we need two.
Yeah, no, that's a, that's a great explanation.
I'm generally a, you know, because I trust her and let her kind of do what she wants type guy.
But there was, there was times when I realized, like, I have to, I have to be a little bit more proactive, such as the time you got scammed on the puppy thing.
Oh, yeah.
No, I fell for an online dog scam.
I had to learn for Charlie.
I was like, no, there's times I'm supposed to step in and make sure she doesn't do things she shouldn't do.
Yeah, no, we should be kept in check.
But no, I'm not like a radical anti-femme.
Like, I love being a woman, and I like having women friends, and I love being around women.
And we have so much we can do.
I mean, I turned our home into this spectacular, cozy, wonderful environment to raise our son.
That's what I liked about you because you kind of owned that woman-ness and just wanted to create a co-that's why I let you time brace.
That's why they said let you decorate however you want, because I don't hate the aesthetic.
I like the aesthetic that you have.
The turf to Nazi pipeline is a real thing.
Yeah, it's nice and cozy.
And the main thing you never did, which is you never tried to be one of the lads.
And I think I'm hoping that trends starting to die off a little bit more, but girls that think they have to be into things that men are into has never been something I liked.
No, no.
If I want to be friends with a guy, I'll be friends with a guy.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm always been wary of females that.
I don't want to say that because I have a lot of male friends because my brother and I are very, very, very close.
And his friends were my friends and my friends were his friends.
So I've always grown up with lots of guy friends.
But if women don't trust a woman, then there's something wrong there.
Yeah, but you're the type, like when you say you're friends with them, like you're the type of woman to be baking them cookies.
Like literally, that's you.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, I baked all my brother's birthday cakes growing up.
I like.
So like there's a, there's a clear, when you say you have guy friends, like there's, that's, there's a clear difference in what we actually mean here.
Yeah.
You are, there are guys you are friendly with because of the social circle you were in.
Sure.
Yeah.
Early days, fatherhood impressions, any surprises, buddy, any joys or pains?
How's it going for you?
Well, what was surprising to me was just how easy like the transition was into just like, I know things are going to be difficult.
Like yesterday was the first time my son fell under my watch.
Oh yeah, he rolled gently off the couch and he was fine.
Yeah, he was fine.
But the first time that happens, that was, you know, it's because I'm generally a very unemotional.
The way she describes it, I have a flat effect.
I'm generally a very unemotional or unexpressive person.
And that's partly because I get that from my mom.
Like the reason why my mom's, the reason why I'm cool is the same reason why my mom's cool.
It's just a family thing.
But, you know, you get all these other, I have all these fatherly emotions now.
And so I, you know, it's like a melancholic.
It's like an odd feeling.
It like comes later, right?
Like as a melancholic, we're like, we kind of act slowly or react slowly.
So you, you have the emotions and you have the feelings, but like that comes on, right?
Yeah.
And I, I mean, I don't regret anything.
I don't, I mean, this is my, my mom actually, it was funny because I said to her the other day, you know, have you ever thought you'd see me with a baby?
And she's like, yeah, I was like, I, you know, I was kind of worried about how long it was taken, but you've always been very good with kids.
Even when you were little, you always took care of little kids.
And his, his dad vibes are so hot.
So yes.
So when a man, well, when a woman becomes a mom and a man becomes a dad, it like increases the attractive fold like by 10.
Oh, yeah.
The only thing I miss is, and I know you'll probably bring up the malecolic thing again, Sam.
It's just the nature of that personality type.
Yes.
Because you have to be able to, you know, I have to respond to whatever she needs or whatever the baby needs at any given moment.
My concentration gets broken a lot.
Well, and he's an introvert, so he doesn't have as much, you know, time.
He recharges by being by himself, which, you know, isn't really an option anymore.
Yeah.
So that's, that's been the most difficult part.
But I mean, there's nothing.
I have an infant.
There's nothing I can do about that.
Yeah.
And he's a baby.
He's too trapped now.
He's a great baby.
I can't remember if I said this at the beginning or before the show, but he sleeps through the night already.
He's four months old and he's already sleeping through the whole night.
He fusses and cries during the day, but really we don't have any issues like colic or I mean, you hear these horror stories of babies that scream for 14 hours a day.
He's teething right now.
That's been the hardest part so far because he's in pain.
But we have a system to take care of that.
So, yeah.
I remember when our firstborn was born, I was shell-shocked, just literally looking down and thinking, holy shit, like my life has just taken a dramatic turn.
I was so ready for this, though.
I mean, I am a little bit older, and so I'm not, you know, it's not like I started having babies at 20.
So I'm, I know, I don't, I don't mind saying, I don't think that that, I don't.
So in a way, I don't advise waiting ladies, don't wait till 34, but I guess I have the advantage of maturity and patience.
And I was, I was, I've been wanting this for so long.
I was, I jumped right in.
I was so ready to like, yes, I want to get up and give you a bottle.
And I want to do all the things.
I want to be all the best mom.
I want to be the best.
There you go.
God bless.
Yeah.
I think you guys will be our whatever, you know.
So you had the worst time in your life.
One last question for Borzoi.
For the show art this week, may we use your face popping up from a woman's belly in the hospital.
Would that be okay by you?
The dog's the face.
The Icheria Cossack face.
Which face are we talking about?
Just you and a white power salute popping up out of the uterus.
It's going to be hot.
Smashers are going to have to pass in that one.
No, please use the avatar of him doing that, though.
Which avatar are you talking about?
Tell me about the Ivan Serco Cossack one?
I don't know.
The dog.
No, the dog one's too crazy.
No, just do the Ukrainian Cossack guy.
The long Borzoi nose, just like barely crowning out.
No, no, just have a, just have a copy of cultured grugs popping out.
Oh, no, that's too shame, too shameless self-promotion there.
But yes, please do plug cultured grugs available on antelopehillpublishing.com.
Anything else?
You got more works in store?
I know you did the intro to Hitler by Wyndham Lewis.
What else is going on?
And that essay is also in Cultured Grugs.
But the Wyndham Lewis book is interesting.
Yeah, all I really have to plug is that Stryker and I have been talking.
He messaged me to say he wants to bring back People Square.
So I think he said sometime next month.
So I guess that's an exclusive scoop right there.
He wants to bring it back.
Who knows?
You know how this thing goes.
It's like the McRib.
It comes in and out.
You can't force the McRib.
So just enjoy it when it's there.
And then, because he's sleeping a little bit more, maybe I can finally get working on that.
A river runs through it.
Pause button.
There you go.
Yeah.
And he hasn't woken up or cried during this recording.
So he sleeps through.
He sleeps like that.
Borzo Jr.
Yeah.
All right.
And Borzette, congratulations.
Well done.
So happy for you guys.
Yes.
Can I explain the mid-song, the intro, or what is it?
The mid of the brake song.
Break track.
Yeah.
By all means.
You guys got the wheels of steel going into the break this week.
Have at it.
Okay.
So as I said, my family's Irish.
My grandpa was like off the boat Irish.
And our son's actually named for her grandfather.
Yes.
His name is, he took my grandfather's name.
So every night when he was young, he's a devout Catholic.
He would douse my mom in like a bucket of holy water every night before she went to sleep.
And he would sing her Danny Boy, which is this beautiful Irish tune.
It's his favorite song.
And he would sing it to her every night.
Would also tell her, remember, we don't like the English.
They're the bad guys.
But I love that.
I love that song.
And every time I hear it, I listened to it in the hospital when I was holding baby boo.
And I mean, I was like, water works.
So I don't know if I can actually listen to the song and not cry, but it's a very special song.
So that's the one beautiful.
All right.
We're going out to Danny Boy.
God bless the Borzois.
Congratulations.
They added to our cause.
And you can too, dear listener.
Smasher, you got to run in the second half too.
Any last words for the audience, brother?
Oh, I can't think of anything but ghosty stuff.
Damn it.
I know.
Automatic response.
Yeah.
Jill.
No, we won't do that one.
Yep.
Yeah.
Smasher, quick say something.
Anyway, for legal reasons, this is a joke.
The last time we put you in the spot for something like that, we had to take the episode down.
So yeah, let's not do that.
There you go.
But the editing I would have had to do to fix that episode.
I was like, yeah, that's just not going back up.
Twins 2.0, real quick, buddy.
Everything going all right?
What's happening?
It's great.
They've been really good babies so far.
So, all right.
I'm sure.
Yeah, I don't know.
It doesn't sound like he's frazzled at all.
And I'm sure wifey is handling it with an applum, too.
All right, guys.
Hail the Borzois.
Welcome to their new white life.
We will be right back with Sam, me, and Jackie Boy with more stuff.
So enjoy.
We'll talk to you in a couple minutes.
Oh, Denny boy, the pipes, the pipes are calling from glen to glen and down the mountainside.
The summer's gone and all the roses fallen.
It's you, it's you must go and I must fight.
But come ye back when summer's in the meadow or when the valley's hushed and white with snow.
I'll be here in sunshine or in shadow.
Oh, Danny boy, oh Danny boy, I love you so.
But if you come and all the flowers are dying and I am dead, as dead I will maybe,
you come and find the place where I am lying and Neil and Say and Avi there for me and I will know Though soft ye tread above me,
And then my grave will return, sweeter be, and you'll bend down and tell me that you love me and I will rest in peace until you come to me.
And welcome back to episode 98 of Full
House, second half.
Big thanks to the Borzois for sharing their story.
And of course, big congratulations.
One and done for them.
But hey, they didn't have a choice.
And now they get to focus their energies on their son.
Much worse possibilities could have resulted from that situation.
So we're, of course, as we say, over the moon for them and grateful for their sharing on the show in the first half there.
We're at 98 here.
I don't have anything snappy about 1998.
I graduated high school in 1999.
So junior year is pretty good.
But I am a baby.
A little baby.
I graduated in 84.
I was five years old.
There he is.
Yeah.
We had a full house there in the first half.
Five people on the mic.
So Jackie Baby never even asked if he could come on.
He knows that we were a little bit jam-packed.
But well, come on, Jack.
How are you?
You know, I could see good out of one eye, not so much the other.
Yeah.
He saw Mudshark the other day and stabbed himself in the eyes.
I mean, isn't that the proper response?
Blind yourself to not see the horrors of Clown World.
Yeah, I know.
Does Clown World exist if you can't see it?
Oh, you can hear it and smell it still.
Now I know what I'm doing next.
You're just going to be like that guy in the Metallica song.
No arms, no legs, no eyes, no ears.
However it goes.
It's going to be you by the end of this ordeal.
No, please, Jack, preserve your eyes, ears, and your tongue, too.
Just begin to show.
Yeah, I'll just be in a sensory deprivation chamber, but I'll be able to record from there, so we'll be good.
Please lock me up and put me in solitary confinement, Mr. Zog agent, so that I can be spared the horrors of this world.
Speaking of horrors, Sam was talking about the four temperaments, the book during the break, which we mentioned in at least one or two earlier shows.
No harm in bringing it up again.
He really plugged it for its value in self-evaluating and making sense of your personality and your temperament, of course.
And Sam, the blues, you know, we had that sort of like, you know, just do it spine stiffening episode and that sustained me for a while.
But I think it's summer coming to an end.
I could feel the blues and the gloom.
The news hasn't helped too much either coming back.
But just ride it out.
It's not like I was like, oh, no, I'm just going to be happy and turn on a dime and brush this away.
But just recognizing it, knowing that's a part of life, that this too should pass.
Yeah.
And Understanding yourself.
You know, that's the biggest takeaway for me when I read that book.
And as I mentioned, once I read that book, I bought a stack of them and I would give them away to people because just the thing of understanding why you are reacting to things in a certain way instead of beating yourself up about it, saying, Why do I always do the same old thing?
You know, I always have the same reaction and disappointment and stuff.
It gives you some tools for understanding it and to stop beating yourself up or hating yourself.
Hopefully, you don't do that, but to understand yourself and how to make something positive out of it.
Amen.
And yeah, the world is so crazy that a lot of times we'll get the blues or, you know, in my case, I'm like, I'm not doing enough to turn this around or, you know, am I working hard enough, et cetera.
So I'll put that link in the show notes again to plug it for the audience.
I checked it out.
It's only 14 bucks on design.
You can probably find somewhere else.
Yeah, I'm telling you, it is like a religiously based thing, but even if you're not religious, I think you get a lot out of it.
Exactly.
Yep.
I wanted to mention Charlottesville here real quick at the top of the second half.
We passed the four-year anniversary last week.
And last year, we did do a special show dedicated to that event, what we lived through, and the significance of it with the benefit of hindsight.
So we won't go back to that well again this year.
I refer you back to it.
It's We Told You So episode 70 something.
I'll link it in the show notes.
But I wanted to read this note from a friend.
We forget the impact that that event had on so many guys who were either adjacent to the movement or just starting to wake up then.
And our pal, I won't name him because I don't know if he meant this to be public, but he said, I'd like to personally thank all of you who attended the rally.
Without your bravery and sacrifice, I wouldn't be here or the tens of millions of other white men and women your actions have inspired.
And that guy doesn't BS either.
So to all the guys who showed up and suffered as a result of it, if you went and got away scot-free, good luck for you, knock on wood, not jinxing you.
And of course, to the men who got locked up unfairly when those thousands of feral savages wielding bare mace and clubs and worse and throwing frozen items at us basically all got off scot-free.
Blowtorch man, yeah, the guy with the club who beat people outside the garage.
And then the guys who fought back got arrested.
Absolute shame.
So hats off to all of our Charlottesville veterans.
Yeah, we had a buddy of mine hit with a bike lock.
That was cool.
Yeah.
Oh, was he hit?
Oh, there was the bike lock professor.
Remember him?
He was out in California, but that wasn't Seaville.
No, I'm trying to remember because this is obviously a while ago.
And I think he said he was like in a restaurant after the event.
And they just came in and pretty much assaulted them, pretty much.
Yep.
Yeah.
I went back to look at my footage of the event.
We had a buddy with a GoPro and yep, just got clubbed in the head with these thick wooden poles trying to help my friend get his hat back.
And if those were slightly different items, could have been a lot nastier.
So yeah, good reminder.
Everybody put their asses on the line that day and we salute them.
So we haven't done a coach's comfy corner in a while and this will be a real quick one.
The summer's not over yet.
It is August 20th right now.
We started on August 19th tonight, but in sort of dad's frenzy to jam as much action-packed, healthy fun and entertainment into the summer, took the kids canoeing on a it wasn't a lazy river.
There were a couple uh whitewater spots that I told Junior was known as the children's graveyard section of the river, which he thought was funny.
And daughter was a little bit spooked, but uh, just one of those things, you know, had never done that, only took the two older ones, didn't bring the toddler.
That was not going to be a good idea.
Uh, but what a lovely and cheap way to experience it wasn't, there were no tubers, right?
Tubing, I think, is the real heavy drinking thing.
There was some responsible drinking among the uh canoers and kayakers.
I actually teetotaled for almost the entire time.
One buddy brought a little bit of hooch, so I took a little swig, but we jumped off rocks into this beautiful river somewhere in the mid-Atlantic.
We woke up and drove two hours.
I think it was 50 bucks all-inclusive for the canoe and the shuttle and all the rest of it, supplies, packed PBJs.
And the kids were still glowing about it days after about the canoe trip and stuff like that.
So, yeah, just a little idea.
They're probably all over America.
You got a river that's not too wild and not too slow, not too shallow.
You can make it happen.
So, milk that summer for all that it's worth.
Yeah, that's a great story.
Yep, Sam, I have some dad humor here that I'll phrase in a form of a question to you.
I hope you haven't seen this one yet, but did you know that the person who invented the Ferris wheel never met the person who invented the merry-go-round?
And do you know why?
No, they traveled in different circles.
Yeah, it's not exactly like a gotcha, but you know, that was that was me.
Niggy posted that one the other day, and everybody was like, Oh man, that is prime dad humor.
Yeah, yeah, well, that's that's a thing, you know, for sure.
And uh, uh, sometimes I'll go to my mother's house, and uh, she gets the newspaper, you know, I'd like she's probably the last person who gets it delivered to her house, you know, and uh, and literally, I mean, I don't even like to touch it, it's so bad, you know, but I do read the funny papers, you know, the comics, and uh, so that's like the only credible part of the newspaper is the comic section.
Yep, so so when we go over there, I'll pull that out and so I'll sit and read it.
And there's a there's a couple good ones like Dilbert or Peanuts, the old classic peanuts, or the uh um trying to think the uh the space guy, uh, I forget his name, um, space guy.
There's a couple of good ones in there, and uh, so my youngest son, he saw I was looking at it, and he, so I said it, I read the couple of three or four that were worth reading, and I set it down.
And uh, so he picks it up and he's looking at different, he didn't even know which ones I'm reading, but he's just started reading.
He says, Oh, this is dad humor, yeah, dingo, yeah, yeah, because a lot of it's kind of like really corny and kind of dumb, you know, and but there's a couple of them that are kind of clever, but uh, yeah, I know what you mean.
Yeah, I was full of cliches on that two-hour ride up to the canoe, like, look at the gas prices in this town, and holy moly, would you look at the size of that cornfield?
You know, partly self-aware, partly sincere, you know, and the kids are in the back, like half engaged with my commentary, half it's you know, probably cliches.
You don't want to overdo it too much and become that goofy joke of a dad, but I think it goes with the territory and uh, right, it's like it's like a true, mostly innocent meme that can get out of hand if you're not if you're not careful.
So, yeah, well, I got some new white life for y'all, and I hope you're ready.
Yeah, of course.
Just a couple and one or two with a really nice note.
First up, to Carpenter, congratulations, Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter.
We call them the Carpenters in the business.
Speaking of cringe dad humor, yeah.
Yeah, they welcome, they welcomed their third, and they had a beautiful baby girl.
And of course, the picture he shared of her, she looked very angry.
She was like, oh, brought me into this place.
You know, that was a difficult journey.
Is she going to be into martial arts?
Oh, I presume so.
I would imagine.
I think, yeah, we got to get Carpenter on, too.
He's got to be Southern Twang.
Yeah.
He'd be a good one to have on for sure.
And a big fan, too.
Yo, I know he's been very bitter that I haven't invited him on the show yet.
So, Carpenter, we'll get to you when we can.
No, I'm kidding.
Yep.
And they also had to pay a fairly serious end tax at the hospital with a bad experience.
So I won't go into details there, but one of those things.
It's like, I don't know.
You know, my wife and I were, we were just like, no, we're just going to the hospital.
And it wasn't like a wonderful experience there, but we just did it.
You know, like, it's really annoying.
The nurses come in every five minutes and you can't get a good night's sleep and it is pretty sterile.
And then you look around the maternity ward at how many Mexicans and everybody else are in there.
It's, yeah, it's not warm and fuzzy, but the most important thing is not warm and fuzzy.
It's healthy mom, healthy baby.
Remember that.
Yep.
Yep.
All right.
We got another nice note here that I will read almost in total.
And it says, Hello, gentlemen of the birth panel.
It's with great pleasure that I write to you to announce the birth of my daughter this month.
Mom was induced a few weeks early over worries of high blood pressure and possible proclamsia.
I think I pronounced that right.
Preeclampsia.
Yeah.
Though not what she wanted, we originally sought out a midwife for a more natural birth.
Mom was wonderful in seeing our daughter into the world.
So here's another one.
Had some troubles and ended up at the hospital.
A small flex from me on all those who have passed out.
I sat through the epidural, helped hold a leg and the back of mom's head while she pushed and witnessed the episiotomy, whatever that is.
Sam, what's the episiotomy?
When they had no episiotomy is where the baby is maybe a little too big for the, I'll just call it the opening.
Yes.
And they have to, they have to like open the opening a little bit.
Break out the construction scissors.
Yep.
That's right.
Oof.
Not pretty.
Not pretty.
Yeah.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
I remember I was like, oh, I took a little peek when the head was crowning on, I think, all three of them, but I didn't need to be all up in that business.
So good for you.
I would want to watch that.
I don't think the mom would want to watch that either.
But regardless, he says, go ahead, Sam.
They say Elvis couldn't have relations with Priscilla after he saw her give birth.
So, you know.
All right.
He says, I can only.
Bold move, Elvis.
Yeah.
Thanks.
See you later, baby.
Thank you very much.
Thank you very much for that.
I will be shopping elsewhere now.
That's terrible.
Glad he's dead.
No, I don't know.
Oh, Jaxi was perked up.
Yeah, Jack is almost dead.
Oh, damn it, Sam.
You cracked open the gates of hell so soon.
Well, I don't know if I'm pretty sure he's dead, but what I can probably dead now.
But he's been alive a lot longer than 1976.
He is Jewish, though.
Whoa, what's up?
No way.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry to break it.
Citation, send me a link.
I'll put it in the notes.
I don't just want these empty claims on here, Mr. Producer.
Elvis, the pelvis?
I'll find the picture again, but I think it's what was it?
His grandmother's grave.
Yeah, no, literally, Starve David on it.
All right.
All right.
So he's maybe got a quarter, is what you're saying.
Yeah.
But I mean, maternal.
So.
All right.
But I'll.
All right.
Send us that documentation.
That's important.
Yeah.
Elvis fans be TFO'd.
Sorry to ruin it for everyone.
All right.
All right.
Son of Texas.
Sorry to derail on your bragging about watching your wife getting cut open.
I can only hope to weather all the future challenges of fatherhood as well.
Baby girl is in the NICU for a while until she puts on some weight, but is breathing unassisted and drinking down every drop of the good stuff from mom that she can.
I still can't put into words the feeling I'm sure you've all experienced, but seeing those tiny eyes looking up at me as I fed her for the first time was indescribable.
I thought I was serious about this thing of ours before, but this new perspective is so much more than I was expecting.
It's one thing.
Yep, exactly.
You just leveled up.
It's one thing to intellectually accept that we should leave things better for our children than we found them, and another to feel and see and smell that responsibility up close.
It's a powerful motivation, no doubt.
Thank you for all the work that you do and hail victory.
I could not be more confident of our inevitable success.
And that's from Texas Sun.
Yeah.
Man.
We added here a little Easter egg for Sam.
P.S. Please ask Sam for any music recommendations along the lines of Stalga Vitta.
It's time to get huge so I can mog all medical personal personnel for hopefully four more children to follow.
Yeah.
You're familiar with Stalgawitter?
Yeah.
Yeah.
As far as German bands, if you want a German band, I will make this recommendation for you.
Terror Sphara.
Terror Sphara.
T-E-R-O-R-S-P-H-E-R-A.
Terror Sphara.
Check them out.
There you go.
Ask and ye shall receive Texas Sun.
And congratulations to you and your wife.
I'm not giving you too much credit for being there and being a man.
And I don't know if the passout thing is more a Hollywood meme than reality, but yeah, sure, it happens.
We got another golden one here.
This one warms my heart in particular.
This is from James, and he writes in, Greetings, birth panel.
I have some wonderful news to share.
Coach, I introduced my wife and myself at the most recent event, which was incredible, by the way.
If you recall, I'm the Catholic guy who immediately shared with you that my wife and I plan on having 12 kids.
Of course, you were supportive, but as you were leaving the venue, you came up to me and said something along the lines of, be sure to manage your expectations.
And then I walked it back and said, ah, you know what?
You'll be fine.
Because toward the end, we all had a few.
Right before patting my wife on the back and saying, good luck.
So there you go.
I gave her a little blessing before leaving.
I don't know.
I hope I think I was appropriate.
I just didn't, I wanted to be glib and also, but seriously, like, okay, you know, shoot for the moon, 12, but yeah, you can't get it.
Calibrate yourself there.
You never know.
I mean, there's people, there's women that are afraid, like, oh, I don't know if I could have X many, but you know what?
Maybe like Borzoi's wife, you only have one.
Yep.
You know, and there's women who are lucky enough to have four and six and ten or whatever the number is.
So just do the best you can.
That's all any of us can do.
Yep.
But get this, dear audience.
He goes on to say, well, what do you know?
We hadn't been home from the event for even 10 minutes when my wife found out she was pregnant with our first child.
Amazing.
Yeah.
What synchronicity or whatever.
Good fortune.
Not too bad.
Not bad for only being married for two months.
That's right, James.
All right.
Way to go.
We're on our way to the even dozen.
Now, there's a good chance we won't have time to get to 12.
Maybe we'll only get to one.
Maybe not even that.
Very true.
Very humble, James.
As funny as your advice was at the time, I'm taking it seriously.
That's right.
Seriousness through joking.
Like you, I am generally a pessimistic person, so I'm mentally prepared for the worst.
Amen.
That being said, God will send us as many kids as he wants to, and we were prepared for that too.
Just thought I would share the incredible news.
It was truly special to receive such perfect gift coming off an already inspiring weekend with our guys.
The timing certainly was amusing too.
To anyone out there who's worried about conceiving, keep the faith, keep praying, keep up the good work.
You will be given what you need to accomplish what you are supposed to do.
My wife and I are impatient, so we were paranoid that something was wrong with one of us both since it didn't happen right away.
How wrong we were.
Praise God.
God bless the birth panel and all of the listeners.
I can't wait to introduce my army of children to you all when we win.
I'm scared now.
I'm just getting scared.
Like they're going to take us at gunpoint or something.
That's right.
Yeah.
Congratulations, James.
That's amazing.
Yes.
It was me patting your wife on the back.
Yeah, that was the coach blessing.
No, not that.
Full of my own smoke.
Yeah.
So I'll just be very vague about this next one.
But there's a guy in the cause, in the movement, who is a content creator, puts in a ton of work, and he's got his first on the way.
It's still early days, but past the crucial threshold that he felt comfortable sharing with some people.
And he, I asked him if I could announce it.
And he said, no, no.
He very grounded guy.
He said, let's wait until it's out.
So no, no names, but extremely happy that another prominent guy, remember I teased those before, guys that had more white life on the way, another one in the hopper square to Adolf Hitler that that's true.
So congratulations, guys.
You'll be able to put the pieces together and figure out.
Yes, and I'm talking about you.
Excellent.
All right.
Yep.
And I have, drum roll, a full house love connection personal ad here from a lady.
Yes, that's right.
She reached out, got in touch via a friend.
And this is her basically, you know, I'm not going to name who she is, but this is out there.
You can email into the show, fullhouseshow at protonmail.com, if this is of interest.
And she was a little self-conscious.
She was like, I don't know how to write a, you know, a person, you know, I've never done this before or whatever, but it's pretty sweet.
And so this is what she wrote.
She said, this just in, single woman with a southern core aesthetic.
Generation Z calls it y'all alternative is on the market.
The package includes slightly above average height, black hair, and a fairy-like bone structure.
I.e., she's not, she put in parentheses, I'm not fat.
Hailing from the southeast United States, doesn't have the heart to leave her swamp.
So she's a southerner, wants to stay.
Iceman need not apply unless you're dying for humidity and fish for dinner.
If you can't bench her, this probably won't work out.
But she's admittedly setting a low bar here.
I see what you did there, ma'am.
Animals, especially dogs and wildlife, are a passion of hers, but fear not.
She is not far from falling.
She's far from falling for the dog mom meme and is still looking forward to potentially having non-fur babies.
Fiercely loyal and open to anything.
She's looking for a man to make her laugh and cherishes women for who they are.
There you go.
So we'll leave it at that.
If you're interested.
Yes, Sam.
Sorry.
No, I'm not sharing her app for you, you salty dog.
All right.
Sam melts at the temperature is above 70, anyways.
We should start doing biddings, dude.
You mean like a meat market?
Yeah, yeah.
Don't forget our pal.
If you have, if we have any listeners in the DC metropolitan area in Northern Virginia, a couple shows back, I won't reread his personal ad, which was really good too.
But yeah, feel free.
I can try, you know, with our newly engaged couple, we just sort of wing that one that we happened to have a perfect woman come forward and we knew a guy who was in that area and it clicked perfectly.
That's probably, you know, it's not going to happen every time.
Don't get over your skis, but just let us know.
We're happy to help.
And the Borzois are an example.
And Jack is an example too, crossing my fingers that you guys are still together.
And how's everything on the dating front, Jackie Boy?
Give us some news from that front.
It's actually going really well.
I'll be there.
I'm actually heading there on Saturday for the next two weeks and some odd days.
So, yeah.
Oh, man.
All right.
So is this serious long distance or minor long distance?
No, I definitely okay.
Yeah.
And so that's going to be a real crucible.
Have you guys spent that much time together before?
We have not.
The most we did was like the four-day weekend that we spent together during the Fourth of July weekend.
Okay.
Yeah.
Two weeks.
You could really get on each other's nerves if you're not careful, or it could be like awesome and blissful and filled with lots of romps.
So I'm going to go with the latter because it's just mainly going to be us talking about like flat earth nephilum and stuff like that.
So it'll be good.
Go get her, Jack.
Yeah.
I did see one angry commenter be like, don't let Jack bring you that conspiracy stuff to Full House.
This is, this is my happy place.
But you did say that you're not actually a flat earther, or am I blowing up your spot?
Do you have a no?
I wasn't a flat earther until about like a year ago.
Like before I was like sphere cuckoo earth.
Johnny sent me like two books.
It looked like grand total, like 1400 pages.
And I've gone through them and I can't disprove it.
Oh, all right.
Mute your microphone.
The grown-ups here are going to talk for the rest of the show.
Jack that way.
Oh, God.
I have to cut myself out.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
Yeah, I know.
He's like, screw you, coach.
I can just like delete this recording right now and all your work goes poof up in smoke.
The only thing that's going to be released is me talking about flat earth.
Jokes on you.
All right.
Hey, what can I tell you, folks?
You know, you deal with the talent that presents itself and steps up to the plate to help produce.
Although I am going to get some lessons on editing soon.
A friend is going to put together a little seminar on audio editing because I've been doing these recordings for the Voices of the Past project.
Just got a new degrill is going to drop soon.
And my second William Luther Pierce thing.
It's awe-inspiring and a little intimidating to bring those guys back, but they're such good writers that they really make the job easier.
And when I slip over a word or maybe mispronounce something, I'm like so ashamed.
I'm like, oh, that was not very Aryan or national socialist of you to make a mistake, right?
But hey, that's what we got out of it.
Like semi-assisted with that whole project of putting together like the how-to-edit audio thing, especially with like Leon deGrett.
Like, it's really hard not to do all my necronormic cons on him.
Sure, it's really hard.
Yeah, yeah.
The toughest thing for me was like, all right, am I doing the authentic German pronunciation or the anglicized version, like von Manstein?
I was like, the first one I was like, von Manstein, and then I was like, von Manstein, you know, the total American accent.
So make it work.
Sammy Baby's got some stories in the hopper, but I got one here that I think will be good to chew on.
Question from the audience.
And nobody else has read this except for me.
And I intentionally left my mind more blank than usual so as to, yeah, just have this be fresh and live.
This is from DC.
He asks, or he says, I was married for 12 years, had two kids in the process, and at the age of 40, found myself divorced and financially struggling, being a sole provider and now having to support two households.
I started dating once again and got remarried to a lady that had two children.
I'm in a much better place financially now, and things will only get better when my alimony obligation terminates next year after eight long years.
That's that's interesting.
I want to revisit that in terms of, I don't know if we even know standard alimony terms.
I presume it's until the kids are out of the house, but who knows until they're 18.
All right.
So you're not on the hook to support the old battle axe in perpetuity, just while she has kids under the roof.
It's usually pretty rare for like normal guys to have to pay alimony, you know.
Right, because alimony is the installment payments.
When you see these trillionaires get divorced and the uh and the woman gets half, that's just like the estate split up.
He's not cutting her checks every month.
Right.
But here's the question: Can I get your guys' opinion on attempting to have another child at nearly 50 years of age for me and 48 for my new wife?
Have two kids, but not together.
Yeah.
Sam's like, oh, exciting.
Yeah.
Get down.
Our oldest is 18.
The youngest is 13.
To anyone going through a divorce, it gets better.
Should you ever want to do another show on the topic, feel free to reach out.
I have a great grasp on the topic.
Thanks in Advanced DC.
So go ahead, Sam.
First chop at it.
Well, yeah, I mean, unfortunately, it's sad that people do need to know about this.
And you could be doing everything right.
You could suddenly find yourself in this kind of a predicament.
And it's tough, you know, especially if you believe like we believe, you know, you are altruistic and you believe in family and marriage and all that type of thing.
But it takes two, as they say, to tango.
And the biggest thing is don't give up.
And there's always hope.
Don't give up hope.
That's the biggest thing right there.
And definitely, if you can have a child at 50, go for it.
Yeah.
And hey, the reality is that at that advanced maternal age, she is going to be more likely to have birth defects.
But I say go for it, brother.
Yeah, but the correct.
I mean, well, 40, 48, 48, 48 is definitely, you know, in the past, Sam, I poo-pooed, you know, my wife is 40 and I'm worried about having a retarded child.
No, get out of here.
Yeah.
It's like a slightly elevated risk.
And well, at 48, I would say it's going to be difficult to have a child, but definitely try.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
If at first you don't succeed, try again.
Yeah.
Keep trying until it gets boring.
And even then keep trying.
Yeah.
Yep.
You have our blessings on making the sign of the cross.
Not at all sarcastically or disrespectfully.
DC, go forth and try for new white life.
And yeah, and presumably she's on board too.
And I would just say, you know, make sure you get all that the full diagnostic set.
We talked about Down syndrome babies in an earlier show.
And I think the consensus was if you get, you know, you find out that you have a Downs baby in there, it's up to you.
I would completely understand someone not wanting to be committed to that for their lifetime.
But as I think it was JO at the time who said, like, there are very good, decent, functioning Down syndrome kids who are very special in their families' lives.
So we're not so eugenic that, yeah, we're just saying get rid of them all.
But not even to spook you, DC.
Just go forth.
Good luck.
And if you conceive, let us know.
You can come on the show.
I don't know.
Well, we should probably talk about divorce too, but we'll say you can come on to talk divorce and conceiving at close to 50 for her and 50 for you if you make it happen.
So hopefully, like our younger friends who found out they were pregnant right after that nice event, that you'll have some luck there too.
Sam, I will stop there.
And I will, yeah.
So in the second, we ran, we ran long in the first half.
We got navigating the collapse coming.
I wanted to talk about Afghanistan and the census with Borzoi to get his analysis.
I can do that myself, but maybe we'll save it.
Maybe we'll hit it while it's fresh.
But by all means, drop the best story that you got in the hopper or whatever you got cooking.
Yeah, just real quick.
I mean, these are just a couple of quick little blurbs, and then I would be very interested to hear what you have to say about Afghanistan.
So this is a, I'll just put this in the category of a boomer moment.
First, number one, I am not a boomer, not by age, and nor am I a spiritual boomer.
And he's not defensive about it either.
No.
So, but I'm close to that age, but I am not a boomer.
So, but now, so I've been going to the same barber since I got my first haircut as a baby.
And all of my children also got their first haircuts at the same barber shop where I also received my first haircut from the same barber.
And so I've been going there a very long time and have very sentimental feelings about it.
And also, as I've been in adulthood, these guys are very based, shall we say.
And I'm not going to put anything on them, but let me just say that I've lit up that shop more than once with my repartee, shall we say?
Hot takes repertoire.
Hot takes, yeah, hot takes.
So, but in recent times, the oldest barber there who actually gave me my first haircut, he is actually for a while.
He's been out of the game, shall we say.
And the other barber that has been there a long time, he has been there and they took on another guy.
So they continue to have the two.
But then that guy recently had some health problems and he's an older man and he's out of the game.
And well, the remaining barber who himself has been there over 15 years, I've been knowing him and going there.
But, well, he couldn't sustain it by himself in that particular place and their lease was up and so forth.
So he, you know, the shop where I've been going for so many years closed, which was sad.
But so he said, though, he said, I'm trying to get on at this other place.
And he said, within a couple of weeks, I will notify you by text.
I gave him my phone number.
I said, I want to keep in touch with you.
And hey, you know, you've been my barber a long time.
I want to keep going.
So he says, definitely within a certain amount of time, I will, I will let you know what's going on.
So sure enough, he notified me.
He said, yep, I'm over at this place now and you can make your appointments and so forth.
And okay, great.
And, but so the boomer moment comes in.
So it was like a mass text to a whole bunch of guys.
Of course.
And then I started getting all the text from the guys, you know, from like all these guys because they're boomers.
They don't realize you got to reply just to the guy that sent it to you.
Just like reply all.
Reply all.
Yeah.
So I'm getting all these texts from all these different guys.
So it was kind of, I said, boomer.
Awesome.
Yeah, you got to find a new barbershop now, too.
That's the most important thing.
Well, no, I'm going to the same guy.
He's just at a different place.
Oh, well, yeah, new place.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's just, and it's, it's not exactly convenient.
And even where they were before was not exactly convenient for me.
But, you know, I've been going there since such a long time.
So I just stuck with him.
In fact, I'm going to go there tomorrow.
So there's that.
And then the other quick story I wanted to tell was my youngest son.
He's been getting the, you know, the lift waffle bug, the weightlifting.
Yeah, gym rad.
Yeah.
Because I have my own routine.
I've talked about on the show a little bit.
I like things like boxing.
I like jumping rope.
I like to do pull-ups and push-ups.
I have a curl bar out in the garage.
I'll do some curling.
It's not that I'm against weightlifting or anything like that.
It's just, it's only occupies so much of my own personal workout.
You and I are on the same page on that.
Yeah.
My eyes glazed when I see guys doing like, oh, two times 12 at whatever.
I'm like, I don't know what that means.
I don't really care.
You know, it's probably not going to be something.
It's like just not my thing, you know, and there's nothing wrong with it.
I used to have a friend many years ago.
He considered himself a bodybuilder and I would lift with him.
I don't mind doing it.
It's just, I find the other stuff a little more interesting, you know, like I've said, the natural rhythm of the body, the movement, you know, put some music on.
You move with the music and stuff.
But anyways, my son, he's catching on as in this last year or so as he's gotten a little bit older teenager.
And he's, so he's, I have some cinder blocks out there and I'll set up the curl bar and then I'll do some curls.
So he's been doing it too.
And he started saying, you know, I'd kind of like to do some weightlifting.
So I'm thinking, well, I don't know, you know, I'm kind of averse to spending money like that.
But, well, anyone, anyways, one of our good local pool party members, well, he put it in the chat, actually, in the Telegram channel.
And he said, hey, anybody interested in a weight set?
And I said, well, yeah, actually.
And because he's known to us locally, I've been to his house and he had kind of a nice set, you know, all steel plates, you know, because what I had in my garage is just like the concrete filled plastic plates.
And so he had the solid steel plates and a nice bench and a nice rack that you could put them on, as well as you could extend the forks on the top where you could do squats and everything like that, too.
So he was going to give this to us.
So I said, hey, heck yeah.
And the thing is, and I don't think he's a listener to the show, but too much because he's a single guy, but he's like a cat guy, shall we say?
And so like everything in his house smells like cats.
So we get the plates and the bench.
And it was a nice set, you know, a couple of nice solid steel bars and all that type of stuff.
And everything smelled like cats.
So my young son and I, we laid it out on the lawn and we were wiping it down with some tea tree oil and cleaning everything off and wiping down the bench and all that.
And so we brought it in, got it set up, and I took a picture of it and sent it to our good friend and said, look at your equipment has got a second life now.
And so my young son, he's been enjoying exploring some of these like bench pressing and things like that.
And it's funny that I think I might have mentioned this on the show.
You know, he's at an age when you're in that teenage years where, you know, one year is a lot of development in your life.
And because I have that Google photos that said, oh, one year ago, you were here at this restaurant.
There was a picture of my son and how one year ago, he, you know, still kind of had the baby fat face.
And, you know, he still looked very childlike.
And how in one year he's kind of really grown up.
And now he's, he's lean and he's got long arms, long legs.
He's very lean and the muscles are starting to pop out.
And so like I said, back when he saw the type of works out, workouts I do, I have a pull-up bar.
I like to do pull-ups.
And so he's been doing pull-ups and then he was doing the curls.
And now he's getting into the bench pressing and doing some of the different exercises.
And, you know, when you're in that age and if you got that type of a body and that kind of lean muscle mass, you get some quick gains and you start to see the results of what you're doing.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
That's awesome, Sam.
Yeah, your baby, your last baby, probably not.
Yeah, he's turning into a man.
It's funny that you say that because I was probably a sophomore in high school.
And when I was a freshman, I was still baby faced.
The tea wasn't quite flowing from down there yet.
And then, but sophomore year, I was starting to bulk and get that little rat stash or whatever.
But you can see, like, I was a kid as a freshman, and I was becoming a man as a sophomore.
And my dad was dropping me off at my buddy's place.
And he got a little choked up because he had gone to see me play soccer.
And he said, you know, coach, looking at you out there on the field, you look more like a man than a boy.
And my dad was total Germanic Nord, like never really lovey W. He's a very loving father, but we didn't talk about feelings or emotions or anything like that.
And of course, as whatever I was then, 14, 15, I kind of cringe like, oh, God, Dad, you know, you're like talking about my development and getting choked up.
Like, this is awkward.
And the funny thing was he was dropping me off at a friend's house for a sleepover for me to go do the most immature thing, which I was supposed to go fight this kid from high school at the baseball field that night, which I did.
I went and like, it was, yeah, it was bad.
I had never really been in a real fight.
And we like wrestled around on the ground.
And I think we both got some licks in on each other.
And then cop car rolled up and we all scrammed.
So, yeah, it was, it was just, you know, that's the phases of life and whatever.
That's great, though, that your son is getting into weightlifting.
Godspeed and yeah, get under there with yourself too.
We went on a hike on the AT two weekends ago with some good guys.
I brought Junior along.
We did 10 and a half miles.
It wasn't too strenuous up and down, but we did the full 10 and then we went back to my buddy's place, which is out in the country.
It was beautiful.
It was a sunny, hot day.
He got the grill going.
He had some cold ones.
My son was totally in his element.
You know, he's one of these kids who's totally fine hanging out with adults.
He's quiet, but he's not like in his phone or in his tablet or whatever.
And then he put on, some of us were sitting on the back of tailgates.
He brought the weight set out to his driveway and put on some screwdriver.
And we all did some bench presses and had some cold ones and we were grilling.
I told him it was like White Friday that we were the scene of, you know, blacks in Compton would always have their like weight sets out in the front yard.
It was awesome.
You know, like at the moment, I was like, oh, this is pretty cool.
And then looking back at like thinking about seeing the scenery, the screwdriver blasting and all of us just having a good time, it was awesome.
You know, there's something very therapeutic about it.
If you're ever having a bad day, like, you know, especially guys who got to get up early and you got to get yourself going, there's that day you're just dragging.
Maybe your attitude is not good.
And maybe something unpleasant is going on at work or you're dreading something.
I don't know what the thing is, but you put on some screwdriver, man.
Your attitude is going to change.
180 days.
Yeah.
My pupils dilated the first time I heard white power.
Yeah.
It will pick you right up.
I don't care what kind of mood you're in.
You put that on, you will see things differently.
Amen.
Take it from Sam.
And he is now officially a DJ.
He's been certified a DJ by the, I don't know, the amateur DJ Politicians of America, White Power Hour.
On Cast Box.
We'll boost that again.
So we've got so many things on the hopper.
We got special guests coming up that will be more thematic focused.
We've talked about that before.
But we can't ignore current events.
And I don't give a damn if it deviates from our mission statement.
But you've got the census report, which I think we will punt on that to next week.
I want Smasher to be able to chew on that.
A little bit more digging on it.
You know, the numbers speak for themselves, but what it means and how it looks going forward is important.
So we'll skip on that.
But Afghanistan is, of course, hot.
Some of you may be sick of this.
It don't matter.
I have some experience in this arena.
And the first thing I wanted to say about it was that this is not, this was not a gay op.
I've seen this was a legitimate Saigon moment.
It wasn't manufactured.
It wasn't, oh, this was all planned to get us out or Biden's corruption with China.
I saw candid, you know, conservatives are so stupid saying that this is somehow, I mean, of course, China is a factor there, but it would imply that the elites, the governing power structure of the United States would like, yes, we're going to, we're going to win by like pouring a bucket of like excrement on top of our heads for the whole world to see.
And this is all part of all part of the master plan, right?
It's, it's just ludicrous.
We were too big to fail, not too big to fail.
We were too, we were not too big to fail, big enough to fail.
There were tears in the hallways of certain federal buildings.
I heard people really upset about the gender programs studies thing that they had worked up for the coming year.
And I'll just go out on a limb here and say that I'm going to give Biden a little bit of credit.
He's anti-white.
He's perfectly happy to see this country turn into a brown blob, but he was against the Afghanistan surge when Obama did it in 2012.
That was major news that he was the sole dissenter on that move, or certainly the most prominent one as the vice president.
And you could see that old doddering man just being like, nope, sorry, Jack, we're getting out.
We're not doing this.
So I give him credit, and I think that's totally 100% true that this was going to happen inevitably.
Sure, maybe they could have finessed it a little bit better, or they could have done this or that.
It was going to happen anyway.
It had to happen eventually.
And I'm glad that we're out.
Now, I'm not going to give too many other hot takes because a friend sent me his analysis of this and why this is a good thing for us.
And I'm going to read this in no particular order.
And he did the work, so I didn't have to.
I agree with most of this, but whatever.
These are his words.
Number one, America will be even less inclined toward foreign intervention than before.
Self-explanatory.
Number two, America's parentheses, Israel's enemies will be emboldened, especially the new ones in the region, as they have now seen that America can be beat and they can reliably count on reaping the benefits of point one.
Yep, the emperor has no clothes, at least in Afghanistan, the world's superpower following in the wake of the Soviet Union 20, 30 years before.
America's allies will be less inclined to support intervention in foreign countries than before, less likely to want to rely on America for protection.
This goes both for Europe and the Middle East.
Number four, the disastrous misjudgment of military intelligence, diplomacy, the press, and the president has seriously weakened their prestige and authority both abroad and at home.
The entire government appears both untrustworthy and incompetent.
Number five, the average Ameriburger is hubristic and arrogant when faced with the cold, hard reality that America lost and did so in a way that makes them a laughing stock for the rest of the world.
This stokes anger at the current regime.
Number six, this is to say nothing of the anger currently felt by former servicemen and the families of fallen soldiers.
Number seven, there's 14 of these appropriately.
Falling neatly in line with the commonly known prophecy, read meme, of Afghanistan being a graveyard of empires, the idea is now planted in the heads of normies of America as an entity capable of critical failure failing.
This is actually becoming a subject of discussion, whereas before it was taken as an unthinkable.
It is foolish to underestimate the impact of this.
And I should add that this is all in the context of guys arguing whether this even matters.
You know, what did we really lose?
The system will move on.
And the system will roll on, right?
Like Saigon did not bring down the American government.
It sort of went dormant on foreign interventions for 30 years for a generation until it sprang back to life.
Now, I don't think the United States has that kind of a shelf life, but we'll see.
Let's see.
Number nine, no more quagmire to sink military bucks and white lives into.
That is no small point, right?
White men will not be dying in Afghanistan anymore.
Number 10, no more Afghan opium, meaning the opiate crisis will be harder to sustain.
Now, that assumes that the Taliban is actually going to shut down opium production.
Knowledgeable heads said, eh, they were still growing poppies and dealing.
Others say, no, they actually did seriously cut back.
We'll see.
There's a very real chance that globalist reporters could get detained by the Taliban or even redacted.
Very edgy, but yes, there are some bad people who will suffer consequences as a result of the boys coming back in town.
More military equipment in the hands of Israel's enemies.
This is getting spicier as we go along.
Number 13, Israel will have to play it way less aggressively in the area because of the aforementioned points.
Eh, we'll see.
And number 14, it's comfy to watch.
You may quibble with any or even many of the points I made, but the overall effect is undeniable.
This was good for white nationalists and good for the world.
So thank you, friend, for putting in the work there.
And I don't agree with all of that, but go ahead, Sam.
Well, I'll just, I saw this on the channel thing.
Yeah.
No Taliban ever ran all the banks in my country.
No Taliban ever flooded my hometown with Africans.
No Taliban ever encouraged my daughter to get on OnlyFans.
No Taliban ever called me a domestic terrorist.
No Taliban ever tried to turn my kids gay.
Yep.
That's what it's come to.
And our enemies are not outside of this country.
And there are valid points that it is, you can be meme-y and say it's a bad look to be, you know, either, you know, literally or figuratively supportive of some Islamic fundamentalists.
But the point remains, that territory has been a battlefield for millennia.
Victory goes to those who are willing to put it all on the line.
And the fact that those fabulously supplied and fabulously enriched locals either put down their guns right away at the first sign of trouble or high tailed it out of the country.
They said that President Ghani fled with $126 million, something like that, some ungodly amount of money in his helicopter, how to leave money bags on the tarmac.
I don't know if that's true or not, but it seems feasible.
We've seen leaders do that all the time.
Yep.
And you're going to be labeled the terrorist anyways.
Yeah, it's not our country.
Don't want to see our boys dying there anymore.
And this, like I said at the top, that is a serious knock to the system's competency and ability to intimidate at least overseas.
And yes, they were already like this whole withdrawal, like Trump sort of played footsie with it and was trying to do it delicately and do it smartly.
You could probably argue that his plan was better than Biden's, like just pulling the plug, but it don't matter.
And they were already pivoting to us to target us before January 6th, dating back to Seville and before withdrawal from Afghanistan was even a glimmer in some president's eye.
So don't, yeah, don't get too memey.
Don't overthink these things.
Sometimes a collapse, sometimes a failure really is a failure, and it's not part of some masterstroke.
You buy that, Jack, or do you think this is all puppeteered from behind the scenes?
I guess it depends on what level of puppeteer you mean.
Sure.
I'm sure there is legitimacy behind the Taliban, but at the same time, us leaving all those weapons, vehicles, aircraft, et cetera, et cetera.
That's definitely a gay op.
So it's a mix of both.
It is incomprehensible to think all those rifles and hardware that they left behind.
You know what?
Knowing what we know about the arrogance of our elites and their belief in their ability to blend dozens of races and ethnicities and languages together into something that works or to be able to remake the cultural and gender outlook of a largely rural, poor, and fundamentalist Islamic society.
I mean, and yeah, that's the real question.
Do they actually believe their own BS or is it all just chaos stuff?
And I think you have the second and third tier and backbenchers who have actually bought into the top-down messaging.
Whereas the guys really calling the shots who are for whom money is no object or whatever, they, you know, it's the old line.
Who knows the score?
Jews and Nazis.
So for them, chaos is okay.
It's just something to be managed, right?
They are not omnipotent and omniscient, but they are willing.
They have no shame and they will take L's across the board and do Jew jitsu to turn them into W's, however it ends up.
So that is their special skill.
So yeah, I guess the real test is going to be because I saw tonight that they said they're going to start their own currency or whatever.
So if we end up invading them, it's like, okay, it was a gay op the whole time.
And if or would it be vice versa?
If they started.
Yeah, look out, Gaddafi lesson.
Yeah.
Start your own currency, not worried about the IMF.
We'll see if, yeah, if they get some, yeah, if the next strain is like the Kabul strain or whatever, then UNS and his theory that COVID-19 was actually an American bioweapon.
Then you give that a second look.
Implying germ theory.
Yeah, exactly.
But I'm staking my clout here that the United States is not going to re-invade Afghanistan or go back in there with any appreciable number of troops.
They're just trying to get people the hell out.
And then we'll be looking at, yeah, another, hopefully another few decades or forever before we start to just breaking things and leaving them a shambles and then scurrying away with our tails, you know, tucked between our legs.
Yeah.
I mean, I did see today that Biden decides like, oh, well, we're going to have to have to airstrike all of the equipment we left behind because I guess everything looked so terribly bad.
We need to bomb our bombs or we need to shoot up our guns.
Yeah.
So I don't think we'll ever really have ground troops, but I think the, I guess you could say the black pill is like, oh, yeah, nice.
Our guys are out of the Middle East because we didn't need to be there.
That's great, right?
At least they're going somewhere else.
With the gay op that happened today, yeah, no, that was pretty much like the green light to give them the go-ahead to use the military.
Oh, sure.
Yeah, yeah, or the Library of Congress putative bomber.
Yeah.
Regardless of whether or not he was a Fed, a Fed informant, or just like manipulated by a Fed, it doesn't matter.
What matters is the outcome.
And that's probably going to be what the outcome is, especially when you got guys like Stephen Colbert saying like the January 6th protesters are like the Taliban of America.
Like they put it out.
Jimmy Francis audience celebrating fewer white people.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Well, we'll see, right?
If they memory hole it, then it wasn't useful to them or it wasn't perfectly in keeping with what they want to do.
As you know, I'm more inclined to believe that that guy was mentally ill, but it's certainly not inconceivable that he was, you know, whether he was mind effed by Q, which was certainly an op that counts, right?
Whether he was mind F by the number of drugs that are readily available dirt cheap to Americans across the country, that still makes it technically a gay op, right?
Or if he was just a normal guy who consumed too much media and went crazy, you can split the difference and be like, he was influenced by this sick society, the drugs that are coursing through it, and social media and all the rest of it.
I watched some of that video, and you know me, I'm more inclined to just be like, that guy was bipolar or schizophrenic and broke than there was some puppeteer there, you know, telling him what to say, whispering in his ear.
I mean, the way I look at it, it's like, why not all the above?
Because the feds do go after the people with the mental disabilities, like schizophrenics and stuff like that, because they're more impressionable.
They can use them.
They'll fall in line and pretty much do what they got to say.
So that's why I'm inclined to believe there is some sort of Fed influence while I don't have any evidence to prove it.
Doesn't matter.
But just basing it off, you know.
The theory is credible.
The theory is credible, which is in some cases good enough.
And it's also credible that he was mentally ill and snapped as a result of the sick society that our elites have allowed to exist and metastasize and get worse and worse every year.
Yeah.
And the timing is just, I don't believe in coincidences.
Like the timing of all of this, like if this were to happen at a random time when there's nothing really else going on with foreign policy, I'd be like, okay, maybe it's a guy who snapped, but with this whole fiasco going on, it's like, no, this was a KOP.
Yep.
And yeah, handy timing and, you know, MK Ultra came to mind with him sort of mouthing the things, you know, that he was upset about the Taliban.
But that's also TV and people just regurgitating what they're told.
So reminder for the audience, if somebody encourages you to do something that is even murky on the legal side, view it with extraordinary skepticism and suspicion because that's how they do it.
They worm their way in and try to get you to do a gun mod or to cheat on your taxes or illegally apply for this or that.
And you don't have that luxury.
Don't give them the stupid, dumb win.
They will hunt.
Yeah, they're looking to put points on the board to make whites look bad and justify their budgets and get their promotions and stuff like that.
So just be lawful.
That's not ironic.
It's to keep your ass out of jail and available to make new white life, among other contributions.
Yeah, you're a white person.
You're under a microscope.
Just don't give them a reason.
Yeah.
That doesn't mean you have to be an ostrich and just go about your life as a dumb, cowardly normie.
But, you know, what was the leak that there's like 20 million Americans now on the everybody's like, can I check myself on that database that leaked, right?
Oh, there's 20 million Americans, not just like on the no-fly list or the official suspects of like not being loyal enough to the people that want to destroy you.
And yeah, everybody in our cause is like, so can I check that?
Can I see if I'm on the list?
Yeah, I'm not even going to bother control effing and trying to find myself because I already know I'm on there probably.
All right.
Yeah.
There you go.
You're peacocking now.
Yeah.
I'm on the list for sure.
I hope Sam's not on the list.
I'll be upset if I'm not on the list, actually.
Yeah.
Anyway, yeah, I think Stryker put out, he was like, if you have access to this list, please send it to me.
Yeah, I don't know the details, but.
All right.
Let's uh last call for comments, gents, before we go to navigating the collapse and landing this show with three survivors.
Go for it.
All right, let's do it.
Hit it, Jackie Boy.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
There are a lot of useful tips and information to learn on the internet.
Unfortunately, a lot of them don't translate well to audio format in a digestible and rememberable way without visual aids like pictures, graphs, and diagrams.
I'll still keep an eye out, but to supplement this section, I'll add information about lesser known historical periods and events that our listeners may find interesting or useful.
When Mussolini rose to power, he had to contend with one of the most long-standing forces of corruption in Sicily, the mafia.
The mafia operated as a state within a state, imposing taxes and penalties on the local population, requiring fees to return stolen goods, and stamping out any who would threaten their rule.
While often glamorized in America, the Sicilian mafia preyed on the working class and farmers just as much as landowners and the wealthy.
They frequently stole livestock, kidnapped family members, and enforced their rule through rape and murder.
Of course, for a fascist government, this is unacceptable, and so Mussolini appointed Cesare Mori, a retired policeman, to deal with the problem.
In a telegram, Mussolini wrote, Your Excellency has carte blanche.
The authority of the state must absolutely, I repeat, absolutely be re-established in Sicily.
Should the laws currently in effect hinder you, that will be no problem.
We shall make new laws.
Mori would go on to use lightning strike tactics against the mafia, gathering evidence discreetly for months before arresting as many as 500 mafioso in one night.
11,000 arrests were credited to Mori during his four years in Palermo, and his actions earned him the nickname the Iron Prefect.
His crackdown led to many mafia members fleeing to America, including Carlo Gambino and Joseph Bonanno.
After his many victories, he was nominated as a senator, where he served for 13 years.
He died in 1942 after publishing an account of his deeds in The Last Struggle with the Mafia.
His life has inspired a movie, a miniseries, and several books.
Unfortunately, his achievements did not last.
When the Allied forces invaded Sicily, crime soared, the black market thrived, prisoners escaped, and nearly all institutions previously upheld were decimated.
The loyal fascist politicians were deposed and the occupying Allies appointed replacements, many of whom turned out to be mafia members.
Since then, the mafia has caused thousands of deaths through murders, bombings, and terrorist attacks, and is still active today.
It was recently estimated that one Italian mafia family controlled 80% of the cocaine entering into Europe.
Prime ministers, mayors, and migrant reception centers have all had proven links with the mafia, and their power will continue to grow until a man like Mori rises again.
Here are his words from the last struggle with the mafia.
I think I have now said enough to express the problem of public safety in Sicily in its proper terms.
And if I have attempted to trace the causes of the state of things revealed, I have certainly not intended to assign the responsibility for it.
I should never think of putting on a judge's robes, which I have no title or right to assume.
Men of action make facts, but do not judge them.
They realize how easy it is to be wise after the event.
Those who preceded me on this rough road, often staining it with their blood, though ennobling it with their courage, all had one common single aim, the aim of duty.
What caused the undoubted efforts made in the past to peter out was a feeling of listlessness in the minds of the people, which seemed refractory even to unusual stimulants.
It was not a reality, it was not a fact, but a feeling.
Yet the past was infected and dominated by it until the day when, on the coming of fascism, the Duce in person broke the evil spell.
That was in May 1924.
Mussolini came to the island, made personal contact with the people, and though he had never been there before, in a week reached such an understanding of Sicily's soul, needs, and grievances as no statesman had ever reached.
Moreover, he made himself understood.
He told Sicily, publicly and solemnly, what no statesman had ever told her, and for the first time Sicily felt that she too was understood.
The people asked above all for security, tranquility, and freedom to work.
Mussolini promised these things fully and immediately.
The hour of liberation had come.
In the name and by the will of the Duce, action was at last going to be taken.
Thus it was that, called to the honor of taking part in it, I returned to Sicily for the third time.
My point of view is very simple.
I have never believed that the abnormality of the conditions of public safety in Sicily constituted, in itself, a problem peculiar to the island.
I do not say that there was no problem, but it lay in the state of things, in men's minds.
It lay not in what took place, but in the views held about it.
It lay not in the dynamics of criminal offensive, but in the stasis of social defense.
This is the only explanation of the fact that such a local, degenerate institution as the mafia could have prevailed over the conception of the state to the point of creating a state within the state.
A regime within a regime.
The regime of the mafia, that is, with its own laws, its own tributes of money and blood, and its own penal sanctions, which completely dominated and exploited the activities of the island, insulting the state and greatly injuring the people, who, with no liberty of choice, the real state being distant and inert, and the other state near at hand and operative, had to bow to the latter and submit to its yoke.
One thing at any rate was certain, that there was a permanent excess of criminal activity.
Here, as I said at the beginning, lay the real problem.
The excess in itself, although unusual, was a common occurrence, observable in all countries and in all times and due to a thousand different reasons, which either by natural exhaustion or the result of intervention from without, pass away.
The problem lay not in the existence, but in the permanence of this excess.
It was due to historical causes and particularly the introduction of liberal ideas into a society that was unprepared for them.
The old vice-regal penal system, though harsh, had been an organic and adequate whole.
But the new laws based on the new ideas were inadequate in their action, since the local conditions, indispensable to their effectiveness, did not yet exist.
Moreover, the more liberal tone of the law appeared to the island masses, still uneducated as they were, an inexplicable confession of weakness.
This made the failure of state action inevitable at the outset, and this was particularly serious in its depressing effects upon the minds of the people.
Failure ensued, reiterated, persistent, and incurable.
The people were left defenseless and realized their position.
Every man, seeing that the evil persisted, took what steps he could to assure his own interests.
Those who were opposed or threatened came to terms with the criminals.
Those who had money paid to be left alone, purchasing security for themselves and their property from the very people who threatened them.
And the state found itself excluded from the relations between the sufferers and the malefactors.
The mafia took its place.
The country, forced into silence, remained shut into itself, opposing a systematic mutism to investigatory action.
What should have been a collaboration in mutual confidence between the authorities and the sufferers was perverted into a source of mutual distrust.
The authorities said that it was impossible to act against crime because not only did the people refuse to help them, but the very sufferers favored the evildoers instead of cooperating with justice.
The people and the sufferers on their side retorted that it was useless and dangerous to collaborate with the authorities, since the latter could not defend them from the attacks and the reprisals of the criminals.
Thus, there was a vicious cycle, which amounts to saying that nothing was done.
It was a simple question of will, but not everybody saw it so.
Reluctance to undertake responsibility, sentimentality, and legal formalism needed to be overcome.
Either the organs of state action needed to be strengthened with opportune legal provisions, or the tendency to legal formalism and jealousy of the executive needed to be overcome by giving full reign to bold initiative.
For my own part, though in these matters I respect the sanctity of law, I am, and have always been, for granting free initiative.
naturally within the limits of the law, but regarding the law as a guiding principle, not as an obstacle to action.
Thank you Nathaniel Scott for making your grand return with some surprising content about the mafia and anti-mafia actions.
I guess it's not surprising either.
Yeah, the mafia has been so glorified in a sordid sort of way via Hollywood, big surprise.
And of course, there were tons of Jews doing illegal things for, with, and in the mafia that they romanticized that.
And it really has had a negative impact on the culture, right?
All those movies making it look cool, being bad, being anti-system, and a little pushback is justified.
And never trust a Sicilian when life is on the line is a lesson from a Jewish movie, The Princess Bride, and still applies to those guys.
So thank you, buddy.
I'm glad to have you back in the saddle.
And I can tease that Nathaniel Scott has a monster navigating the collapse in the hopper for a future show.
It's so expansive that I don't even know.
Yeah, he's like trying to monopolize the second hour.
It's going to be the Natscot second hour.
So we'll either put that out as a separate brief segment on the RSS on Libsyn, or we will just tap it in if we really want to put our feet up on the table for a second hour sometime soon.
All right.
All right.
Go around the horn, Sammy Baby.
Thank you for being the glorious sexy white soldier that you are.
Didn't plan to say that, but out it came.
What a great show, Borzois, and all the good discussion we had.
I'm glad to be here.
Hell yeah.
Bless you and your family.
And Jackie Boy, thank you for navigating us through these I.T. troubled waters.
Oh, hey, you know, learning along the way.
It was actually kind of interesting hearing Borzette's story of how they kind of all met.
I'm just like, huh, that sounds kind of similar to my story with my G. Exactly.
Maybe there is a program underway.
Yeah.
Got your noggin jogging.
Really makes you think.
Jack, remember to get a fresh haircut.
Check those teeth.
Make sure they're pearly white.
If not, get some whitening strips.
Cut those nails.
Pack your best clothes.
Maybe do a little bit other personal grooming, et cetera, and have a blast with hopefully your future bride when you go to see her.
Way ahead of you.
He's got a checklist.
He's going down the checklist.
All right.
Good stuff.
Rose checklist.
Thank you, guys.
Who would take a checklist to this?
Oh, he really does care for her, ladies and gents.
He's really thinking this one.
I remember those days.
I used to get, I was like, all right, I'm going to see my girlfriend.
This is serious.
That was, you know, my now wife going to visit her when we did long distance for a brief spell.
Full House episode 98 was recorded during the waning days of summer, August 19th, now August 20th, 2021.
Follow us at Telegram on Telegram at ProWhiteFam.
And remember to use web.telegram.org if you're on Apple products.
Download the app direct to your laptop for uncensored stuff.
And if you have Android, get it direct from Telegram.
Don't use the app through the Google Play Store.
Drop us a line, fullhouse show at protonmail.com and follow us on gab at gab.com/slash fullhouse, where you can make hay with social engagement approaching Twitter levels if you put in a little bit of effort.
Experienced that recently.
So to all newly expecting white parents who may be considering the home birth option, be careful.
Consider all your options.
And yeah, consider that sort of happy medium compromise that the Borzois and Sam talked about where you do the home birthing center that happens to be attached to a hospital.
Seems like a happy marriage to me.
And to all content creators worried that they might never get that QT waifo waifu, just look at Borzoi and our very own Jack as examples that yes, magic can happen.
This week, Jackie Boy, please take us out to one that I hope doesn't trigger our audience too much.
I don't think it will.
It's a slick song, but we'll see.
And it's just perfect for this time of year and recording the show.
I can hear the crickets out there, but the leaves are starting to fall.
And this is, of course, Summer's Almost Gone by the Doors.
Oh, God.
Laurel Canyon, CIA, and all that.
Don't care.
It's a good, good song by Jim Morrison and the gang.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
Camera going on.
The wooden doors.
Was it Laurel Canyon that was the like supposed CIA op with the musicians and all that?
Implying supposedly.
There you go.
You know, it was.
All right.
Yeah, I got it right.
Anyway, it joy's comers almost gone.
We love you, fam.
Talk to you next week.
Summer's almost gone Summer's almost gone Almost gone.
Yeah, it's almost gone.
Where will we be when the summer's gone?
Morning found us calmly unaware new burn gold into our hair at night.
We swim the laughing sea when summer's gone.
There will wait.
New burn gold into our head, and night we swim the laughing sea.
When summer's gone, where will we be?
Summer's almost gone.
Summer's almost gone.
We had some good times, But they're gone.
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