If refusing to bend the knee to lockdowns, mask health theater, and vaccine mandates makes us rebels, so be it.
If drawing a line in the sand and declaring no, they will never take our guns from us makes us rebels, so be it.
If declaring that the more than 62 million abortions performed in America since Roe v. Wade are a moral atrocity makes us rebels, so be it.
If righteous fury at the degeneracy foisted on our children via race-mixing propaganda, gay indoctrination, and now even state-supported chemical castration of minors and normalization of pedophilia makes us rebels, so be it.
If knowing that the endless, deliberate browning of white countries via third world invasion is indeed the great replacement makes us rebels, so be it.
If yet another billion-dollar giveaway to the first world rogued state of Israel, nothing but a strategic liability to us, fills us with revulsion and makes us rebels, so be it.
And if opposing with every ounce of our beings, the Jewish power that makes all of the above possible makes us rebels, by God, so be it.
Family and friends, we've got two rough characters with us tonight to talk fatherhood, white nationalism, and yes, music.
So, mr producer, hit the gas.
Welcome everyone to episode 102 of Full
House, the world's most rebellious show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
I am your unapologetic host, Coach Finstock, back with another one hour this week.
We'll call it a white power hour, more on that later, of all the content that's fit to upload.
Before we meet tonight's birth panel, though, hail to all of our Australian brothers and sisters making the bravest and most prominent stand against globalist tyranny since the yellow vests in France.
I personally have always been a bit soft on the PQ.
That's the police question, not the pit bull question, based on some decent personal experiences I had with them throughout my life, until Charlottesville, at least.
But the footage coming out from down under is nothing less than the stuff that fuels revolutions.
And yes, our pal from Oz answered the call, and we will have him on the show next week.
And with that, let's get on to the birth panel and our very special guests.
First up, he's co-piloting the ship with me more than usual this week as we have on two of his pals, and we take a welcome detour from a little bit more of our focus on family, religion, and politics and more into music.
He is our very own aspiring Aryan Casey Kasim.
Sam, welcome back, brother.
Thanks, Coach.
Great intro.
As always.
Yeah.
You know, on this eve of a very somber remembrance, actually, if we could pause to just remember a great man, Ian Stewart, died on the 24th of September back in 1993.
And This, for those who don't know, this is a man that certainly changed the course of music in this world and was a sterling individual of great character and a great sense of humor and was so prodigious.
He put out, I don't even know how many albums he put out under the name Screwdriver and under his own name and under a few spin-off bands.
But we certainly pay tribute this week tonight on the eve of that somber remembrance.
A legend for sure.
Yeah.
Thank you for reminding us, Sam.
And the reason that I called you the aspiring Casey Casement is because you've been making the rounds, finally putting that old massive record collection to good use, right?
You've been on White Power Hour twice now?
Yeah.
Yeah.
What a thrill it is.
You know, every time that I did it, you just, there's so many things rushing to the front of your mind.
Oh, I got to play that.
Oh, how, how can I miss that?
You know, it was fun, but also challenging because I would come up with a game plan and then the game plan would go out the window.
You know, when you sit in front of your collection, you start picking things out.
It was great fun, and I appreciate the feedback that I received from listeners.
Awesome.
All right.
Well, we're excited to get on to our special guest then.
No smasher this week.
He said, and I quote, no donations, no smasher.
So there you have it, fam.
There's no pro bono smasher.
But yes, we didn't get any shekels last week.
That's all right.
You know who you are.
So let's get on to our guests here.
They are the co-hosts of the White Power Hour, which is available, so far as I know, on Telegram and Castbox and perhaps other outlets coming soon.
Now, if Sam is an aspiring DJ, these guys are the real deal.
So Mark and Jay Haight, welcome to Full House.
You guys are edgy.
I listened to your show before this show and I said, woo boy, I got to turn the Bluetooth speakers off and put it in my headphones.
Fun fact, Jay Haight is named after Haight Ashbury in San Francisco.
He feels very strongly about the mood there.
But let's go to Mark first.
Mark, welcome on, brother.
How are you?
I'm doing pretty good tonight.
Yeah, so definitely good.
I'm actually the host and Jay produces all the music.
He picks most of the songs that does the producing duties.
And I do all the hosting and describing everything and telling all the stories and just giving my rants every week.
And then like my actual kind of co-host unofficially is Old Lonesome Jones, aka Chris from the Midtown Boot Boys.
But Jay Haight's our producer.
He does all that, produces the music, makes it possible, gets all the deals, talks to a lot of the different bands to come onto the show and stuff.
So he does all the footwork.
He does the hard work.
And I just do the easy part where intro and fans, you know, do the fun stuff, right?
There you go.
You and I are cut from the same cloth.
We're the trained monkeys just getting it going.
Go ahead.
Let me say one of the fun things about the White Power Hour is listening to the melliferous way that foreign words roll off Mark's tongue.
And in observance of that, we've prepared a list of foreign words and band names for Mark to pronounce.
All right.
Lay it out.
Go ahead, Sam.
I'm just getting.
You made a Falk's pass there, Sam.
All right.
Mark, what's your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please, sir?
Yeah, can you go to Jay Haight for just a second?
I got to explain real quick.
Sure thing.
Jay, tell us why did your parents name you after Haight Ashbury?
No, I'm kidding, brother.
Welcome, honey.
Oh, the guy that wanted to go first.
He's busy.
But so my ethnicity, I'm mostly Italian and Polish.
Got a little bit of Russian English mixed in there.
White father, got a lovely wife, three beautiful white kids.
Yeah, life's all right, you know.
Wonderful.
And how about your, what's what were you raised and what are you now religiously?
Oh, I was raised Catholic.
Now, actually, I just put my race first as my religion.
You know, I Catholic Church.
I mean, I've heard you guys talk about it on the show quite a bit.
Sure.
This is just no training.
No going back.
Yeah, it's a train wreck.
There's no point even wasting your time.
I'm not trying to offend anybody.
I know there's people that are, you know, traditional Catholics and they listen to my show and it's your show and that's great, you know.
But at the same time, you know, maybe they can fix it.
Yeah.
I'll stay away from that.
Yeah.
You know, one of the lines, of course, is, you know, you guys, you guys need to fix that institution, or if you can't fix it, then you need to split off from it.
I can certainly understand people who say, oh, man, you're supposed to be the apotheosis of virtue and morality in the world.
And look at all this, you know, horrible things going on under your roof.
And look at what they had to do to these trad Catholics.
They had to, you know, try to suppress their form, you know?
And so that tells you right there, these trads are going in a different direction.
Absolutely.
And Jay, have you been a longtime white advocate, more recent arrival?
What's your little bit of your backstory?
Initially, I found Screwdriver and Johnny Rebel when I was a young kid in middle school.
And, you know, still a degenerate, having a good time.
But I'd listen to some more, you know, regular music, what you'd call regular music or, you know, I don't know what they call it nowadays, you know, metal hardcore, but it's not, it's not pro-white music.
Let's just say that.
But I would listen to stuff like that and then a little bit of pro-white music.
I'd show up at parties, started getting more into pro-white music, and I'd throw it on a CD player and people would get drunk.
And, you know, you'd watch some craziness from time to time.
But as that, as I started, I met my wife.
She was my girlfriend at the time, you know, kind of settled down a little bit, calmed down, relaxed, had some kids.
But yeah, I was in this well before the alt-right formed.
Like I was telling you, I'm in my early 30s, but got into this kind of early.
And, you know, I just been into the music, you know, just trying to promote the music, the bands, the labels.
Yeah, I was thinking about that.
You know, we, I'm a relative newcomer.
It was around 2014, 2015 for me when the scales really fell from my eyes.
And we were all trafficking in memes, right?
And online propaganda when guys like Sam and you and Mark probably were, you know, music was the, sorry, your legal tender.
That was your means of communication and identification with the cause.
So whatever it takes, it's all good.
And Jay, if to my trained ear, I'm going to guess you grew up in West Texas in the oil fields, deep south.
Pretty sure, pretty sure I'm sure I nailed that one.
All right.
Welcome on, brother.
Oh, come on.
You killed it.
Yeah.
All right.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry.
It's like the Texas of the North.
All right.
Shale gas, brother.
Yeah.
All right.
All right.
And Mark, how about yourself, sir?
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
German, Italian, and Irish fatherhood status, as far as I know.
I don't have any kids.
There might be, might be one or two.
Not 100% sure because I had my heyday back in my younger days.
You know what I mean?
So there were high school days.
There was some questions sometimes.
But, you know, as far as I know.
So, yeah.
Are you single and looking?
I mean, you down to settle down with a lady and start a family, or is that not on the radar right now?
No, I mean, I would.
Obviously, just you got to find the right chick, and it's a hard market out there.
You know, you got, you know how it is.
The men outnumber the women in this mood about 10 to 1.
So the chances of you, you know, finding a decent chick is slim.
So you got to try to find a normie girl and turn her and convert her, which, you know, you can do, but, you know, it's a lot of work.
And a lot of times they'll break bad as the kids like to say.
And that's pretty much what usually ends up happening.
So, well, hey, I mean, you're only 18 years old, so you still got time there.
Yeah, I'm getting a little long in the tooth.
I don't know about that 18 days.
Yeah, I got to say, German, Irish, Italian.
I always say, oh, that's a fine blend to basically whatever anybody tells me.
But German, Irish, Italian, that's a fighting breed right there, sir.
I have some.
Yeah, I should like to fight and drink, you know, although the drinking, luckily, I left behind many years ago.
I mean, that said, I don't ever drink at all, but I don't drink like that anymore.
That was my early 20s.
Now that I'm much older, that stuff's way in the past.
But, you know, I still occasionally, like I seen Sam at that show a couple months back, and we had a good time and had a couple laughs and had some beers, which, you know, is what I enjoy.
I like going to the shows and seeing stuff.
So I guess with the religion thing, I was raised like kind of, I don't know, evangelical snake charmer type of Christian, but I spoke in tongues and all that craziness.
And then when I got older, I went out and on my own, started studying and doing my own research.
And eventually I found my way into Ossatrue and Odinism.
So that's what I am now and have been for the last 25 years or so.
So check out last week's show if you happen to see it yet.
That's right.
Yeah, we just had Matt Flavill on last week from Ossatrue, which I now finally pronounce correctly.
And he did a very nice job.
We had a bunch of listeners reach out and say, ah, you know what?
There's one down the road from me or I've been meaning to do this.
That was a good show.
Very good show.
Reach out to them.
Yep.
Yeah, I heard that too.
My roommate was telling me that he was like, oh, yeah, that was really good.
And I met Matt a couple months ago, like right after that show that I seen him at.
We had a nice little AFA weekend event.
They had a camp out and honoring the folk mother, Elsa Christensen.
And that was put on by one of the locals around here, one of the guys, Prentice Folk Builder.
Good dude.
And another one of my good friends that has been involved with the movement for 30 plus years.
He's been around forever.
Good dude.
And him and the apprentice folk builder guy got together and we had a nice weekend.
I run it out of campgrounds and everything.
And it was just a really good time.
I met Matt and a bunch of other people, which I met a lot of good people there, you know, guys I still talk to now, some guys you guys probably talked to a few times, at least some of the ADS guys have been hanging out with and talking to I know.
So that's really cool.
And yeah, so I mean, it's just nice.
It was real good to come back from there and then go to this thing up here and just kind of building up from there.
We've been a little slower this summer after that.
There's been less events.
I've tried having a couple of things and there hasn't been as many people come out.
We did get a few, a few things, but you know, it wasn't as much turnout as I was hoping.
Well, hopefully, after this event, we'll get bigger turnouts again.
They can do some stuff in the winter, or at least late fall, we get a barbecue or cookout or something.
Maybe we can mention right at this moment this gig coming up in a couple weeks without being super specific, but there's a great gig coming up here in October.
The Hershey area.
Yeah, Mid-Atlantic, right?
October was at the 13th.
We mentioned the date, I think.
16th.
Yep.
Very good.
It's October 16th.
Yeah.
Blue Eyed Devils, Wellington Arms, Blood in the Face.
Help me out, Jay.
What's some of the other bands playing?
What is Fashion playing?
Activists, Blue Eye Devils.
Blood in the Face.
It's a Blood in the Face.
It's going to be a cool gig.
All right.
And real quick, guys.
Yeah.
You mentioned their quitting drinking or mostly quitting drinking, which is interesting because a couple people in the full house comment zone has said, were just saying, like, just today, like, I just gave up the bottle, like, couldn't do it anymore.
Fifth of vodka every night, or I was doing, you know, booze and pills.
And just by pure coincidence, I have been teetotaling.
I do have a beer in front of me here just because I'm 40 now.
I don't know if it's the COVID lingering effects or I'm just a big pussy now, but I wake up in the morning tired and sort of sluggish, even if I'm not hitting the sauce the night before.
So I've been teetotaling, but did you were you like out of control?
I don't want to probe too much, or were you just like, ah, you know what?
This just isn't what I should be doing.
Like you just.
It was, I mean, honestly, it was mostly because I went to prison for like seven years.
So that really put a kibache on a drinking.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah.
That's one of the things.
Before I went to prison, I was drinking a lot.
I probably was drinking, you know, three, four, five times a week, definitely drinking too much.
And I wasn't really thrilled about it.
It was a lot of, I was out of, you know, hanging out with my friends at the time and my ex-girlfriend at the time too.
She drank a lot.
So kind of we egged each other on, drank too much, you know.
And then once I went to prison, I went to, just for clarification, I went to prison for a hate crime.
I beat some Mexican that was talking, making some very derogatory sexual comments towards my girlfriend.
So I smashed him in the head with a beer bottle and I went to prison for hate crime.
For seven years for a beer bottle over the cabeza, huh?
Yeah, well, that and I also had another previous pending case for like a tick writing thing I did.
So that, so I had those two kind of they ran together back to back.
So they, there were judges kind of like worked together, like, oh, well, we'll give them three years on this and three and a half on that, run it together.
So it was six and a half years told because, you know, they knew what I was about.
And it was on the news down in Milwaukee and all this stuff.
So it was, it was a local little news story, but they definitely made it out like I was the devil.
And they didn't listen to our side of the story.
They just believed whatever the Mexicans said.
So it was like, all right, whatever.
I'm not going to find it.
Even back then, yep, do your time.
And here you are.
I may ask for some stories about that later on, but I don't want to go too much longer here.
We can shoot the stuff a little bit later too.
But tell us about the show, the White Power Hour, the music.
How long has it been going?
And why did you decide to do this?
All right.
Well, I decided to do it because Jay, he messaged me and says, hey, man, let's do a music show because I've been doing the wolf pack on Radio Werewolf for a couple of years.
And then after Dion decided to step down, I just took over and took the website over and posted up all the podcasts.
And then eventually, it's a long story, but basically there was some people that were on our network that had an issue with another podcaster who I'm not going to mention because he's a scumbag snitch and dirtbag.
So I didn't want to give him any fame.
But he other than that, other than that, he's a fine man.
I'll just have the audience know.
Yeah.
Well, he ended up giving me, he called, he wrote like an email to the guy that owned the website trying to get us kicked off, said he was going to sue.
One of the other co-hosts because they were making comments.
You know jokes about the other guy and he got all butthurt, you know.
So anyways, long story short, the our website went down because one of the guys that was doing the website was not wanting to get doxxed again because he had promised his wife he wasn't going to get doxed, because she was like, if you get doxxed then we're going to get a divorce.
So he stepped away and I have no computer savvy.
So the website went away.
But me and Jay Hate was still doing the podcast and I just ended up looking around for podcasting websites and that's when I found CASH BOX and just started uploading it to there.
And then from there we got like a couple different people, like uh Josh from uh Aggravated WELL, I guess Aggravated SALT ain't around anymore but Blood IN THE FACE and a lot of other bands that he was also in.
Aggravated SALT.
Uh Max Resist.
That guy was a big fan and he boosted us.
Uh, him and Glenn from Battlefront helped uh boost the show, got everything going, got us uh really kind of off the ground and started getting people to really notice our show.
Basically, thanks to those two guys, I think go ahead Jay yeah, and real quick Jay, let me just say.
Let me just say for the audience, like i'm always surprised at how much of our listeners know some.
A lot of what you guys are going to say here is Greek to me.
I'm not uh, as immersed in the scene or the uh, the skinhead music as some of our audience is but uh, a lot of it has grown on me.
Uh, if you're listening out there and you're like I don't know what these guys are talking about like, forget this like uh, give it a shot um, and we'll get into that more.
But yeah, go ahead, Jay.
I mean you, you basically bullysided Mark into doing this show.
So what's your side of the story?
Well see, and then that's the other thing.
Is I, as much as I love my, you know my skinhead brothers and you know sisters and stuff, you know it's into the rac and it's.
The show isn't just not rac and skinhead music, majority of it, there's a lot of it.
We also play.
You know metal, electronic folk music country rockabilly, I mean ballads, acoustic songs.
You know it very.
It varies.
You know all different types of electronic styles of music and personally I know I I was just messing around I, I was having some fun messing around making some electronic music for my personal time.
You know uh, nice kind of despise electronic music.
At the time I was younger, thought a lot of it was just gay, for lack of a better word.
Just, you know, a lot of it is just gay.
So i'm like you know, i'm gonna make something, just making fun of it.
You know, and I just grew up excuse me, I messed around, I messed around.
Edit that out.
Not bad, not bad.
First one.
Oh yeah see, Mark has been squeaky clean and you're the one I tried.
I tried to catch it.
But anyway coach uh created, created some music.
I posted it online.
Some people liked it.
I released an album on a label and I just kept messing around making music.
I was into the you know Rac and I wanted to try to you know branch some electronic into the Rac music.
This is before fast Wave and I was just kind of messing with some industrial.
I really don't play any instruments, so I had another guy that was sending me samples and I basically would just mix stuff and it turned out I released an album and I just kept going listening to you know different styles of Rac, Metal and everything like that.
Well, let us know where we can get that album.
I was just gonna say Jay yeah, send it over to you.
It was released on Upright Direct Productions.
It was like an offset of label 56.
They're not around anymore.
I think the Tannis Records bought them out, DIRK over there.
Uh, they bought label 56, the uh uh power Electronics Against Communism stuff.
I haven't.
I heard about that.
There was going on.
Yeah, there's.
Yeah, there was supposedly a show, but the volume one and two of that if, if you're edgy enough to listen to something like that man, that is just mind-blowing stuff yeah.
And and another guy said just the other day to me uh, in a big chat like oh, i'm totally hard up for new music so uh, after the show, by all means, send me.
We'll put the links in the in the show notes.
And before we get too far along, where should listeners go to hear your show?
Primarily is it.
Is it cast box?
A Telegram?
Telegram, right now.
Mark gets it uploaded, the cast box.
Uh, we're going to be going to Liber Play.
I don't know if anybody's familiar with Liber PLAY.
It's like a pro white Spotify.
They have a huge catalog.
Um, I think pretty much everything on Nordic SUN Records, a lot of stuff from Titanis Records, everything on MID Guard Records, because the guy that runs MID Guard Records is pretty much the guy behind it.
So a lot of these record labels are pretty much.
You know, they trade and they work together.
So they're pretty much everything's on there.
And if you like pro white music or you want to get into it and it's not just skinhead rac, punk in a way, which I love, it's great, it's honestly great and that's where.
That's where the music started.
You know it's the, it's the birth of the music.
We can get into that as well if you want.
That's that's where the music started.
But now it's there's.
There's so many different genres and actually it didn't start there.
We can.
It goes back further into the country and Johnny Rubble and stuff like that.
But a lot of people overlook that and they go right to the skinhead scene because that was the more popular thing in the 80s and 90s.
You know, now there's the hardcore, there's metal I mean it's and what's what's, what's Lee, what's liber.
Play real quick l I b e?
R, because that sounds great like a pro white spotify.
What people have been looking for.
Yeah, so it's l I b e r p l a y dot com.
All right yeah, like you said yeah, they do charge a fee.
I think it's like seven dollars to ten dollars a month.
They the free version is just like 30 seconds of a song and then it'll go into the a commercial saying, hey, if you want to listen to the whole song, you know, get your subscription.
And it's not like I said, it's not too expensive.
I think it's between seven and ten dollars and you can listen to it anytime.
You just pop it open on your phone and bam, it goes right to their website.
Now I don't know if they've made an app for yet.
They were talking about making an app.
Uh, like you know, some kind of Android type app or Iphone app or whatever, so you can put it on your phone.
Obviously, they wouldn't put it in those stores.
You know they, they wouldn't be able to get in the Android store, the IStore, but you'd be able to download the app directly from their website.
But, like I said, you can go directly to their website, because I did actually get LibraPlay and I had it for a while and then I had some financial problems so I had to, you know, cancel some stuff.
So that was one of the things that went unfortunately, but it is an awesome service.
I mean, they got like a ton of different bands, like new CDs that are dropping from mid guard records all the time, and Nordic SUN and Titanius is like all this new stuff's out there.
There's literally thousands upon thousands of different songs and hundreds and maybe even thousands of different Bands, plus now our shows up there, so you'll be able to listen to like our two-hour show where we got like you know at least you know, I'd say probably almost a dozen bands every week, and you'll be able to hear new stuff.
And I like I like to try to get a couple of songs from each band, not just one song a piece, like to give it like two or three songs, depending on the bands.
You know, we'll play a bunch of bands from anywhere.
We got the guys from Serbia, uh, what's that Terror 88?
We got any band pretty much from anywhere.
We got some Russian band that was uh labeled that was supposed to send us some stuff.
I don't think we've gotten anything from them yet, but we're definitely trying to reach out.
I know the Rise Against guys, Rise, what's that Rise Above Media is going to be at that show too?
So anybody that goes there, you get a chance to meet those guys and do that.
But they're going to be recording some stuff, and I'll give me a chance to give a shout out to them guys and maybe get on their video and try to reach out and hey, come on our show.
We'll get there.
I don't know.
Maybe we'll get some more connections with the LibraPlay thing too.
So that'd be good because we're always looking for new bands to bring on the show so they can introduce their music to our audience and stuff.
And I assume none of these bands or guys are tight asses about, oh, you're playing my music.
Like you got to pay me for that.
Everybody's just grateful to get it out there and heard.
Yeah, pretty much.
I mean, we're not taking their entire album or catalog where you're just playing a couple songs so people know what they are and can find their music and go buy the CD for themselves and stuff or check out LibraPlay.
Sure thing.
And Mark, were you longtime, you know, WN 1.0, whatever you prefer to call it?
And how did you get involved in the cause?
Yeah, I was like Jay in high school.
I was like 17 and I well, even before that, I was pretty race racial, but it wasn't until I went to the Jewie to the Jewie prison at 17 where I got really woke up to racial politics because, you know, blacks and browns really kind of show you what's going on.
So then after that, I was like, oh, well, there's, you know, because before that, I used to think, well, there's a couple of cool niggers here and there that aren't so bad, you know, that, you know, the act white and would, you know, be halfway decent.
But then I quickly learned that that was a solid act because they, you know, might want to try talking to your sister or something.
That was the reason they were trying to be nice to you and stuff because they wanted to try to come around hitting on your sister or something, right?
So, anyways, yeah, I got clued in on all that.
So since I was like 17, I've been like a white power skin ahead, you know, been a white nationalist 1.0, whatever you want to call it.
Now, personally, I don't know why they call it the 1.0 2.0 because the biggest difference between us and you guys was that the idea was when the dude from Occidental Observer came up with that.
Or no, sorry, it was the one that does the Dixie thing.
I can't remember, Occidental and Dixie, whatever it does.
Anyway, the point is that Griffin guy came up with 2.0.
He's the one that coined it because he's like, the 2.0 guys don't do all this infighting like the 1.0 guys used to be.
Oh, he really, he really stepped in it there.
No, yeah, and you know, when I say 1.0, I don't mean it may have been derogatory at one point.
Like, yes, we are the upgraded version or whatever.
But yeah, you know, for me, I was babes in Toyland when you were getting race woke from Nogs and the joint.
And yeah, it was just like, oh, I had, I literally knew nothing about it except for maybe what like American History X or Skinheads existed or what was the British Sex Pistols.
I mean, I know they're not even skinheads, right?
But that was how little I knew about the cause before the internet, before the internet and Twitter and everything came around.
Yeah, they had that Tim Roth movie about skinheads back in the 80s.
I can't even remember the name of it now.
Made in Britain or something.
But yeah, that was been around for a while.
And that was kind of how I got into it.
I remember when American History X came out and my buddies were like, oh, bro, you got to see this.
Cause I had a few friends still that weren't skinheads.
I'd be like, dude, man, seeing this on MTV?
It looks like it should be really good.
You should go check it out.
I went to the theater and watched it.
I was like, huh?
Watch it in reverse.
It's a lot of fun in reverse.
You get the curb stops.
How about the rapper's topper?
Did you see rappers?
Roper stopper.
Yeah, just another one.
That was another one.
The first like five, ten minutes of the movie is great where they're beating the shit out of these Vietnamese.
This is not your country.
That was pretty good.
That was pretty good.
I mean, the thing with Rapper Stompers, there was no, there wasn't like, at least with American History X, you know, Derek always, he had speeches and he made a lot of sense on what he was saying.
So in the end, they had to end up getting him raped in prison to try to scare people away.
Like, oh, this is what will happen to you.
If you become a skinhead, you'll get raped in prison by your so-called Aryan brothers, you know.
And it's like, okay, that was just total BS and it was garbage.
That Frank Mixon was supposedly at book.
Rapper Stomper was old Sullivan.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, there was this old Sullivan guy supposedly it was based on.
I don't know.
But that whole them running around like they were bones and living in squad houses and all this other stuff, I was like, I don't know any skinheads like that.
I don't know if that was what they're, I don't think they even, there was that many of them that were doing that in Australia.
There might have been a few or something, but it was funny.
I shouldn't say it was funny.
There were some good parts in it.
I enjoyed it probably more than American History X because I don't know.
It just seemed like it was a little more authentic to some extent.
But there was no rape scenes in there.
Yeah.
It wasn't that health.
It was just like a story.
It was just a story, you know, and as such, you could appreciate it in a certain way.
Yeah.
Well, that's right.
I'll add that to the list.
And Mark, do you make music too?
I would guess you're a flutist would be the instrument of your go-to.
I don't know.
I used to sing way back in the day.
I had a band back before I was a skinhead and was still metalhead back when I was younger.
And we had like a band where we do, you know, the play.
We played some original music and then we play like Metallica, Slayer, Danzig, shit like that.
And I did that.
That was, and then I hadn't done anything since.
That was like back in high school.
No, I just told you it was, we were playing like Slayer and Metallica and Danzig.
Danzig was probably the closest thing to hair metal that we had.
So yeah.
I feel your pain, Mark, because you were saying on the most recent show, like, oh, Jay's going to give me guff for talking, for talking too much at the top.
And that's Smasher always giving me trouble for long-winded introductions.
Hey, since we're only doing a one-hour show, I'm going to do a new white life right here in the middle.
We're flying by the seat of our pants.
And this one knocked my socks off.
And then we'll get back to Mark and Jay and talk more music and maybe some prison house stories.
But oh, go ahead, Sam.
I got some thoughts.
I wrote a whole page of stuff down on this.
Oh, okay.
Good stuff.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, Tammy.
Here we go.
I only got one, but it's a keeper.
And it says, hey, coach, new listener and first-time writer.
The future belongs to those who show up and claim it.
So I'm making sure it belongs to us.
We welcomed our 10th child into the bio family.
Sam, Sam BTFO.
Sam, you are same wife, wonderful life.
And unlike Smasher, all of them like me.
Seriously, though, as a father of only should be honored to defend himself.
Yeah, I know.
That's all right.
As a father of only one set of twins, my hat is off to Smasher for valiantly raising two sets of joy.
Sam mentioned alternatives to Boy Scouts.
And while I haven't encountered the troops of St. George as an Eagle Scout, I've left the Boy Scouts of America for trail life.
I've been a leader, troop master, and regional representative with this Christian scouting organization.
He wanted to make it clear that it was Protestant and Catholic and can't speak highly enough about it.
I'd be happy to provide more information.
Thank you all for what you do to create a positive, encouraging, and at times challenging place for white men, husbands, fathers, and leaders to come together for the worthy cause of furthering our victory.
Hail Christ, hail victory.
And that's from Malta.
So yeah, Malta, way to go, bro.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Trail life.
We looked into that as well, you know, because my son was in Boy Scouts and maybe three years ago, we had to pull him out.
It was just getting too bad.
And we did look into trail life and it did look pretty good.
But, you know, we fell into this troops of St. George.
But that guy would be interesting to be on the show.
No, absolutely.
We'll have Malta on and hail your wife as well, Malta.
Bless her.
Yeah, 10 man.
I know, right?
Like when I'm, so we've been doing the homeschool thing here, and it's going great.
Like it's really rewarding.
We did a lot of fun stuff today.
I gave the kids the alphabet A through Z and I gave daughter an assignment to come up with what was it healthy foods or animals today.
It was animals.
And I told Junior for every letter of the alphabet, come up with either a city, a state, or a country, which he did.
On X, we both blanked and I told him about the historic city of Xanadu, but I forgot to do the research there.
So he did that.
And then we've been doing Khan Academy online, con academy.org.
JO mentioned that on our homeschool episode.
I know it has Khan in the name, but it's really just straightforward, no pause lessons online with tests, quizzes.
It moves quickly to make sure that they're doing this stuff.
And they seem to really like it.
They keep going for longer than I expect.
I'm like, you guys need a break?
And they're like, no, I'll do one more dad.
So I think they like the challenge.
And then today, real quick, Coach's Comfy Corner.
I was like, all right, it's time for phys ed.
And of course, it's soccer madness around here.
So we went out to this.
We had this big hill, nice gradual long slope.
And the kids took turns up at the top kicking the soccer ball down to us.
And then we had to try to get it back up there.
We did soccer ball races and we prorated it so that Potato got the head start and then dear daughter went and then junior and I got involved and all the rest of it.
Beautiful September heartwarming memories.
And I thought, you know, this homeschooling thing ain't so bad.
But then there are also times where I'm pulling my hair out and I'm like, okay, break, break time.
I can't take this anymore.
So yeah, you got to go easy on yourself, really, is the trick of it.
You know, you got to have like a different kind of expectation about it.
Yeah.
Science is the weakest part so far, Sam, because I'm just like, photosynthesis, the seasons, the weather, the water cycle.
You know, I got a couple books.
We got the online stuff.
We got my own intuition.
History, I got down pat, but science is weak.
And I'm like, what the hell did I learn about science until Junior High?
Anyway, I don't know.
Here's the thing.
Yeah, you might be critiquing your shortcomings and all that, but what the hell do you think they're learning in a public school?
You know, I mean, you know, you might, your system might not be perfect, but I think that you could do as well at least as the public school.
Yep, we're certainly doing our best.
And hey, this is the first last year it was virtual through the school, right?
So they had this like half-ass like iPads and stuff like this.
So now it's all on my wife and me.
And we're learning as we go along.
Yeah.
Jack the intern has science, science.
Yeah.
Tucker, Tucker, Tucker was like, nobody cares about flat earthers because they're retarded.
And I could see, he didn't literally say that, but I could see Jack reing from outer space, which doesn't exist.
I don't know.
Jackie, baby, you're crying.
I read all the way to the firmament.
Yeah, I know.
We don't have to derail onto Tucker here, but yeah.
How are you, Jack?
Everything all right?
Yeah, things are good.
You know?
All right.
Okay.
I won't probe for any practices this week, but thanks for being with us.
Feel free to chime in at will, of course, brother.
But let's get back to our two special guests, Mark and Jay.
Jay Haight.
I love it.
I love the name.
Go ahead, Sam.
If you did so much prep, I'm going to kick my feet up on the desk and listen to you for a little bit, brother.
Well, you know, I wanted to just put a few ideas out there and get Jay Haight and Mark's reactions or comments.
And I know that some of our listeners probably, at least maybe a couple of them, would wonder why, what is the purpose of proposing to have this type of show, to have these guests on the show.
Some people, no doubt, misunderstand the skinhead thing.
They might see it as obscure and irrelevant.
And there might be somebody out there who questions like, why have this on?
Do I think everybody should be a skinhead?
No, no, not at all.
You know, and the thing is that we're using that term skinhead.
And really, we should say more just like white nationalist music.
But the thing is, this white nationalist scene in this last, whatever period you want to talk, one year, three years, five years, six years, 10 years, think of how it's grown.
It has grown so much.
And I'm going to go out on a limb here with my clout and say that I think it's we reached a tipping point where we have enough momentum that this thing, this thing goes forward no matter what.
And the thing is that our scene, if you want to call it to white nationalist music, skinhead music has grown into so much more than just OI.
OI is great.
I could listen to OI all day long.
And then you could say RAC.
Like those are two different things.
That could be a whole argument right there, you know, OI, RAC, but it goes, it's gone so far beyond that.
And the thing is with a lot of people in this last, let's say, five years coming in by what they call the alt-right, there's been this thing called Fashwave, you know, and I like Fash Wave.
My youngest son, he loves Fash Wave, you know, but I think like that our movement needs more than just that.
And that's where I see the role of the skinheads coming in, not to say, hey, everybody, be a skinhead, but you need to get in touch with this pro-white, white nationalist music that is extremely rich and diverse.
And we've already kind of touched a little bit on that in the conversations.
Yeah, there's OI, there's RAC, but there's black metal.
But even beyond that, there's this folk metal and just straight up folk or stuff like Johnny Rebel country music.
It's so diverse that I would like Jay Haight and Mark maybe to just chime in a little bit on that.
The richness and diversity.
You know, it's funny.
It turns out diversity is our strength.
Yeah.
And real quick, Sam, I just wanted to add to bookend off of you or whatever.
I, you know, I like talking to these guys and learning about it.
One, because there's a sense of humility that this stuff has been around for so long before I became racially aware, right?
We always think that it like starts with us.
Like, no, these guys knew the score for so long.
Talking to John from ADS and recognizing that, yes, this is more, you know, coming together with different groups of whites, more working class, like he said, more boots than suits.
And then also just the simple fact that this stuff does grow on you.
I remember the first time listening to a couple songs, like, oh, okay, yeah, all right.
And then you listen to it two or three times, you're like, oh, all right.
Yeah, I could definitely see myself putting this in the regular rotation.
So yeah, hail John and Mark or Jay and Mark take it from there, please.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, if what I would say is, it's, it's, you know, it's not just the skinhead music and it's not boots and suits.
I'm not trying to counter signal or nothing, brother.
I just, I think the music's come so far since the 80s and it's great music that was made in the 80s.
The oi, like Sam referenced, you know, it was three-chord oi, great music, you know, melodic.
But now we're to the point where we have such high production, it's it's pretty much mainstream.
You know, the music's right on par with the stuff that's out there and mainstream quality.
Not to say to compare it to the mainstream lamestream music, but it's it's right on par with quality.
There's pretty much no excuse to be listening to, you know, say Three Days Grace or Kill Switch Engage or Slayer anymore.
Like I love Slayer.
I used to love it.
I grew up listening to Slayer and Pantera and stuff like that.
But, you know, and I'll still listen to some of that in Flames.
But really there's.
But really, there's, you know, there's so many great pro-white bands that I don't know why people aren't supporting.
There's a genre for everybody.
And the thing is, there's so much great stuff, not just for you yourself, but to play for your family.
You know, your kids, whether they're young or whether they're teenagers or you and your wife, there's so much stuff.
And this stuff is uplifting and inspiring.
I talked about on a recent when I did my thing there on the White Power Hour, how this music is so powerful, it could turn your emotions on a dime.
You know, sometimes I'm getting up early in the morning to go to the factory to work.
I might be dragging, like maybe tomorrow, because I've stayed up late talking to you guys tonight and getting up early.
Maybe, you know, you're just not in a good mood or it's early, you're tired.
You put on white power hour or some good white power music, man.
Your mood is going to totally change.
And that's what people got to remember that.
You know, like, Coach, you were saying, you're in the dull drums some weeks ago there.
You know, you got to have your go-to stuff, you know, and maybe you're not into the harder stuff, but I'm thinking like that band Flack.
You know, it's kind of like a almost like choral German music, you know.
And it's the stuff that's very powerful.
And that's my purpose of bringing this stuff onto the show is to broaden people's horizons.
This is important stuff.
Amen.
And the production quality, you mentioned that too, Jay, is surprising.
I mean, it sounds like these guys are in a legitimate LA studio for a lot of these tracks.
Are they the case that they have real recording studios or has technology come around so much that you can do something in your garage and make it sound high class?
It's a mix of both.
Actually, it's a mix of there's a lot of do-it-yourself, you know, a lot of people just think they're able to reach that quality.
And, you know, a lot of it sounds great just by being organic like that.
You're in the same room and you're playing and you're recording and you create some beautiful sounds.
Then there's also people that, you know, they book the studio time and there's labels that get banned studio time.
It's becoming harder and harder, you know, as you can imagine, but it happens.
It definitely does happen.
And it's getting to the point with technology where, you know, for example, Pete from We Want War, I think it's Studio.
I'm trying to think of the name and I apologize.
I can't think of the website on the top of my head, but he runs his own website.
Like for any bands that need mixing and things like that, you pretty much send him your audio and he takes care of the rest, you know.
We won't look that up.
Go ahead, Mark.
I know Jay or Matt, sorry, Jay, Jason, 14 Sacred Words has a home studio too.
And he lives last time I was talking to him, he lives in like a regular apartment.
So having a home studio to make music now is pretty easy compared to what it was 20, 30 years ago, like where people had to actually go out.
like that first midtown boot boys album i remember i was telling my buddy mark and he was telling me he had to pay to get them guys to be able to actually record a studio to record that second sorry the second midtown boot boys album unfinished business so back in the day they used to have to go to the studios and you know rent uh studio time but was that mid 90s dude mid 90s 1995 or 96.
I think.
So they go ahead, they.
They ended up, like I was saying, a lot of those bands back in the day, like Resistance and uh, Nordland Records they, they would rent the studio time before that, which Sam can attest, since he's been listening to this music probably as long as me or maybe longer.
The old Rockerama stuff, a lot of that stuff really didn't sound that great and he used to get, like these traded copies of actual tapes.
I remember getting all types of tapes.
The first time I had Midtown BOOT BOYS was on an actual recorded tape along with Screwdriver Bad Uh.
I don't know if I can say that name, the vj, I guess i'll just call him uh, the.
I don't know if I can say her name on yourself to try to get her not to cut dice.
Well, they're right.
Anyways, on Rockerama, what I liked about them is they put it on the heavy vinyl.
You know those records really held up over time.
Yeah the the, the uh did get the second hand and third hand recording.
So that's what i'm saying, like everybody has recording.
So I mean you got a lot of ground nowadays.
Yeah, that nowadays it's like it's so much easier, like Jay said, to get the production.
It's all sounds good.
90, 95 of it sounds phenomenal, but well.
But I wanted to get to the point about, uh, I hang on.
I wanted to get to the point about you bringing us on here for your audience and stuff.
So what I would say is, I know from personal experience for a couple friends of mine that have been listening, so I don't know exactly how long, but like I turned a couple people on your show, uh Glenn Uh, Singer from Battlefront, he's a really big fan.
He likes the show, thinks it's pretty good, so I wanted to bring him shout out yep, but uh, yeah.
And then my my little bro here Jesse, he's listening to it too.
Told me guys did really awesome with the Mad Flat last week.
Really likes your show too.
So I know you got a mix younger and older people listening to the show.
So what I would say is basically the old skinhead thing and the white nationalist music, all this other stuff.
This is still a way that we reach people like effectively, a way that we get.
You can get past propaganda.
Even if the people that listen to the music may not necessarily agree with our message every time, the more they'll listen to it, maybe the more they'll look into the message you know.
So that was a big selling point back in the day was selling and there's different styles of music and different ways the lyrics are sent.
Some bands are much more More extreme and hardcore, and a lot more hate-filled music, you could say, because it's like this is just your expression of seeing these parasites destroying your country.
So you're expressing the way you feel about it and the way you like to deal with those situations, you know, the way that you do it properly.
I know, right?
You could see the enemy being like, oh, God, they're inspiring young men to violence and whatnot.
And they're totally oblivious to the idea that this music is in often ways a little bit of an event for them, right?
A way for them to watch.
Yeah, it's a good release for that.
And then it's a good point.
It's a good release for like possible violence.
It could happen.
There's like a listen to this music blow off some scene, just listening to it.
And then I can also take it to the gym when I'm, that's another thing that, like stuff like aggravated assaults, killing spree.
I go to the gym to jam that, or maybe it's Chaos ADA, but anyway, I go to the gym, I jam that at the gym and work out.
It's not like I go hop in my car, pull out of guns, start shooting people randomly.
I go listen to it.
I'm not getting that attitude.
Yeah, I get another rep in.
I'm going to hit another rep. I'm going to get another, you know, give me one more rep listening to this because that's what it does for you.
It gives you that aggression stuff, right?
Exactly.
Yeah, I know that the official soundtrack of lifting heavyweight should have at least some violence and murder implied in the lyrics, at least.
Exactly.
It gets you up to get you going.
Unless it's like Skinhead Superstar, and then it's just a cool song, but that's another thing you guys have to listen to.
It's a nice, funny, good song.
But yeah, so that's what I'd say.
I mean, we've been around, as Singham was indicating a little bit earlier, basically in the 80s, the 70s and 80s, it was the skinheads until the 90s that really kept this scene alive and kept things going.
We were the youth back then.
We were the ones carrying the flag.
And to this day, there's still tons of young skinheads that are coming into the scene, even now.
I mean, maybe not as much as it used to be.
Now it seems to be a lot more moving towards this more optics-friendly alt-right type of people.
But there used to be, it was a lot more going that way.
And I was never, I never had any issue with that because we always had like groups like the National Alliance and other people that were much more of the suit and tie kind of people and polo shirts and khakis and whatnot.
So never had any, I never thought that was a bad idea.
I always thought we need to approach this.
Like my good friend John Beattie from the British something league, People's League, I think it is.
Anyways, good dude lives in Canada.
He was telling me, you know, the white nationalist scene is like these podcast music and everything else.
It's kind of like the supermarket shelf of ideas.
You take what you want and you can work with it, you know.
So if you're not necessarily into like the skinhead boy rock and roll, you can listen to the NS hardcore, hatecor.
You can listen to the blackmail.
You can listen to that folk music.
There's lots of NS folk music.
There's country, NS folk, NS Country.
There's all types of different white nationalist national socialist music out there.
Like you said, there's even the electronics, this new fashion wave stuff.
I've not really listened to it.
Can't say that I like it.
I mean, I guess I listened to one song and I wasn't really impressed.
But, you know, I mean, then again, I wasn't impressed with a lot of the folk stuff when I first heard it.
I mean, I'll be honest, before I started this show, I didn't like Patty Tarleton at all.
But then once Jay Haight sent it and we did a country episode and I just kept listening to it, I was like, yeah, this guy's really growing.
I mean, the next thing I know, I was like, oh, yeah, Patty's awesome.
Just Jack Hawaii guy.
He's great.
You're welcome, Mark.
You're welcome.
Thank you, Jay.
Thank you.
Mark is basically, Mark is all about tolerance and diversity within our cause and our side of the race.
Yeah, I'll try to work together.
I mean, because I want to see white unity.
I don't like, I mean, we've had, we've had good runs where we've gotten together and we've built up some stuff.
I mean, there was in the early 2000s, this York, Pennsylvania, there was a big protest where it really reminded me this years ago.
I remember when Charlottesville happened.
I said, This was just like basically what happened in York: there was the Church that created National Alliance, the Hammerskins, Wolf's Front, and some other groups out there.
And they were all out there protesting together against this thing.
There was some cop that had become mayor of the town.
They were trying to get him arrested or thrown out of the thing because apparently he'd been handing out guns during some kind of racial unrest in the city because his partner was a cop and got killed by one of the Negroes.
And then the Negroes were running wild.
So then he's like handing out guns, apparently, is what the story was.
So, anyways, they're out there supporting that mayor and stuff, trying to get some support drummed up for him because, you know, it was basically the guy was just seeking revenge for being robbed or whatever.
I'm not exactly sure the whole story, but the point is, they had a nice rally.
They had a bunch of people there.
There was like maybe close to a thousand folks that had come to this thing.
And then the cops had separated a bunch of people off from the main group, trying to send them into smaller groups.
They had like 70, 80 guys fighting a bunch of Antifa and local blacks because the Antifa had gone into the ghetto and told the Negroes, like, hey, there's a bunch of white supremacists down here.
You better come stop them.
So they're out there fighting them.
And I remember there was one guy, he ended up getting separated from the pack.
He was in his truck, and Antifa and blacks was trying to pull him out of his truck.
And they'd actually reached into his truck and started pulling him out.
And he hit the gas, and bam, a bunch of them went flying, right?
Just like happened in Charlottesville.
Except, you know, that guy didn't get pulled out of his vehicle, but you know, he's probably thinking he was going to get pulled out.
We all know, you know, Phil's was probably thinking they're going to pull me out of my car and kill me.
And that's what just getting into the thought as well.
But they actually grabbed him.
So maybe that's why he didn't get, he still got prison time.
He hit like a couple protesters.
I don't think any of them died.
You know, a couple of these Antifas come and some Negroes ended up getting hurt and possibly, I don't know if they were crippled or not, but I mean, they were trying to pull him out of his vehicle and obviously stomp him to death.
And he wasn't stupid.
We all seen what happened to Rodney King back in the 90s.
None of us are dumb.
And this is the thing that when you see this stuff, I mean, you can watch these protests that happened over the last summer.
And every time you see somebody plowing into him or shooting someone, it's like, what were they supposed to do?
Just lay down and die?
Were they supposed to just let the mob beat them to death?
Yeah, I know.
It's like, well, I'd rather go to prison and get stomped to death because at least there's a chance that things could turn around in the years ahead where we'll be, you know, be released because, you know, some white people will since get in and we take back over, whatever.
You know, something happens to where there's a possibility that you're going to get out.
But if you just lay down and die and let them stop you, Jeff, you know, that's just, you know, but I think most people's survival instincts is going to kick in when you're getting pulled out by a mob.
They're going to try to do something.
So, oh, yeah, no, absolutely.
The choice is clear there now.
And we just found out this week that James Fields has been transferred to a med unit, not doing well.
He stopped responding to his mail.
So they probably have him in long-term 23-hour day solitary and not doing so well there.
So once, yeah, I did write to James and didn't get a response about two or three months ago.
It was.
So we'll keep you posted, fam, if we can get some letters through to him.
But go ahead, Jay.
Anything, anything else there to riff off of Mark?
You know, just the show itself, you know, like he explained, it was, yeah, I approached him about producing the show.
I was producing it and I said, hey, would you like to host the show?
You know, I thought he had a decent knowledge for the older bands and I had some knowledge for the newer bands so we can come together.
And I kind of feel like when you guys talk about the 1.0 and the 2.0, I kind of fall somewhere in the middle, you know?
Sure.
I want to kind of bridge that gap is what I'm saying.
I don't think there should be a 1.0 or 2.0.
We're all white people.
We should be all be on the same page.
Name your next band 1.5 or something.
Yeah.
14.88.
All right.
That's better.
You're the creative.
Yeah, but it's just like, I think we should all be on the same page working together.
Hell yeah.
And another thing, like, we could be doing collective action.
It's going to take a lot of us, but when we all get together, I mean, we could do.
a national white strike day.
I mean, I've heard that tossed around in our circles, and I think that would be great.
I think that would be a way to do, you know, some bloodless action to actually affect some change against the system.
But it's going to take a lot of us to do something like that.
You know, it can't be just a couple hundred of us.
Unless you're talking about a couple hundred truck drivers.
Yep.
No, and that was starting to come together.
That ability, of course, Charlottesville, however many there were of us, a thousand, probably 2,000, all in one place.
And they're like, oh boy, we can't have that happen.
We cannot have that sort of cohesiveness and ability to assemble in one place at one time with some semblance of order.
So yeah, they had to do that.
Of course.
You know, if Charlottesville was good and I understand it needed to happen, you know, people needed to come out and defend the statues and it's disgusting.
We see what happened.
We see that, you know, there's statues and niggers now.
They're in there.
They're in it.
They're in the park.
Just today, they replaced Robert E. Lee in Richmond with a shirtless black guy and some probably slave woman holding up the Emancipation Proclamation.
But, you know, the people that have the money to do these rallies and get everybody together, I'm not one of them.
I wish I was.
I wish I had the organiz, you know, I wish I had the network.
But I think what we need to do personally is go into a white area that was predominantly white.
And now maybe it's 70%, 60% where the people that were white are pissed off.
Oh, excuse me.
Excuse the language.
That's $2.
$2 to the white poverty law center.
So anyway, but that's, you know, we need to go to an area where the white people are, they're upset.
They're aggravated.
You know, they're irate because their neighborhoods is declining.
And we go out there and where you said there was 2,000 people.
Well, if we went to a white area and a white neighborhood, those people would be receptive to us.
There's been rallies more positive.
What we need to do is have, like they're having a concert.
We're just talking about going out there in Hershey.
We need to have a big festival and thousands of us, just thousands of us.
And you know, you know how many, imagine how many people actually would have shut up to Charlottesville had it not got shut down.
People were still trying to get in.
Yep.
Amen.
Yeah.
How the Aussies have been doing it.
Now, one of the, one of the things about that is that we've all, or many of us, have grown very cynical and skeptical about assembling and doing things, right?
Oh, it's a gay op or, you know, the Boogaloo boys, okay, they're like crappy libertarians.
And then Kurt Doolittle's thing down in Richmond, right?
And that kind of fizzled out.
So there's a lot of, I totally agree with you that it has to happen again, and it will unquestionably.
And you see the effectiveness of Australia, that footage from Australia of thousands of construction workers, blue-collar men and women just assembling there.
And then these robo-cop outfitted, overwhelmingly white coppers, system pigs, as Western chauvinist repeatedly calls them, just going in there and mowing them down with the rubber bullets and the foam mace capsicum, I think they call it, something like that.
But what they do is they just put out one little flyer on Telegram.
It's like mass assembly this day, this time, exact location to be provided, be there.
And when we see something like that, like pro-white day or something, we're like, oh, this is a gay up.
This is a Fed up.
So we have to get, and maybe some of those are, right?
I'm not counseling people to just show up to things that any Tom Dick or Harry announces on the internet.
But at some point, yes, that is the way forward where it's like, nope, it's happening here.
You are going to be there if you have a set on you.
Consequences be damned because of how bad it is out there.
And freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose.
Yep.
The point is, our people's energy is effervescing right now.
There's not going to be a question about wondering what we should do.
It's going to be that it is happening now.
You know, just like you say, those videos.
I mean, and anymore, you ever overhear some normies talk?
Like, sometimes they're more radical than we are because we know what to say and where the limits are.
But normies are getting very radicalized right now.
If you overhear them talking, you know, you'll hear them saying the most outrageous things like, well, of course they would do that.
What are they?
Black?
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
You know, so it's just that time on the calendar.
I always go back to some of the things Horace the Avenger said.
You know, it's that time on the calendar, just like they say the son Sonon Rad, right?
The black sun.
You know, when the black sun is shining, our people just come to life and do what they're supposed to do.
Yeah, I was talking to a sort of a former Trump guy who's coming around to the idea that Q was a gay up and Trump sucked, who is currently agitated about the prospect of families being separated for COVID protection or something like that, you know, sort of the old FEMA camp thing.
And he said, that is my, that's my red line.
They are not separating my family or me over some damn virus.
And they'll, they'll meet me in the driveway, more or less, you know, um, so yeah.
Uh, I got one question more for Mark and one for Jay.
But Sam, I don't want to, we don't have to cut this short.
We'll just make it a long first hour or however.
So yeah, if you got anything else on the hopper, please have that.
Go after, go say, say your part.
I do have one more topic to bring up.
And good, good deal.
I was going to, I was going to, I was going to ask, well, we'll do the we'll do the happy and the heartwarming, and then we'll get into the darker side with Mark.
But Jay, tell us, give us a little bit of fatherhood content here.
What do you, what do you love to do with your kids when you think back to when you think to fatherhood?
Obviously, you're still in the game.
What fills your heart with joy?
One of my favorite things to do with my kids.
They do work a lot, I'll be honest, but one of my favorite things to do with my kids is I like to go for a nice walk, you know, just go out in the middle of the woods, just go for like a hike up into the woods, middle of nowhere.
There's nobody with everything.
You know, it all depends.
I like to take them and explore and do things that they like to do.
My daughter likes to go to museums, so I take her to different museums and talk to her about history.
And then we'll be driving in the car and she's like, oh, here comes dad's history lesson.
You know, here comes dad's history lesson.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And how about, how about does your uh is your wife?
Is your wife okay with your uh beliefs?
Does it cause tension in the marriage at all?
Are you guys on the same page?
So my wife didn't doesn't doesn't, you know, I'm not going to say she holds 100% my beliefs, you know.
She holds, she does, she does hold like, you know, similar.
She sees what's going on.
She's not stupid.
I'm not trying to get her in trouble here.
Yeah.
Women, you know, women, women, women are naturally non-confrontational.
And I think a lot of men, you know, expect women to get in the game and get in the fight, you know, but really they belong doing their part, you know.
We're supposed to be a team, you know, and you get these guys that are incels.
All they want to do is bash bash women.
You know, really, we're supposed to be a team.
When I see these guys doing the incel stuff, it's like, it's like, are you gay or are you a Jew?
I see the MGTOW men going their own way.
It's like, which way are you going?
Another dude?
What are you gay?
We need each other, right?
We need each other.
Well, yeah, but you know, men and women, that's that's what creates white babies, and that's what that's, I think, this is what this show is about, too, right?
It's creating white babies.
You crack the code there, Jay.
We've been working for 101 episodes.
All right, finally, breakthrough mana.
You know, it's a no-brainer.
We need more white children, white babies, you know, anything we could do to promote that.
And the music, you know, it's just another thing for motivation.
Yeah, like you said, there's various genres.
So I just, it's it.
We do try to do different things with the show.
We have Old Lonesome Jones, Chris.
Yeah, funny, funny, hilarious.
I mean, every day he makes me laugh.
I don't know how he does it.
Amen.
And Mark, you're still a young buck yourself.
You still in the game for having more kids, or do you think you're done with three or Jay?
Sorry.
Yeah, I think we're good with the three.
We're going to focus on our three children, you know.
I hear you.
Give them a good upbringing.
Good for you.
You see these people.
You'll see these people that are, and I'm not trying to, you know, disparage anybody or talk badly about anybody, but you'll see these people that go really hard on their kids, right?
And they're trying to push the pro-white beliefs on their kids.
And what are kids and teenagers do in the end?
They end up rebelling, right?
Yeah, you gotta let them come to it.
You gotta let them come to it on their own terms, just like anybody.
You know, like, you know, the Fuhrer said that children are they have the same prerogatives as adults, just without as much experience, you know.
So, so you need to respect them as people, let them come to the message in their own way, just like all of us probably right here have a little different angle that we come in on.
And certainly, if you talk to enough people, you see everybody's come to it with a kind of a different emphasis or different understanding or a different starting point, at least.
And your children are be the same way.
So, yeah, definitely don't push it on them really hard.
Yeah, if anything, from my experience, at least the guys that I know best, they're very exceedingly cautious about not wanting to go too hard and treading carefully with their young ones and constantly asking questions like, Can I bring this up with them or how should I handle this one?
Really, uh, rightfully thinking hard before giving hard lessons to younger kids, right?
The little especially geared to the age, you know, you don't want to spoil their innocence and things like that.
Exactly.
And, Mark, big guy, I wanted to ask, I don't know if you got a good stem winder from time behind bars.
We had on Jack McCracken, I don't know, maybe 20 shows ago.
He was a corrections officer in New York State, and he wrote a whole book about his experiences, sort of on the other side.
But seven years, brother, feel free.
Any snippets or big picture stuff from doing time where you I assume you weren't in like a maximum security place, but what was it like and any good stories from that?
If whatever you're comfortable with, of course.
I was in MAX for I don't know, two years, medium for about two years, a minimum for about two months, and then I went back to whole, and then I went to their supermax.
Uh, so I was bouncing around all over the place, but taking a tour of the American correctional system, okay.
What the hell did you do?
Did you kill somebody behind what did you go to a super max for?
That jumps that's I was getting ready to get out.
I had about six or seven months left, and uh, one of the niggers was giving a bunch of grief to one of the white guys.
There was an older white guy in there, and uh, he was pretty cool.
We were talking, and his like he had a nigger that was like on the bunk boat because they, this, this was this ain't like California, this Midwest.
So, you know, they these states in the Midwest, they try to integrate stuff, but they got like they had like a big open barracks that there's a bunch of beds and bunk beds.
So, anyways, the negro up above him, you know, it was like a typical one.
He had his pants hanging down halfway down his ass and all that stuff.
And uh, the guy was reading his book and he looks over and then, bam, there's dude right in his face with his handwear half pulled down, just kind of hanging out the tank.
And he's like, Dude, I told you to get your blanking blank out of my face, which I know get your black ass out of my face.
Yeah, how about that?
Yeah, yeah, okay, we'll say that.
And then uh, dude was like, What the what in the F?
And then he went and hopped up.
The white guy I knew who's like, Let's go.
He went to the bathroom to go fight him because you can't fight him out in the area there because there were so many cameras and the COs and stuff will be watching you trying to lock you up.
So, go in the bathroom to fight where there's not a bunch of cameras and get away with it.
Well, he ended up going in there, dude didn't come in, and the other blacks, oh man, ain't worth it.
Dog, it ain't worth the bad.
Screw that punk ass black blood.
So, anyways, I was like, dude, let's let's go outside, take a walk.
You know, I'm this is some BS.
And then, one of the other Negroes decided that he was gonna, I don't know, I guess he thought he was gonna come out there, puff his chest.
So, he went out there with a couple other of his homies, and they're out there.
And we're walking by, and he says something to me, like, what are you staring at?
I said, I'm looking or sorry, you've been great, Mark.
You swear like a sailor on the show.
So, I'm so impressed, sir, that you get you've been a you've been a sailor remarkably.
I don't even know.
I guess I just cussed because I'm used to it, but if I can refrain from it, but anyways, like when I get into these stories like this stuff, especially sideways, uh, dude was like, Yeah, da-da-da, says something slick, and I said, Yeah, okay, dude, what's up?
And then he's like, Oh, yeah, it's yeah, I can't remember exactly what his words were, but I ran over, I punched him in the face, and I thought he was going to drop because he was just a little skinny guy, but he was like a tall, skinny dude, probably like six foot five or something.
And I knew why he was so arrogant, cocky.
Apparently, he knew how to box because he was just like, and he punched me in my face about seven times before I hit him again.
Then he punched me in the face another seven or eight times.
I was like, Jesus Christ, this ain't going so well.
So, I grabbed him, I got him by his nappy head.
He's got those dreadlocks, pulled him down into a headlock, and I started giving him the old, you know, wrestling headlock, punching him in the face.
And I'm walking around the yard looking for, I'm like, I got to slam this dude's head.
So, I seem like a picnic table.
So, I was like, All right.
And I judo, like, you know, did like one of those judo throws to throw him into the picnic table.
But then I heard the cops come and I heard him screaming with the COs, like, oh, no, no, no, crap.
So, I just hurried up and slammed him into the concrete pad.
Slammed his head in the concrete pen.
I was on top of him hitting him.
And then the COs come running up and they told me to stop.
They said, Stop fighting, which I was like, We're not fighting.
He's on the ground.
I'm beating him.
But I didn't say that.
That's what I was thinking.
So I'm just hitting him a couple more times.
And then they said they're going to mace me.
And I was like, Well, I don't like getting mace.
So, okay, I'm good.
And I got up and he talked some more smacks.
I spit a big bloody Louie right in his face.
And that was it.
You know, he ended up with a bunch of lumps on his head and everything else.
This state that I'm in is it's the prison systems, really that, especially that specific prison is really petty.
And they ended up sending me to Supermax from it just for that one fight.
Well, it was also, they tried claiming it had something to do with, you know, we were part of, you know, some kind of Aryan gang, and this has got something to do with your white supremacies, you blah, blah, blah.
And it was some kind of gang activity.
And I was just like, whatever, man, you guys are idiots.
He was a cool white dude who was pro-white, and I was sticking up for him, kind of, I guess.
And the other guy really didn't have a problem with him.
It was the other little black guy, but then this one decided that he had to hump, he had to hop out there and say something.
But yeah, so that was that was it.
But yeah, you know, then I got another good story.
Yeah, how about it, brother?
Yeah, this is this is quality radio.
Just yeah, yeah, don't get yourself in trouble.
I figured, yeah, you already did your time for this circumstance.
That didn't necessarily get me in trouble because I told this story about a dozen times, and I'm not too worried about it because, like I said, statute limitations, all that stuff.
But when I was in prison, it was, you know, we already had the cops come out and say, oh, well, we're going to, we might press battery charges, whatever.
It's like, how do you press battery charges?
It was a fight between two people.
I just happened to win and he had to lose.
That's just the way life goes sometimes.
You know, you pick a fight, you get beat up, you can't try pressing charges later.
Well, I mean, I guess you can, but it didn't work out for him.
So they just kind of like left him alone.
Never, I never heard nothing more about it.
I just went to the hole for whatever, and then they sent me off to Supermax.
But anyway, so this other time, now I don't know how well you guys know Antifa in Illinois, but they had this Antifa group in Illinois that posted this old, they used to post a lot, and they posted this poster that had like Illinois's most wanted Nazis, it was called, and had my picture and a couple of friends of mine.
And then they did like a little article on me where they gave my name, full name, address, and like the license plate on my car, which I still ain't figured out how they got that.
I guess they just looked me up in the DMV's website, but I don't know how you get that.
Was that the recent one where they posted your name and stuff?
No, no, this was years ago.
This was back like 2012 or something, 2013.
Yeah, an average citizen is not supposed to be able to access the you know look up a driver's or a license plate online, but they usually have a friend with a connection or somebody in who does it for them.
So I hear I wouldn't be surprised.
Your most recent one when they posted a picture of you and all that stuff and your name and all that.
They made it look pretty fucking cool.
Oh, pretty cool.
Pretty cool.
They made it look pretty cool.
Yeah.
It was funny.
That was funny.
I just didn't want to.
They weren't really attacking me.
They were attacking my friends.
I was, you know, my friends with the AFA and stuff like that.
They were trying to attack them more saying, look, he's associated.
They're associated with this guy who's just this big scary Nazi, you know, and all this stuff.
So I was like, whatever.
You know, anyways, I'm sure they just roll.
You know, I'm sure they just, what?
He's against COVID.
He's against the COVID.
Oh, that was you.
That wasn't even my talking point.
That was his.
So, whatever.
I know.
I'm only giving you credit for my stuff.
It's not even there.
Mark doesn't even recognize COVID as a thing.
It is a nothing to him.
Yes.
Yeah.
All right.
Go ahead.
Go ahead with the other one.
He shouldn't have no problem with it, right?
So, but anyway, so if I can get back to this story before Jay Hay derailed me.
So, sorry, buddy.
And so we were okay.
So they posted this stuff up.
So I'm hanging out with Eric and the other guys from Wellington Arms.
And it was like me and Eric and Nate were hanging out drinking some beers.
And this is the first time I met these guys, you know, and I was going to try to get him to do a show because my buddy had just got out of joint and he supposedly had a place.
There's some bikers on some land and they wanted to have a nice big white power show.
And I was like, oh, cool.
So I talked to those guys and they said, yeah, we'd play your show.
That'd be cool.
And it never happened, unfortunately.
But, you know, anyways, I did go and meet him.
So I go up to Chicago to meet him and I hung out with some other people, some really cool guys I knew.
My buddy that was the Serbian dude and some other people I knew.
And then I went and hung out with Eric Nate.
And Eric's like, dude, these commies, there's a baldy bar right down the street from here.
And the baldies are all at this concert.
But you know, there's going to be a couple stragglers left behind that can't make it into the show.
So he's like, you want to, you know, let's go down there and we'll, you know, you know, stop some commies.
I was like, well, of course, you know, because why not?
Right.
So, anyways, we go to hang out at this bar.
But before we leave, like Eric's old lady and the other dude's old lady, I think it was nice, but anyways, they're like, no, no, no, stay here, drink some more beer.
You know, I wasn't that drunk.
So I was like, yeah, okay.
They had some Jack Daniels and some other stuff that's probably not good for me to have.
So I was like, yeah, let's drink some more of this, right?
So, okay, I stick around.
We keep getting drunk.
And then the party's about over and we're getting ready to leave.
So, you know, I got this brother of mine, Dave, from California.
He's with me.
And we're, but he's like ripping rare and ready to go.
Like, yeah, we're these commies.
All right.
He's like, so show us where the copy bar is.
So we go down to the bar and we go to go in the bar.
And the monster is like, yeah, it's $6, $10, whatever the hell it was to get in.
I don't remember.
And I'm like, I'm going to pay, you know, whatever to get in and go beat up some commies.
Like, screw, let's just go.
And then that's when Dave, I don't know whatever reason, we're walking back to the car.
We're all hammered.
And for some reason, I still can't figure it out to this day.
He sees a Volvo and he grabs a brick and he like throws it through this window.
He's like, God, I'm like, dude, what's that about?
He's like, oh, that was a commies car.
Look at it.
It's a commie's car.
I'm like, I don't see like no pink rainbow flags on it, but there's a sticker I didn't see.
This is the horseshoe theory between fascism and anti-fascism, right?
Yeah, smash ball.
No, I'm kidding.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, anyway, so I don't know, but it was for whatever reason he thought it was.
And then I don't remember because I'm pretty drunk and I pretty much blacked out.
And then when I came back to, we're heading back towards the bar and I see these two green, grimy looking, dirty, hippie-looking types, you know, little scummy Antifa looking, you know.
So I'm like, walk up to him and I took off my shirt and I said, hey, what's up, man?
You guys said you're going to come hunt me down.
You're going to F me up, right?
You're going to screw me up, huh?
Here I am.
Come get some, you know.
And they were like, oh, oh, one guy's just staring at me all like, oh.
And the other dude's giving me like the dirtiest look I've ever got in my life.
Like he thought he was going to take my head off or something.
Right.
So I said, what are you Antifa?
And the other guy was like, would you let me tell the story, please?
All right.
So the other guy says, like, the first guy says, I says, hey, are you Antifa?
He's like, no, I'm not Antifa.
He's like, no, no, man.
No, no.
And the other guy said, well, are you Antifa?
And the other dude, he didn't say nothing, but he just looked at me like he gave me the meanest mug you could ever see.
You know, and I'm not stupid.
I've been around a lot.
Target acquired.
Target acquired.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know that this guy's got it in for me, but he just ain't got the actual balls or the cojonas to actually say something.
But he's going to look at me like, oh, if looks could kill, I'd have been dead right there.
So, you know, I reach over and I slap him.
I said, Are you Antifa or what?
And then he keeps giving me this dirty look, staring at me like you want to kill me.
So I smack him in.
I'm like, come on, man.
Are you Antifa?
What?
What's up?
What's going on?
And then after the third time, I smack him.
He's got tears welling up in the corner of his eyes.
And some chick comes running out.
Some chick comes running out, she's like, We're not Antifa, we're just dirty hippies.
But she didn't say dirty hippies, she said hippies, but you know, you know what I'm saying.
So that was a pretty funny story.
I know, like I said, it was the baldy bar.
So I know it's some baldies, at least that one dude.
If he wasn't a baldie, he was some kind of Antifa affiliate or something because clearly he wouldn't have been staring at me like he wanted to kill me if he was just a normal person.
He's just like, What is wrong with this dude?
No, dude, I'm cool, bro.
You know, or he's looking at this big guy.
He's like, Hey, this big drunken guy who could try to get it.
Oh, that's right.
Yeah, all right.
Yeah, all right, Jay, go to bed, go sleep next to your kids.
The big boys are talking.
He's looking at the big guy, the big guy that's all drunk, staring at him.
He's like, What's this guy gonna do?
And this guy starts smacking him.
That's that's not the way it happened.
I mean, I know you've said I've told you this story, and you keep trying to come up with that.
That's not what happened.
If you weren't there, you don't know what you're talking about.
Trust me.
I mean, you might find it.
I mean, I get it.
It's funny, but no, that's not what happened.
The dude was really some kind of antifa type.
And I mean, anyone that's been anybody that's been around Chicago, which should or anyone that's been around that Chicago area knows what they look like, and they look like dirty, disgusting drug addicts, emaciated, yeah, malnourished, stinky, exactly.
Exactly.
That's exactly what they look like.
And that's why I was like, oh, these got to be, you know, this is that and the way to do kept, you know, I'm going to kill him.
Because, like, what normal person would some big giant, you know, I should call myself a giant dude, but some big dude comes rolling up on you.
It's like three, four times your size and starts like, oh, it's not all you, you know, why would you not be like the other bill?
No, no, no, dude.
Hell no, that's not me.
You guys are guys mistaken, you know.
You wouldn't stare at him.
Oh, I'll beat you up with my stare, my hateful stare, you damn dirty Nazi.
My girlfriend will save me in the end.
Yeah, I did not plan to milk you for edge content here, Mark, but I got one more.
And sir, uh, doing time in the hole, I think most people listening to this envision Hollywood, a straitjacket, a padded room, or no lights, or lights 24/7.
Was that as brutal as people think, or a little bit about being on long-term isolation?
It's not that bad.
I mean, it depends on the person, really.
But the worst part about being in the hole, there's no straitjacket unless you get the only time you would get that happening is if you like start attacking the guards, like bite them, or you fling pee or something on them like that.
Then they'll strap you down, and they got like a chair.
And if sometimes they'll put you on a table.
If you do something like that, they'll strap you down for I don't know, 12 hours or 24 hours.
They can't keep you a certain amount of time because it's against the law.
Like they've, you know, had so many lawsuits against it, they can't do it for that long.
Uh, they can't strap you down like that for very long.
So, as long as you're not like biting the guards or trying to fight with the guards, you usually are right.
I'm not saying you don't, you shouldn't have to, you know, but some of the guards are pretty bad because I'll tell you a little bit about that stuff I've seen with those guys that got scooped up on January 6th.
I'm sure you guys all read that article or at least heard of it.
But, um, so like being in the hole, basically, the lights are on 24/7, they dim them at night, so it's not as bad.
Uh, but you know, you just throw a towel over the light, or you know, we put paper up and stuff like that, like put toile paper up over the lights so it wouldn't be as bright, and you'd throw a towel over your head to sleep.
The worst part of the whole, really, honestly, the worst part is all the Negroes, the niggers just beating, beating on the walls, singing and screaming, yelling all hours of the night and day.
That's the absolute worst.
You know, if you, if you get like, I got lucky and most of the holes I went into, they either sold like earplugs on canteen or you could write the medical unit, the nurse on the unit and stuff, and have her send you some earplugs so you could put them in your ears so you could sleep at night or whenever they were out there making their noise.
Because that was about the only way you can sleep.
Because, I mean, like I said, it's just constant madhouse of screaming and yelling.
And like, because niggers can't handle the isolation.
It freaks them out.
They got to be yelling and screaming, talking to somebody.
They got to be making some kind of noise.
They're not singing old Negro spirituals around the campfire like in Gloria.
Oh my Lord, no, no, no, yeah.
The more simian, simian in the hole.
Yeah.
Oh, it's more the beating like, yo, beep, beep, beep.
Yeah, that mother, my hole, yeah.
They beat raps, they sing rap, and they beat out rap tunes all the time.
That's another reason why I hate rap so much is because it's all I would hear them beating and singing rap.
And that's one of those things that just drives me nuts whenever I hear it.
I just want to start punching people in the face because rap, that's all they ever comes from their soul.
It's what they are.
So, you know, I understand that rap music is big and popular with the younger kids.
And there is people that reach out to it.
And that Mr. Bond made pretty popular doing the parody raps and stuff like that.
I just can't stand listening to it.
I'm just like, dude, here's some real music.
Stop listening to Mr. Bond.
Here's some real white power music.
Listen to this stuff.
Listen to something that our people actually put out.
We actually originally produced this music.
Our people are actually putting out these actual songs, not this, you know, parody or doing an imitation of some black Negro coon singing some song about, you know, whatever.
I mean, we're not singing about hoes and money and drugs.
We're singing about more positive things, obviously, because I know they got nationalist hip-hop and whatever, but that's, I don't care.
I'm not playing it on my show.
I'll never play rap on a show.
Me and Jay Hay definitely got an agreement on it.
I agree with you, Mark, on that, but I would say a little bit in its favor.
Something like Mr. Bond is so incredibly subversive, especially if you play it around normies or liberals or something.
It kind of has a certain role to play, but I agree with you.
It's like it's not part of our folk soul.
So with Mr. Bond, I mean, hey, I don't think the guy should be sitting in jail.
I think he should be freed.
I mean, I agree.
I was just looking for him.
I mean, he was effective, you know, and I'm not a fan.
I'm not really a fan of rap, but at the same time, you know, I think any type of music could be used as a tool.
You know, it should be used correctly and used properly.
And it could be a tool, you know, it's just, it's, it's, anybody should be able to utilize and create the art that they want.
I understand what you're saying, but I'm telling you from my personal experience with this, my own personal experience, meeting these guys that would tell me, like, yeah, man, I'm going to do some white power rap, bro.
And then they're just like totally wiggers.
And then they get out and they all act like the total niggers they were before they got in there.
They start hanging out with the non-whites doing drugs and getting all this other stuff.
So it's, it's not like I never said I would support.
I'm not saying it.
I never said I was going to, you know, support it or play it on the show or anything like that.
I just, I understand, you know, just like our great uncle said, you know, you got to meet people where they are.
And if some people like that music and some people want to create that music to get people in tune with the message, well, hey, I'm not going to, I'm not going to go out of my way to shit on it, but I'm not also going to promote it.
You know, it's got a certain role.
And I would just say for anybody who wanted to completely throw the baby out with the bathwater, if you can find that video, Fascist by Mr. Bond, watch that and tell me that doesn't inspire you.
Oh, sure.
Youth of the nation, where'd you go?
I mean, some of that, some of that stuff.
Yeah, you don't have to like rap.
The lyrical creativity alone is worth it.
Yeah, well, there's plenty of lyrical creativity in our own actual music.
I mean, we got songs, plenty of good stuff that's like that.
That's, that's, you know, comes from the white folk soul, as opposed to this black folk soul that we're just imitating to reach these kids because they've been so polluted with this garbage mainstream culture that pushes rap.
Like it's the best thing ever and that's the reason why kids listen to it, because it's pumped into their head every day constantly, 24, 7 commercials, tv shows movies, always playing rap everywhere you go it's.
It's disgusting and I hate it.
But i'm not, or sorry, I didn't mean i'm not.
Yeah, i'm not, i'm not trying to give you know, I don't like his music, but I did like the way he reached out to people and I surely would, you know, give money to his Uh legal defense fund, because Mr Bond Uh, apparently was effective and he was a good dude.
He said himself he was just doing it as a way to reach people.
He didn't even like the music.
He couldn't stand rap at least that's what I thought is he just thought it was a joke.
He was making a bunch of parodies of it, trying to think hey, this is the way I can reach, reach people by parodying their crappy music and i'm like, great, you know, that's good that.
So, mr Bond, I mean that's.
I mean i've said I don't like his music and i'll stand by that statement.
I don't like the music, even if it is a parody, but the guy was doing good and he was trying to reach a message.
My biggest thing on, like you say, with throwing out the baby with the bathwater thing is i'm more concerned that we'll just get a whole army of wiggers who are going to try changing white culture into being more like some kind of fusion of black, brown and white culture, because everyone wants to hang their pants down, grab a hold of their junk and talk like, yo man, shop homie, I got some drugs and money.
You know, that's the kind of stuff we don't need, which i've seen.
This is my what i'm saying.
I've seen these dudes like this.
These guys are supposedly, you know, white and woke with you know they're all about being pro-white, but they still act like they're old gangster thug, wannabes and stuff and it's like dude, act like a white man.
You know you need to drop that.
Well, we got to get Mark wife up.
He's got to have at least a couple rugrats around the house to wrestle with.
Come on yeah yeah, let's try to make it happen.
Ladies, I i'm sure a couple of you are listening to Mark going oh, that rasp.
Yeah, he's done, he's probably got, he's probably got some cool tattoos he can kick at any help.
Well thanks, I appreciate that coach, or that was that coach.
Yeah thanks, dude.
Yeah, like I said, i'm definitely.
You know, if any of the ladies want to message me afterwards or in the whatever, i'll talk to him, so you know.
Yep, hit us up.
Pro tubmail.com, go ahead.
Sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off.
Uh yeah, but that was pretty much it with the.
The rap thing that was my point is, I understand why they're trying to reach it and I seems to work a little better and Europe, but I still notice, even with like the German nationalist hip-hop and the Check nationalist hip-hop stuff like that Italians whoever, it does seem like they still use those exaggerated motions that the blacks do with Throwing her hands and swagging and swaying around, imitating the Negroes that are in their negro videos.
And it's like, you know, I remember years ago, this is, I don't know, 12 years ago, 13, 14 years, whatever it was.
There was this band that called themselves Peckerwood was the name of their band.
And they were like some rap duo band.
And they had a song called I'm a Wood, and it was the cringiest stuff you will ever see.
It's still on YouTube.
Go check it out if you want a good laugh.
But these guys were like, yeah, that's why it's still there.
That's why it's still there because it's that bad.
Look how horrible that is.
Leave that there so they can think that's what white power people are about.
But like you were saying with the with the German and European rap, I mean, Henry A. and stuff like that, he doesn't do the pan sagging and all that.
He just, you know, does he does rhymes, he rhymes to beats, and I really don't see a huge issue with it.
It's just really not my cup of tea.
You know, but then there, you know, I'm saying country music, you know, like old Lonesome Jones, Jack White.
I mean, there's a big, there's a big niche and a big void to fill for country music.
You know, you have like little NAS X and like blacks, blacks playing country music nowadays.
You think white people like that?
I mean, I'm not, I like country music, you know, but there's, there's like, there's, there's people out there.
There's a lot of people that that's just their market.
That's the main thing they like.
And there's not a lot of, you know, country artists.
And a lot of our white guys can play country music and, you know, get that message out there.
Out there.
You guys, you guys are certified.
You guys are certified musical autistes.
And that's why you got your own show, The White Power Hour.
Hail you both.
Outstanding job on the show tonight.
I'll be perfectly candid.
I had a little bit of anxiety going into it.
Yeah, go ahead.
Before you wrap it up, I do have one.
Oh, sure.
Please.
No, I was just going to say, yeah, I had a little bit of anxiety going to the show because when I listened, I was like, oh man, these guys curse a blue streak.
And you were cursing a blue streak in the chat.
Yeah.
Yeah, sure.
But I mean, no surprise.
Like, I knew, I knew this was going to go well.
Of course, we always bring it together.
But yeah, I got a couple of pieces of audience mail, Sam.
So go ahead.
Please have that and we'll bring this puppy home shortly.
Okay.
All right.
So just again, these are the thoughts I was writing down on preparing for this show.
And so this modern era, I'm calling the podcast era.
We know that in this last five or six years, podcasts have really taken off and our guys listen to podcasts, which is good.
It's all good because it's breaking away from this disgusting media of 10 and 20 and 30 years ago.
I'm old enough to remember when there was just like three or five channels on the TV, you know, and now we are because of technology, we're able to break away from this Jewish miasma that we're mired in here.
And just like in every era has been marked by the advance in technology, whether you want to talk about the Bronze Age, the Iron Age, the Silicon Age, right?
And the same thing, the invention of the electric guitar made it so that you could have a small combo that was creating a gigantic musical sound where before you needed a whole orchestra.
And then in the 80s, you had like the cassette tape where people could record their own music very easily and so on and so forth.
CDs and computers being able to burn your own CDs, MP3, the internet and everything like that.
So we've come through all this era and in this podcast age that we're living in, when people have become Red-pilled, I'll use that word.
When people have woken up to white nationalist politics, you will hear this said, and I'm sure you've heard this said before by somebody.
Like, after listening to the podcast for a couple of years, it's all been said.
You know, it's all been said.
Okay, we understand the Jews are evil, the Negroes are doing this and everything.
And I can remember even going back, let's say, you know, 25, 30 years, I was collecting all the pamphlets, which every pamphlet or every little flyer or zine that I could get was like gold.
You know, I was picking them up.
And some of the older guys that I knew, they just weren't interested in having these things.
Because once you've read it all, it starts to, you know, sound all the same.
Like, yeah, I know, I know that.
I know that.
I know that.
And I came to agree with them in that sense.
And, but the music, music is part of our culture, an expression of our white souls.
And that's part of the importance of this show we're doing tonight and the importance of things like the white power hour and why we're having these guys on is even though you might get kind of burned out on the message at some point, or like some guys have said, it's all been said already, you know, but the music continues.
It's one of one thing.
I don't want to say music is everything, but music is one of those things to keep you tied to that folk soul and to keep inspiring you and uplifting you.
And that's, that's why it's so important.
And that's, that's the reason we're bringing this show.
It's not to just trumpet the importance of skinheads per se, but to that it's important for our people to, first of all, disconnect from this sick, diseased system we live under and connect to this wonderful, burgeoning, rich, powerful underground scene of white nationalist music and white nationalist podcasts and other things.
So if Jay Haight or Mark could comment on that.
Go ahead first, Jay.
Well, I mean, just a comment, I mean, like this show here, just for an example, I mean, there's so many podcasts out there, but this show here is a great show, you know, for white men, white fathers, even females.
You know, I'm driving, I listen to it.
My wife's in the car.
She doesn't have any complaints.
Nice.
Sometimes you listen to some shows and they complain, you know.
You mentioned she liked the thing that Coach read about his dog.
Oh, so yeah, I said that to you, Sam.
We were driving in the car and coach was reading the phone about the rainbow rainbow bridge.
And we're sitting there driving and she's listening to you.
And all of a sudden, I look over and the tears are just dripping from her eyes.
Oh, bless her.
Thanks, brother.
It was beautiful.
It was.
It was a good.
Thank you, Jay.
Yeah, I mean, hey, Sam's, Sam, you really brought it home there beautifully, brother.
And yeah, big thanks to Mark.
Excuse me.
And Jay, getting choked up here myself, literally.
Wonderful show.
I hope the audience appreciates.
Yeah, this is a little bit of a deviation for us, but you guys, you guys did the genre and the cause in your own show, Justice, White Power Hour on Cast Box and Telegram.
I'll post that all in the show notes.
But Mark, brother, thank you very much for opening up and very spicy stuff there at the end and all around great content.
Yeah, no problem.
So, to answer Sam's question, I believe you were saying to way to keep it fresh, like you were saying, because you get instilled.
Because obviously, you know, when you're around for a long time, and it does happen, you get burnout, you will get to probably some point to where you wonder, is it even worth it anymore?
I mean, I don't know now in this era, because things have changed so much in the last 30 years that it's just unbelievable how much our country has gone downhill and how further down the rabbit hole everything has gone how far the communists and Jews and the rest of their allies have been able to push our country and our people towards the brink of extinction.
So I don't know in 10 or 15 years that you'll be able to get burned out and just want to leave the movement for a while and go live a normal life and then come back or something because I've seen people do that.
And I've dotted that myself.
But I mean, I was, there's at points or I was at the brink where I didn't know if it was worth doing anymore.
Just like, fuck, I'm sorry.
They just, you know, but you know what I mean.
Just I was at that point.
It was like, oh, this is just horrible.
I mean, I never gave up faith.
I just couldn't see myself doing it.
But I was there a few times where sometimes it just felt like it was going nowhere.
And you've heard everything that said before.
You've heard it all.
It's, it's nothing new.
And you just get a little tired of the messages because you've heard it and you hear it and you know it.
And it's like a lot of that stuff with like he was talking about with the pamphlets and the newsletters and the magazines.
Those are things to hell on out to normies.
Now, admittedly, when a magazine like Resistance or Blood and Honor and stuff like that was coming out back in the day, that was brand new, fresh.
They were really good.
You know, it wasn't just some crappy little newsletter that got printed off a copy of it.
It was a real magazine.
So that was pretty fresh and revolutionary.
And then when in the 90s, early mid-90s, we started getting in the internet revolution.
You know, you had Stormfront come online and that was huge and a great place to meet people and have meetups and local events and everything.
It used to be awesome, man.
I mean, it was phenomenal.
It was tips.
You know, this is the best thing going on the internet for years.
And then Facebook and the other social media stuff come along, everybody just kind of migrated towards that.
You know, the same kind of flame wars that would happen on there would happen on there because internet makes people say things that, you know, they probably wouldn't say to people in real life.
Right.
Yeah, exactly, which is a lot of the whole MGTOW Incel, White Sharia garbage is, I think, a lot of that is like back in the day, you know, you wouldn't be running around some shows saying some of these ridiculously retarded things these guys say about women without getting punched in the face and probably a poop party, because you know we want women in the movement, we need women to have wives, children and everything else.
You know they you gotta have.
You know I mean that's saying you need to bend over backwards and you know, be like the captain, save a whole white knight type of guy.
But you got to at least have some respect for women folk because they're the other half that are raising our children and we need them to raise them.
You know we need them to instill that values in our boys and our girls.
You know they got to have that.
There has to be a soft touch.
You know what I mean, because you're a man.
You're not going to be sitting there.
You know bawling with your boy every time something happens, that's the mom's job.
You know you got to be the man.
You got to show them your strength and And you got to show them how to be a strong man when he grows up.
And you want to be that example, you know.
So you got to have it.
You got to respect our women that way.
So I don't know how I got off of that, but the internet thing.
Yeah.
So we were the crest of the way with the internet.
And, you know, the music's been there the entire time.
It's been the life splitting the heartbeat.
And it's, like you said, what keeps a lot of people able to go is this different art forms that we have.
I mean, in just the music, there's, you know, like I said, the art, the music, the videos, these podcasts now, and that helps.
And the way you guys have branched off and done something a lot different than a lot of the other podcasts where you're just talking about the news items a day.
You bring it from a perspective of fathers and the movement and raising your kids and doing things like that.
I think it's a good idea.
I think separating it.
I mean, maybe it might sound, maybe you're doing a kind of a niche thing, but it's a good thing because it helps, you know, especially since it's part of raising a healthy white family.
It's a good idea.
You know, I'm sure there's shows out there now that talk about doing a homestead and homeschooling and all types of different things.
So you got a lot of different aspects where people cover stuff.
Someone's more interested in one thing or another.
Maybe they don't, maybe they're not as much into the music, so they won't listen to our show.
But, you know, I'd say give it a chance.
You know, and if you like the, I guess, spicy or edgy or whatever you guys like to call it, the spicy stuff, you can listen to me.
And I got some pretty good long-winded rants that go on for a while and you might enjoy them, or you might just be like, dude, when this guy got to shut up and get the music already, I don't know.
About the podcast, you can skip ahead.
Yeah, exactly.
And like you say, you can probably always get a laugh, like Sam was saying earlier about my mispronunciations, all these different foreign words.
Proliferous is the word I like.
Oh, is that it?
I don't know.
I like trying the first time he got me to do Galhorn Klangsmeet.
I was like, I don't even know if I'm saying this.
It's like, it's, you know, because reading it on a page, it's a lot different than like when you're listening to like a language thing on tape because I listened to a couple of those German.
So I can read and out of here the way it's supposed to be pronounced.
But when I'm just reading it, I'm like, especially with somebody that's Hungarian and Russian stuff like that, where I'm just like, I don't even know what that word is.
How am I supposed to pronounce that?
It's got a bunch of X's and Z's and Y's in it.
I'm going to give you 10 Polish band names that you have to pronounce right now.
That's why when I was at the show and I gave it to the Polish guy to pronounce the Hungarian bands.
There you go.
Hey, Polish dude.
Yeah, thanks, bro.
Help me out here.
Bless your heart, Mark.
Thank you for coming on.
I want to see.
We're going to make you like the white George Foreman.
You're going to have Mark Jr. and Mark Jr. Jr. with the same woman, of course, in matrimony, not all over the country.
Yeah.
Thank you, brother.
Great job.
Last word there, Mark, Chatty Kathy.
Oh, no.
As I was saying, that sounds fine to me.
All right.
You accept.
All right.
About five kids.
If I can find a right woman, I definitely would.
So there you go.
I keep telling every chick I talk to, it's like, ah, four, five, six kids.
And then they usually come back with two or three, you know.
So it's like, yeah, we'll work it out.
We'll compromise somewhere.
You got a big, you got a big swastika on your chest, or did you get some jailhouse ink?
Oh, God.
I'm extending the conversation here.
No, don't think.
All right.
Yeah.
I got a big swastika on my arm and a couple other swags on my arms.
I don't have any tattoos on my chest.
I've been saving that.
I got my back and arms and stuff, but I still need to get more ink.
I didn't really get much full house tattoo.
No, that would be okay.
Yeah.
He's saving the prime real estate for the really good stuff.
All right.
Jay Haight, thank you too, sir, for coming on.
We'll wrap it up here.
Yep.
Thanks for having us on.
The answer is Sam's question.
Yeah, we all get a little depressed.
I just wanted to answer that really quick.
We all get a little depressed.
We get down.
Sometimes you just got to take a little break.
You don't. give up your views or anything like that.
You just, you know, sometimes you disconnect a little bit.
Maybe it's a week or whatever.
You know, go out in the woods, go for a walk.
You know, clear your mind a little bit.
You're always going to come back.
There's no other option.
There's just everything else that's going on in the world.
You just look around and you see what's going on around you.
Basically, you have no other choice.
At the end of the day, we all got to unite on the same page.
Damn sure.
That's pretty much it.
Thanks for having us on, guys.
You bet.
Listen to the White Power Hour on Telegram and Cast Box.
We'll put those links in the show notes to Vic and Callum and Jimmy.
We will get to your comments next week with our pal from Down Under to talk about what's really going on with the system oppression and the populist or popular uprising in Australia.
Sam, thank you to my friend.
Glad that you invited these fellas on and nice job.
Yeah, what a great show, interesting show.
And like I've just been making on that last point, you know, it's important for our people to connect to our culture, to connect to not only music, but religion or the podcasts or different things, the things we talk about on this show.
The enemy wants us isolated and demoralized.
But in this current moment, we are connecting with each other, whether it's pool parties or going to gigs or some religious connection or something like that.
We have a better opportunity than ever to be connected to each other and not to be demoralized.
When you hear about these things like opiate addiction or suicide or things like that, these are people that are not connected to each other.
Think of a theoretical agricultural village from 150 years ago where our ancestors lived.
How much drug addiction was there?
How much suicide was there?
How much homosexuality was there?
None, I guarantee you, because we needed each other.
We're connected to each other.
And that's what we are doing now with this show and with all our little ways that we connect with each other.
Amen.
Sam, if I die, if I keel over, if I choke on a chicken bone, the reins go to you.
Full house is yours.
All right, fam.
Full house episode 102 was taped on a chili September 23rd, now September 24th.
We could have done a break song in the middle and continued on in the second half.
My bad, I misjudged.
But we didn't even take a break or anything.
We just plowed through and it was a lot of fun.
Follow us on Telegram at prowhite fam and on gab.com slash fullhouse.
Drop us a line, fullhouseshow at protonmail.com and hit us up at full-house.com if you like to support our efforts.
So our brothers from different mothers set us up with two, I guess, rack or skinhead tracks, whatever their metal, they're hard.
So Jay, you are the maestro, I presume.
So what do we have on tap here?
Let's definitely go with Final War first, but let us know what we're listening to these two tracks.
So you're going to be listening to Final War with Raceland and We Want War from Sweden with I Am the Superior.
Hell yeah.
Final Wars, like RAC, like a Southern California punk rock.
They have that kind of sound to them.
And We Want Wars.
They're metal from Sweden.
All right.
Great stuff.
Enjoy, fam.
We love you.
We'll talk to you next week.
Put them up.
White power.
And we'll see you.
So white, proud, and free.
I dream of a race destined to be.
I'm hated by society, but still my honor holds true.
Cause my dream is a victory and I'll fight to the battle and throw fire with honor, I'll fire with pride.
I'll fight with victory on my side.
I'll fight with courage, I have no fear.
I'll fight for the race that holds so dear.
Fight for each other, I fight for a land.
Oh my God, I'll make a stand.
Fight to the last, I'll fight till the end.
I'll make my pledge for my race.
Go deep in my dream of a race that I'll end of one race.
Free from dishonor and freed from disgrace.
A land in which our backfies hide.
A world in which our race could never die.
I'll fight with this, sword, and shield.
An iron will and a heart of steel.
For blood, honor, foe, and faith.
Pride, power, nation, and race.
I declare warfare on my land to appear up by it once again.
Never surrender, never retreat.
The scientist will soon be beat.
I dream of a race that I'll land a war race.
Freed from dishonor and free from disgrace.
A land in which our bag flies high.
A world in which our race could never die.
You still obey me, why am I superior?
I rule the world as I please.
My room is dark, but I see life taking over.
Why can we rule as one?
Why road road?
Here I roll.
We are the lost, we are the lesser.
We lose our faith.
Only the strongest will survive.
Only the strongest will prevail.
While we're all breakfast, why I'm the reaper, I ruin hell as I please.
My home is pressured from three more lights.
We are the lost, but I can we rule as one white road.