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Oct. 16, 2021 - Full Haus
02:29:50
20211016_Our_People__Our_Year
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Time Text
The men who act without thinking and the men who think and act are the ones who mold the world.
The man who thinks and does not act never molds the world.
He may think he does, but that too is only a thought, the thought of a deedless, actionless thinker.
Some real talk from our man Jack London there.
And a healthy reminder for all of us that no matter how much we get it or even talk about it, knowledge without action is about as useful as a Jew on your local school board.
Constantinople wasn't reclaimed in a day, but you got to start doing something somewhere, no matter how small you start.
This week, we've got not one, not two, but three doers and creators to talk about their projects, our cause, rural life, and more.
So get inspired.
And Mr. Producer, hit it.
Welcome, everyone, to episode 105 of Full House, the world's most shamelessly shilling show for white fathers, also a fan of alliteration, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am your talking head host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of good words, often translated into good deeds.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to our number one fan, Durendle, for covering our expenses this month.
We do do the show for free and will do so for as long as we can.
But if you'd like to be an alpha dog like Durendle, check out our support tab at full-house.com.
And we're working on a couple options too, if you are still a dirty no-coiner.
Also, big thanks to our pal Walker for the D's Nuts pecan rub that arrived in the P.O. box.
That's right.
I don't think I thanked Walker.
I don't think I thanked him for that yet.
It was a troll gift.
And lo and behold, it was good.
And yes, I think, you know, we've been pretty good about not being too cheesy with dad jokes and D's nuts jokes lately.
So that means we earned a couple perhaps later this show.
Anyway, thank you, Walker, for D's Nuts.
All right, let's get on to our birth panel and our full house this week.
Be grateful I don't use that pun more often.
First up, and speaking of good deeds this week, his words of wisdom made a difference in a youngster's life this week.
Sam, how about we go into too much detail, but what a nice note we got from that kid.
Yeah, yeah, man, was that heartwarming?
I hope you do share that letter on the show later or sometime.
Yeah, that was great, you know, to be giving a little light of hope to the youth there like that and to get that kind of feedback means a lot, you know.
And then that last letter you shared with us, that one really kind of brought me down, man.
That was sobering.
I hope you'll also share that one.
Possibly.
One of the toughest questions we've gotten in the history of this show, we will do that near the top of the second half.
Little teaser there for the audience.
All right, we next, not next up this week.
Anyway, Sam, you okay?
We got so many guests and stuff to do.
Yeah, no, that's fine.
Yeah, sure.
We'll be chatting at the second half.
Yeah, all right.
Not next up.
He fired himself from the show this week for not getting vaccinated.
He looked at himself in the mirror and he was smirking and he called himself a menace to society.
No, in all seriousness, Smasher is he couldn't make the show because he did the bit.
He reached out to the Isatru Folk Assembly and he and the family are going to check it out.
So godspeed to him.
We'll get a report from him next week.
And I certainly hope that it works out for him and that he leaves the show and converts to paganism and we never hear from him again.
Just kidding, just kidding.
That's where Smasher is this week.
All right, finally, our very patient and numerous stable of talented guests this week.
First up, so far as I know, he is the project manager or perhaps the assistant to the project manager of a wonderful new product fresh out for our people.
He's got the gift of Gab and the work ethic to back it up.
Apollo, welcome to Full House, brother.
Yes, yes.
Thank you, coach.
You're welcome.
You're one of like three Apollos I know.
So good OPSEC there, sir.
Let's see.
That means that you are an acolyte of Mark Brahmin, right?
And the Apollonian worldview.
Yes, yes.
I become who I am.
I hope to become who I am.
That is right here on this show in front of all of you.
Yes.
Good stuff, brother.
We're honored to have you on.
And we want to talk about this project.
But first, make it snappy because we're chop chopping tonight.
Your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, buddy.
I am about three-quarters Celtic by way of Ireland.
And I mean, Ireland by extraction.
Obviously, I'm American many generations.
And I had one Anglo-Saxon grandmother.
So on both sides of the Brothers' War in the British Isles, there.
All right.
White enough.
I think.
What were your other questions?
Ethnicity and fatherhood status, sir.
Or sorry, religion and fatherhood status.
Yeah.
So I'm somewhere between Catholic and pagan, struggling, kind of walking that, struggling with faith.
But I just want to be honest.
And we'll have Smasher pull on one of your arms and Sam pull on the other.
And I don't know.
Okay.
Looking forward to that.
So I can finally put that sort of existential question to rest in my own mind.
But and fatherhood status, no kids yet that I know of.
All right.
Are you available?
I am single.
Yes.
All right.
You sound like a handsome man, but maybe I'll consult with our next guest to verify if that's true.
We haven't met yet, have we, Apollo?
Iro we actually did.
But it was late night.
That's right.
Yeah.
Yeah, you mentioned that.
It must have been three sheets.
Excuse me.
That's right.
That's right.
All right, brother.
Well, we're moving on to our next guest.
We haven't had a lady on the show in quite some time.
Not since Smasher's wife and mine were briefly on our Independence Night show.
She is also either the project manager or assistant to the project manager on said imminent new delightful product.
But unlike Apollo, she is a delightful person.
Clarion, welcome to the show.
I guess I'm ribbing Apollo this show.
No, no, no.
So he is.
He is delightful and handsome for all the ladies who are listening.
Delightful and handsome.
All right.
So you want to know my fatherhood status?
Definitely.
No fatherhood here.
All right.
Go ahead, Clarion.
I know the girl.
I'm Irish, Anglo, and Dutch.
I am a devoted Christian, Anglican, but next weekend have plans to go to Latin Mass at a Catholic church.
So we'll see.
Oh, yeah.
That's for Sam.
And I'm a wife.
I just had my 20th wedding anniversary.
I had two lovely teenage daughters, both of whom are white nationalists.
And so that's really a blessing to our family.
And this product, I guess we're not revealing the product.
This product has been a labor of love, and I am really excited to talk about it.
Me too.
I'm excited to ask you questions about it for the audience out there.
Now, remember, you guys have to be as compelling as Sam and as entertaining as Smasher, lest the audience say, oh, this is just, you know, full shit.
There's no way.
You should just hang out now.
Awesome.
We'll get right to it.
But first or last, I should say, last but not least, rounding us out this evening, we have another lady.
She is the author and illustrator of the 12 Dancing Princesses and other European folktales.
She is young, attractive, and I'm not sure if I hope that she's single or spoken for, right?
For her own sake or for our audience's male audience is excitement.
Bronca Ryan, welcome on.
How are you?
Hey, thanks so much for having me on.
I super appreciate it.
And to repeat the last few or reflect the last few answered questions.
Definitely, I am not a father.
My ethnicity is very similar to my mother's, actually.
50% probably.
English.
Yes.
Yes, about.
Mostly Irish and English with some other Northern European.
And currently my religion is non-denominational Christianity.
All right.
Good deal.
And for the single guys out there, Bronca, are you single, dating, married?
I'm not really looking right now, but I do appreciate it.
All right.
Good deal.
Well, we're honored to have you on as well.
We're going to talk about your book after we talk about this.
I think I can give the spoiler now that there is a wonderful, well, I'll let them talk about it.
It's a full color 12-month-plus calendar for our people.
Apollo, when you first talked, well, you didn't talk to me about it first, but you did pitch me on it.
And you did a delightful job.
So all you have to do is recreate that sales pitch that you gave to me, sir.
Tell us about the motivation to do this and the work that went into it, please, sir.
Sure.
Well, let me just say thank you, Coach and the other gentleman, Sam, and the entire birth panel here and to the wider fatherland, fatherland nation, I suppose.
It's an honor to be on here.
And yeah, like Coach, you know, you had a hand in this project as well.
So don't be humble.
And yeah, I mean, I gave you the sales pitch.
I, you know, sent you a voice note on Telegram.
And Coach is a friendly guy, but he's a tough sell.
He's not an easy sell.
So when we got him on board, I was very proud.
And that made me believe in the project even more to have his endorsement.
But everything really started.
I think Clarion and I were talking in the middle of the summer.
And I mean, it was pretty obvious looking around at, I think, what a lot of us see and saying, look, Gay Pride Month, you know, George Floyd Holy Week every other week, Holocaust remembrance every other day, seemingly.
And, you know, let's tell our stories.
You know, we've got a heroic, badass story for every day of the year, you know, and more.
So let's take back the calendar.
So we wanted to make our own calendar to not only venerate our triumphs, but also really mourn our tragedies, you know, and the loss of our innocence.
And so, I mean, I think the reason for doing that is pretty self-evident to everyone listening.
You know, let's tell our stories.
Let's take back the calendar.
There are some deeper reasons I think that Clarion and I had, and I think Coach you agreed with.
And, you know, one of those is: look, we need to ultimately what we all want to do is secede from Zog, right?
We want to get the ethno-state, right?
Absolutely.
And now we can't politically get the ethno-state that we all want right now, but what we can do is secede in small ways.
And one of the very important ways is culturally, right?
So, so many of us, right, we've been in this thing for a while.
And I mean, I would say I'm fairly senior in the white nationalist movement.
I mean, I'm not 1.0.
I haven't been around as long as some of these guys.
But I've been around a while.
And I see a lot of our guys, you know, you might be with your pool party, you go meet up, you have a barbecue once a month.
You tell some racist jokes, you shit post a little bit on your Telegram groups, but then you go home and you go back to your kind of normal life.
And what my goal is, and I think what Clarion's goal is, and what my vision is, is to really get our people to just live in white nationalism as much as we can.
And there's many ways we can do that.
I mean, I think down the road, I can envision a future where we are doing business and transacting, like, you know, the plumber that you call is a white nationalist or the dentist that you go see is a guy from your pool party or the next pool party over.
But what this calendar is about is sort of culturally seceding, culturally walking away from Zog.
So, you know, I can envision a time, and what my hope is that this calendar will serve as a jumping off point, as a touchstone to, you know, look at the month of September.
That's the month where we're highlighting and celebrating Charles Martel and the Battle of Tours, which Coach, you had a very important role to play in that month.
And, you know, you get together with your pool party and you're saying, hey, so what did you guys do for the Battle of Tours?
And maybe like the little boys are dressed up, you know, in their crosses and sword fighting, reenacting the Battle of Tours, running around in the grass, you know, with their plastic swords, that kind of thing.
You know, that's what we want to create, you know, or month, if you look back in May, we're celebrating the Rhodesians, which Coach, you also had a hand in that one.
Maybe, you know, maybe you make some traditional Rhodesian food, you know, for dinner, you know, to commemorate that.
And these are things that we can all talk about amongst our people, like other, our guys in your local pool parties and in the wider network.
So that's what we want.
I mean, so I think to answer your question, on one level, it's obvious.
I mean, why wouldn't we want to tell these stories?
I mean, you know, there's, like I said, there's a, there's a badass story or a tragic story worth commemorating for every day of the year and then some, you know, I mean, more than we could tell in 10 years.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was when you go ahead, you know, basically, yeah, just real quick for the context, you know, I just knew that you guys needed sort of a mercenary pen on a last-minute project.
And then when you told me what it was, it was, you know, people had talked about doing calendars.
People, you know, ourselves included.
Everybody's got ideas.
Everybody's got potential projects and things.
It's very rarely that it happens.
And you guys were already well down the road.
You had artwork picked out.
You had these very compelling stories for every month of the year, plus some annexes and don't forget in the sort of in the after December things to add on delightful reading.
I was like, oh, perfect.
Please.
I couldn't be prouder to contribute and thank you for the opportunity just to write up a few months and do some legitimate research and refresh my memory on these things.
Real quick, Apollo.
One of the reasons I love this too is personal because I've had a 12-month color wall calendar every year, probably for the last two decades.
It's just like a foible of mine.
Like, I need to have one on the wall.
I use it less and less every year because of the phone and all that stuff.
My wife's like, can we put this behind the closet?
You know, it doesn't need to go right in the kitchen.
But this year, it will go in the kitchen.
My mom used to get me a Mets calendar every year.
And finally, I had to say, Mom, I don't really like sports ball anymore.
So then we moved on to what I always call him Aldrich Ames, who was the spy, but it's Ansel Adams, AA, Ansel Adams, you know, beautiful landscape photography.
So this year, thanks to Clarion and Apollo, I can tell my mom, Mom, save your money.
I got a calendar already, unless I want to have her buy this thing.
But anyway, it's beautiful.
It's practical.
You're not going to have any like risk, I don't think, for any of the, you know, the safe people who play it safe in their kitchens.
You can display it proudly and read it to the kids or have the kids read it.
Everybody learns.
It's just awesome.
So Apollo, go ahead.
Apollo, yeah, I love the idea of it.
And I always buy every year one or sometimes even two calendars that I think have the same sort of purpose as what you're having here.
A calendar that I bought some years ago, I kept even after the year was done.
It was a trad Catholic calendar, but every month commemorated an important battle from Catholic, so-called Catholic history, which would really be just our white history, you know.
And it was really, really great.
And that's how this whole calendar is going to be.
Maybe every day or every week is going to have those type of highlights.
But one of my pet peeves has been: somebody will give me a Catholic calendar from somewhere, you know, and you go through it, and all the Jewish holidays are on there.
Marxist Lucifer Kunday is on there.
And, you know, every stupid thing is on there.
So you mean to tell me there's like some synagogue somewhere making a calendar for their congregation and it's got all the Catholic holidays on there?
It's too late if they're not.
So I think this is really great.
Real quick, Mr. Producer says that his father got him a calendar once that said 365 reasons to love being Jewish in one year.
I think that's his way of like crying for attention that he's actually Jewish.
He's never been able to admit it yet.
Apollo is on a short timeframe, so we're giving him the microphone.
Clarion's like, yeah, what's new?
Apollo's talking all the time.
But Apollo, one of the things I did strike out, I did strike out on one of your assignments, which was like Mission Impossible.
And that was Day of White Unity, which was going to be a fusion of Uncle's birthday plus like bringing white people together, a little commentary on National Socialism.
And it was just too much to accomplish.
But tell us a little bit about that one because that is important functionally in addition to people just having the calendar.
Sure, sure.
And I am going to let Claire on in here to tell, to give a little more detail, because there's a couple of reoccurring holidays on the 6th and 14th of every month that are really exciting and that people want to hear about.
And it was her idea mostly to do those.
And then she's going to, she can also answer your question, coach.
But yeah, you know, it's a big, one of the first things.
I mean, when I talk about this calendar, when people hear about it, when they see it, they open up to April and we know what they're looking for.
And so we, we obviously, like, that's a very, very important day for our people.
And, you know, just in sort of white nationalist war, which this is ultimately, I had this idea to be a piece of white nationalist folklore, right?
So it's not so much for normie outreach.
I mean, so many things people think in terms of ideas and projects, they think from the standpoint of, well, how can we red-pill white normies?
And that's totally noble to do that.
I mean, obviously, there are lots of sort of, you know, just drawbacks and limitations to doing that, which we don't, we don't have to go into that.
You know, you can have Borzoyon to talk about big normie because he's got that a lot more well thought out than I think any of us do.
But so obviously normie outreach is an important part of what we're doing here, but that's not what this project was so much about.
This is something I want to, as a piece of folklore for our people to tie our existing communities together, because that's something that I think is really important.
And so to that end, you know, the 20th of April was very important.
And Claire Ann and I were talking last night and she made the very salient point.
She said, you know, there's a lot of days on the calendar that are sort of specifically put there.
And I'm just, Claire Ann, if I'm misquoting you, you can jump in, but that are specifically put on the calendar to harm us, you know, to psychologically feed us down.
And one of those days that's been very strategically placed is 420, right?
So what 420 is in popular culture is just this day of exactly.
Like it's a Seth Rogan movie of a holiday.
So, you know, and we wanted to really take that day back, you know, like of all days, we wanted to take that day back.
And, you know, but like we didn't want to do it with just simply saying, here is when, you know, you're like the our uncle, the Fuhrer was born.
Here's his life.
Because we all know that.
Again, this is for our people and we all know that story.
What we thought of, and this was sort of a joint idea from Clarion and I, so, is what better, what more profound way to honor the Führer and commemorate the day of his birth than use that day as a call for no more brothers' wars.
Yeah.
For white people to come together as a race.
You know, because I mean, look, what ultimately brought the Führer down was, you know, I mean, he was brought down in a brother's war, a giant.
Exactly.
And that's the only way that we lose.
You know, so, you know, look, I think it's a very evocative and a very compelling and a way, I mean, like, it's something that I think, you know, Adolf Hitler would be proud of to like look to kind of see how we've commemorated his birthday in a very profound and sort of emotionally stirring way.
You know, it's a tragic, I mean, if you read the highlight and you see the artwork, Clarion picked up the artwork.
It's a beautiful piece.
It's a beautiful photograph.
And I want to say, by the way, every piece, every bit of labor that's gone into this, it's a beautiful, I mean, as Coach said, it's a very aesthetically pleasing piece of work.
I mean, it surprised even me, I mean, how well it turned out.
And we, Clara and I labored over this, like to how are we going to balance, you know, form versus function.
And for a while, I mean, it was kind of a tough choice, and we were going to err on the side of, well, let's make it beautiful and a little less functional.
But I think we were able to balance both.
And I think you'll agree.
But so I just want to say every bit of labor that's gone into this is like we hired a graphic designer.
He's our guy.
We met him at NJP.
We used, you know, guys like Coach, you know, and his, you know, power of the pen.
Like, he's a very good wordsmith, not only with the spoken word, but with the written word as well.
Coach came very highly recommended.
I didn't even know it was you.
You were recommended by a mutual contact.
I didn't know it was you.
But Coach did an awesome job there.
But so when you look at the 420 month and you read the highlight for that month, getting back to your question, Coach, it's a tragic story, but it's also sort of a holiday.
We make it a tragic holiday, but a holiday of resolution and resolve.
You know, no more brothers' wars.
It's about time we come together as a race and focus on the problems that we're all mutually facing.
It really is.
That's right.
A promise that we all have to make for ourselves, a blood-clad one.
Before we get too far, the audience is going to be like, okay, where can I find this calendar?
It's called Our People, Our Year, 2022, and it is available online for sale now at ourpeoplehouryear.com.
Did I get that right, Apollo?
That's exactly right.
Good deal.
Now, people have to email correct.
And for now, you're only accepting Bitcoin.
So we, so the email address is at the bottom of the page.
It's a one-page website.
You scroll down, yes, and you send us an email.
We're accepting money orders as well.
Can you just email us and tell us which way you want to go, and we'll get you set up.
Good deal.
Clarion, let's go over to you for this project.
The most important question, of course, is how bad was it to work with Apollo on those things?
I think Apollo has a flight to catch, right?
Maybe.
Yeah.
I'm going to, on that note, I was going to jump out, but I'm going to listen.
I'm going to listen a little bit longer.
Yeah, yeah.
Literally going to run out of flight.
You know what?
It was, Apollo and I have been friends for a long time.
And we worked so well together, if for no other reason, than our motivation was exactly the same for this project.
And we're both kind of, you know, like he said, I mean, he shared some of the things as far as our struggle of like form over function and how to make something aesthetically beautiful, how to find a printer.
I mean, just even just the logistics of it, we I also want to note that we had this printed by a white family.
So this is a 100% white product that was really important to us, that we weren't outsourcing the product anywhere outside of our people.
And so we, and we had the graphic designer was amazing, the printer was amazing.
And Apollo and I really, every, when we started talking about this, it was kind of a nebulous idea.
Like he said, we just wanted to create something that was for our people.
So what does that mean?
You know, and as we started putting together all of the pieces that you see each month, it was just seamless because we both were motivated for exactly the same thing.
And that was to erase that which has been used to demoralize us.
So yeah, there's not going to be Jewish holidays on this calendar.
Yeah.
You know, and by the way, a friend of mine just moved into a house, bought a new house, and the former residents were apparently Jewish.
And he just sent me yesterday, he got the local Jewish Shabbad calendar sent to his house.
And, you know, it was exactly, you know, this is one of the things that we're trying to do, right?
Like other people understand the empowerment and the beauty of creating something that's just for their people.
And that's what we wanted to do.
And so, like, one of the one of the small things, when you know, just it doesn't happen every month.
It's just one, one of the dates that was really intriguing to us was this whole idea, for instance, of the Juneteenth that came out this year.
If you guys remember, you know, yeah.
So we have this like, so for those Biden gave exhaustion that day.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Exactly.
So now we have this federal holiday, which is celebrated on June 19th.
That is, you know, the Juneteenth day of, you know, supposedly it's celebrating the emancipation of Africans, but really we know that it's just another day to abuse white people.
It's just another day to heap white guilt on our children at school.
I mean, that's, we know what it's about.
But also, June 19th is the date when Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed for their Jewish trader.
Oh, so that's a good day.
So, so we, so on our calendar, on our people's calendar, yeah, June 19th is marked, but it's, it's marked for a different, you know, and so, and we've done that every month.
I mean, we have we have dates that you're marking, you know, like for instance, the Battle of Tours or whatever, but we have two months or excuse me, two dates on every month that we have marked.
And on the 14th of every month, we have the date that we call never forget.
There's an appendix at the end of the calendar that explains each month's never forget moment.
And what that is, is we have chosen one of, I mean, we all, we're all familiar with the everyday Telegram channel.
I mean, we could, every single day, we could mark an innocent of our people who has been essentially sacrificed on the altar of diversity.
But we have, we've, we've chosen one for each month that we remember on the 14th.
And then in the back of the, in the back of the calendar, you can read, you know, a brief synopsis of what has happened.
Like, for instance, we have Mary Fagan, who was a 13-year-old victim of Leo Frank, you know, and then we also have very modern, you know, like Cannon Hitton.
So we do that on the 14th of every month to mark the people who we have lost and that we will remember.
And then on this, I'm sorry, not everybody knows all these things, too, right?
This is as well a reminder.
Yeah.
It's not just propaganda.
It's like, oh, I didn't hear about that one.
I didn't know that detail about Otto Scorzeni, you know, the little epoch.
All sorts of little gems.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's why we added it at the end to really, because, because, look, I really didn't myself, I didn't really know about Otto Scorzeni.
That was 100% Apollo.
He's like, you have to know about, you know, you have to know about Otto Scorzeni.
And he wrote that entry.
And it's so edifying to see so many.
And, you know, we cannot rely on anybody else.
I saw an article.
I'm sorry, I can't remember.
It was a dissident article about the way that Wikipedia is going into the heroes of the NSDAP and essentially stripping away all their heroism.
And so, you know, that's what they do to us, right?
They demoralize us in every way they can and they moralize themselves by, you know, the frame, whatever, Floyd, whatever his name is.
George Floyd, you know, like St. George Floyd, you know.
But on the sixth of every month, as far as moralizing us, on the sixth of every month, we have a notation of a Jewish expulsion.
And again, we could have many, many of those.
We only have 12.
But days in the year for that.
Yeah.
And the, you know, I was going to say, if we could have 110 days in the month, maybe at some point, you know, fit all of them in there.
At all the pogroms in for 2023.
Just make it a totally edgy calendar for 2023.
You're working them in this one.
Let's do it.
We'll do it.
I've written that down, Coach.
Start the presses on that one.
But yeah, like every format, every month is formatted so that the sixth is marked, the 14th is marked, we have our dates, our holidays, important things that have happened for our people, like Charlottesville is on the calendar.
I'm just trying to think about dates that are ours.
You know, this is our place.
This is for our people.
This is going to be our year.
And so we filled it with not just the dates, but calls to action, right?
Call it like, you know, what is it?
You know, deedless, actionless men.
That's not what we're looking for.
So I just happened to stumble across that Jack London quote as we were sort of working you guys into the show this week.
And I was like, ah, that's perfect.
And of course, you know, we're not going to change the world with a 12-month wall calendar, but you know what?
Let me, can I share what my motivation was specifically for this calendar when you say it's not going to, it's not going to change the world?
Sure thing.
And then get Apollo in before he's going to run.
Yes, Apollo.
Let me insert one more thing because I do have to jump on.
But I just want to reinforce a point you made and sort of flesh out a story because you're so right.
Look, talked about how other people, like as in other tribes, other races and nations, don't have not only their enemies, but even just racial outsiders and foreigners, writing things like their calendars.
And that's such an important point because, look, the one thing that the Jews know better than white people and even most white nationalists is the power of legend and the uplifting and edifying power of stories of triumph and a tragedy of your ancestors.
And that's in the story you were alluding to, Clarion, is it was in the news just last month.
It was this, it's this Jewish woman who literally spends all her time.
I don't think she has a day job.
I think she just goes on Wikipedia and edits stories of former SS and NSDAP soldiers and just makes them sound bad.
And like this was in a mainstream media article as if she was doing some great service and telling the truth, making them more accurate.
But really, we know what she was doing.
And I want to say I saw this happen and other people saw this too in real time.
Because in January of this year, it was the anniversary of the Wilhelm Gushloff.
And if you don't know that the story of the Wilhelm Gushlof, I'll summarize it quickly.
It was a German cruise liner that was used as a refugee boat.
And it had about 10, anywhere from the estimates are 8,000 to 10,000 German refugees.
We're talking POWs or like wounded veterans and women and children from East Prussia.
It was carrying them back to Germany and it was sank by the Allies.
And this was in Wikipedia.
And like the entry was actually accurate.
It just told the story that it was a former cruise liner.
It had British refugee, or excuse me, German refugees.
It was sank by the Allies.
And so we started talking about it.
And I saw the story of, you know, just the anniversary of the Wilhelm Gushlof going around Telegram channels.
And in real time, I swear to you, I visited the Wikipedia page and I went back to it like minutes later and it was edited.
So, I mean, this is happening.
And other people will notice this too.
I mean, this was kind of a thing, but people said, ha ha, it looked like they changed it already.
You know, they got this one.
So, I mean, these stories, I mean, like these harrowing tales, I mean, we've got to get these out to our people.
And I want to just say a small example.
So the Otto Scorzini example, you know, I didn't know a hold on about Scorzini or Scorzini either.
I just knew a little bit, but I researched more for this calendar project for his entry.
And I started learning that, I mean, you know, he, he, I mean, there's a lot to this man's life that's worth it.
All I can say is buy the calendar, read about it.
Commando.
Exactly.
And so, but in the process of researching it, I was talking about it to some of my other cool party bros down here in my local area.
And, you know, we all talked about it, you know, and kind of got pumped up.
And we had another project for something else we're working on.
And it was kind of a, you know, of course, all legal and lawful.
It was kind of a high pressure, high, high kind of deadline situation.
And we called it Project Scorzini.
And even just recently, I was talking to these guys and we were talking about something.
And he was like, one of my buddies goes, well, look, what would Otto Scorzini do?
And my point is, like, look, obviously, we're memeing.
You know, we're guys.
You know, I wear a suit to work.
And I mean, I'm not some badass commando like Scorzini, right?
But the point is, if even a jaded, grizzled old white nationalist like me with more and more gray hair in my beard every day can read a story like Scorzini and get pumped up and get inspired where I'm like, exactly, where I'm like, you know, just like idealizing my own life and, you know, in my own mind that I'm some badass.
Imagine what your son, your young son who's idealistic and not as jaded, is going to think when he reads these stories.
He's going to get so inspired.
You know, you just read the stories from the Eastern Front and you're like feeling sorry for yourself.
And then you're like, oh, hell no.
If those guys could suffer through all that and stay strong and true to the ideals, so can I. Exactly.
So that's the kind of, I mean, like, that's the inspiration that we want to get out there and spread like wildfires, you know, in the minds of our, you know, young men and women.
So you can live your life with that type of inspiration, whatever you're doing in life, whether you're a mother or father or a worker or whatever it is you do.
Exactly.
So look, on that note, I do have to jump.
I have a plane to catch up.
Paulo has been an honor.
Paulo, real quick, before you leave, I just want to say, I know you're not asking my advice, but you can be a Catholic and appreciate what the good parts of paganism are about.
If I can say that.
Let's make him this is here and tie him down with the religion question.
Okay, look, I will take, that's a good point.
I'll take it on board.
I'll wait for Smasher's rebuttal.
That's all I can say.
Godspeed, Apollo.
Great job on the calendar.
If you're listening to this, fam, and you don't buy this thing, I'll channel Smasher Speak of the Devil.
Go into the bathroom and, well, I'll just say, shave with a rusty razor if you don't pick this thing up.
Ourpeople are year.com.
Good people.
Thanks, Apollo.
Godspeed.
All right, he's out.
Clarion, we can revisit the calendar if we want.
I think we did it justice.
Sam, anything else or Clarion that we want to hit on before we move on to your lovely daughter?
Yeah.
Well, I thought I would mention, you know, just looking through these few pictures that are on the site here, I couldn't help but remark it.
This last picture, we chatted a little bit before the show about this, but I thought the comments were worth repeating or talking a little more about it.
The very last picture there, it shows kind of a little bit dated picture of a couple of nice ladies.
They're in a supermarket.
They're at the checkout line and they're interacting with each other.
You can tell by the lighting and the type of cash register that this is probably maybe from the early 70s or something like that.
But there's something about the picture that, and maybe I'm thinking about when I was a very small child and being in a scene like this, you know, the white people interacting with each other, the way that they carry themselves.
You look at the healthy frame on each of the women in this photo.
That's what strikes me.
Sometimes I watch an old movie or something and you see how healthy the people look compared to now.
Because sure, there are any kind of movie that has some kind of action hero or something in it.
Yeah, the people look muscular and athletic, but not in a natural way.
You know, when you look at the pictures of these women in this photo, or even the illustration on the cover of the calendar, you see this kind of a good, healthy, balanced, you know, virile kind of a sense that people should strive to recapture.
And that's really, I don't, that photo actually, I'm glad that you are moved by that because so am I.
I put that on the website just as a marker of like, this is how you buy it.
Because I've had that photo on my, like on my heart really for years.
That would like back in the day, like 2015, that was one of my profile pictures on Twitter.
And so that actually isn't part of the calendar, but I love that picture.
And I think that maybe second edition, maybe we'll put it in there because it is, because you really understand.
And I think in a way that all white nationalists understand why it's so moving.
I mean, it seems like a very ordinary photograph, you know, like two women at the supermarket, but it is so powerfully different than what we have now, but that it's something that we can reclaim.
I mean, that's what white nationalism is, right?
Is our reclamation of that actual health, not like a health that we put on, you know, with like it was just living in a natural way and in a healthy way without being completely propagandized by Jewish disease.
It's arising out of a healthy lifestyle.
And, you know, I've often thought about that.
Like I think of what would my grandfather or great-grandfather think of people going to the gym?
Like going to the gym was an absolutely unknown concept before a certain year.
You know, going to the gym is like for people that don't have active lifestyles, I guess, I would say.
But also, Keeping in the same vein, I'm looking at this picture where it's showing like the NASA, the ground control for maybe some kind of a space shot or something.
And you see, I remember seeing some few years ago at the Museum of Science and Industry, they had a whole exhibit about the moon landings and about the space program and stuff.
And you look at a picture like that, and it's all white people, you know, like every last person.
Yeah, but we, when we chose that, it was like that's I mean, that's what it is, right?
I mean, that's who, that's who built us.
And the whole exhibit is like that.
And if you go to these big city museums like what we have around here, and I don't know, I don't know how to explain it.
You go to the museum and the museum will be full of Negro children.
You know, there was Negro children milling around chasing each other.
It's like they don't know or even understand or care about the thing.
But that's when I was there with my family.
And we're, and, you know, you, the whole exhibit was like this photo.
So, okay, here's the guys working on the different rockets and things.
Here's the guys in the ground control.
Here's the astronauts.
Here's the, I mean, everybody's white.
What must, what must these Negroes think if they could think?
What would they think to say about that?
You know, must it, it, it's so obvious.
It's how it used to be.
They just, then they just make it up, though, right?
I mean, the whole hidden figures.
I mean, then they just, then they just either just either caught out like, you know, that this person, this janitor was actually imperative to the moon landing, or they just make it up.
You know, so, but in our word for that called retconning, right?
That's what they do.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
So not in our calendar.
Hats off for your efforts on this.
It was so nice to meet you.
I met you at one event and then I met you again.
Yeah, it was great.
Just like a normal person, right?
Yeah.
Hey, can it?
I want to just, I want to say something really nice about Coach.
I did not know who you were, right?
At the first event that I saw you, I saw you do two of the nicest things.
So I'm going to put this out there because you're not prompted.
Okay.
All right.
I'm blushing.
Oh, no.
And you should.
Like, it was so, it was so sweet and endearing.
I saw this, I saw this man two different times across the room.
Really, there was only like one or two children at that first event.
A lot of white children at the second event, but at that first event, there was only a couple of white children.
And you were so genuinely, I'm a mother, so I can tell when people are like sincerely and genuinely engaged with children and not pretending to be engaged with children.
You were genuinely engaging with a child who was extremely bored at this adult event.
And I thought, oh, that's a good guy right there.
I didn't know who you were.
And then it was really quite hot during that event.
And one of the event organizers was walking around with the last few bottles of water and offering them to people while some speeches were going on.
And so it was a silent, a silent offering.
And he went up to a table with two women who were like probably in their 60s and offered them water.
And one accepted the bottle of water.
And then one did not accept fast enough kind of a thing because it was a silent, a silent situation.
And the guy turned and then went to the table that Coach was sitting at and offered the last bottle of water and coach took it.
But then he saw that the table nearby, that the woman wanted the water, like that she had kind of like lost the opportunity.
And this guy, who I had seen really being sweet to a child earlier in the event, got up and gave his water.
And y'all, it was hot.
This man had a, and he gave it to me.
No, no.
She was like, she was like definitely 60 years old at least.
And I thought, man, this is a great guy, you know?
And so I thought, oh, I'm going to go say hi to this.
And then, and then you had your, I was like, oh, coach, like, oh, yeah, like, hey, nice to meet you.
But anyway, coach is the real deal.
And he, and he's the real deal, even when nobody is looking.
Like, he doesn't know anybody's looking.
Coach is a nice man.
Oh, boy, most of the time.
Yeah.
I'm legitimately blushing.
Thank you, Clarion.
That's enough.
I'm getting sheepish.
My son is when I compliment my son on something, he's like, Dad, stop.
You know, I'm like, I'm really killed on the soccer bill.
He's like, no, please, you're making me fall on comfortable.
No, please, stop talking.
Yeah.
That's delightful.
You're a delightful person.
And you raised a delightful daughter, ma'am.
You said it was okay before the show that we could brush.
Bronca, let's get you in here and talk about your book.
But first, of course, as a family show, I got to ask, ma'am.
So it's like the chicken and the egg question: who went first?
Was Bronca the one who got red-pilled first or Clarion?
We'll go to you, Bronca, please.
That would for sure be my mom.
My lovely mother, Clarion, was the first person in our family to become, you know, actually to join the movement that was then known as the alt-right.
I know that that's kind of an older term, but so I was 12, and my mom essentially said, We're white nationalists now, family.
And that's how that's how we became white.
You remember the moment where you shocked, like, my mother is a Nazi, or where you're like, okay, all right, I'm gay.
Yeah, I was never really shocked.
I was like a 12-year-old kid.
So, I mean, what was I going to do?
I know so many, so many of us had zero top-level approval or encouragement, right?
And yet we still found ourselves here.
So imagine the power of not, you weren't a little kid then, but imagine the power that a little kid or an older kid, you know, getting that moral approval and, of course, the education to go along with it that they that most kids, at least in my generation, I guess, were just, it was just stamped out, and mom and dad weren't interested or were totally indoctrinated to the neoliberal stuff.
It's powerful, it works, and yeah, we always worry about the backlash or that it might backfire.
You know, if mom and dad think one thing, junior and dear daughter will think the other thing, but not necessarily.
And Bronco went on to create a beautiful book.
And speaking of compliments in a warm and cozy show here, it is, I bought it for my daughter, or actually maybe I can't remember if I bought it or maybe Antelope Hill sent it to me, but it doesn't matter because I gave it to my daughter.
I said, this is for you.
And it went on to become her favorite book, legitimately.
I'm not lying.
She put it in her backpack and it's safe enough.
It was safe enough for her to bring it on the bus.
And she wouldn't let me read it to her.
She, you know, Junior is like phasing out of stories and Potato is pretty high energy and he'll sit for one or two occasionally, but not every night.
But dear daughter is still in the story sweet spot.
And she said, no, thanks, Dad.
This is my book.
And Bronca, you illustrated it.
And I presume that you curated the, there's five European folk tales or fairy tales in there.
But yeah, let us know about the creative process for this, the motivation, anything else you want to share.
Well, before I say anything else, I want to say that I know now from what you were saying about your daughter that that book that I made has reached its goal.
That was the goal of the book from the beginning was to be a book for white children to read or have read to them and something that would be not explicitly,
this is a white nationalist book, but something that is definitely exclusively for Europeans because so often these folktale collections are, you know, there's some kind of, it's almost like the diversity hire.
You need the diversity check for everything.
But yeah, inaccurately updated.
Yep.
No, we got Junior the Brothers Grimm, nice hardcover bound edition that he initially showed no interest in.
And then once I saw him reading it in his bed, I was like, oh man, you know, achievement unlocked.
And sincerely, I didn't have to push it on him.
And same thing, they take to this like a fish to water when you just put it on the bookshelf or over their bed.
So there's morals to each of the stories.
I especially like the last one about Baba Yaga, which harkened back to my and my wife's time in Russia.
I remember hearing about Baba Yaga.
But did you go through the whole pantheon to select these five?
And my daughter took to it, but it's not necessarily, it's got a princess on the cover, but it's not necessarily a girl's book, would you say?
No, I wouldn't say that it was a girl's book.
Originally, there was supposed to be a different cover that was not going to be the fairy.
It was going to be one of the illustrations from Baba Yaga.
So the cover can be a bit misleading as to which of the two genders it is more suited to.
I would say it's suited to both.
I made it specifically to be for both because if it was me picking my favorite stories, it would definitely be more suited to, well, like my personal favorite stories.
It would definitely be something that was more suited to girls.
Sure.
But it's definitely for any European child.
And you did the illustrations yourself.
I had to say that they had a certain Ralph Stedman aesthetic to him.
He was the artist who did the artwork for Hunter S. Thompson to accompany a lot of his articles and artwork.
And yet they're not, you know, Stedman's stuff was dark and in many cases obscene.
It's not that at all, but it has a very similar style, sort of, I don't know, avant-garde or whatever.
But yeah, anything about the art or anything else about the book?
Sorry, I had to get that in there.
Ah, well, yeah, yeah.
Okay, so for the actual stories, I know, I'm a relatively decent writer.
I'm not anything incredible.
And I actually, my mother was my amazing editor.
She's an incredible editor.
But She edited those.
So I just wanted her to have credit as editor in the book, but that didn't end up happening.
So I just want to say that now.
And so I, you know, just kind of picked out the stories that I thought would be best for like the modern European child, plus a poem from the poetic Edda as well as a classic Irish poem.
So I included those two and all of the stories, not the poems, I retold those.
There are notes that are more geared towards possibly like parents reading to children about the origins of the story and like versions that I might have used instead of the more common ones that you would find in perhaps a widely known book like The Brothers Grim.
Like I modified the 12 Dancing Princesses quite a bit because it has been told so many times in throughout different countries in Europe.
So I just kind of made it into a collaboration of all those versions.
It's available at antelopehillpublishing.com.
It's a beautiful hardcover with delightful illustrations.
And what's the name of this book again?
Because I got to get this.
The name is the 12 Dancing Princesses and Other Tales from Europe, I believe.
It's currently the only book under the second or the third imprint of Analope Hill, Little Frog Hill, I believe.
So I think they have a tab on their website that will just take you right to that one book.
I must have seen it and just I'm just trying to connect it with what I've seen, but that's that's great.
I will definitely get that book.
Amen.
I'm back there.
A little internet.
We had that.
We're already coming up on the bottom of the first hour and we wanted to talk.
I have to admit, so Stryker did such a wonderful job.
By the way, Bronca, thank you.
Sorry, I got cut off there.
Beautiful book, antelopehillpublishing.com.
Buy it for your kids or buy it for yourself.
I mean, Sam reads it to himself before bed every night to feel warm and cozy and remind himself of those morals.
Whatever it takes.
Yeah.
Christmas is coming around.
That's right.
Yeah.
I, yeah, so real quick.
I mean, we can go a little bit long if we have to, but it speaks to Clarion's need to go because I listened to most of Stryker's telethon.
Essentially, they raised a ton of money for the family with a sick child.
And one thing really triggered me.
And it was relatively early in the show when you had three childless, childless New Yorkers sort of poo-pooing rural gang, right?
They were strawmanning living in the country as running away and going to live in a cabin in the woods with a fake tread aesthetic and stuff like this.
And I'm like, guys, like try having some kids and having to deal with all that and live in the country a little bit first.
These urbanite no-kidders lecture at us about what's running away and whatnot.
But yeah, Clarion, you live in the country now.
It's safe to say now, were you guys urbanites or suburbanites and then decided to get the hell out of Dodge?
How did that work?
Well, you know, it's like kind of a long process.
We were living in what would be considered a suburb.
Lived in in like a really tightly you know dense, high density uh development, but we lived in, you know, essentially in town we have a little bit of property and we we lived in Florida, which we loved and um, I got red pilled in 2015 and started looking at the uh the race map by by county in Florida and the trajectory was so
bad.
bad.
And I looked at the, you know, I had, I had a 12-year-old and nine-year-old.
And my husband was red-pilled.
And I was like, babe, there's no, you know, what are we going to, what are they going to do with this?
And so we started looking in 2015 for the perfect place to give our white children a future.
And that's how we, that's how we ended up moving with the idea that it was complicated.
It was such a long process and it was such a researched process.
And then also the qualitative considerations of like, what is it, what does it mean to be a white nationalist?
Like, what does it mean to have God, family, folk?
Like, what does that mean?
What is the action that that means?
Like, love is an action and we love our God and we love our folk and we love our family.
So what does that mean?
And so that means for us in part that we need to be someplace where white people who are not completely shells of, you know, like corpses, where we can get together with other healthy white people to work on reclaiming what we had.
And so that's where we started looking.
Okay.
We want to come together with other healthy white people so that we can do the actions which are necessary to reclaim what we had, you know, to reclaim that picture, Sam, like to reclaim that.
Like we had that, you know, we had that.
And it wasn't that long ago.
We had that.
No.
Within my lifetime.
Yeah, mine too.
Yep, mine too.
We've said this before on the show, but we also have to eke out a sense of happiness and security and peace of mind in this world.
And what do you know with the advent of the internet, moving to the country does not mean that you're like receding from the battlefield?
Now, I know Sam has strong feelings about this too.
And it's just like the, you know, different white ethnicities mixing.
It's, if you want to stay all Swedish, Godspeed, right?
If you want to stay in the suburbs, stay in the city and fight for that, Godspeed.
But whatever you do, do not look down on the, especially the families with young children who say, you know what?
Screw this rat race or this diversity or this crime.
I would rather get to a place where I can be happier, safer, and I'll make less money, but I'll also have lower expenses.
And this came up just this week.
We don't normally do current events or sort of news reviews on this show.
And that's for a couple of reasons.
One, I just assume that everybody's seen it and understands it and don't need us to rehash it or interpret it for them.
Maybe, maybe not.
Sometimes they do need that.
And the one that came out this week was from Loudoun County, which it's no secret is my old stomping grounds that we decamped from about two years ago.
And if you missed this one, and I think people may have missed it, you know, we take it for granted that everybody's on Telegram, including to Drudge or Daily Mail or whatever.
Because I mentioned this to my mom the other day.
I was like, did you see this story out of Loudoun County?
And she's like, I have no idea what you're talking about.
And she generally follows the news.
This father, Scott Smith, he went to a school board meeting in Loudoun County in June, on June 22nd, and he had the intention.
They were talking about critical race theory in the bathrooms at this point, transgender bathrooms, allowing boys and girls to use whatever bathroom they wanted.
Turns out that Mr. Smith, who is a plumber, he's a white guy, he's slightly overweight, but he presented well enough.
His daughter was sexually assaulted in a bathroom by a boy at a high school wearing a skirt just under a month before the school meeting, school board meeting.
So he goes there to try to speak his mind.
Before the school board meeting, he has an interaction with a liberal activist who's there who said she didn't think that it happened.
So what do you know?
When push comes to shove, believe women doesn't apply here.
He gets up to speak, and everybody in the crowd is angry about one thing or another, but this man had more right to be angry than anybody else.
Minutes before he's arrested, the Loudoun County School superintendent Scott Ziegler, now that he doesn't look like a Jew, but that's a questionable last name.
He declares that the predator, transgender, student, or person simply does not exist.
That's a direct quote.
And that, to his knowledge, we don't have any record of assaults occurring in our restrooms.
As I'm clenching my fist here, put yourself in that father's shoes.
And you've got a 14-year-old daughter at home recovering from what was conclusively proved to be a rape by the kit that they do after the fact.
And these lying scumbags are saying everything is fine, nothing to worry about at this meeting where they're basically talking about critical race theory and transgenderism.
So he gets a little hot under the collar.
Understandably, somebody sees a cop sees that he's getting a little bit agitated, grabs him from behind by the armshades of Greg Conte, by the way, at the Michigan protest.
And Smith jerks his arm away.
And who gets arrested but Scott Smith?
And he did say that he flew into a rage at the meeting after he heard Ziegler's comments and after a local progressive activist said she didn't believe his daughter's story.
Get your kids out of the schools.
Get them out of the schools.
And that was, and that just circles back to, like, and somebody asked, like, what, man, we need to like help these Louden parents who like are rightfully angry or whatever.
I was like, Godspeed if you want to do that.
But in a place like that, it's sort of a rearguard action at this point.
It's a retreat.
And I would say that's not the hill to die on in that county.
You want to move somewhere where there's still a chance to nipping this stuff in the bud before it gets to that point where you have a Soros appointed.
The attorney gener, the attorney general essentially for Loudoun County is this woman, Buddha Bibaraj.
Now, Bibaraj may be Albanian, it may be Jewish, I don't know.
I couldn't nail it down.
She received about $659,000 from a George Soros PAC in this sort of obscure, like, who cares about the county attorney general, right?
Specifically for the purpose, because Loudoun County is one of, if not the wealthiest county in America, and it is a proven ground just west of Washington, D.C. in Northern Virginia, and they wanted one of their own in there.
And get this, Buddha Bibaraj is, of course, a big proponent of light sentences on criminals, rehabilitation, etc.
But when it came to this plumber whose daughter was raped in a bathroom by a boy wearing a dress, who, by the way, went on to assault another girl in a different high school months later.
Now, the Loudoun County Sheriff gave somewhat of a conflicting statement on that.
I'm not 100% certain about that, but Smith's lawyer says that the name matches up.
Had some informant who told them who it was.
That attorney general took it upon herself to prosecute Smith for like yanking his arm away from a cop.
Meanwhile, his innocent daughter is basically suffering for life.
So that's the reality.
I'm gritting my teeth here, trying not to get too steamed in some of these counties where they have started to encroach their power.
Loudoun County, seven years ago, had an entirely Republican board of supervisors.
Fast forward five years, and it's almost entirely Democratic.
There's one GOP holdout from the West in the rural county.
So these places turn quick as a dime.
They poison, and in often cases, will oversee your children's physical assaults in order to protect their agenda, which is degeneracy, trannies, gay, black's good, whites bad, and the rest of it.
You probably knew that.
I don't want to be preachy on the show, but that one I thought was worth raising.
Like we said earlier, you have to disengage from the satanic Jewish system.
Do business with each other.
Buy this calendar.
Buy books from our people.
If you want a cool t-shirt or you want to listen to music or whatever it is, we have to completely disengage from the system.
Homeschool your kids, whether you live in the city.
You know, I mean, I raised seven kids in the city environment, you know, and I, and though I am turning my opinion on that, I recently read fully this article by Alex McNabb about the population decline.
And there's no doubt about it that the urban environment is toxic.
So, you know, I'm leaning that way now, but completely disengage from the system and let's do business with each other.
We hang out with each other, and that's it, you know, and we'll attract good people.
And that's one more thing that I wanted to compliment.
You know, I was giving the New Yorkers a little guff there on Stryker's Telethon, the People Square telethon, but Stryker and Warren talking about the sort of snowball cumulative effect of our people withholding their talents and their efforts and their loyalty from an evil system.
It may seem small, but multiply that by thousands and thousands, and it becomes a powerful force denying them our toil.
They will suffocate.
They suffocate without us.
Yep.
Oh, man.
All right.
Clarion, thank you so much.
The calendar is our people, our year 2022.
It's available at ourpeopleouryear.com.
I am not getting any shekels from sales, lest some of you skeptical, cynical listeners out there think that this was a personally invested shilling session.
I did it because the product is awesome.
These guys deserve it.
And it is a new and wonderful product.
And Clarion, we'd love to have you back on to talk more about rural life.
We just ran out of time here at the top.
And like you said, that means you got to wake up early every morning to take care of the animals.
I do.
Well, thanks so much.
And it was really, really a pleasure to talk to you guys before the show and during.
It was a real highlight.
So thanks very much for having us.
Amen.
Godspeed and congratulations on raising such a wonderful, talented, and committed daughter.
Bronca, you're not so bad yourself.
Oh, thank you.
Thanks for having me on to, you know, talk about my work.
Of course, our pleasure.
Thank you for giving my daughter such a lovely product for her and myself to enjoy.
You know, I had to read it on my own.
And remember, Full House Love Connection.
You ever decide to get back in the dating pool, you just say the word, and we'll have about 1,400 suitors lined up at your door the next day at this pace.
But no pressure.
Well, I appreciate that offer.
And I am endlessly happy to hear how much your daughter is enjoying the book.
Amen.
And that's available at antelopehillpublishing.com.
Those scoundrels.
I have to add that up.
Lest I'd be total shill.
Shameless episode.
Fam, thank you so much.
A little bit of a long first half.
I think that all these guys deserved it.
Go out and do it.
Christmas is coming.
Forget winter is coming.
Christmas is coming.
So fill those stockings.
All right.
Let's go to the break.
Mr. Producer has been on mute because he said he had something more important to do.
No, I'm kidding.
He's there.
He's been marking time in the chat.
Thank you, buddy.
For the break this week, we have just two weeks.
It's T-minus, two weeks to Halloween, fam.
And we haven't had any classical on this show in far too long.
So please put on about the first three minutes, the most compelling minutes, of Modest Musorkski's Night on Bald Mountain.
Beautiful piece, powerful.
You may know it from Fantasia, Russian composer.
And yeah, Smasher is not on the show.
If he were, he may have made an off-color joke about Night on Bald Mountain.
But we don't have to worry about that this week.
We'll be right back with quick teaser.
We've got a dad coming on who is going to talk about the MC, the motorcycle question, and whether that is an appropriate thing for fathers to ride.
Don't go anywhere.
Right back and welcome
back to full house.
Episode 105, second half, best half.
I don't know.
We'll see.
That was a tough one to follow.
But special guest, Anon Commando, one of our regular correspondents throughout the course of this show, is on with us in the second half.
How are your brother?
Let's get it out of the way right here at the top.
I'm doing all right, Coach.
That was a great first half.
That was fantastic.
Thank you.
And you kept your mic muted the entire time.
Eavesdropping in.
Well done, sir.
You're a pro.
I guess we got to do it, brother, real quick.
I hope the audience doesn't mind this trope of ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, but we got to know who we're talking to and treat everybody equally.
Oh, sure.
My mother's side is Cajun and English, and my father's side is German and English.
So I'm kind of a bit of an American mutt.
And we are practicing Roman Catholics.
I am married.
I have three children and a fourth on the way.
Nice.
Congratulations.
Got a boy.
Heck of a job.
And you are the one who had to put your dog down with a nine millimeter to the skull, correct?
Yes.
Man, that was brutal.
I know that was weighing on me, and everybody's like, don't listen to that fool.
Just get the dog put down.
But our dear Mako, you know, saved us some trouble.
I do have some surprise news to share.
It's too soon, but we got some news on the pooch front.
But I can't say anything lest certain people in my house are listening.
So we'll leave it at that.
Anyway, welcome aboard.
We'll just call you Anon for short, brother.
Thank you for listening.
Oh, and yeah, how did you find the show?
Was it back in the Twitter days or Telegram?
Back in the Twitter days.
I've been listening since the first episode.
Amen, brother.
Thank you for that.
Hopefully, we'll keep you in the stable of listeners, especially now you got skin in the game.
Anyway, enough of you, newcomer kidding.
We're going to move to a delightful, I teased a nice note we got from a middle schooler.
I'm not going to even hint at who he is.
Obviously, kids who are not adults yet, we handle with extreme kid gloves, no pun intended, if at all.
But this is just an email that we got that warmed my heart, and I'm sure it warmed Sam's heart.
So here it goes.
He starts with, whoever receives this message, can you please make sure it gets to Sam?
Thank you.
And of course, I did.
Hello, Sam.
I hope you're having a good day.
I just wanted to say thank you for giving me inspiration to pursue Christian identity.
I am a middle schooler, and I go to a majority white school.
Thank God.
Although I go to a majority white school, the issue of race is still prevalent in my life.
My dad has been a constant follower, following the river of red pills, and has kept me on the right track all my life.
One day I was listening to Full House, and you listed off a few websites, and I quickly wrote them down.
I was about to drop my Christian faith because I knew the statistics were most likely true, and Christianity was not backed by anything but people who believe.
So I went on Christogenia, if that's pronounced correctly, and saw my first glimpse at the truth.
Thank you.
I was wondering if you know of any Christian identity groups in the blank, I won't name the region, that I might be able to look into.
Thank you again for being a great resource of hope and inspiration, and goodbye.
Thank you, pal, little buddy, if that's not too patriarchal or whatever.
But Sam, way to go, brother.
Yeah, it's very heartwarming.
And I made a little response.
I don't know if you will be forwarding that to him or not, but I did already.
Yep.
Okay, wonderful.
And maybe I'll just say the sense, a few words about the sense of what my reaction was, which is you will find this Christian identity belief everywhere because it really is not a standalone thing.
You will find Christians of various stripes that have this understanding, whether it's Orthodox, Trad Catholic, or people that call themselves just Christian identity or Protestants or non-denominational.
I have met Christian identity people in every one of those categories.
So I would say that just getting involved with any good nationalist group, you're going to find those people because it's issues that they're just not going to go away.
The questions that Christian identity answers are simply not going to go away.
So there's definitely hope to do that study, study, read the Bible, read other books and listen to people, and you will learn a lot.
And it is an exciting thing.
And the story that Christian identity tells is a very compelling, exciting story for those that don't know much about it.
And I'll just leave it at that.
Amen, Sam.
And I'll give you my honest response from receiving this email from a young kid who is about to give it, I don't know if you could be an atheist, agnostic, pigment or whatever, but the thought of a young kid rediscovering his faith to a Christian identity would be sincerely happy.
I would certainly prefer, I'd prefer somebody to be devout pagan to nothing.
I'd prefer somebody to be a devout Catholic, tradcath as opposed to nothing, and Christian identity as opposed to nothing.
And then there's sorry old me still being a stubborn son of a gun, not joking quite yet.
MP letting me know I was underwater earlier.
Shut up, Mr. Producer.
You're distracting me.
The show must go on, whether I'm underwater or not.
Yeah, very heartwarming message there.
Yep, absolutely.
Love to hear it.
It provides an arrow in your quiver to have that faith and that belief and that big guy on your side.
I have no doubt about it.
And who knows?
Maybe one day I will have it before my deathbed at least.
Anyway, New White Life.
Tough act to follow with young kid with a kind note.
But Grant let us know that he and his wife welcome their second, a healthy baby boy.
Congratulations, Grant and Wifey.
I think they're listeners.
If not, shame on them.
Congratulations, rescinded.
Also, joking, sorry.
I stole an IPA or two from the fridge upstairs.
Let's see.
New White Life number two.
I'm making an executive decision here, Sammy Baby.
And he's cagey about it.
But our pal, Whitey, who was kind enough in the early days of the show to give us credit for encouraging him to pop the question to his wonderful wife.
I got to meet her over the summer.
What a delightful person.
Makes Whitey look like a bag of rocks.
Talk about marriage there, Whitey.
I'm busting Whitey because he said that he's on a podcast hiatus, whatever that means.
I guess he's doing well.
Yeah.
Digital.
Well, you know, we had a manner bund outing here last weekend where the local lodge here all got together and shared a wonderful meal together at a, I'll just say, honorary Aryan restaurant.
Leave it like that.
And yeah.
And he mentioned that.
He was kind of checked out and all that.
And I, you know, that's some sometimes people, they need to do that, you know, and that's, there's nothing wrong with that.
And I know that people sometimes they get a little too wrapped up in it.
You know, you got to keep things in perspective.
And I kind of listen around to a lot of different things.
You know, I listen, whatever you name a podcast, I probably listen to it.
But sometimes I kind of meander around a little bit.
And I would kind of recommend that approach so you don't get too wedded, so to speak, to one particular idea or one particular podcast.
Sometimes people, they, you know, even listening to our show, you know, people feel very personal with us and everything like that.
And I hope we never let our listeners down.
But sometimes you listen to another podcast, you end up disagreeing with the host or something.
And it's good to keep kind of a healthy distance and a healthy variety to what you listen to.
Should listen to some music, listen to some podcasts, listen to some funny stuff, and maybe just don't listen to anything once in a while, too.
That's right.
Yeah, I go back and forth.
There are days where I'm like, I don't want to listen to our guys again.
You know, I got this stuff on the top of my mind or at the front of my mind all the time.
Anyway, I really don't need to overdo it.
So just give me some boomerock on Appalachian Radio.
And then there's days where I'm like, good God, I can't listen to this song for the 10,000th time.
You know, give me some content.
So I'm still, I'm still, I'm cycling through.
Obviously, I listened to that six-hour People Square talk about a marathon, most of it.
I'll pop on the freebie shows on the TD on the TRS network occasionally.
Of course, Nordic Frontier, Myth of the 20th Century.
Yeah.
There's a couple others.
White Power Hour.
Don't forget about them.
White Power Hour.
That's right.
Hate House.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've been tasked with putting together a little program for White Power Hour.
I can't remember if I mentioned that last week, but regardless.
Oh, we did.
Yeah, that's going to be great, man.
That's going to be hilarious.
Or I shouldn't say hilarious.
I think it's going to be hilarious, but it'll be very interesting and certainly a change of pace for a lot of people.
That's right.
Yeah.
If Mark and Jay and you're listening to this, I'm still doing my homework, guys.
Bear with me.
I've never DJ'd before.
I want to hit this one out of the park with your oh man.
It's going to be great.
Anyway, we got sidetracked by Whitey the scoundrel and his like digital fast here, but Whitey and his wife are expecting their first.
God bless them.
So happy for them.
Two wonderful parents to be.
And can't wait to meet the little guy or gal.
And congratulations, guys.
Even if you are shamefully not listening to Full House this week, I'm sure somebody will back channel it to you that coach let the cat out of the bag.
All right, we are riding with MP free freed up from his prior obligation.
We got a non-commando riding shotgun or in the back of the seat.
I guess Sam, me, and we're in bucket seats up here, and we'll put MP in the middle, playing with the radio dials.
Then, MP, MP, give me a drop, give me a good drop.
We got drops now, fan.
This is big news.
Make it a good one.
Pick the best one you got.
Smashing success.
Never mind.
We don't have drops.
Put him on the spot.
All right.
Yeah.
Well, I actually did.
There you go.
I had a collection of like 50 that I sent old Mr. Producer at one point.
All right.
Not bad.
All right.
We'll try not to, you know, I can hear some audience members like, no, please don't.
We don't need it.
And others are like, yeah, let's do it.
Anyway, before we went to tape tonight, it's so funny how the show always comes together.
Really waxing here.
It seems like we get notes and like topics right before we go to tape fairly regularly, as if the universe or a celestial power is smiling down on us.
And just before we went to tape tonight, got one of the toughest questions that we've ever had in the history of this show.
And it's from a guy that I and many of you know, but we will keep him completely private and anonymous for his family's privacy purposes.
Here we go.
Hello, birth panel.
It took me a while to decide whether or not to reach out to ask for advice with this issue that has been causing me a lot of mental anguish and decision paralysis over what to do and how to proceed given the devastating news I've been handed.
My wife of five years was just diagnosed with Huntington's disease.
I apologize for the medical jargon, but this means that one of her alleles in her DNA that controls the production of the Huntington protein has mutated and creates the protein in a malformed way, which causes it to collect in her brain, causing symptoms similar to Alzheimer's and Parkinson's combined and eventually premature death.
These symptoms tend to begin in the 40s to 50s age range and have various lifestyle and mutation-specific factors affecting onset and progression.
She has no symptoms yet.
Due to this being a genetic disease, my three-year-old daughter has a 50% chance she inherited it, and my unborn child, who is due later this year, has the same chance, which gives me a 25% chance that all of my current progeny will also carry this disease.
The big irony in all of this is that Huntington's is one of the few diseases that the third Reich courts would consistently rule in favor of sterilization for.
There's research being conducted, but no therapies or cure as of yet.
The reason I took my wife in to get tested was because her father was recently diagnosed with it due to symptoms onset, and she ended up losing the coin flip.
She got it from him.
To add on to all of this, genetic clinics refuse to test any person under 18 because they believe that knowing whether or not they have the condition should be an individual's choice.
So the soonest I would be able to have an answer would be 15 to 18 years from now for my children.
I'm at a mental and emotional loss at this point for what to do given our national socialist worldview and our politics.
My wife and I are both Catholic and strongly against abortion, especially our own flesh and blood.
And that conviction combined with it being financially impossible to afford in vitro fertilization means I'm staring down the barrel of a gun of either stopping having kids at two, which has a 25% chance of my family line becoming a genetic dead end, or I try to breed my way out of the situation and have as many kids as possible so that at least half turn out fine.
If I go with the latter, how would something like that even be justifiable to my children?
Yeah, half of you are going to be afflicted with this disease, so that's why I had so many kids.
Seems like a roadmap to hatred and resentment.
Any advice, guidance, opinions would be welcome and appreciated because I'm at a loss for what to do.
Thank you, sir, for the question.
Sincere sadness, apologies, regrets to you and your lovely wife and your kiddos, too.
We got Nathaniel Scott is putting in some hours again.
We got a response from him.
But Sam, you know, you are my rock.
I'm going to let you have first crack at this one.
Okay, yeah, sure.
First of all, and I don't know that much about this particular condition, disease, whatever it is, other than just having read this letter.
So I'm just responding very top-level, superficial way.
But I remember a story years ago, reading a story, somebody had stage four cancer for 30 years.
Okay, so like somebody gets told they have a condition.
Oh, well, this is what's going to happen.
No, that is not necessarily what is going to happen.
This is not clockwork that you have this condition and then you can expect to die between 40 to 50 years old in some bad way.
So first of all, there's that.
This is not any certainty to it.
And the other thing is, you say you're Catholic, so I will mention that there were quite a few very famous saints that did not necessarily live long.
I think of the one they called St. Therese Littleflower.
She died at age 26, and she led a very full life and a very blessed life and left a lot of important writings and is a beloved saint to this day.
So I don't know that the lifespan is necessarily the measure of a person.
And recently, a dear friend of mine turned 50, and he was telling me how he was taking it kind of hard turning 50.
And he said, because, you know, when you're 50, like, your life is mostly over.
And I said, well, you could be 20 years old and your life could be mostly over because you could die at 25.
So nobody knows for sure what's in store for you that way.
So, you know, maybe the cynical person might call me out on this and say in a practical way, well, what are you trying to say?
So you should just keep having kids and all that type of thing.
I don't know exactly what I'm saying.
I'm just trying to tell you that these pronouncements are not absolute and you don't know what the future holds.
So I wouldn't be depressed or discouraged.
And if you say you're Catholic and you're a true believer, then you should be praying about this.
And God is well capable to address the situation.
And he is well capable to supply you the grace to deal with whatever amount of the situation he wants you to face.
So do not be discouraged at all.
Yeah.
We do know a couple extremely based and supremely intelligent doctors who I would be happy to kick this over to them just to see what they think.
Absolutely true point and valid point, Sam, that, yeah, there's no cure for Huntington's today, October 15th now, 2021.
But with that late onset, decades of life before it kicks in, it's tempting to say, oh, man, especially for the kids, there's a decent chance that that could get straightened out by the time they come of age.
The other thing that came to mind immediately was, well, does your wife regret being born, knowing what she tragically knows now?
Does she regret having two kids who might have the disease?
I would guess certainly not.
It's a kick in the gut for sure.
But if your kids have it, are they going to regret, you know, if they get the bad news when they turn 18 or if they wait until later?
I don't know when you tell them on this one.
They're probably not going to regret being alive just because they might not live as long as somebody who did have it.
How long are you supposed to live?
Yeah.
Also, this is not National Socialist Germany with a righteous and legitimately eugenic, but not cruelly or mad scientist sense.
If you look at the history, I mean, the German courts were extraordinarily careful about sterilization and things like that.
Read Madison Grant's Into Darkness for his man on the scene reporting about how extraordinarily circumspect they were about making those serious decisions.
They weren't just out there sterilizing everybody with a wart.
And also, you said it was compared to Alzheimer's.
And again, I am speaking out of school here.
I don't necessarily understand everything about this.
But I know for Alzheimer's, there is therapies or there are things that ease the symptoms or that enable you to live some degree of quality of life and things like that.
With the advent of therapies and things that that do enable you to live in a certain way, the Third Reich may very well look at it differently in 2021 than than they did in, you know, 1930.
Something sure uh, to his question there's something.
Just a my gut response is that there's something a little bit grow grotesque is too strong of a word, but something a little bit creepy about like ramping up the mating to like pump them out to ensure.
Like that doesn't quite strike me as the right thing to do.
Knowing what you know, go ahead, sam.
Well yeah, and even even with that you know, that just goes to the whole question that I, I would say to somebody who's, let's say, getting married and they say oh, I don't know that I can have eight kids or ten kids, I have to think about birth control.
Well, who says you're gonna going to have eight or ten kids?
Think all the people who have trouble having even one or two kids.
You know you, you don't know what, what kind of hand that you're being dealt here, and you know I, I would trust god on this thing.
Yeah uh and, and the wife has a big say in it too.
You know, if she's, you Know, doesn't want to have more for one reason or the other.
Uh, I would respect that.
Uh, she got a say in this too, even if you guys are still doing the deed, which of course you will be um and uh to, yeah I, I.
So both pumping them out on purpose to beat the odds strikes me as off.
And also, you know, being afraid of having more for the possibility, the 50, 50 chance more or less, that one of them will get this also strikes me as off.
So I would go about and live your life and try to eek, not eke out, to make as much happiness and new white life as feels right and appropriate.
And i'm going to go to Nat Scott here, who had a.
Uh, he doesn't have kids, but he's certainly wise and certainly kind.
And he says, you have two children, love them, care for them and nourish them as best you can.
If you feel the need to have more, none of us is going to stop you.
I corrected his grammar there.
He said, none of us are.
Ha ha.
Anyway, got to bust up him a little bit for being awall for a couple weeks.
It sucks to die early, but all of us have to die someday.
You'll have to weigh the choice with your wife, and if you decide not to have more, there's nothing wrong with adoption.
And he puts in parentheses, besides, the average lifespan in America is probably going to drop to like 35 pretty soon anyway, I don't know if that's a FED post or a DOOM post or whatever, but uh, thank you, Nat Scott, for that.
Uh, MP or ANON, any hot takes or things that Samurai or Nat may have missed on this one, I don't really have much to add to follow on that.
Uh, Sam hit it on the head and then you followed up with what I was going to say.
Uh, you just don't know what's going to be in store for you, and you know who says we're supposed to live.
You know 50 60 70, 80 years old.
Um, I watched my great grandmother, you know, get to almost 90 years old and just watching her fall apart was uh, just terrible.
I mean, I and I get That that would probably be experienced earlier with this disease, but you know, we just aren't necessarily made to go that far.
Yeah, hey, better to fall apart than to not be there in the first place to fall apart, as uh ghoulish as that may sound.
Oh, and I, but I did get sidetracked.
What I wanted to say is that this is not national socialist Germany with virtuous eugenics in place.
This is a transcontinental polyglot multiracial madhouse where everybody is at the trough trying to get as much as possible before it all goes up in flames.
So, uh, yeah, you don't worry about your line about like my line continuing is completely understandable from a man perspective.
No guff toward you there, but don't think of it in that sense.
Think of it what's good for your family, good for your wife, and good for your existing children as well.
Too, I mean, if you're gonna have a whole you know, yeah, like there's part of me that's like, no, you don't want to be bringing in a whole brood of kids likely to have serious health problems down the road, but at the same time, life is short, crank them out and uh let what's left of this sick indebted government, you know, pick it up via insurance or Medicaid or Medicare or whatever.
But regardless, I think that the consensus we could give is that you don't have to beat yourself up over this, you don't have to shut down the reproductive line if you and your wife don't want to.
And I also don't think it's normal or good to feel the need to hyperactively pump out more than you otherwise would have, if that makes sense.
But man, thank you, thank you for sharing it, buddy.
Real, real pain and a kick in the gut to get that right before we went to tape.
And I know you were questioning whether to send it in, but we're grateful for that.
MP, anything before we move on?
I'm good.
All right.
We'll be the one to judge whether you're good or not.
Thank you very much.
Godspeed.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Hey, yeah, MP Rolo.
I did talk about the universe coming together.
Awkward transition here, grinding the ears.
But after you told me, I forgot who Rolo Tomasi was, other than the man's advice author.
And LA Confidential popped across my screen for free the other night.
And I watched it and totally enjoyed it, especially despite Guy Pierce's sort of raiding goody two-shoes character, his motivation of Rolo Tomasi as this character that he made up, the guy who mugged or robbed his father, and he wanted to, you know, he found power in creating that boogeyman, a real person, but without a name, was a very apt choice for your Nat Socker, your white Nat avatar.
So LA Confidential is fully full house endorsed.
Whether or not Sam likes it, I didn't consult with Sam on the one.
I mean, yeah, white Los Angeles beautifully shot.
Kim Basinger, probably maybe in her last role before she kind of fell to pieces and went on to become Eminem's like trailer park mom in 7 Mile, 11 Mile, whatever the hell that was.
Eight mile.
Eight mile.
Thank you.
Close enough.
88 mile.
Listen to me.
Yeah.
Aldrich Ames instead of Ansel Adams.
Couldn't remember Freudian slip the other week, but I got it.
I got it all under control here tonight.
But the other thing was it was such a beautiful throwback to white Los Angeles, even though there's a corrupt power going abroad.
But it was a Jewish mob boss who got arrested that led Mickey Cohen that led to the city going into chaos.
And there's a very painful scene where the blacks are basically have an RAPE house that they break into where they're not portrayed very kindly.
So for its time, they would never make it today.
It was filmed in 1997 or released then.
Check out LA Confidential.
But moving on from there.
Oh, yeah.
And I watched The Mask with the kids.
The kids wanted to watch a movie and the mask was available for free.
So I sat there and watched the mask and it was so stupid, so bad.
It was so early 90s, schlock, Cameron Diaz looking particularly good in that one, but it was so goofy.
It was a waste of time.
Not too much pause, but heaven help me for watching The Mask.
I like that one.
All right.
That's kind of funny.
Over the top.
All right.
Anon, you're off the shoes for the mask.
Anyway, Anon reached out to us after being a correspondent for so long to say, hey, coach, did you ever address the motorcycle question?
I said, no, of course.
Well, he knew that we hadn't, but he said, what about it?
And I said, oh, that's actually really good.
It tickled me right off the bat because I have, like most things in life, I draw my conclusions based on what I've personally experienced.
And my old man, who I knew later in life or in my childhood, is sort of like a, you know, a goofy, you know, go-to-the-office dad type, was a little bit of a wild man earlier in his life.
He had a motorcycle.
He played football as an offensive lineman at a major college.
You look at him in old pictures and he's quite dashing.
But he had a motorcycle at some point in his 20s.
And he's told me the story of the time where he fished out, slid out on black ice or an oil slick.
I can't remember which it was, broke his arm or his leg and said that was it for him.
That was enough of a message that it was dangerous and I shouldn't be doing this.
I'm sure we got plenty of dads out in the audience who have a motorcycle, ride a motorcycle.
But one other relatively recent anecdote, very alpha dog father, who I just met over this past summer, just in the course of conversation, motorcycles came up and he said, my wife, who I also met and was a delightful down-to-earth person, she said, if I buy a motorcycle, she promised me, no joke, that she would divorce me.
It was a red line for her.
And it looked like he had a little bit of pain in his eyes that he really wanted to get back on a bike.
But he was like, no, I can't do it.
So obviously, there's the safety question, but there's also practical stuff and also fuel efficiency and all the rest of it.
So Anon, you own a motorcycle, dear sir, and I suspect you are an advocate, but maybe 100%.
So let us know your biking history and your father of three with one on the way.
And I'm guessing you're still riding.
Have at it, brother.
Frame this.
Yes.
Let me shut up now.
I'm sorry for framing.
It's fine.
Well, my first introduction to motorcycles was with my dad when I was a kid.
He rode, he's ridden all my life.
He's ridden most of his life.
He actually started when he was about 10 years old rebuilding dirt bikes and hopping on those.
And so he's ridden his entire life like this.
Still rides today, even.
Although he's not riding nearly as much as he used to.
He's starting to get a little sore after even like a couple hours on a bike.
My mother was not a fan, so I was not allowed to get into riding bikes as a kid, even though my dad really wanted me to.
I didn't really get to ride them until recently on a regular basis.
I'd hop on a friend's bike every now and then if they'd let me.
But I came into some unexpected money and I said, well, let's go ahead and do it.
So a friend in the city went, I told him I wanted to get a bike.
When I found the bike I wanted, I said, Hey, you want to go pick this up?
Yeah, let's do it.
So we drove to go get the bike.
We looked at it together.
He knew more about looking at these than I did.
I know a little bit at the time, but uh, so we go get the bike, hand over the cash.
He rides the bike home for me.
Actually, he rides it to his house because that's where we're going to keep it for the moment.
And I'll explain why in a second.
And eventually, I get it home, and now it's my bike.
So there is a bit of a learning curve to motorcycles.
They aren't quite like bicycles or like an automobile.
They're a little bit different.
They are obviously more dangerous because you're only on two wheels.
But I think with maturity and having been on, you know, driving a car since I was 16, you get a lot of that knocked out, a lot of the problems of motorcycling knocked out of you.
Mainly paying attention.
You know, that's a big issue.
And that and your attitude as you approach it.
Maturity is a huge factor in it.
You know, are you going out to street race, you know, race around at ridiculous speeds on, you know, public roads that are not necessarily the best condition?
What are you doing with it?
For the wheelies in the city, like our good goblin friends do.
Yeah.
I've seen that where they're riding on their rear tire through like interstate traffic.
Oh, just have them, you know, go by you.
That's always great.
Yeah, that kind of stuff is right off the bat, the kind of stuff that gets put in the hospital.
As for me, I want something for commuting.
I have a one-hour commute to work five days a week.
I've got a little commuter car for that, but it gets kind of boring.
I listen to podcasts all the time, obviously.
I wanted something a little different and decided it was a motorcycle.
And there was a practicality aspect to that.
One, it's another vehicle in the stable.
That means spreading out the wear and tear that we put a lot of on our cars.
I think we rack up about 5,000 miles on the commuter car in a month.
Decent.
Yeah.
Two, it saves a little bit of money.
Not as much as you'd think.
They are very fuel efficient compared to cars, even small cars.
Oil changes are a little bit cheaper.
Tires, those can add up a little faster, but you change them once a season.
Whereas with our car, we end up changing all four tires about twice a year.
Yeah.
And they're pretty cheap to get too.
Somebody once said to me, all these boomers with their Harleys don't know that they have the ultimate Rejoa vehicle in their garage because of the fuel efficiency.
And I can't remember if it was the, they can take, you know, Harleys can take that sort of like, you know, distilled potato vinegar ethanol or something like that.
But, you know, they have a backup utility to them for sure.
Yeah, it's a little bit of one.
The other part of it, too, is it's something that helps clear the mind.
Like when you're on a bike, you're not distracted by a phone.
Some people might listen to a podcast.
I personally can't because I find it distracting.
I put on electronic music, rock, metal, that kind of stuff in my earbuds, and I just go.
And my mind is completely focused on the task at hand, which is riding the bike and paying attention to what's coming up in the road.
Have you ever crashed?
I have laid it down once.
It was about two months after I got it.
I was taking a curve that was a little too at a little too high a speed, like 60 miles an hour was too fast for this curve.
And I ended up going into a ditch and laying it down in the ditch.
I walked away from it just fine.
And the bike was recoverable.
Yep.
I had a busted mirror, a busted, let's see, that was the brake lever that was busted on that, and some scratched up plastic.
Is it a source of contention with Wifey, or has she come to terms with it?
It was never a source of contention.
She was actually fine with it from day one.
Her main concern was, well, how are you going to afford this?
Sure.
Yeah.
Sam has put some photos in the chat of him riding over the Rocky Mountains there.
Yeah.
It's not actually Sam on a Vespa, but go ahead, Sam.
What's your take on this?
Well, I don't have a motorcycle and I have never ridden a motorcycle, but I do have a moped.
And I put a picture of my 1978 Austrian pook moped, which I have restored actually.
That's cool.
Yeah, and that's exactly the reason to ride it.
It's cool.
But what I would say about motorcycles, and I have a tragic tale I could tell you from somebody I knew.
But, you know, I look at it more as it's like more of a hobby than a mode of transportation.
You know, you have to, it is not a substitute for a car.
There's times that you need to have a car and go somewhere in a car.
But having said that, I think that it can be intelligently done.
The moped, we do not ride it, you know, on the street, so to speak.
And the mopeds came about in a time where you didn't need to have them registered or anything like that.
So nobody kept their titles to the thing or anything.
So I bought this from a guy out of his backyard who was sitting in his backyard rusting.
And so if you're riding this, you're riding dirty, anyways.
So we, as you see, my youngest son there, he's riding it in the alley behind our house.
So we kind of just, we don't ride it on the main streets.
We'll ride it.
We'll take a ride to the park.
We'll ride to the park on it and just kind of hang out a little bit and come back.
And we use it just for a little bit of fun.
And as far as that goes, I think it's perfectly fine.
Or if you ride with a group, I have, if, you know, there's a website you can go on.
There's these moped enthusiasts.
They will all ride like in a pack of 100 people or more at a time.
And you can find out where their meetups are.
And you can go there and ride with them if you have a scooter or a moped or something like that.
Also, just off the cuff, I will say that this is probably somewhere where you might actually meet in real life an Antifa person.
But so that's what I have to say about that.
Real quickly, when I was in college, there was a guy who was a couple years older than me, who's really kind of like a mentor to me in the same major that I was.
And he rode a motorcycle, and he was very, very diligent.
And he took safety classes and he dressed properly and he always wore a helmet and he did all the things, you know.
And he would ride all winter long, too.
He didn't have a car.
And he had the suit and all the gear and everything like that.
And then one day he was, and he taught his girlfriend also how to ride.
And she would ride.
They would ride together.
And his bike was in the shop or he didn't have it for some reason.
He went over to her place.
This is in the city, took public transportation over there.
And she sent him to the supermarket to get some trivial item.
And so he started walking.
She said, oh, just take my bike.
It'll be quicker.
So he hopped on her bike, no helmet, of course, because it wasn't his bike.
He didn't have his helmet.
Maybe her helmet didn't fit him or something like that.
And so he rides the bike and going at a slow rate of speed, he was driving down the street and a guy pulled right off the curb in front of him.
and did a U-turn.
He was actually going the oncoming way.
The guy pulled off the curb and did a U-turn right in front of him.
And my friend hit the guy and flew off his bike and his head hit the pavement.
And he was basically in a vegetative state for about, well, he died in 2006.
The accident was in 1987 or 88.
So, yeah, very sad.
You know, very talented guy who had a promising career doing the same thing I do.
And he was engaged to his girlfriend.
And, you know, that's what happened.
So that just goes to show you how very easy and quick a tragedy could happen.
Yeah.
Yeah.
In theory, it wouldn't have happened if he were in a car.
I know that's a case factor.
But they kept him on life support for three decades.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, his parents did.
You know, and I went and visited him a few times when he was in that state.
And his mother was a nurse and took care of him at home and all that.
And he was, I mean, he was not, I never had the feeling like he knew I was there or anything like that.
So, I mean, he was bad.
Not to derail Sam, but what's your take on that sort of long-term artificial life sustenance when somebody has serious brain damage?
Does that strike you as off somehow that it's modern medicine falsely keeping the body alive?
Yeah, it's a very fine line because if you think of like a hundred years or something ago, that person would be dead already, you know, would have been dead right there within that first 24 hours of the injury, probably.
But as far as like, you know, what kind of state should somebody be maintained in, I don't know about that because just like we were talking about earlier, you know, with the person with the Huntington's disease or something, it's easy for you in your state of health and in your lifestyle that you have to sit in judgment of somebody else.
But I think even somebody who is in a, let's say, compromised condition, to whatever degree, I think there's still something about the life of the person that life wants to live.
Life wants life.
And even you might say it looks pitiful to you, but that person, even let's say somebody who's born with some kind of condition or something, there's still something about that they crave life and they want life.
So I would say that we should be careful about saying that, oh, somebody can't go throw the football in the backyard with my son today.
Yeah, you know, I mean, because this, and I, and I, like I said, my impression of this friend of mine that I'm describing to you, that he was kind of in a state where I don't think he knew where he was, but his parents did not feel that way.
And his parents said that they would talk to him and that he would respond in some kind of minimal way.
And so who's to say that they shouldn't have had those extra years of life with him, even in that state?
You know, so not knowing, not knowing the full truth there.
Yeah, that seems like a family member indulgence, possibly bordering on, who knows if that guy had any sensations or sentience about his state of existence.
Hard to say.
I almost hope he didn't, you know, because lying in hospital beds for three decades or whatever.
Oof.
Yeah, he was kind of in a wheelchair type situation.
He would sit up, his eyes were open, but you know, yeah, not bad as I fear.
That's why he was.
But God forbid you be in the position where you're going to be asked to make that decision for your child.
I mean, I think for a parent, it might be like a child to their parent.
It might be a little bit more of an easy decision.
But I mean, that's that's her flesh and blood that she produced.
That's right.
I don't think she could have a wrong answer in that scenario.
And if she was able to take care of him for that many years, you know, God bless her.
Yeah.
My wife and I have both come to the mutual agreement that at the first sight of an infected hangnail that we both have the right to pull the plug on each other.
Just terminal.
Hey, Nan, I wanted to bring it.
Go ahead, please.
Sam's story actually does bring up a really good point, too.
I'm a rural light.
I commute from out in the country into the city.
I stay entirely on highways.
Where you're really going to find the most dangerous interactions with other vehicles.
It's going to be in the cities.
It's going to be at intersections.
Around cars.
Yes.
Yeah, they are dangerous.
And, you know, this is before cell phones.
So it is a lot.
It's a lot worse even now, I would say.
Yeah.
The thought occurred that owning and using a motorcycle is a little bit like owning and storing, possessing a firearm at home, especially when you have children, when you're a father.
It's a tool.
It's a utility.
It might save your ass.
And it's also a liability at the same time if you don't treat it with extreme diligence, respect, and all the rest of it, the proper practices.
It's not a perfect analogy.
Don't get your panties in a bunch there.
Gun guys are motorcycle guys, but there's somewhat of an analogy there.
Painful fence sitter, big-brained middle-of-the-ology here.
I would just say, if you're a motorcycle guy and it's been part of you and you know your stuff and you're responsible and you're a father and you have kids, God bless you.
I'm glad you have a motorcycle.
If you've never ridden one before and you're in your like 30s or 40s and you got kids and you're having a midlife crisis or you want to add a little spice to your life, man, the you know, I don't know what the per capita stats are on motorcycle deaths, but there's no question that it's more dangerous and more likely to be fatal per mile than driving a motor vehicle and probably not a hill worth dying on, especially if your wife is against it.
And Anand, do you ride it the winter?
Do you not take it out, I presume, when it's inclement weather out there?
Absolutely not.
What Sam said earlier about you need to have a car, absolutely, yes.
The car is my primary form of transportation on these commutes.
I'm a fair weather rider.
If it's below 50 degrees, I'm not getting on the bike because then it's going to be like 30 degrees at highway speed.
If it's more than 15 mile an hour wind, I'm not getting on the bike.
If there's a hint of rain coming, I'm not getting on the bike.
No, you just got to use your brain and check the weather and make a decision based off of that information.
Another thing is appropriate gear.
Your friend's circumstance, a helmet obviously would have been a big help.
That's a good starting point.
There's more to it than that, though.
I'm a proponent of what's called Atgat, means all the gear all the time.
I have a jacket dedicated for motorcycle riding.
It has armor in it.
I have motorcycle boots that have armor in them at the shins, the ankles, the toes.
I have jeans even that have armor in them at the hips and the knees.
But is your helmet a stall helm and do you have a skull mask on?
Absolutely not.
That is actually not a very safe helmet to wear.
I wear a full-face helmet.
Shame on you.
Yeah.
Good for you.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Hey, I don't know.
I thought about it, actually.
My buddy and I.
We were going to take courses together and do it.
And I was just like, this is something that I don't.
Just don't ride it around cars.
If you rode it around your neighborhood just for fun now and then, you know, it would be fine.
But when you get around cars, especially around careless people like black drivers and whatever, man, you're taking your life in your hands.
Diplomats in DC with diplomatic immunity, Asians, women.
There's a whole host of hazards out there across the country.
Anon, are you a con?
Not bad, MP.
Not bad.
All right.
All right.
Nice.
Gong show.
Are you particular toward, do you think Harleys are boomer mobiles, you know, Kawasakis and Yamaha's or rice burn and crotch rockets?
What do you what do you like?
What do you prefer?
Put yourself in the shoes of somebody listening who wants to get a bike for your purposes as you use it.
I'm an appreciator of all of them, to be honest.
I love the look of a lot of classic Harleys.
I don't like the these, my dad's got one too.
They call them touring cruisers or baggers.
They're the ones that have the big fairing up at the front and the big hard bags on the back.
You hear blaring radios all the time.
What are you doing?
But like just a simple cruiser, you know, maybe has a windshield.
I think those are fine.
I personally drive what's called herb drive.
I ride what's called a naked sport bike.
It doesn't have all the plastic fairings on it all over.
So the engine casings revealed.
It also sits a bit more upright.
So it's not quite like a crotch rocket where you're at a tight tuck all the time.
Hello?
Sure.
Yeah, we got you.
Yeah.
What's the other good?
Is it Journey?
There's like an American one with an Indian name, I think, that's supposedly like better than Harley.
I don't know.
The Indian motorcycles?
Yeah.
No, like it's an American motorcycle, but I forget the name of it.
Journey or it's like a more based version of Harley.
Anyway, no, I meant there's a company called Indian Motorcycle Company.
Oh, maybe that's it.
Yeah.
They were competing.
Go ahead.
Or is that me?
They make cruisers primarily.
They were competitor to Harley back in the 40s, 50s, and I think they died off before the 60s.
They have been brought back.
They're some neat-looking bikes.
I wouldn't say that they're as reliable as Harleys are, but if you like cruisers, you want to be a little different.
Yeah, that's the way to go.
Sure.
All right.
Yeah.
Victory.
That's what I was thinking of.
Oh, they went, they're gone now.
Polaris, the manufacturer of ATVs, jets, they actually owned Victory, and now they own the new iteration of Indian.
That's what's replaced Victory.
Gotcha.
All right.
Well, I know a couple motorcycling buddies who are going to listen to this and be like, oh, God, you should have had me on.
But Vic to Victory goes a non-commando for stepping up and suggesting a topic.
Seriously, thank you for coming on, buddy, and for being such a good friend of the show for so long.
Always enjoyed your emails.
And Godspeed to you.
Please be safe out there, whatever you do.
It sounds like you've got an excellent head on your shoulder, despite the shameful state of your garage out there.
He sent me a picture of his bike.
We're not going to talk about it with the bike because he's got a lot of cardboard boxes out there.
I've been there, brother.
You just got to hide your plastic bags in them.
Old mean, but it checks out.
You know, Coach, I will say this.
If you were slightly interested, it's worth going and taking the Motorcycle Safety Foundation course.
Sure.
They do provide a bike.
You don't have to bring your own.
You just have to have a helmet, you know, long-sleeve shirt, some boots, and some gloves.
And go hop on it and see if it's for you.
There you go.
Good advocate.
Yes.
And hell, right?
You know, in the great struggle to come, you never know when you might need to hop on a motorcycle, strap on your tech nine, put on a skull mask, and have some fun.
There you go.
Or just save some money on your commute to work, more likely.
All right.
Anand, thank you for coming on.
We're going to go to, we weren't sure if we were going to have time for it.
It's been a couple weeks.
The audience is probably like, what's going on here?
No navigating the collapse.
Mr. Producer leaving.
The full house has fallen apart.
No, not at all.
Nathaniel Scott was just using Key West for a while, finding himself.
So, MP, thank you for the drops.
Not bad, brother.
Let's hit this navigating the collapse.
We have no idea what's coming.
It's been a while.
Better be a good one.
And then we'll land this puppy.
Fire at will.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
Most people thinking about collapse think primarily about their relationship with nature and enemies.
But there is another important aspect that often gets neglected.
Our relationship with our community and neutral people.
One crucial part of this is exchanging goods and services, which without currency will be done through bartering.
Humans switched from bartering to coins, to paper money, to credit cards, for one reason.
Ease of use and access.
A coin purse is a lot easier to lug around than a dozen chickens.
So keep in mind that small, easy to transport and useful items are much better to make purchases with in most circumstances.
Items like ammunition, medical supplies, including antibiotics, batteries, food, seeds, lighters, candles, and spices would be perfect for trading.
Vice items like alcohol, cigarettes, coffee, sugar, or prep would also be a high value due to the amount of people who are dependent on them.
It might be a good idea to make sure you have a small stock of some of these items.
Bartering itself is a forgotten skill in the Western world.
Always make sure you know exactly what you're getting.
If you're trading for a phone charger, make sure you're trading for a working phone charger.
Test it out if need be.
This is especially important if you're trading with your services, as you can't easily unroof that house.
If you are receiving services from someone else, it's always a good idea to have everything down in writing with witnesses.
If the local bricklayer doesn't deliver on his promise, a public record of that would be far more detrimental to his income than whatever he would gain by shortchanging you.
Negotiating is especially important, as it could mean a huge difference in your available resources.
I think that white people will barter in a very different way than people in bartering countries today, so keep that in mind.
They will likely give a more reasonable offer up front.
So while tourist sites say you might be able to negotiate them down to 50%, you likely won't be able to do that in post-collapse America.
Also, guides for bartering down are mainly for tourists, but you will most likely have to live around the people you're bartering with.
So keep in mind that their good graces are a type of currency as well.
And if you keep shortchanging someone, they might refuse to do business with you in the future.
If you get on the bad side of the local cobbler, you might have to go 20 miles to the next nearest one.
And that's quite a ways to walk without shoes.
A good rule of thumb is to be friendly and never get aggressive or angry.
But how to stay safe while exchanging goods?
Of course, many common sense principles apply.
If your trade partner has a bad reputation, you may want to pass him up.
And always have a nearby friend or two if you're not in a community market.
Avoid the appearance of wealth or over-preparedness.
You don't want someone following you back home because they think you'll be a profitable target.
And avoid bringing more than what you need or more than what you're willing to spend.
John C. Calhoun was an American statesman and served as vice president under John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson.
In his later years, his staunch support of white southerners gained him the nickname the cast iron man.
The following is an excerpt from his southern address, published in the Charleston Courier in 1849.
Very different would be the circumstances under which emancipation would take place with us, if it should ever be effected.
It would be through the agency of the federal government, controlled by the dominant power of the northern states of the Confederacy, against the resistance and struggle of the southern.
It can then only be affected by the prostration of the white race, and that would necessarily engender the bitterest feelings of hostility between them and the north.
But the reverse would be the case between the blacks of the south and the people of the north.
Owing their emancipation to them, they would regard them as friends, guardians, and patrons, and center, accordingly, all their sympathy in them.
The people of the North would not fail to reciprocate and to favor them instead of the whites.
Under the influence of such feelings, and impelled by fanaticism and love of power, they would not stop at emancipation.
Another step would be taken, to raise them to a political and social equality with their former owners, by giving them the right of voting and holding public offices under the federal government.
We see the first step towards it in the bill already alluded to, to vest the free blacks and slaves with the right to vote on the question of emancipation in this district.
But when once raised to an equality, they would become the fast political associates of the North, acting and voting with them on all questions, and by this political union between them, holding the white race at the South in complete subjection.
The blacks and the profligate whites that might unite with them would become the principal recipients of federal offices and patronage, and would, in consequence, be raised above the whites of the South and in the political and social scale.
We would, in a word, change conditions with them, a degradation greater than has ever yet fallen to the lot of a free and enlightened people, and one which we could not escape, should emancipation take place, which it certainly will, if not prevented.
But by fleeing the homes of ourselves and ancestors, and by abandoning our country to our former slaves to become the permanent abode of disorder, anarchy, poverty, misery, and wretchedness.
With such a prospect before us, the gravest and most solemn question that ever claimed the attention of a people is presented for your consideration.
What is to be done to prevent it?
It is a question belonging to you to decide.
All we propose is to give you our opinion.
We then are of the opinion that the first and indispensable step without which nothing can be done and with which everything may be is to be united among yourselves on this great and most vital question.
The want of union and concert in reference to it has brought the South, the Union, and our system of government to their present perilous condition.
Instead of placing it above all others, it has been made subordinate, not only to mere questions of policy, but to the preservation of party ties and ensuring the party's success.
As high as we hold the due respect for these, we hold them subordinate to that and other questions involving our safety and happiness.
Until they are so held by the South, the North will not believe that you are in earnest in opposition to their encroachments, and they will continue to follow one after another until the work of abolition is finished.
To convince them that you are, you must prove by your acts that you hold all other questions subordinate to it.
If you become united and prove yourselves in earnest, the North will be brought to a pause and a calculation of consequences that may lead to a change of measures with the adoption of a course of policy that may quietly and peaceably terminate this long conflict between the two sections.
If it should not, nothing would remain for you but to stand up immovably in defense of rights involving your all, your property, prosperity, equality, liberty, and safety.
As the assailed, you would stand justified by all laws, human and divine, in repelling a blow so dangerous without looking to consequences and to resort to all means necessary for that purpose.
Your assailants and not you would be responsible for consequences.
Entertaining these opinions, we earnestly entreat you to be united and for that purpose, adopt all necessary measures.
Beyond this, we think it would not be proper to go at present.
We hope if you should unite with anything like unanimity, it may of itself apply a remedy to this deep-seated and dangerous disease.
But if such should not be the case, the time will then have come for you to decide what course to adopt.
Based.
John C. Calhoun.
Yeah.
Nat Scott still got it.
Vacation was good for him.
Yeah.
He's a great guy.
And oh man, I'm totally relating to all of that, including the prepper barter stocking.
The thing that came to mind was there are so many times in my life where I regret not buying something way more than I regret buying something.
I mean, obviously, like big ticket items, you know, sometimes you have buyers' remorse or whatever, but on the little things, the things that will keep your family alive, warm, fed, defended, and also just having a little bit of comfort knowing that you've got extra lighters and cans of food and stuff like that.
Even if you don't need them, go get them.
And I wasn't sure.
I know John C. Calhoun, or I knew he was a contemporary of Andrew Jackson, but ha, he was Jackson's vice president.
Imagine an America where Andrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun are your number one and number two.
That was probably the high watermark of America right there.
No doubt.
That glorious reign came to pass.
Thank you, Nat Scott.
Our new pal, Anon.
We'll call him motorcycle Anon.
I don't know, Anon motorcycle.
He had to run because he said that weather was coming in.
So I don't know if he was actually on his bike tonight, but that would be pretty appropriate.
We'll imagine that he was.
So it's just Sammy Baby.
And MP, you're okay too for being able to tee that up on relatively short notice and getting it all piped into the works.
I think you're going to work out here, brother.
That's right.
He's all right.
I like it.
Yeah.
And all right, don't get over your skis there.
You know, we did, we did make the connection with Water and the lovely lady that I mentioned last week.
So we're going to write them off.
That's the ball is in their court.
And Mr. Producer, forget Apollo.
Forget all the rest of the guys.
Mr. Producer is now at the top of the eligible bachelor's list.
I meant to ask why Apollo and Bronca didn't just get together, but I figure there's a story there or age difference or whatever.
So I did have another.
You know what?
Let me just go real quick.
I know we're long in the hour here.
I had one more love connection.
And this is a good one and it's short.
And I apologize for putting it toward the end here, Toby.
Dear coach and crew, after being a single male listener of your show for the past year and a half, I finally decided to remedy the situation, take a gamble at the Coach Finstock honeypot.
I mean, Full House Love Connection.
Yes, he actually went through you too, Toby.
To tell you a little bit about myself, I'm a healthy, reasonably handsome white man in his early 30s.
I enjoy lifting, reading, and hiking.
And for a profession, I'm a classical musician and good enough to make a decent living at it.
Ooh, bonus boo.
Wow.
An artist, maybe Bronca, perhaps.
A little audio-visual dynamo there.
I'm also successfully self-employed.
I've been able to avoid any vaccine mandates.
There you go.
And I'm in a good position to resist the ever-encroaching system control and oppression over our lives.
I currently live in the northern Midwest.
I'll leave out the state, but you know, it's worth driving to.
And I'm interested in finding a wife with our values and starting a family.
I'm a religious Christian, not identity.
Sorry, Sam, he put in parentheses.
I attend church regularly.
I passed over several interested women in my 20s as I wanted to prioritize finding the right person over having flings.
I'm very glad that I did, but now that I'm a white nationalist, that is even more important to me.
And meeting women is not as easy when you aren't in school and run your own business.
In any case, thanks for all you do.
Even as a single guy, the show is incredibly uplifting to listen to.
You've managed to combine being family-friendly even with potato smasher's constant fed posting.
God bless Toby.
God bless you, Toby.
I'm all ears here.
Sorry for putting it at the end of the show, but I think we got enough diehards who make it to the end, the true blue Full House listeners.
That is an extremely well-written self-advertisement.
And we'll take it verbatim that that's a straight scoop.
I often can get a sense of people, and I don't sense any subterfuge or dead hookers in Toby's closet.
Excuse me for ruining mood there, Toby.
You're Jim.
Good luck.
Godspeed.
If we get any bites, we'll let you know.
All right.
Let's go around the horns.
Sammy Baby, I'm all smiles.
What a delightful show.
Brother, yeah, man.
It was very informative and great guests.
I feel like I learned a lot.
Same thing.
Yeah.
And my concerns were assuaged by how well Apollo and Clarion and Bronca did.
I was worried it was just going to be a shill, spectacular, you know, extravaganza, but it was better than that.
Thanks for watching.
Yep.
And MP, anything you want to add here that you want to plug, brother?
Greatly appreciate your efforts.
No, I'm good.
So whatever you tell me that I can plug, I'll plug that.
All right.
You want to plug your show again?
I know you did it last show, but.
Oh, sure.
Final Storm on Americoner.org.
Please listen.
We just released our Halloween commentary track for Nightmare on Elm Street Part 2, the second most based horror film from 1985.
Really?
Wow.
And you said during the break that Halloween 3 was an extraordinary soundtrack with a sixth wave ethos.
So, yeah, we'll consider that.
I want to play some of your music on this show after I listen to more of it.
And yeah, I think that's a rap, fam.
It's almost 1 a.m. here in the great Appalachian gazebo.
Every week now, it's a question.
I always say to my wife, I'm like, I'm happy to go to the gazebo.
Or if you want to go elsewhere on property and sleep with the kid, that's fine.
But I'm down here.
It's glorious.
The crickets are still chirping.
It's about a half moon and Halloween's two weeks away.
So Full House 105 was recorded on a perfect October 14th, now October 15th, 2021.
Big thanks to Apollo, Clarion, Bronca, Anon Commando, Sam, Not Smasher, and Mr. Producer.
Speaking of Mr. Producer, you salty dog, you probably don't remember this or didn't hear, but we once had a closing sequence of tracks that an anonymous source had let me know was the songs that various characters on their show had, quote unquote, lost their innocence with ladies to.
This is a little bit of a humorous expose of our various characters.
And I never played my song because in full candor, I was waiting for it.
Something like that.
I wanted to have Jay.
I had so many songs I wanted to play for JO from Kid Rock to like really cringe stuff.
But when he comes on, we'll get him.
But anyway, there was a perfect synchronicity with this time of year.
And this one is 100% sincere.
Now, while I do not remember there being any music playing during the deed, I do remember the last song that I heard in a kitchen in Kiev before losing my innocence.
So in the spirit of the season, with all truth, fam, this song from 1984 is by Roy Parker Jr., and it's Ghostbusters.
It's true.
It's the last time we heard.
Anyway, we love you, fam.
We will talk to you next week.
I think it's just going to be the birth panel next week.
Too many damn guests.
We love you.
Put them up.
Forgot to turn my camera on.
Thank you so much, Sam.
Thank you so much, Mr. Producer.
White Power.
And see ya!
I ain't afraid of no ghosts.
I ain't afraid of no ghost.
Ghostbusters.
An invisible man sleeping in your bed.
Oh, who you gon' call?
I ain't afraid of no doubt.
I ain't fraid of no ghost.
Who you gon' call?
Ghost busters.
If you're all alone, pick up the phone and call ghost busters.
I ain't afraid of no ghost.
I hate it likes to guns.
I ain't afraid to make guns.
Ghost busters.
If you have dose of a freaking ghost, baby, you better call Ghostbusters.
Let me taste them.
It's Nick Field, I ain't afraid of no ghost.
I ain't afraid of no ghost.
Don't get caught alone, no.
Ghostbusters.
When it comes through your door, unless you just want some more, I think you better call.
Ghostbusters!
Who you gon' call?
Ghostbusters!
Who you gon' call?
Ghostbusters!
Think you better call?
Ghostbusters!
Who you gon' call?
Ghostbusters!
I can't hear you!
Who you gon' call?
Ghost Busters!
Louder!
Ghost Busters!
Who you gon' call?
Ghostbusters!
Who can you call?
Ghostbusters!
Who you gon' call?
Girls, Busters!
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