America is far better endowed with expensive toys and funny money than the classic collapsing empires.
But its rulers are far less competent.
Our population is now a grab bag of savage warring tribes.
Thanks, Jews.
Each of whom require increasing bribes in exchange for docility.
America has several deathly serious and competent ascendant enemies with axes to grind.
and had the genius strategy of making enemies of Russia and China simultaneously.
While Land of the Free, Home of the Brave, is now just a sad joke to the extent it's even still mentioned.
This zombie nation is also impossibly indebted and faces a score of other existential problems, from an endless perpetrated psychosis over COVID, to an unending invasion, both legal and illegal, to the fresh, bloody Afghanistan debacle, to an open sewer, gay, tranny, race-mixing culture with obesity and opioid epidemics on the side, to an increasingly furious and oppressed,
declining white majority.
You know, the people who made this country run for two centuries.
And something close to half the electorate doesn't even think the last election was legitimate.
The leader is senile.
Everyone hates his empty pantsuit second in command.
His most prominent opponent is 75 and failed the first time around and was last seen flailing around in South Florida, mostly censored off the internet.
The legislature is as despised as the media.
And Jews are in ever more positions of authority to maintain control or manage what increasingly resembles a mafia-style national bustout.
No, dear listener, I would not bet on this experiment continuing as is for another decade or two, TOPS.
Yet our people have always looked upward for inspiration and strength in dark times like these.
And this week we have on a former preacher who once dedicated his life to the faith to talk Christianity and now also white pride worldwide.
So, Mr. Producer, let's upturn some tables.
Welcome, everyone, to episode 99 of Full House, the world's least religious infighting show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am your stubbornly skeptical, yet respectful host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours designed to inform, inspire, and light some fires.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to our main man, Narco, for his support of the show this week.
He is not actually a Narco, so far as we know.
And also to our pal, AK, for his generous support.
Also, a warm welcome to all new listeners of Full House from Gab.
That's right, after our Telegram censorship, I dusted off the old Gab account for more than just show shilling.
And what do you know?
You put in some effort over there and you get some engagement.
Imagine that.
They got a lively community over there.
So check us out at gab.com slash fullhouse for more than just show updates.
And consider supporting Gab as well.
Go Gab Pro or whatever they're asking for, because they have been through a lot and have remained staunch free speech advocates and defenders.
All right, enough of me.
Let's get on to the birth panel.
First up, he's been so busy making new white life, raising it well, going to church, living devoutly, and studying the saints that I say he's working up toward a little sainthood of his own in the new order.
Sam, hell.
Wow, that's a tall order right there.
Very nice.
Thank you, Coach.
Hey, I meant sincerely.
I know it's, you know, it's a tall praise, but, you know, keep at it.
Don't get cocky now.
Thank you.
Thank you.
No, that's great.
Hey, Coach, did you listen to Smasher on modern politics?
As always, yes.
I started, but I didn't finish it because it's a video, right?
I just can't stay at my screen.
Yep.
Yeah.
No, I'm saying I just listened to it as audio, but I got probably down to the last three minutes or so and I had to stop it.
But very moving.
I recommend all listeners go and listen to it.
It's so moving.
I mean, the way he's talking about his family and his wife and his children and everything, it'll put a lump in your throat.
I'm telling you, it'll hit you right in the feels.
That was really, really great.
Good man, Sam, because yeah, I totally wasn't getting him any credit for that.
As one of the commenters said, Smasher sounds a lot more intelligent and less autistic on camera.
So, you know, a dig and a compliment there.
Definitely.
So, and last week we had our gig, outdoor gig very successfully.
We didn't have any problem from the, you know, Negroes or anything around or the police and gave away a lot of great books.
I mean, I got into a really good box because I was looking at, I came out with this book, Jewish Ritual Murder.
Have you ever heard of this one?
Very interesting book.
Gave it away to somebody.
And another one, The Epic of Gilgamesh, which is very interesting from a Christian standpoint.
So I was a little nervous.
You know, anytime we play out, I'm always concerned that we're going to have some problems, but there were no problems at all.
And well attended and well enjoyed, great fellowship and good music was enjoyed.
Yeah.
Can't wait to go to the next one or one in the future, Sam.
And before the show, I just happened to be looking through my calendar over the next couple months and I realized something and it made me think of you.
For the next two, almost three months, literally every single weekend of this glorious fall that's approaching, I have either a movement or cause related event to attend or possibly attend or an essential biofam thing like a birthday or an anniversary.
We got the Big 15 coming up this year.
Probably should start planning for that.
Is it paper plates and plastic spoons for your 15th anniversary?
I read that.
Tear falls down my wife's eyes.
She's like, he's not joking.
That's old school right there because I mean, you could look that up.
I remember seeing in my parents' house the different things like my father, he would get my mother for different anniversaries, like, you know, whatever it was, paper, wood, or something else.
You know, I mean, that's really old school there.
Yep.
Real quick, one thing that my parents did, I might as well share it now.
I find it kind of touching is that every anniversary since they were married, you know, they got, I guess my dad got my mom a card or vice versa.
And they have saved every single one of those cards and just framed them in little frames on one wall in their house.
So you can literally go and see how many years they're married by how many cards are up on the wall, which I give my old man or my mom.
I don't know whose idea it was credit for that.
Yeah, my, my mother is much the same way.
She retained all the things from my babyhood and childhood and her life as far as with the family and marriage and all that.
My father died kind of early in life, so that they didn't have a lot of anniversaries together.
But yeah, that's something that is kind of a lost art, you know, is the archiving of family things.
Exactly.
Don't get me started with the guilt about not printing out photos, you know, looking through your photo scrolls and seeing all these gorgeous photos.
Oh, man, I don't even remember that one.
My wife is like, for 16 cents a print, you know, it's not expensive like it used to be.
Just print out a whole slew and pick them up at whatever store and throw them in an album.
I'll tell you what, Coach, I'm going to send you some photos because while we were at the gig, one of the persons there, he said to me, hey, you got some pictures of yourself, you know, as a young skinhead and everything.
I said, you know, I haven't retained a lot of photos just because I always thought it was like such a pain in the neck to, okay, stop the party.
Let's all pose, you know, no, no, one more, one more.
You know, it's like such a pain in the neck.
And also just kind of the bittersweet thing.
And my mother has pictures of me all through the 80s and 90s.
So I went over to her house and collected some photos.
You will laugh when I show you these, me as a late teenager and early 20s.
I look like a, you know, I feel I look like I'm 12 years old.
But it was, you know, and it is kind of a bittersweet thing because, you know, as the longer you live, there's a life is a lot about pain as well as joy.
So I'm going to send you those.
Good deal.
And thanks for always being upbeat and optimistic, Sam.
Overcoming that melancholy.
It's an inspiration to us all.
Thank you.
Yeah, you were talking about you took the test, you know, and you came out melancholic with the choleric secondary.
Secondary.
And that's the same way that I tested.
And I'll tell you what that's from.
You're a true melancholic probably like me, but life teaches you lessons.
And people, for instance, who work with me and things like that, they would say, like, if you tried to tell them these things, they would say like, he's not a mellow guy.
What are you talking about?
That's right.
Because you acquire that.
Like life does that to you.
And I learned to be intense, you might say, through my work life and through, you know, just life experiences.
But the underneath is that melancholic thing.
So people do change or take on some of those other characteristics through life.
And maybe the same is true for you.
Absolutely.
And with the just real quick before Smasher punches his microphone in frustration and not mention our very patient guest, you know, people don't believe when I tell them that I was or maybe still am to some extent an introvert.
There he is.
It wasn't until white nationalism and racism incorporated that I came out of my shell.
And I was like, oh, all right.
Now, like, this, this feels natural.
Exactly.
I can speak freely.
I don't have to be introverted.
These people are great.
I enjoy their company.
I got nothing to have social anxiety about, right?
And you're believing in and standing for something that's urgent and important and dire rather than like, yeah, politically correct chit chat, you know, walking on air shelves.
All right.
Well, reluctantly, we will move on next.
He's a devil in the sheets, but a saint for all of our people in the streets.
At least one day back in August 2017, he was.
I couldn't describe his religious outlook, even if I tried.
So maybe we'll just say a regular old monument is in order for this young fella, Potato Smasher and new or recent guest on modern politics.
Welcome aboard.
Every day when you wake up, you have to ask yourself, how am I going to fight Jewish terror and dismantle the Zionist occupational government today?
You could do worse than that for sure.
It's a mouthful, first thing out of bed with bleary eyes, but I wholeheartedly agree.
You know, there's an article up on NJP by Chairman Mike about the census demographics, and he quotes extensively from Jennifer Rubin of the Washington Post, who reminds us that America is and always has been just an idea.
And it got me thinking, if America is just an idea, then a sober and objective analysis would lead one to believe that that idea is the enrichment of Jews and the entrenchment of them in power.
And that doesn't fly by us.
Just remember, you're a natural anti-Zionist individual.
Yes.
N-A-Z-I.
And when you're having a conversation with somebody, always remember to just say no and ask about Zionism in Israel.
You know, Smasher, there was only one thing about that interview that really pissed me off, and that was that Warren introduced you as the co-host of Full House.
Did you tell him to say that?
I did not.
That was all natural.
You just come across as a co-host.
Yes.
That's all right.
You can put a little co-host hat on when I'm not around.
Anyway, what's shaking for you, buddy?
Not much.
Just like I said before the show, live in the dream, but nightmares are dreams.
That's right.
Wifey said that the twins are beautiful.
She got to hold them this past weekend.
And yeah, still on track there.
Yeah, no, they're doing pretty good.
Wife is doing pretty good, all things considered.
She's a little busy.
Yeah, good.
I don't know.
I can't answer that.
The first two were hard because there was like a huge, it was a huge paradigm shift, right?
Because we had zero kids and then we had two kids.
So like two is infinitely more than zero, but four is only twice as many as two.
I've already dealt with infants before.
Yeah, yeah.
I could see it being slightly easier.
I don't know.
The more kids, I think it's easier.
I certainly have a smaller increase.
I certainly have more patience this time around.
Somebody said in the chat the other day to somebody who was questioning, he said, oh, don't worry.
With every child you add, it gets easier.
And I said, excuse me, sir.
I'm actually going to disagree with that.
It gets harder.
And he was like, yeah, I was just trolling.
You just parent a little bit less.
Not to be cynical, but you know, just life goes on and you don't make a big deal out of every little thing.
It probably depends on the kid.
I mean, we've talked about a few times that every kid is different.
I mean, even just these two boys, you can already tell that they're very different.
Oh, or Borzois last week saying like, oh, yeah, he sleeps from 9 p.m. till 7 a.m.
Oh, man, hitting the jackpot.
Yeah, God, I wish it was me.
Yeah, seriously.
One of the boys is already two pounds over his birth weight, a full two pounds over.
He's a big work.
Did you stick a little baby dumbbell in his diaper for that way?
No, I'm joking.
Sorry.
No, just a judge.
Good job by mom.
Yep.
All right.
Finally, our very special guest this week.
He has been a youth pastor, a missionary, and was even in the seminary to become a pastor at one point.
I'm told that his story is one that needs to be told by people in the know.
And he is here by audience demand.
When we teased up some of our future guests, this one elicited the most excitement and interest.
So we are honored to welcome on Johnny.
Welcome, brother.
How are you?
I'm doing well.
Glad to hear it.
You let us know that you got a couple rugrats in the back there who might make a little background noise, to which we told you not to worry about it.
So glad that you are, of course, a father.
And yeah, we're just going to talk your interesting backstory and an evolution of Christian belief.
And full disclosure to the audience, we were going to have on a second guest tonight who was also in the seminary at one point, but who is more of a hardline Catholic.
But he had to drop out last minute, got called into work unexpectedly.
So Johnny's on the hot seat, but that's fine because it gives us more time to talk about him and not have to split it up between two.
But Johnny, you know the deal.
You've listened before.
Please lay it on us, sir, your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status.
So I'm white.
I am a father.
And as far as the religion, you know, I don't really have an answer for that yet.
I mean, I guess I'm Christian adjacent.
All right.
So, yeah, we'll dig into that.
Good deal.
What's your, do you know what your ethnic background is?
As far as like what European countries your ancestors came from.
Allegedly 70% Irish.
And that's not a big deal to you, though, huh?
Nope.
Nope, that's just it.
That's it.
It's fine.
70% Irish and the 30% is just, yeah, that just overcomes.
I'm not sure.
My brother took the test and that's what he told me.
All right, grab your ski mask.
It's time.
He's declaring it.
Yeah, it's been quiet from over there in Ireland.
We got to check in to see what's going on over there sometime.
But Johnny.
Not too long ago, there was a journey that got killed, but they were killed by like the Maoist IRA.
There's like four.
There's a couple different IRAs there, so that was kind of gay.
Still kind of cool that, you know.
Bad things happening to bad people or good things, whatever.
All right, Johnny.
So every journalist listening to this, just remember, you're gay and I hate you.
Pretty much.
There might be, it's like Jews, right?
You could probably count the good number of journalists on one hand.
Striker and Spectre.
There you go.
Yeah.
But together, they're really only like one person.
Or are they the same person?
All right, Johnny, what were you?
Gotcha.
What were you raised, Johnny?
How were you brought up?
And I assume that you continued that path during your ministry days.
Yeah, Southern Baptist, one of the largest evangelical denominations in America.
Sure.
And mom and dad pretty forceful in inculcating that in you?
No, no.
I mean, we did go to church, but it wasn't like it definitely wasn't forced.
All right.
So you bought it as a young man and were enthusiastic and decided to carry forward.
Yeah, take it.
Yeah, take us on a little journey from young Johnny to, yeah, getting involved and being a youth pastor.
Yeah, sure.
So when I was like probably 10 years old, you know, I went to church camp for a week and then I found out about hell and I was like, I don't want to go there.
And so got saved and then came home and got on with the neighborhood kids saved because I didn't want them to go to hell.
But that was just kind of a, I was a weird kid.
I was, I don't know.
It was for at a young age, I feel like God had called me to be in the ministry and to be a pastor.
Um, and southern uh assume I know nothing about southern baptism, and I and I that's not too far off from the truth.
I think of like, oh, brother, where art thou and people getting baptized in a river.
Uh, but what's the uh, you know, it's evangelical, it's evangelical but not Protestant, or is evangelical just sort of a strain of Protestantism that's uh not as well organized?
You know, what's the TLDR on Southern Baptism?
Well, as far as I know, basically, anything outside of the Catholic Church is considered Protestant, it was a protest against the Catholic Church, and the Southern Baptists is just like, like I said, they have, I think they started in Kentucky and spread out mainly in like the southeast, Florida to Texas, pretty much.
Um, you know, I don't know.
I mean, it's what I mean, like any denomination, it's just this specific group is convinced that they have the closest interpretation of the Bible on how to on how things should be and missionaries work and pastors and women and so on.
But that was that was the church that I was raised in, was Southern Baptist.
Gotcha, and you carried through.
So, what's the next big thing that you went into?
And I assume that you are, you know, even if you grew up in the South, were you racially aware as a young man, or was it more just Jesus was your calling and that was your church?
No, and I guess I'll get into that towards the end of my story, but no, no, it wasn't like racially aware at all.
Um, you know, we grew up in a small town where you would have like a couple black families, a couple of Hispanic families, and just it wasn't like a part of the conversation like at all.
It was, I don't know, it wasn't, it wasn't until the last couple of years that I actually became racially conscious.
Um, no, I had a goal in mind.
Like, when you grew up in a small town, and I'm probably going to share more than I normally would have because the other guy dropped out, if that's okay, of course, as you like.
Yep.
And so, you know, when you grew up in a small town, and particularly in Texas, you know, your, your, your idea of success is driven by very, you know, things that don't seem to matter anymore right now, but like football.
My goal in life at a young age was I had two goals to get going to become a pastor and play college football.
And I wasn't big enough or fast enough to play college football.
So I made a decision at the time to join the military for two years, the army, and get bigger and faster and see if I could earn a scholarship.
And so at the time, I knew, I also knew I needed, I wanted to go to seminary.
So the reason I also joined the military was to get a scholarship, I mean, to get the GI bill, plus hopefully get a scholarship to pay for college.
Because if you want to go to seminary, you have to go to college.
And so that was it.
That was the goal: get through college so that I could go to seminary.
And I did play one year of college football at a small Baptist university.
And it just didn't work out for whatever reasons.
And I get, you know, at that point, I moved back home.
I went to a local, you know, community college, lived with my parents, kind of fell into a little bit of depression because all my goals in life seemed to be falling apart.
And eventually, you know, went to a state university where I met the mother of my children.
And I was on academic probation because I was just kind of getting through and skipping class because nothing seemed to matter anymore.
Right.
And once you find, you know, a girl, turns out she's not real impressed by somebody who's on academic probation.
And so I got my stuff together.
And so I got focused.
And I, you know, I graduated and expressed my interest to go into the, you know, the ministry.
And we, let's see, we got married.
And the next day, we got in the car and we drove to California where I went to seminary.
And that's where we started our journey together.
Okay.
And she was Southern Baptist too, I assume.
She she was, you know, she grew up in the Baptist church.
Um, she and I both both kind of got closer to God and got closer to being more active in the church at the same time.
You know, kind of kind of, you know, went away from like, um, I wasn't so much of a part of your in college.
Neither was she, but just got focused and kind of, you know, I don't know how to say, I don't know how to describe it, but fell back in love with God and fell back in love with you in ministry.
And she was, she was all about it.
So where I went to seminary, I was there for two and a half years.
And when you go to seminary, you meet a lot of really amazing people.
One thing that's very, it's kind of easy to describe is like, you know, when you get a part of like the nationalist movement, you meet really, really good people.
You meet people, you know, you meet people who hate injustice.
You meet people who want the best for the world, for others, for the future.
There's people with purpose.
You meet the exact same type of people when you go to seminary.
And a lot of these people came off the mission field.
They came off like a two-year stint overseas.
And when you start to, we start to like hear some of their stories.
And at some point, a semester before I graduated, I said, you know, let's just go do this two-year stint.
And we, I always think of missionary service as a very Mormon thing.
But yeah, you, you guys went overseas too.
I would say the Southern Baptist by far have the most, most money involved in.
Yeah, a lot, a lot of money.
This Southern Baptist is.
My ignorance.
You're educating me here and hopefully the audience too.
Quick question.
When I think of enrolling in the seminary, I think of priest college, essentially, almost like becoming a monk while you're in training for a few years.
Now, were you able to live?
Was it just like college?
Like you're taking courses and then living a life and having a separate job?
Or was it a full-time theological study?
Well, it's full-time.
It's like you're earning a master's degree, a master's in divinity.
And I mean, my wife, she worked for the school for the accounting department.
I actually cleaned the house for two homosexuals that paid really well.
Oh, man.
I'm not going to ask for it.
I don't want to know any details.
Well, I'll just tell you this.
When you go clean the house for two gay guys, it's already clean.
Okay.
All right.
Oh, very good.
You're giving a little bit of credit there instead of any sorted things in the trash can or whatever.
No, and basically my job was to take care of their two Bichon Frice dogs.
That was my job.
And that didn't morally conflict with your beliefs at the time?
I got to make some cash here.
A little bit, but I will say this: of all the bosses I've had, I've never, never did they make me uncomfortable.
And they always, they show me a lot of respect.
And so can I interject real quickly?
I remember, of course, my father-in-law, he was a TV repairman back when that was a thing.
And he went to do a job at a homosexual's apartment.
And the guy came to the door nude that happened to you, Johnny.
No, no.
All right.
All right.
Quick homo story, derail here, since you brought it up.
I was a bartender at a hotel pool bar one summer in DC at the Washington Plaza Hotel, which you would think is just like a regular hotel in Washington.
It's near DuPont Circle.
You know, families would come there for their little DC vacations, but it sold outside memberships to the local community.
So DuPont Circle, of course, is like the gay hotspot, probably still is in DC.
I don't know.
I haven't been there in a while.
And so there would just be all these gay guys in their speedos, you know, fat, young, old, et cetera, hanging by the pool.
And these poor families would come walking out to the pool with their kids.
Like, what in the world did I just wander into?
So they, they, I, I had these like sort of short blue shorts that were part of the uniform and a tight white polo.
And those guys tipped.
Those guys tipped really well, and I made the drinks pretty stiff.
So, yeah, it's not a good idea.
Hey, yeah, no, hanging out at the prison, getting drunk, getting ready to slam some meth, and then your homies.
Hey, when I, in my mind, before the stream started, I kind of ran through my mind the things I wanted to go over, and that this was not one of the things.
That happens all the time.
Don't worry about it, brother.
It's a good derail.
But yeah, they never think about how it's gay that Johnny even knows what a Bichon Frise is.
I had to Google it.
It's a Bichon Frise.
Yeah.
Okay, whatever.
I typed.
I typed Beach on Fry's Dog and it popped up.
So, well, we'll get there.
I mean, the two years we did missionary work was in France.
So it's hard not to.
Okay.
All right.
We're getting there.
All right.
So you're, you're, you go, you're going to school going to get your soul together.
Is it because France is a third world nigger shithole?
Oh, God.
Jeez, just because we don't have a producer this week, Smasher.
Yeah, you'll still have to bleep it in post-production.
Johnny, all right.
So you're going to seminary and work in a side gig with your wife.
You're married at the time.
Take it from there.
And, you know, any other relevant details there or go to skipping overseas?
Well, this is kind of a funny thing, too.
So when we were there, you know, we, you know, we're from, I want to express my, the reason why I desire to move around a lot because I felt like every time I moved from like a different state, like Oklahoma, Arkansas, California, like it kind of, you know, every time you kind of get outside of your what you think this center of the world is, it kind of stretches you a little bit.
And it definitely moving to California kind of stretched me and seeing and seeing that.
But when we, when we first got there, I was like, you know what?
We're in California.
We're in, we're close to Tahoe and Lake Tahoe and Yosemite and San Francisco.
We're going to live it up.
And a lot of our friends that just showed up there were pregnant with their first kid.
And my initial thought was, like, suckers, you know, you're going to have a kid and you're not going to be able to enjoy all that.
Party, travel, travel, all that stuff.
Yeah, that kid's just going to weigh you, you know, going to weigh you down.
And at the time, I was thinking that my wife was pregnant with our first kid.
So, so, so, um, and either way, it was, it was my own level of uh, you know, that's why you don't judge other people, you know, it's um, kind of, it kind of comes back on you.
But either way, so yeah, so we had um, and also that little, that little baby girl, uh, that gay couple allowed me to bring her to work, so that helped that worked out too.
There you go, and so we met, we met a lot of young couples who, like I said, just came back from like a stint overseas, China, Africa, Sudan, you know, just all over the world.
And so, we both decided, let's do it, let's go do two years overseas.
And then, whenever you go to the training place in Virginia, they have all these like books out in each book that shows you like, here's where the jobs are that are available.
And I had like zero like uh desire to go to China or Africa or any other place.
I mean, none of those sound like appealing to me.
However, I had two semesters of French in college.
I said, Let's go check out France.
There you go.
Now, real quick, real quick, looking back, with the benefit of hindsight, do you think there was why didn't you want to go to Africa or China?
It doesn't sound fun.
All right, fair enough.
You're still in your 20s at this point, I presume.
Well, I mean, I mean, a lot of people, I don't know why they felt like God was calling to these places, but they felt that.
You know, they were, they were, you know, some went to Morocco, and I don't know.
I didn't know, I didn't feel like a specific calling to any specific group of people.
And so, um, we just looked through a book in France and we found a place, um, a little island off the coast of Italy called Corsica, where Napoleon's from.
And we, and we did a Google image search of it.
If you want to do a Google image search of Corsica right now, you'll see why we chose that place because that's beautiful beaches and mountains and rivers and the cultures is fascinating.
Like, their culture is probably more Italian than it is French, but just a completely, I mean, and one thing that's interesting about that place is, I mean, you would think France, but like the people were very country.
the men wore like camo every day and they hunted and uh like very similar to like people in the south and um yeah when you told me your story or your your vague outline before the show i was thinking oh he must have done a stint in the third world and that's what red-pilled him and woke him up to the ways of the world but no you went to corsica so uh yeah how was it how was it there otherwise two years or how long were you there we were there two years and um No, you brought up a good point.
Maybe I'll bring that up later because we did have a couple of friends who did go to the South Sudan and came back, you know, just not sure about anything anymore.
They came back alive.
Yeah.
They came back alive, but they came back.
know he came back like just lost lost spiritually because all things they experience um but it did Okay.
That's what I was going to share.
It was a weird.
The people were awesome.
Our experiences were awesome.
The place was beautiful.
However, this is something I've kind of, I haven't mentioned yet that I wanted to mention.
There's a lot of things like within like Christianity and within not so much Christianity within the church that kind of bothered me, the way things were done.
And same thing as seminary too.
Like there were little things that just kind of bothered me that didn't feel very, you know, Christ-like.
It felt more like a business.
And same thing when we were missionaries overseas.
Like we would, we had a lot of trouble with it, with people who worked for the Southern Baptists.
Like our people are over us.
They caused us a lot of grief.
And everything we tried, they just kind of discouraged.
And I just couldn't tell you.
I mean, we did a lot of things.
We tried our best to really reach out to the Corsicans and we were also in a university town, which meant we reached out to people from all over the world to bring into our home and stuff.
And we kind of, you know, we left the mission field with a bad taste in our mouth.
But either way, while I was there, like we had some experiences that you would, you wouldn't ever picture.
So for example, our goal was just to meet people and to find ways to meet people.
And so it turns out, like, you know, in Europe, the preferred sport is soccer.
Everybody plays soccer.
I'm sorry.
Is everything still going?
Or somebody drop out?
I'm still here.
We're all here.
Keep going.
Sorry.
Yep, you're good.
Just muted so I could look something up real quick.
Go ahead, brother.
Sure.
So there's like a group of outcasts that like to play American football.
And they're not, they weren't good, but people from like the states were donating equipment to these people.
And I think they didn't so much want to play as pretend like they were playing, like pretend like they were playing American football.
And these are guys in their 20s.
And so it was like the perfect out for me as someone who played football.
But these people were like, they had no concept of anything when it came to playing football.
And so it was just a great, it was a great way to teach someone and get to know people.
And, but this is where I was talking, like, you know, certain like cultural experiences that you would go through that you would never think you'd go through before.
So so when you go to France, if someone becomes your friend and they trust you, they give you a bizu, which means like you go cheek to cheek, kiss, kiss on whenever you, whenever you greet them.
And so before I started football practice, I had to go kiss 22 guys.
But you know what?
I mean, I understand how that sounds like ridiculous now, but like after you do it a while, it's like, oh, these people, you know, they've let me in.
They let me into their circle.
Go into, yeah, you're just going, you're just going cheek to cheek.
It's not like, no, I know, I know.
Yeah.
Go into a little bit more, though, the sort of religion incorporated, the top-down management stuff that bothered you.
What was that about?
Well, it was, okay, so when I was in seminary, there was, I don't know how to put an exact word on it, but like it was, it was a business.
And that's how churches are ran.
They ran like a business.
The pastor's the CEO.
He has a parking spot.
He's put up on the stage and everybody donates money.
And nobody, you know, it's this, it doesn't quite align with what I had saw, what I saw in scripture.
And it just, I don't know.
It kind of, okay, I'll just say this.
So inside the church, people are donating money.
And you want to show your constituents that you're using their money correctly.
And so the only way to do that is through is through data.
So you have to show numbers.
This is how many people got saved.
This is how many people got baptized.
It's all about numbers, these people.
So you got to get the numbers up.
And, you know, you might find certain places like in Africa where you can really, you know, pump out a bunch of numbers.
But when you're in a place like Corsica, which is Catholic, you're not going to convert very many people at all.
In fact, they're very skeptical of you.
They don't know why you're there.
It's a hard place to evangelize.
That is it.
Well, I know, I went through a process too where we started doing house church when we came back home because house church seemed to be a closer version of what you saw in the book of Acts and the early church, which means what's house church?
It's basically like three families, you know, under between 12 and 20 people.
You know, Christ had 12 disciples.
So we had like a small core group of people.
You're only going to get so intimate with so many people.
You're not going to have, you can't have 300 people that you have like a deep relationship with.
It's not possible.
And so the idea was you multiply.
And so they would, they would find, there were these studies where they find where Christianity spread really quickly.
And it happened where you had like a small circle of churches.
And once the number got so big, you split up.
You just kept splitting up, splitting up.
And so it shows like even in the early church or China, certain places in Africa, this is where Christianity spread really quick.
And so we started doing early, early, I mean, house church at some point, whenever we got back living over here.
All right.
So you made it.
Yeah.
You made it through, made it through two years in Corsica, not the worst service, especially, you know, you didn't have that many customers to deal with, I guess.
Yeah.
Anything else from that?
And then you came back stateside.
So we came back.
Oh, no.
When we were living overseas in Corsica, there were large, there were spans of time like we were living up in the mountains where it was snowing and you couldn't do nothing but stay inside.
And so at the time, I'm not exactly sure when we started researching this, but we started researching human trafficking, specifically sex trafficking in the United States.
And I had kind of lost my desire to do missionary work and lost my desire to become a pastor.
So we decided we both, my wife and I decided we were going to get involved in sex trafficking in the city that opposing it.
Yes.
Yeah, isolate the audience.
We don't have a producer this week.
He called in.
He's got an early morning today.
So yeah, I'm the producer now and isolate that myself.
We decided to get involved.
Go ahead, brother.
Sorry to laugh and derail.
That's okay.
We decided to get involved in helping young women exit human trafficking, exit sex trafficking.
In any, you know, in any of which way.
When we showed back home, we showed up back home.
We went to a lot of meetings.
We met a lot of people.
And my wife stayed pretty consistently involved.
But the thing about human trafficking, sex trafficking is it's a very difficult ministry because these young girls will get hooked on drugs and you'll get them out like four times and they'll just keep going back.
You know, it's like the opposite of like feeding someone who's hungry.
If you want to, you know, if someone's hungry, you give them food and you know you did what they needed.
But these girls, it's like, it's, it's psychological.
Like they're just, they're broken.
They have pimps.
And I don't know.
I got kind of like at some point, just I was just, I was kind of done with it.
She stayed, she stayed very involved with it.
And eventually they have a house now with like 10 bedrooms and they've got like five girls that they've gotten off the street.
But it just, I don't know, it wasn't my thing.
Also, when we came back home, we both had degrees, but they were like useless.
Like it turns out like a degree in sociology doesn't mean anything to most people.
Yeah.
Well, but you know, if you grew up in my age, you know, the consensus was if you went to college, you could get a job.
But that's not true anymore.
And we were both like struggling.
We're competing against high schoolers trying to find work.
I was doing construction work for 12 bucks an hour.
She was like babysitting kids.
And I don't know.
I am appreciative from like doing from like learning construction work because now that I can pour concrete, you know, do she-rock float and stuff.
And I was able to build the house that we live in right now.
However, when we came home, we bought a house for $45,000.
And it was like, it was a really horrible house, but it's all the bank would give us when you make $12 an hour.
And over the course of like five years, I completely made new and right.
You know, I'll tell you this too.
If you're a young person who's married, don't, unless you have a really strong relationship with your wife, don't live in a construction zone because it'll tear you apart.
She gets sick of the drywall dust everywhere.
The fixer-upper.
Yeah.
Well, it depends on how much of a fixer-upper is.
This one was bad.
This is like replaced all the sheetrock, the roof, the flooring, the kitchen, gut, just gut everything.
And with one bathroom.
So either way, this is a side note.
Sure.
I wanted to ask real quick because I've had Jehovah's Witnesses come to my door before.
I've been accosted on the boardwalk by evangelicizers, if that's a word.
How the hell did you deal with rejection when it's your job to go talk to strangers and persuade them to join your faith?
That's got to be sort of, you know, it's like the people you see on the street who are like, stop you to like give money to an environmental cause or something like that.
Were you able to just do that and keep a brave face about it?
Or was that pretty rough?
Well, I would say like Mormons and Jehovah's Witness is not the same thing as like a Southern Baptist missionary.
The way we saw things is we wanted to develop relationships with these people, go to their house, have dinner, invite them to our house, and hopefully, you know, show them that the way that we live life is the way that they should want to live life.
And then hopefully win them over.
So, you know, I understand what you're saying.
I assume most, actually, I saw two Mormons today.
I assume most Mormons and most Jehovah's Witnesses are pretty adapt to rejection because you experience it so much.
Yep.
Sam has been going door to door, knocking on his neighbors, trying to convert them to white nationalism and Christian identity.
And, you know, he keeps a smile on his face with every time they shut the door on his face.
Sorry, brother.
So, all right.
So you're back home.
You got a fixer-upper house.
You know, you already have one kid, I think, and you're sort of you're drifting or it's just not the most important thing to you anymore.
Carry on from there.
That's no, that's, that's about right.
Like, so like around 2016 or so, with that, you know, we were working on the house, got it complete.
And that's when my buddy kept sending me, I want to say it was communism through the back door.
And he just kept sending it to me, sent to me.
And I started watching it.
And that's whenever I started to start my own process of just realizing that, you know, we've been lied to about a lot of things.
A lot of things that you think are real aren't real.
Sure.
And I don't know, you know, waking up to like the white consciousness or the Jewish problem that we have, you know, took me a long time.
That just shows you like the programming that we've all been put under.
And I don't know.
And also, I took the senior crowd.
To be fair, I was kind of hoping that Jack was going to be on because I did listen to one of y'all shows with him.
And he does have some ideas and thoughts that align with mine.
So, I would have had somebody that kind of backed me up a little bit, but um, don't worry about it, yeah.
And communism through the back door, is that thing still uh alive and kicking, or is that uh gone by the wayside?
As far as like, what do you mean?
Did I finish it, or or do they know?
Yeah, I don't even know what that is.
Was it like a video series or like a business wise?
That's like the greatest story never told.
I don't know, ah, okay, yeah, yeah, I guess he had like he had a couple movies on the you know, the Freemasons and stuff.
Um, lesson for the lesson for the audience.
Somebody just uh basically kept peppering this guy with information and it stuck.
You know, that common refrain it happened with me.
It works.
There are certain things that once you hear it, you cannot unhear it.
You know, it's like you cannot unring the bell.
And I think that's what Johnny got echoes or bounces around inside your head.
Yeah, Smasher actually has never read or consumed any of our literature.
He's just born this way.
So he claps.
I can, I can barely even hear.
I would say, go ahead, Johnny.
It's on par with like Europa the last battle.
It's like that's the type of thing you would probably recommend to someone to get them to like introduce them to like World War II and revisionism.
Gotcha.
Either way, man, and you know, in YouTube back in the day, you used to be able to find a lot of really interesting content.
And, you know, and if you shared someone, they said, oh, you learned that on YouTube, they would like, they would just kind of laugh at you as if it was like just something you would, you would, you would, oh, it's YouTube because you didn't get it from an authoritative like source, like through the school system, through television or whatever.
Oh, you didn't send me this a link to like a national geographic documentary.
No, it's true.
Holocaust must be real then.
Well, and that's and that's and that's the hard thing for most people is I think that you have to have extra time to do things because the vast majority of people don't have any time.
They're they're paycheck to paycheck.
They're, you know, they're worried about paying their mortgage.
They're worried about paying things.
They just don't have time.
You could tell them this stuff.
And I had time at the moment.
I had some extra time.
So I was able to kind of do some of my own research.
And there's a lot of things that the conclusions you come to, you're like, oh, well, we've just been lied to about just about everything, you know, whether it be history or, you know, science.
A lot of it's just, it's, it's, they took over every institution, you know, they did it on purpose to distract us.
And to to, I, I want one thing I do want to talk about is this too.
When I back in like the, I don't know, I guess maybe 20 years ago, it became really popular to have debates between like Christians and atheists like Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens.
And what they did is they created this like really false dichotomy that you have to either be a Christian or you have to completely reject everything and be an atheist and everything's meaningless and there's no God and there's.
It's just.
It's just.
I used to eat those guys up.
Yeah it's, we were.
There was a cosmic sneeze trillions of years ago and we came from monkeys, and so it's just.
It's silliness to choose between the two like you have.
You have to choose one or the other, but that's how.
That's how things were presented back in the day.
And Christians.
That's one thing Christians don't have is they don't have like really good answers on a lot of things.
When it To, when it comes to you know, if you watched Europe Of The Last Battle, I couldn't help but ask myself several times when I was watching it, where's God?
You know, why, how did he allow this to happen to these people?
I mean, just absolute horror, and um, there's no answer.
Christians don't have answers for things like that, not good answers.
And that's that's the crux of uh what I was hoping to get at here: is you know, you can be Christian and our guy completely, you can be Christian and a white nationalist.
Obviously, uh, we have evidence of that in spades from inside the house and outside the house.
So, you could have continued on, uh, as a you know, it's not like it, you can't chew gum and walk at the same time, but so that your red pill uh disabused you of some of your Christian faith.
Is that fair to say?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
I mean, like, like you guys were saying before, the vast majority of evangelicals they watch uh Hagee out of San Antonio, who really promotes Israel, you know, and our connection.
And everybody here probably is very familiar with the Schofield study Bible and its connection between promoting end times and Israel.
And we have to, you know, you know, God loves those who bless Israel and He curses those who curse Israel.
Like one verse has so much power over the church.
It's just because you could you could go back to the Bible and really just dismay that completely if you wanted to.
But that's the other thing about the Bible is you can come you can if you if you have a belief system, you can go into the Bible and come up with you know scriptures that back your belief system.
It's very easy to do that.
And that was one thing I also learned in seminary is like once you study Hebrew and Greek, and you realize that there's so much bias from these people who sat down and wrote scripture and stuff.
Bias is it's hard to get away from people's bias, even your own.
But there's just a lot, there's a lot of division within Christianity.
And I have noticed that one thing that when people start to wake up, like to the situation that we're in right now, people do kind of go towards spiritual, they go towards trying to find God, they go towards the book of Revelations and try to find answers.
Because for the most part, you know, people, I mean, we're in a dire situation, so you look for some, some, some type of um, some type of hope.
You know, I don't know, you know, one thing I did discover with looking through stuff is like, you know, maybe I could probably have a hard time proving to other people the existence of God, but I can, I can prove that these people believe in Satan, they believe in a dark entity.
And you can look at the Catholic Church, you can look at the Pope's Hall, you know, where they have a whole building designed in the shape of a snake's head and inside and out.
These people believe in something that's given them.
You know, that's an argument a lot of people have.
Have they accomplished what they've accomplished with some type of higher power, some type of dark arts?
Yeah, it seems that way.
I mean, to take over everything, like just to control the world, something, something spiritual has to be helping them.
Yeah, and I don't even dip my toe into the Satanism or the summoning the end time so that their choice of Messiah or destroyer comes forth, but just that I can prove to you objectively and empirically that yes, they do hate us.
And yes, they are nationwreckers and not just here throughout history.
That's good.
That's good enough for me.
If the other stuff is true, that's just like this rancid icing on a foul cake.
But yeah, you can't deny it.
Well, this is one of the side paths I took that kind of slowed me down to get to where most of you and most of you guys have been for probably years.
But because it's fascinating, the occult, you start to look in some of the darkness of Hollywood and a lot of their numbers and their signs and colors and all the stuff that they do.
It has some kind of black magic, some kind of power.
Either way, on that note, real quick, I was going to ask our hardcore Catholic guy this question, not to be a prick or anything, but did you encounter any either obvious or suspected cuckolds or faggots or pedophiles during your time there?
Obviously, that faith allows for priests or pastors to get married.
So I assume it's less, but any nasty stuff in that regard?
No, for me, from my experiences, no.
That's good.
Good to hear.
Because the Southern Baptist Leadership Conference has been pretty bad.
I assume that they are sort of the governing body over the faith and they are pretty cucky with their pay-ins to blacks and adopting black kids and all the rest of it.
Familiarity with them and their ethos?
No, a little bit.
But I think a lot of that's come fairly recent.
Okay.
Yep.
And I'm probably almost 10 years removed from being involved with them.
So I don't know.
So where are you now in terms of faith versus radicalism in the best sense of the word?
So that's a good.
No, that's a good question.
That's where I meant to go.
So when it comes to racial consciousness, I was talking to my friend about this the other day.
The very first like Jared Taylor interview I saw, maybe like three or four years ago, I felt like I was doing something wrong.
That's how it felt.
It felt, it's hard to describe, but it's interesting to see what they've done to us as far as making us so like the white race is so like least racially conscious.
Don't even think in terms of race at all, whereas everybody else is, I mean, completely.
But you watch a Jared Taylor interview, you think, oh, why is this guy being so mean to this girl?
And in reality, he's not.
He's just being, he's just being honest about reality.
And his message is inherently mean, not intentionally, but it's just, it is.
You can't get around it.
You can't, you know, if you were to just go tell the absolute truth that, hey, you know, we just, you know, we just feel like we deserve a home of our own and we have no hate towards other people.
That's the thing.
That's the, that's the bridge that a lot of Christians can't cross.
So if you start talking to people about like our ideas, their first thought is, oh, so you hate other people?
No, I don't hate anybody.
I just, you know, I feel, you know, I feel like we should be able to, you know, we're made different.
Christians.
Yeah, it makes me makes me think of Ben Shapiro.
Facts.
Yeah, let's quote from Shapiro here on Full House.
Facts don't care about your feelings.
You know, it's like, sorry.
I would only say that hatred has a particular power of its own.
And love and hate are opposite sides of the same coin.
Can't have one without the other.
Yeah.
As GLR, I'm sure, among others, has said, Smasher has never actually hated anyone or any group in his entire life.
It's basically like the late 60s in his household.
Well, I don't hate any form of human.
Right.
He's got a very strict definition.
So that hatred is exhilarating, actually.
Yo, if you don't run on hate and caffeine, you are missing out.
Yeah.
Obviously, I hate plenty of things, but I don't hate anyone for what they are.
You can't help what you're born as.
I resent the presence of many of these people.
But, you know, if Uncle Sam is putting out the sugar, the ants are going to come to it in spades.
And boy, have they.
Well, it's like, you know, I said this on modern politics.
Like, I don't hate blacks.
Like, blacks are just what they are.
And it's whatever, but I hate dealing with them.
They shouldn't be my problem.
But Jews, like, I just hate Jews because I think largely what they're doing is on purpose.
They have natural inclinations to a lot of their behavior, but they're doing this on purpose because they hate us.
They are our enemies from a time before history, and they will be our enemies until one group completely eradicates the other.
And that's just the way it is.
And I don't care if they're meeting in boardrooms or back-filled smoky rooms or if they're just doing it on their own volition because it's in their DNA, right?
The proof is in the pudding that they're making.
I suggest they do more Zoom calls so that they can get more Zoom bombs.
I just highly doubt that these people, we hate them half as much as they hate us.
I think they hate us way more.
I think they live by it.
Here.
I'm inclined to agree.
And that's why I tell people that they should be like super pro-hatred.
Johnny, you also have worked with or know or are friends with our pal, Handsome Truth.
So that's sort of, you know, that's a big step for somebody because he's out on the edge.
How did we end up going?
Yeah, you went from just a good, good, good Christian pastor or, you know, traveling.
Now you're in the thick of it.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I was a construction worker who spent a lot of times trying to figure out what was going on on the internet.
And, you know, I don't, you know, you guys were involved in Charlottesville.
I don't know y'all, all of y'all's stories, but clearly, you know, like Stryker and others have been wide, you know, have been aware of the situation we're in for a long time.
But Handsome Truth and his inner circle, his couple of friends, like for the vast most part, we all kind of like woke up at the same time.
And so I found like striking Mike's content interesting, but to be fair, it was a lot of it was above my head.
And so when you, when you start to wake up, you also realize that a part of you died.
And so you're going through like a lot of a lot of what your life was or what you thought things were.
You're going through a mourning process.
And so when you go through this morning process, you know, you, you're in denial, you're in depression, you're going through all the whatever the cycles are.
And when, and that's why I was attracted to HT stuff because he he made me not feel so like, like, horrible about things.
And so just desolate, you know, he was kind of funny.
We, we, you know, him and his uh Joey and others all, you know, we were on the same page with a lot of things.
And so at some point, there was a, I don't know if you've ever heard of this guy, the salary manager who makes some content like Uncle MTV.
And he's, he's a little older, a little more philosophical, lives in China.
And he just had some kind of, he had some kind of uh short video where he he challenged people.
Like, are you going to do something?
You know, are you going to?
And so at that point, I said, that's it, you know, I got to do something.
And so that this last tour in Florida, I just showed up and, you know, I'm glad I did because, you know, you guys have said this many times, like, once you meet people in person and it changed, it's a game changer.
It's not, it's not only a game changer, but you meet some like the most incredible people.
You meet people who are a lot of the people, like, it's a funny thing, too, is like a lot of people that were attracted to HT's content were like far left.
They were liberals, you know, they were, I don't know if that's, I don't know if you call them Burning Bros or whatnot.
Also, that was another point that I wanted to make.
I think James also a few years ago wrote an article that it was like a case for Burning Bros.
I think there's a case for missionaries and people who are involved in ministry.
I don't think there's much of a case for people who just show up to church because one thing I've realized over, you know, the older you get, he's like, some people just are never going to care.
You can try and try and try.
They're just not worth investing in because they just don't care about anything.
Yeah.
That's probably that's probably more than 90% of the population, but there are a lot of people out there who do.
They care about something.
Find someone who cares about something and just try to redirect that energy into showing them what's actually happening, what's what's taking place right now.
And so, yeah, I showed off and we did some activism.
I was there for just a little while, a few days.
And I'm glad I went.
You know, I'm glad I'm glad I, because I wanted to meet these people in real life.
It's a little weird, you know, you know, but when you're sure when you're on the internet, it's hard not to say everybody is, you know, someone told me this when I went there.
He said, by the end of this, this trip here, you're going to be called a Jew or a Fed.
And it's true.
It's true.
Everybody's so scared that there's somebody that's there just to set them up.
And maybe, maybe not.
But I mean, like, what do you do?
Do nothing?
Just wait.
I've never been accused of being a fed, which tells me I'm not trying hard enough.
Are you saying you have been accused of being a Jew?
Okay.
All right.
You left that one out.
So I thought that was.
I just didn't have a joke set up for that.
Yeah.
Two quick things you made me think of.
One was you're being sort of modest about being late to the game, which you absolutely should not be because, you know, Sam, granted, you know, he was converted to white nationalism while serving in Vietnam.
He was on one of those helicopters and decided.
But, you know, for me, it was, you know, baby red pills until 2014, 2015 invasion of Europe and stuff like that.
So it's not like I'm like some salty pro in this thing.
So whether you come to this outlook today or 20 years ago, it don't matter.
Yeah, we're not judging.
It doesn't matter.
And I think it's very valuable to the listeners to hear because Johnny has had a very decisive change.
And that's where, you know, when I was in high school, sure, I was already coming onto the message and it was ascending through the years.
But it's, I think it's more useful when somebody has a very decisive moment in their life.
So I think that's what makes Johnny's story so valuable.
Yeah.
A couple people have said that they feel sad that they didn't have a red pill epiphany, right?
They were either born and raised in it or it just came to them very slowly and gradually to where they ended up here.
But, you know, that doesn't matter either.
The other thing, yeah, the other thing you mentioned before about being too busy or not having time to sink your teeth into this.
And I spoke to a former special forces guy recently, and he totally gets it.
And I said, how the heck, how the heck do you get it?
And so many of those other guys are still, you know, vet bros or, you know, gung-ho, Uncle Sam, and can't see all of the manifest evil around.
And his theory was that they've just been too busy.
You know, they're on deployments, they're training, they got families to worry about, et cetera.
So it's that, you know, idle hands.
What's the saying?
You know, idle hands are the devil's work.
But ah, there's a flip side to that coin in that idle time gives our people time to think and dick around on the internet and discover this stuff too.
So I presume in like with shutdowns and the economy and all the rest of it, our people have a lot more time to think and observe what the hell is going on.
Oh, I agree.
I think I think COVID's been beneficial for us in many ways.
I think it's got people the opportunity to say, hey, what the heck is going on here?
However, I will say this.
I was under the impression before COVID kicked off that a lot more people, maybe because I had my own inner circle, whatever, were awake.
And then you started seeing the amount of people who just kind of just didn't care, just bought into the whole thing.
And, you know, that was a little scary.
However, when it comes to people who have a vested interest, their life has been like in the military and they have awards and they have all this stuff on the wall for them to look back and say this is all for not.
I mean, that's a big thing for a lot of people.
Well, now they get to do it anyways because we've now just like failed utterly in Afghanistan.
Yeah, no, absolutely.
And it's undeniable.
You know, up until a few weeks ago, people were still coping about it.
And now it's just a straight up like, no, this fails.
And it all sucks.
Well, yeah.
And that's a good point because I know someone within like really close to me who he was shot at trying to either get a Humvee out of a ravine or the goal was to blow it up so the Taliban couldn't access it.
And his interpreter got shot and his somebody else got shot and he's over here dying for this Humvee and then he just turned around and gave him away.
So I don't think that I don't know.
I don't know what you do with that.
I don't know how you square that circle, but you're right.
What happened in Afghanistan?
It surely is a wake-up call for a lot of people in the military.
I mean, we're a few weeks out from the 20-year anniversary of 9-11 and like mass enlistment.
And a lot of these people now are going to be getting ready to retire that joined the military because of 9-11 and like Afghanistan.
You know, the very first thing they did was graduate basic training and go to Afghanistan.
And now it's like actually, nah, sorry, fam.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Enjoy your retirement.
Your entire career was a waste.
Yeah.
Let's revisit or visit that again.
Afghanistan, maybe COVID.
We have a heart-rending, heart-wrenching letter from a father to his son who is about to enlist in the United States Marines and the issue of enlisting in the military and everything that's going on in Afghanistan.
We can touch on that in the second half.
Johnny, thank you so much for coming on.
You are, of course, welcome to hang out in the second half.
You want to play two or you got to run and go take care of that munchkin?
No, I mean, I mean, I don't mind hanging out.
All right.
Yeah.
Great.
That's great news.
All right.
So we're going to take a quick break here.
We got a jam-packed second half.
I wanted to pull up this quick quote.
You know, we went through Johnny's journey and we didn't delve too deep into Christianity and white identity.
It sounds like, you know, the red pill has shaken you a little bit, but you're still on team Christian.
And God forbid I try to dissuade you from that or judge you from that, but I totally get it, right?
I often have the thought, you know, it's the classic one.
Why do bad things happen to good people if he's up there as our shepherd and watchdog and is able to interfere down here?
And I don't have an answer on that one.
Still bothers the heck out of me, to be honest.
But just today, was it yesterday?
I don't know.
Time flies so fast in terms of the division of church and state.
Somebody was asking about how the National Socialists dealt with Christianity, Catholics in particular, because it was a fraught relationship.
I think that's fair to say.
And Hitler had a great quote here, and he said, the priest as the servant of God, we shall protect.
The priest as the political enemy of the German state, we shall destroy.
And far too often, from Catholicism down to obscure Protestant sects, a monkey around in politics and cause, in my opinion, more harm than good.
So you got to find a good one out there.
And we can go back to that well in the second half too.
So to take us to the break myself, this one I was blasting at about a thousand decibels in the pickup truck driving home the other day, windows down and the summer and all that.
And I had to go with it.
And it is from 1986, in my estimation, the greatest song that Megadeth has ever performed.
And that is Peace Sells, but who's buying?
Enjoy this one.
I might listen to it on the brick myself right into my screen.
We'll be right back.
Thank you, Johnny.
Don't go anywhere, you ragtag beautiful group of rebels.
Talk to them every day.
What do you mean I don't support your system?
I go to court when I have to.
What do you mean I can't get to work on time?
I've got nothing better to do.
What do you mean I don't pay my bills?
What the hell?
What do you mean I hurt your feelings?
I didn't know you had any feelings.
What do you mean I ain't kind?
Just nothing you're kind.
What do you mean I could be the president of the United States of America?
Tell me something is still we, the people, right a new way.
I'll be the first, in line with the world this time.
Put a price on peace, He said He
sells for who's fired.
He says for who's fired.
He sells for who's fired.
He sells for new fire.
He sells for who's fired.
He says for who's fired.
He says for whose?
For you, He sells for the fire.
It's a full house episode 99 second half.
That's right.
1999.
Been waiting for this.
It was indeed a great year to finish high school and start college.
But boy, do I wish I knew half of what I know now back then.
Pretty sure I wouldn't have gone to that expensive, very Jewish and very gay, semi-elite, expensive university in Washington.
But it's water under the bridge.
We're all here where we are now and can't change the past.
Big thanks to our new pal, Johnny, for joining us in the first half to tell a very, you know, very personal and fascinating story about his journey in life and in belief and coming around to our way of thinking.
And I did not know and I overlooked the chance to give him a chance to plug his wares.
So Johnny, have at it.
What do you want to draw attention to, brother?
Well, on Friday nights, me and a friend of mine, Joey, we do a little show on Goyam TV called America Fash.
And I want to say we do about 9 p.m. Eastern.
It's live.
So, you know, if you want to tune in, we talk about things that are all over the place.
Actually, tomorrow night, we're going to have a pretty big guest on them.
I don't know.
We haven't told anybody.
So if you've ever delved into the world of these Omegle creator type people, he's one of the best.
And he's coming on our show tomorrow night.
Well, go ahead.
So tomorrow night is Friday night.
And by the time this comes out, hopefully it'll be Friday night.
So we won't be spoiling it.
Who you got in the hopper?
We can't tell you.
I haven't even told HT.
He's begging to know.
Oh, okay.
All right.
Good, man.
Keeping those lips tight.
Good for you.
All right.
So that's GoyumTV.tv, right?
Right.
And what's the name of your show?
America Fash.
America Fash.
Yeah, Tomer Fashion.
A play on America First.
And that's a good segue into we had Handsome Truth on the show, I don't know, a month or two ago.
Can't even remember how much time has passed.
And HT said, all right, it's time for you guys to reciprocate and come on my show.
So myself, Sam, and Smasher are going to join Handsome Truth on Monday of the coming week to talk about, we don't know yet.
Maybe might talk about blacks, might talk about Jews, might just talk about fatherhood and our issues and our stuff.
But really enjoyed having him on.
A sincere pleasure to just talk about his background and his approach to things.
And it seemed like his audience was receptive to what we do here.
I think you guys skew a little bit younger and a little bit wilder with no disparagement meant there.
So hopefully a good crossover.
So stay tuned and check us out when we join his show.
I guess it will be live streams.
So Smasher, you can go on camera and sound smarter and less autistic.
And I'll put my camera on if my internet will sustain it.
New white life here at the top.
I got another great one, but I'm sworn to secrecy.
So I'll just tease it here and say that a great friend, longtime listener to the show, has been trying with his wife for over a year.
And he let me know that she is, in fact, pregnant.
And he'll get his formal announcement when the time is right.
He's probably sweating it.
He's like, don't do it, Coach.
Don't you dare do it because it's still early days and I'm sure he's nervous and all the rest of it.
But congratulations, buddy.
You know who you are.
We see you there.
And got another note here.
This is one that I overlooked or I half overlooked because I went back through the inbox diligently because it just gets lost.
You know, even on the email account, we get spam and all this junk that somehow piles up.
But I missed this one.
And this is from a friend of new white parents.
And he says, my good friend and fellow white warrior, John, and his wife Sadie, just had their firstborn, a fine and healthy boy named, I'll skip the name.
If you could read this traditional Irish blitzing out as well, that would be appreciated.
And here it goes.
May the road rise up to meet you.
May the wind be always at your back.
May the sun shine warm upon your face.
The rains fall soft upon your fields.
And until we meet again, may God hold you in the palm of his hand.
And then he ended it with hail victory, brothers.
And that was from Jamobi.
Thank you, Jamobi.
And congratulations to John and Sadie.
I may have like half-assed mentioned them in the Independence Day show, but it was live and we had all these people around the table.
So I wanted to do them proper justice.
We talked a little bit about Afghanistan here.
Do you guys have any other newbies, new ones on the way that I might have missed?
No.
That's it for now.
Shameful, shameful.
This is a poor batch this week.
A secret one and a stale one.
Oh, we mentioned Fritz last week.
Well, I have a secret one, but that's all I'll say.
I have a secret one.
Is he in the NJP Central Committee?
No.
Okay.
Fair enough.
There was a little bit of a pause there.
So we congratulated Fritz last week and he sent a picture tonight of his brand new baby boy or almost brand new back home in his crib or yeah, I think it was a crib.
Looked pretty flexible.
And just a perfect, I called it a white baby at a central casting.
And I didn't get misty, but I'm thinking about it.
So happy for you, brother.
Godspeed to you.
Johnny, I neglected to mention, are you?
It sounds like there's a decent age gap between your first and second.
Are you and wifey still on the game or you checked out on that?
No, that's a really good question.
I guess I didn't cover that part of my story.
So during 2016 or so, I was one of like the people who was the sky is falling.
And so that house that I told you that we renovated, we sold it.
We bought like four acres because I wanted to become self-sufficient, get off the grid, but you cannot really get off the grid and just get ready for whatever was coming.
I was like, you know, I was convinced that the FEMA trucks were rolling up and taking us out to have our heads chopped off at some point.
And so I came up with this scheme to buy land, buy a used RV.
We had our two older kids that were at the time like 10 and 8.
And I bought a used fifth wheel.
I didn't know my wife was pregnant at the time.
So I wouldn't have come up with this plan to force my family to live in a fifth wheel.
But we did.
And it was horrible.
And I drugged my family through another horrible experiment.
And then now we have a two-year-old.
So, oh, I didn't finish that part of the story.
You remember when I told you how I was a little judgmental over others at seminary for being pregnant with a kid?
So I was in the city at a like a, what do you call it?
Like a yard sale or whatever.
And I saw these people who look like they were in their 40s were like a little child.
And I thought to myself, suckers.
At the time I was thinking that, my wife was pregnant.
So just be careful what you project out there.
Yeah, we gave our advice to the older gentleman with his advanced maternal age wife.
They're not that old last week to just go for it.
And a fan of the show said, well, you know, they're going to be pretty old if they're successful and they're not going to have that much time with the kid, which is a valid point problem.
No, I agree.
I agree, Sam, but I just wanted to give the sincere counterpoint or a slight pushback there.
And my refrain was, yeah, well, you know, even if mom and or dad die a little bit earlier than is usual for kids, that kid is still not going to regret that he was born, right?
You know, thanks, mom and dad.
Yeah, I wish I were never born because you weren't there for a long time.
So it's just part of it.
Well, if white people aren't replacing themselves, then I feel like it's the job of white people to have at least three kids.
Oh, yeah.
To count them.
Four is what I would suggest that was what got women the mother's cross in the third Reich.
And that's actually what Muslims consider to be the absolute minimum in service to Allah or his messenger, Muhammad.
Well, let me just say I sent you guys some pictures over the break and one of them was with a very, well, not very, but a somewhat famous man.
And he said that six to seven children is what you need to have because some people never marry.
Some people have health problems.
Some people die in accidents or whatever it is.
So six to seven is the number.
I don't want to let a low number go out there and somebody say, oh, that's right.
Good.
Exactly.
I'm at three.
I'm done.
I'm done.
I'm at three.
No, go as far as you can.
If you can have 10, 12, 15, great.
If you're somebody and we know people, they started later and they only have two, whatever.
That's great too.
Go as far as you can.
There's no number that's like too far.
No, well, looking back in retrospect, I regret not having 10.
So if you're young out there and you're starting a family, go for it.
Why not?
I mean, there's nothing more wonderful in this world than kids.
It's awesome.
Kids are all.
Children are a blessing from God and people don't even know what a blessing is anymore.
It's like if they were given a whole bunch of kids, then somebody's going to say, oh, oh, I've got too many kids.
You know, you want a blessing or not, you know, because children are a blessing.
There's a lot of people who can't have kids or can't have as many kids as they wish they could have.
If you can have kids, then you should have kids.
Well, look at this.
Somebody pointed this out too.
And it might have even been like, I know y'all probably aren't fans of Gavin McInnes, but he made this point that all these world leaders like McCrone and Boris and the girl, whatever her name is in Germany, they're all, they don't have kill, they don't have kids.
Right.
So they're making decisions about the future of their country and they have no vested interests.
So that's right.
I mean, and let's say there's somebody out there and they can't have kids for some reason.
We don't want to condemn that person either because that person can be a special blessing in their own right.
They can help take care of somebody else's kids.
Like you have a bunch of kids and maybe you and your wife want to go out on a date.
Well, the person who doesn't have any kids and who can't have any kids, they can be the person who says, I'm going to watch your kids.
So you're actually making a really good point.
So when we lived in San Francisco, the average age for a first child, we're talking about really wealthy people, it's like 42.
And so when my wife was crying at 23, they looked at us like we were teenagers who weren't like making responsible decisions.
And so what happens is, and when they have a kid at 42, because they have their master's in business, they work for Google, they're making millions of dollars, they're not happy.
So they say to themselves, let's have kids.
Kids will make us happy.
And then Lupe winds up raising the kids.
Right.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So we definitely, we need a community.
We need other people who may not be able to have kids to help raise our kids.
That's right.
Everybody has a place in this world and everybody has a place in our society and can help us.
But if you are a young couple and you can have children, hey, you've been blessed.
Have those children.
Amen.
Nice job carrying on while my internet crapped out there, fellas.
Unfortunately, what you said during those brief interludes probably is not going to be retained because I'm recording locally, but these are the breaks.
Blame Mr. Producer for shirking this week.
So Afghanistan today, it's the 20, well, it was the 26th.
Now it's the 27th.
Of course, the multitude of suicide bombs, bombs, shootouts, 13 Marines dead the last time I checked.
And a very grisly reminder.
I actually know a guy whose family member, I don't know if it was his brother or his cousin, was one of those poor, poor saps who got called up to go over there to help in the rescue mission.
God forbid he wasn't one of the ones who got taken down.
But what a visceral reminder of, you know, it would be one thing to die in Afghanistan in 2001, I guess.
Don't rake me over the coals for this, but on a mission to knock out, all right, I shouldn't have even said that because, you know, whether the Taliban was harboring Osama or not, or they just wanted to go in and break something in revenge for 9-11 is beside the point.
But a visceral reminder that, yes, something like 85% of the combat deaths in Afghanistan were white men.
Something over 90% of the combat forces in America and higher than that in special forces are white men.
So, of course, what is happening in the political discourse, but Republicans slash conservatives are taking the absolute worst possible angle on this, given that nice, normal white middle Americans are their natural constituency and banging drums for more warhawkishness and Biden shouldn't stay in Afghanistan forever.
Plus, crying crocodile tears for the poor Afghans who are going to be increasingly coming to a neighborhood near you, tens of thousands of them.
And I don't care if they helped us over there, whether they interpreted, translated, or just brought the mail around to the offices.
We're full up.
We're more than full up.
We're overflowing.
It's like that old classic kid's book, The Mitten, where all the animals pile in at the very last minute.
It's the tiny cricket that busts the seams and they all go tumbling out.
But an absolute travesty.
How many actual terrorists are going to come over?
Like we haven't really had a whole lot of Islamic terrorism happen since 9-11.
There's been a couple of shootings by radicalized soldiers and stuff.
And who knows how real any of that even was.
But, you know, it really hasn't been crazy.
They're like, oh, we got to go fight terrorism.
It's like, terrorism, where?
And but people that actually hate us are going to use this as an opportunity to come over.
Absolutely shocking how, remember how wild it was 2015, 2016 during the campaign.
I mean, you know, Muslim shootouts both here and in Europe regularly.
God, the Nice truck driver, I remember seeing that.
That must have been August or maybe June of 2016.
The Christmas markets in Germany.
running people over in London, San Bernardino, Pulse Nightclub, you name it, and completely dropped off during Trump.
You would think that they would keep that stuff under wraps when they were trying to coast to Hillary.
And instead, it only ended up fueling the flame, giving us Trump with a bellyache or whatever.
And now a Democrat's back in office and the whole Muslim Middle East thing is flaring up again.
And it's back to the future, back to the past.
Well, I think part of it is probably like, okay, the Jignats are out of power temporarily.
And they were so pro-Zionist that now everybody's like glaring at us.
So let's make Muslims do some stuff so people get mad about Muslims.
You know, here's the thing about Afghanistan that bothers me.
And of course, when those bombs were going off today, everybody was fake, gay, CIA, Mossad.
Hey, whatever.
Very, well, maybe, but not everything bad that happens in the world, not every Muslim who blows himself up or does something bad has to have a little CIA or a Mossad string attached to it.
You had thousands of U.S. if this guy, so this is coming from a group that is allegedly like ISIS, ISIS-K.
So I don't know, maybe ISIS Kabul or something.
If it's ISIS.
Coruscant, Coruscant province.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
So I didn't get to look into it at all.
I just had overheard it, you know, throughout the day.
But if it's ISIS-related, then it is fake and gay.
Now, it was probably like a real Muslim that really believed he was blowing himself up for a law, but ISIS is a Mossad CIA operation.
And like, all of their actions.
No, all of their actions, everything that happens because of ISIS is because of gay, glow, Negro stuff.
Fair enough.
I mean, yeah, the point that they don't attack in Israel and that they possibly receive medical treatment there.
I'm sure that there are connections.
But like angry Muslims who want to caliphate is not something that necessarily requires, you know, the Jews might help that, but that's also probably in their DNA as much as Jews subverting their host stations.
You know, you pack thousands of U.S. troops and their Afghan collaborators in one spot that's chaotic and insecure.
And like, yeah, a jihadi is probably going to take a run at that.
Now, you know, the whole, yeah, the ISIS, like that the U.S. ship them into Afghanistan to destabilize the Taliban.
It's so wild.
Like, I don't blame people for getting confused or like you say, Smasher, it's breaking people's brains.
Like, you know, Biden basically admitted, like, at this point, the Taliban are like, you know, they're not totally the bad guys.
They're like the more reasonable party in Afghanistan.
They disavowed the attack.
They're like, we didn't do this.
We didn't do nothing.
And the president basically affirmed that today in his little press conference, that it was ISIS and they were communicating with the Taliban to like warn them about ISIS bombers coming in.
What level of insane international clown world are we on?
You know, the Taliban had every reason not to blow us up as we're literally like take, they're not going to keep us there by this, right?
Like, I'll bet anybody 100 bucks that we're not going to go back in with a sizable U.S. force to like sweep the mountains of Afghanistan again.
Yeah, I don't, I don't think we're going to see another invasion.
It's just not popular.
Like people are over this.
They've been over it for a long time.
There are people that didn't even know we were even still in Afghanistan at this point.
You know, like how many people were like, what is it?
He's dead.
I didn't even know he's sick.
Like, oh, we're leaving.
I didn't even know we were still there.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, we had, we, I'm telling you, that Biden presser was a because he was like, listen, Jack, one of the reporters said was like, you know, there hadn't been any deaths in Afghanistan in something like February of 2020.
And he's like, yeah, that's because Trump cut a deal with them and said, we'll leave by May 2021 if you don't attack our soldiers.
So like, talk about cards on the table.
He also said, here are some reporters that I've been instructed to call upon.
Everybody's like, oh, yeah.
Like, he's literally just taking marching orders from his handlers.
But no, yeah, he was like, no, we're getting out.
Now, he did, of course, sound Biden-esque, which is not completely there when he did a little moment of silence.
And I'm pretty sure I wasn't the only person thinking, like, is he actually going to wake up or is he going to take a nap there at the podium?
You know, put his head down to show the ball with his plugs in the front.
I said this to somebody today, and they didn't even know how to respond.
I was like, you know, regardless of how you feel about the Taliban as an American, the Afghanis clearly love the Taliban.
They, you know, you don't take over a country in like 90 days without serious casualty incidents unless you have, you know, popular support from the people.
And he was like, oh, I'm not, I don't, I don't know about that.
And I'm like, well, then explain how you, you know, explain how you regain control of a country.
Yeah.
Otherwise.
Well, they don't have, they don't have to love them.
They have to be afraid of them or, you know, hate the previous collaborators and God knows what they were getting away with.
Right.
But yeah, point, point taken.
They were like, yeah, we'll take these guys over the status quo.
And those who didn't like it were like, I'm an Afghan collaborator with Uncle Sam.
Get me out of here.
You know, like run to the airport.
I mean, the Taliban took over in 96.
They were formed in 1994.
And they took power in 1996 and then were ousted in 2001.
But like between 96 and 2001, and I'm not like, I'm not an expert, but I'm pretty sure Afghanistan was like pretty okay.
Things were going fairly well.
Better than they were if you were a gay smasher.
Not if you were dealing drugs or raping boys.
Think of those poor Afghans.
Well, and you know what?
My answer to people when they like when Normi's like, well, what about gay people?
What about Afghan women and this, that, and the other?
And it's like, you know what?
That sounds like a bunch of stuff that isn't my problem.
I'm not a gay person in Afghanistan.
I'm not a woman in Afghanistan.
I'm not, I'm not an Afghani.
So that's not my problem.
I'm an American.
I don't care.
I don't give a crap.
I'll bring her back.
I got to go grab the boy.
Sam, Johnny, anything before I go into this hard letter from a father to a son about to enlist in the Marines?
No, I had a quick question.
What do you think about the idea that the proposal that they want to bring over to the United States, 200,000 Afghanians, is like more than were more than like the American soldiers were ever there.
So what did we win?
Yeah, I didn't, I didn't, I mean, that, that number would astound me and knock me off my chair.
But oh, yeah, it's, I mean, clearly they're bringing the number that I saw, I think, was 30,000, maybe 50,000.
Yeah, maybe I'm crazy to be even a little bit optimistic that it's not going to be more than that.
But yeah, God knows.
I think they are going to close once we're out of there.
But it's the classic invade the world, invite the world.
We bestride the world like a retarded behemoth monkey, smashing and breaking things and losing a lot of our own precious blood and funny money treasure in the meantime.
Jews, contractors, et cetera, get wealthy.
People make their careers.
And at the end of it, they all end up coming here.
Same thing that happened with Vietnam and the boat people, right?
The Hmong in Minnesota, you know, cutting people's heads off on buses in Canada and colonizing neighborhoods.
It's the classic imperial blowback.
Rome, its minions.
And then what do you know?
The empire didn't last that long.
The writings on the wall, people, I don't know what to tell you.
Like, I was once a red, white, and blue waving classic American patriot.
Visited Washington, D.C., the home of the empire, and was like, this is the place I want to be.
This is where I want to make a career working for the empire, which I wouldn't have, you know, viewed as a virtuous thing back then.
And now the chickens are coming home to roost.
I know, right?
Stupid.
Yeah.
Talk about going back and telling me.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
It's amazing, though.
What a life trip, right?
How fast things can change.
And what was that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're at like just over two decades from normie to white nationalists.
Yeah.
Amazing.
Dude.
Yeah.
I enlisted in 2012 and I was like, I want to be a bad dude.
Like, I want to kill people and not go to jail.
I want to even stupider.
I know.
I was like, I want to jump out of helicopters and shoot machine guns and like did all it.
And, you know, got into like a highly respected special operations unit and was like training the hardest pipe hitters, you know, that Zog has to offer.
Yep.
Yeah.
To the question of whether your kids should join the military and this letter I'm about to read is going to talk to it.
My firm answer is no, no.
Even if you try to go for the chair force and get some safe billet that'll get you a little bit of training, a little bit of benefits.
Yeah, you have to get the vax just to be in the military now.
So yeah, so my answer since the last time we talked about it on the show, answer now is a definite no.
One, because you have to get hard vaccinated.
But two, your opportunities for benefits are, it's really going away.
Like with combat operations coming to quote unquote combat operations, like let's be real about what it was like over there at this point since, I don't know, 2013.
It was just like a really, really crappy, the world's worst vacation.
Very little going on over there.
Still, still, you know, there's still things going on, but not the way that it was.
And so, with your opportunity for any type of actual warfighter experience disappearing, you're going to a peacetime military is just going to be terrible.
Like, like we said earlier in the show, the idle hands or the devil's playthings, like that is very true of the military.
And, you know, they loosen a lot of their restrictions for enlistment when they needed bodies.
And now that they're not in a wartime, those are going to get very, very tight again.
You aren't going to be able to go to schools.
And then when you get out, your only benefit is going to be the GI bill, basically, because everything else, you're not going to be able to get a VA disability because they're going to look at your record and be like, well, you didn't deploy.
You didn't do this.
You didn't do that.
You know, why do you, why do you, what's wrong with you?
There's nothing wrong with you.
You're fine.
You know, so like even the one thing that would be like, well, if you could like claim PTSD and get 100% disability or something, like, okay, that'd be cool.
But you can't even get that now.
Oh, yeah.
And increasingly, they're going to find out that you're a racist, and they're just going to cut it off, even if you had virtuous service and an honorable discharge, right?
Like, sorry, you can't see the VA doc because you're not vaxxed.
Now, yeah, get your training from one of these guys who is getting kicked out of the military or is, you know, getting out because he can't take it anymore.
Yeah, I think that's going to be like the next stage of this.
I don't think a lot of people see that.
They're going to force booster shots for you to get your VA disability or in perpetuity.
Yep.
Let me lighten the mood here real quick with a dad joke.
Niggas, he's been plying me with dad jokes.
The CEO of IKEA, this is also current events.
The CEO of IKEA was recently elected prime minister of Sweden, but he's still assembling his cabinet.
Sam's asleep.
Thank you, Sam.
Sam's my color man.
He always laughs where he's supposed to.
And yeah, why don't people gamble in the jungle?
Sam, any idea on that one?
No.
too many cheetahs sure those are one with your uh younger kids fam yeah Yeah, my youngest son, he always points out like, oh, that was a dad joke right there.
Gotcha nailed.
Yeah, they're good, good, innocent fun that we need more than ever these days.
All right, here we go.
This is a letter from a father whose son has just enlisted in the U.S. Marines.
This guy tried his best and failed.
And this is what he expressed to him.
I grieve for things that haven't happened yet.
And in all likelihood, will not happen.
Possibly losing you, my beloved son, in a conflict that I passionately disagree with for a government that hates me and that hates you and that I despise from the core of my being.
It fills me with unutterable rage and bottomless sorrow.
It's simply the possibility of losing you, my boy, my precious boy.
It's the fear that all parents who love their children feel.
I honestly wouldn't mind so much if you were actually being sent to fight for our country.
Warriors are necessary, and your desire to serve is exemplary.
They use our sense of honor and duty against us.
It's the way they manipulate and use the best parts of our people against us that I despise.
When I think of you, a million thoughts come to my heart first and then my head in remembrance.
I rear you in diapers and one-piece zip-up-footy jammies, and I abhorred every hair upon your one-year-old head.
Becoming your father was humbling, because before you, I never knew what love was, in the sense that I'd loved people before, but not in this new, all-consuming way.
There's just something about the flesh of your flesh and the bone of your bones.
To love someone far more than I did myself was astonishing and electric.
Now you've grown into the last of the true believers, son.
You're a warrior and a patriot.
You've gone and decided to have a military career in the army of Zog despite everything I've tried to tell you.
I can't help but admire and respect your determination and self-discipline, your masculinity and your sense of honor.
Of course, I'm proud of you.
It almost goes without saying.
But the truth is that this country doesn't deserve your sacrifice.
You will not be fighting for the country you think you have, but for rich and evil men who profit upon things like poppy fields for the drug trade.
Soft-handed rich and evil men who think nothing of little boys who are raped and violated by people who are their so-called allies against other brown people that they call terrorists.
You will be told that you are a nation building, but really you shall be a cynical tool used to make some country the Jews want to mess with unstable and filled on the other hand with war and on the other one with imported Western degeneracy and societal nihilism.
Instead of fighting for your country, you'll fight for a gay rainbow flag.
Instead of protecting your people, you'll be the boots on the ground for whatever regime change the plutocrats desire when the sneaky covert ops aren't doing the trick.
I'm talking now about Afghanistan, but it doesn't matter because third world wars of the U.S. to either prop up or tear down other people's countries are all the same.
You can simply replace the Afghan reference to whomever Israel wants us to invade next.
You don't have a country anymore, son, only a huge strip mall where your rights as a red-blooded traditional American white man are crushed.
It's a country where you are slotted for replacement by people that are not you, where the only purpose the elites can find for your kind and flyover country is to pay taxes to them if civilians or to pay with your lives if you're military.
You're dealing with a government elite that's trying to square how they can train you enough to do their dirty work, but dreads the training that you'll have if God forbid you survive and return home and resume civilian life.
You don't yet see how much this country hates you, but rather believe in your own good faith that the flag stands for freedom and that you have a bill of rights that isn't violated every day or by the corporations for which it serves.
How is there going to be room in the future in this country if the system that just tore up Afghanistan now tends to give your homeland up to those same Afghans because they tell you that you're a nation of immigrants.
And whatever conflict and war is coming, you can rest assured knowing that the same people you shot at will now be sending their children to the same schools as the children that you plan to have.
Never mind if they hate infidels.
Never mind if they practice child marriage or barbarism like the rape of little boys that we as a society once had the nerve to call barbarism.
Never mind if you and your family lose the safety of cultural homogeneity that is your birthright.
The truth is that you get different outcomes from different people.
This is true diversity.
Moving Afghans to the U.S. will create Afghan circumstances.
The United States was founded and built by your ancestors, son.
It was supposed to go on to your descendants, white people, the only people capable of either creating or maintaining such a wonder under the sun as America once was.
But you're going off to fight for a country that probably hasn't existed since the Civil War, to fight brown people for Israel, all to have those same people replace you in the land of your birth by a government that, if you survive its wars, is perfectly happy if you blow your brains out when you come home, as so many vets do, just to save them all the inconvenience.
And he quotes a Bible verse here, which is appropriate for this show.
Wiping my left eye.
This is Samuel 12, 4.
We learn of the poor man's lamb.
And there came a traveler unto the rich man, and he spared Jacob his own flock and of his own herd to dress for the wayfaring man that was come unto him, but took the poor man's lamb and dressed it for the man.
My son, you are my lamb, and the U.S. government that seeks to take you is the rich man.
I'm a working-class white man who works and pays his taxes and doesn't break the law.
I'm called evil for wanting a place for my children to live in peace.
I'm told that I owe reparations to one group, but that I should take in as many foreign groups as possible to replace me and patriarchal men like me.
This is not a real nation.
On top of all the slander, on top of a country that hates its own people that work to maintain it, the government wants you, my son, to serve and fight and die for it.
It's only given me a bill and called me evil and wants to send you and others overseas for whatever bullshit they're trying to do.
These wars are started by well-paid men who long ago sold their souls, men who don't labor and whose own children never serve in the global messes that they make.
We all have to die, and I believe that the soul of a man never dies.
I respect honor and I don't have a problem with combat or death in battle.
It's the endless false justification, lies, and lack of justice on the part of this corrupt and wicked monster towards me and working-class white people like me that is unacceptable.
I long to live under a state that doesn't call me a terrorist for insisting on the Second Amendment I was born with as an inheritance from my ancestors while stomping on my rights and saying that my objection is a threat to our democracy.
I want to live in a nation that's a nation, a blood and soil nation, that if it must fight wars, does so in defense of people, not of Amazon and Walmart and BlackRock.
And finally, my son, I want a country for you, for the children you haven't had yet, for your children to not be told that they're evil, to not be taught to be gay, or to have to share your home with people who don't share your values, who can't because they have other values.
I don't want you to fight war against people that aren't attacking us, all to have the same people flown over here after the war to take over the city park that your children are going to need one day.
That's it.
Father to his son about to join the Marines.
Yeah, really good.
Disagree with any of that, Smasher?
Was it too soft?
He's out of the space Marines, right?
Yep.
Can you imagine having to write that to your son?
Very, very well-reasoned, well-stated, important words.
He didn't even, well, he kind of beat him over the head, but still gave him credit for doing the bit.
Sure.
Yeah.
That's what, yes, guys were saying, like, no, you don't understand.
Like, this is what young white men do.
They sign up to fight, especially if they don't have better options at home.
Enlist, yeah, smash into things and get some benefits and come home and translate that into something else or be a little bit.
I've I had friends at that age who didn't have a plan in life, you know, they weren't going to college necessarily, and they didn't have any kind of job they're working at that was going to go anywhere, so they enlisted, you know.
And in those four, four and a half, five years that you were enlisted, you could figure out what you wanted to do in life.
And meanwhile, you were doing something worthwhile, you were saving some money and getting some life experience.
But yeah, I agree.
I would never allow or advise my son to join the military.
How could you possibly take that gamble?
What's up, brother?
Um, yeah, it's like uh, on pragmatic as well as principled grounds, yeah.
No, no dice.
Uh, Smasher, all four of your children, even your daughter, are enlisting in the army when they're 18, right?
Yes, because we'll have achieved victory by then.
There you go, software.
I like that.
Uh, no, I mean, it was a great, that was a great letter.
That was just bad timing.
Uh, the old, my oldest boy started crying.
Literally, you were like, and that's it, Smasher.
And I was like, oh, crap.
He sent it out.
No, yeah, yeah, he's like, don't get dad out of this one.
No, no, no, no.
It was a good, it was a great letter.
Um, I mean, I mean, the biggest thing for me is like, yeah, these people hate you, they hate you and they want you dead.
Why would you join the military?
Especially now that you're, I mean, I'm willing to like go against principles in specific situations like this because if you can gain an advantage from it, like the ultimate principle is do what's best for yourself and for white people.
And so, if you can gain a lot out of joining the military, then it's not unprincipled to join the military.
But at this point, you can't gain a lot out of it.
So, it is unprincipled to join the military.
Yeah, and I feel like you said 85% of casualties in the war on terror were white men.
And then, who knows?
That's just deaths.
Who knows how many casualties there have been that are not deaths?
You know, how many people are crippled?
How many white men have been crippled?
The large majority of people that are now permanently disabled, I'm sure, are white.
It's something somewhere around 30,000 suicides since operations have started post-9/11.
And I guarantee the majority of them have been white as well.
Not to mention how many people have overdosed and died, not even like committed suicide, but just overdosed and died because the VA over-prescribed them medications that everybody knew was addictive.
And they're now dead.
Or maybe they're not dead, but they're worse than dead because they're addicted to heroin, living on the streets.
And people look at them as if they're like some piece of garbage.
But the only reason that they live like this is because the disgusting Jewish system sent them to some third world country to destabilize that country in order to protect Israel or protect the CA-run poppy fields and marijuana fields.
jump on if i give like a slightly a slightly different perspective fire have that have at it yeah i i think if you were standing before like a jury like you guys have built like the most beautiful case that letter did the things that smasher sane does i somebody i just talked to recently he's been at the va hospital and they're pushing all kinds of pills on him he's telling me this so i i get it and so it's it's obvious like white man walk away but i think that's what they want Like,
so with like the George Floyd, whether you call it completely real or a psyop, they're pushing white police officers to walk away from the force.
Good.
I'm not pro-police.
However, if the military gets turned on us, 20 years ago, I was in basic training with, and there were 70 guys in my platoon.
Two of them couldn't speak English.
And that was 20 years ago.
Yeah, but here's my thing.
If they don't want white people to be cops and the warriors of the nation, and then they think they're going to be able to function, utilize the police force and the military against white people, they are sorely mistaken.
I mean, they've made that calculation, right?
I mean, this is a fully aware realization that they are going to alienate and lose white police officers, first responders, special forces, enlisted, all of them.
They have to know that.
I mean, that tells me that they're confident enough that they think that they can backfill them with diversity or shabby squoys and deal with them later.
That's the only conclusion I can reach.
Yeah, they think that they can train transsexual mulattoes to drone strike enough white people to beat us, and that's just not the case.
No, you're, and you guys, I mean, Enoch has brought up that point.
Like the most like diversity and females and homosexual trans is being pushed everywhere except one group of people that works in the federal government, that's the FBI.
He was saying still like 95% white male because they want to be productive at their job, but their job is to come after us.
But they're also not really great at their job.
And they're, at the very least, I'd wager that they're overwhelmingly homosexual.
We know that they have a child rape problem.
Amoral.
They definitely have no morals.
Right.
Oh, yeah.
No, they're sociopathic libtards and largely homosexual pedophiles.
But you could be a homosexual libtard and still be a white male and still be very good at your job.
Oh, yeah, 100%.
Especially when your job falls in line with your ideology.
That's right.
That's why whenever they push the whole transsexual on our military and women of color, just go, yeah, please, fine, go ahead.
Please.
I understand that sentiment.
However, you know, you could see, and it might have been Mike that brought this up.
It's like a really good point.
Like, there are benefits to being in the military.
You do get some money.
And so right now I see you get, you know, you get some VA, you get some, you know, GI bill, you get these things.
They don't want white men getting anything anymore at all.
They want all non-white men to get to get all the benefits.
And I think that's what this whole COVID thing is about.
Maybe, you know, not to get too conspiratorial, but in my mind, I see it's a run against the upper white middle class to shift money, to shift small business owners.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's basically our society is a massive Jewish shit test to see how much shit they can pour on our heads before we bite back.
And then when somebody does bite back, they use that as a ratchet to increase censorship, oppression, surveillance, all the rest of it.
Right.
Dangerous game.
Yep.
To anybody in the audience who may be still like, oh, I don't know if they, ah, the damn birds.
See, they hate white genocide too.
Even the Gene Fal get it.
Oh, God, they're so loud.
Regardless, I'll power through.
Sorry, audience.
Shove them into the pond.
Maybe there's a fox about to eat them.
John Garbisher, former writer for National Review, once said that whether every country has an immigration policy, even if you have no immigration policy at all and you have complete open borders, that's a policy.
That is a choice.
And the bottom line, least common denominator about white genocide, replacement, et cetera, comes with who a country allows to enter their land and establish legal residence and become citizens.
And that is entirely skewed towards non-whites from all of these countries with failing histories.
And the census 2020 that just came, it's been like they slow roll the releases as they crunch the numbers showed that for the first time in this country's history, white people decline as an absolute number of our rank comprising our population.
Now, you could say, oh, yeah, sure, the boomers are dying off, but no, that is a momentous turning point.
And Jesus Christ, these birds, they just threw me off.
Regardless, I wanted to read real quick: if you look at the numbers, there are only 11 states where whites comprise 80% or more of the population.
And if I were you and you were willing to relocate, I would consider these and almost none others.
They are from west to east, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Kentucky, West Virginia, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
If I counted right, that's 11 out of 50 states where you still have something resembling the traditional American composition and demographics.
So buckle up, fam.
Lots of content to come.
What do you think they're stopping, though?
Oh, no, of course not.
No, those states are at the top of the list for, I don't know, if Afghans in particular, but no, yeah, they want to destroy those as well.
Right.
All right.
All right, gents.
Closing out the end of the second half here.
I'm going to mute my mic while I go strangle some African birds, have at it, and then we'll go around the horn.
Hearing none, all right, John.
It was great to have you on, brother.
Any little thoughts?
Nothing.
I'm going to spend a few days beating myself up over my performance because I did have a good friend who encouraged me to call in.
And I do feel like, you know, it might just be normal for people to do this to themselves.
So I did feel like my thoughts were a little scattered.
I think you guys are great.
I think your content's great.
Somebody mentioned you guys were able to play you in the background and your wife not be offended.
And so I appreciate that.
In fact, the show that we do on America Fast, I said from the beginning I wanted to do it, you know, kind of after the, you know, very, you know, similar to y'all's show.
I want it to be family friendly.
I don't want to cuss words.
I don't want, you know, just, I want content that I want positive content.
I want to be, you know, similar to what you guys provide.
And the guy that told me, he has a very high view of you guys.
I mean, obviously, you guys are in with the biggest names in the movement.
So I didn't want to embarrass myself too much.
Yeah.
Not at all.
Tail to hang on.
Come back anytime and keep on you.
And only heard a couple I lost coach a little bit.
Is that me?
No, he's cutting out a little bit with his internet.
Coach, you're there.
Yep.
The wheels are starting to fall off here.
All right.
Sam, have it.
Yeah.
Thank you for joining us.
Yeah.
Great show.
Great discussion.
I think Johnny did a wonderful job.
It's important to other listeners to hear all those little things that he went through and observations and conclusions that he drew.
And this last bit here talking about Afghanistan, very timely and important.
So good job.
And thank you, Coach.
All right, fam.
Thank you for bearing with us with a delightful guest, solo producing here on this Full House episode 99 recorded on a humid August 26th, now August 27th, 2021.
Follow us on Telegram at prowhitefam and gab at gab.com slash fullhouse.
And as always, check out full-house.com for the latest or drop us a line to fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
So to any white families out there who might be struggling with a seeming contradiction between the Christian faith and white pride worldwide, stay the course.
You can work it out, but you don't have to if you can't.
You can, as Sam once said, you might have to choose Christianity or white identity or white nationalism.
But I think you can have your cake and eat it too.
No Mr. Producer tonight, so I guess I'm taking us out.
And good friend suggested this song.
I'll not name his sock even to protect his identity, but he likes to lift heavy weights while playing this, which is we all lift together.
And there's two versions, one with a female singer and one with a man.
I could decide which one was better.
So we're going to let you decide, dear listener.
So put it on loud, lift heavy weights, read old books, read your Bibles, if that's your thing.
But whatever you do, don't race mix and keep it white.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you on Monday on Handsome Truth's show.
Put them up and see ya.
See ya.
Heart, the land we call our home.
Push to keep the dark from coming.
Feel the weight of what we owe.
This, the song of sons and daughters, hide the heart of who we are.
Making peace to build our future.
Strong, united, working till we fold the air and water flowing.
Heart, the land we call our home.
Push to keep the dark from coming.
Feel the weight of what we owe.
This, the song of sons and daughters, hide the heart of who we are.
Making peace to build our future.
Strong, united, working till we fall.
And we all lift and we're all adrift together together through the coldness till we're lifeless together together.
Cold of the air and cold to the land we call the land.
We call the dush and feel the weight of what we own.
This, the song of sons and daughters, hide the heart of who we are.
Making peace to build our future.
Strong united, working till we fall.
And we all live on the land.
And we're all adrift together together through the coldness of heartless.
Till we're lifeless together.
Cold, the air and water flowing.
Heart, the land we call our home.
Push to keep the dark from coming.
Feel the weight of what we own.
This, the song of sons and daughters, hide the heart of who we are.
Making peace to build a future.
Strong, united, working till we fall.
The air and water flowing.
Heart, the land we call our home.
Push to keep the dark from coming.
Feel the weight of what we owe.
This, the song of sons and daughters, hide the heart of who we are.
Making peace to build the future.
Strong, united, working till we fall.
And we all lift.
And we're all adrift together, Together through the cold mist, to we're life blessed together, together Give,