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Nov. 6, 2021 - Full Haus
02:32:27
20211106_Newborns__Diamonds___Show_Trials
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Time Text
Europe's population had dwindled notably.
During the 14th century, Europe had been hideously scourged by the Black Death, which carried off fully one half of its inhabitants, while thereafter a series of great wars had destroyed immense numbers of people.
These losses had not been repaired.
Medieval society was a static affair, which did not favor rapid human multiplication.
In fact, European life had been intensive and recessive ever since the fall of the Roman Empire a thousand years before.
Europe's one medieval attempt at expansion, the Crusades, had ultimately failed.
In fact, far from expanding, white Europe had been continuously assailed by brown and yellow Asia.
Beginning with the Huns in the last days of Rome, continuing with the Arabs, and ending with the Mongols and Ottoman Turks, Europe had undergone a millennium of Asiatic aggression.
And though Europe had substantially maintained its freedom, many of its outlying areas had fallen under Asiatic domination.
In 1480, for example, the Turk was marching triumphantly across southeastern Europe.
Embryonic Russia was a Tatar dependency, while the Moor still clung to southern Spain.
The outlook for the white race at the close of the 15th century thus seemed gloomy rather than bright.
With a stationary or declining population exposed to the assaults of powerful external foes and racked by internal pains betokening the demise of the medieval order, white Europe's future appeared a far from happy one.
Then suddenly, in two short years, all was changed.
In 1492, Columbus discovered America, and in 1494, Vasco da Gama doubled Africa and found the way to India.
The effect of these discoveries cannot be overestimated, and we can hardly conceive how our forefathers viewed the ocean.
To them, it was a numbing, constrictive presence, the abode of darkness and horror.
No wonder medieval Europe was static, since it faced a ruthless, aggressive Asia and backed on nowhere.
But then, in the twinkling of an eye, dead-end Europe became mistress of the ocean and thereby master of the world.
That was Lothrop Stoddard writing in 1920 about how even half a millennium ago, before the Industrial Revolution, before electricity, before instant communication, our people's fates changed in the blink of an eye.
Mr. Producer, let's go to episode
107 of Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
Hope you didn't, hope you weren't too upset by a little historical shot in the arm there to open the show.
I am your hyperborean host, Coach Finstock.
Yes, I say that because here the Northern Hemisphere gang is clearly tilting away from the sun.
I'm back in the frosty great Appalachian gazebo right around the freezing point.
That opening tune you heard was Chutes and Ladders by Corn.
And I hope I didn't jinx the show by switching up the opening music for the first time in our history.
I heard that recently.
I think I was driving in the minivan with the kids, and I thought, oh man, what a good backing to that classic from Stoddard.
Before we meet the birth panel and I shut up a little big thanks to our pals, Von Kaiser, Marcel, Hawk, and AK for their support of the show this week.
And if you'd like to recognize our efforts to literally help bring forth new white life into this fallen world, please do check us out at full-house.com, our support tab, or givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
And with that, let us get on to the birth panel.
First up, he is our resident memory capsule.
Last scene, trick-or-treating in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, with a corn cob pipe in his mouth and a beautiful armband around his bicep.
It is Sam.
Yeah, thanks, Coach.
Yeah, we had the Halloween in between there, and I had some things to talk about Halloween a little bit later.
But yeah, getting out and the trick-or-treating.
My youngest Sonny's, he's kind of at that age where he's outside of the limit in certain municipalities.
So he went with some of his pals, Raising Hell in some other neighborhood where he wouldn't be questioned about his age, trying to squeeze in one more year.
And we had a good showing of kids here in the neighborhood.
Not as high as other years.
They kind of came in a flurry, and I was hoping the candy was going to hold out.
And then it kind of died off for whatever reason.
And it lasted just fine.
But yeah, fine day.
Awesome.
Yeah, ours was just so, so they made ours on Saturday for some reason, the closest town.
Trick-or-treating is on Saturday, October 30th.
So my wife couldn't do it.
She had a prior engagement.
So it was me and the kids and I brought the drum roll new puppy with us.
We got a Transylvanian hound from a shelter down south that they run like an underground railroad of shelter pups and dogs up north to gullible mid-Atlantic sops willing to take these leftover dogs that otherwise would get put down.
And Junior was too cool.
Junior came along.
He dressed up as a soccer player, very creative.
And he didn't want a trick-or-treat.
Daughter was perfect.
She was a doctor, had a little stethoscope and a doctor's thing.
And then we made potato Dracula, sort of last minute Dracula with paint and a crappy cape that I scraped together for him.
But it was just, yeah, between the dog pulling, you know, she was anxious around so many people.
And then it was rainy.
Oh, yeah.
And then we stopped at the library and the library gave out these like big bulky bags that had some books in them.
I'm struggling to carry them with the dog.
So I don't know.
It wasn't our finest Halloween.
Yeah, you got our weather a few days later because it had been maybe the previous four or five days had been just raining like crazy.
But Saturday and then Sunday Halloween, it got to be very, very nice.
And it's, yeah, you mentioned Saturday.
You know, we had a big shindig out here for one of our mutual comrades hitting the big 4-0.
Ooh, yeah.
No big deal, right?
If I can turn 40 without freaking out, so can he.
Yeah.
That's right.
That's right.
Good stuff.
All right.
Welcome, Sam.
Oh, Sam, I meant to ask you.
Do you know what they call?
I figured this, you may have done this job in an earlier life, but he's sort of the head waiter in a restaurant.
He sort of runs the front of the shop.
What do they call that guy?
Maitre D. Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Very embarrassing.
Very childish of you.
Thank you, Sam.
That one came to me the other day.
Oh, no, you know what?
Junior got me with that.
I said, Major D came up somewhere and he's just like, dad.
I was like, what?
And he got me with it.
All right, Sam, we'll get back to you in a little bit.
But next up, he is like Lou Gehrig at Yankee Stadium in 1939 minus the debilitating disease about to take him down in two years.
He is indeed the luckiest man in the world for having not one, not two, not three, but four young children under his roof with many, many joyous Halloweens to go.
Smasher, what's up, brother?
Yeah.
This podcast is dedicated to all the teachers that told me I never amount to nothing.
So the people that lived above the buildings that I was hustling in front of called the police on me.
And I was just trying to make some money to feed all my dang kids and all the niggas in the struggle.
You know what I'm saying?
It's all you, baby, baby.
They didn't believe you'd get your own ADL article in the.
Oh, I don't know if you want to talk about that or not, but I got a real kick reading that little expose about Arpel Potato Smasher and gang.
Yeah, I mean, they made me sound super cool.
And I got a, and not only did they write an article about the NJP and, of course, name dropped me, but then I ratioed the ever-loving dog crap out of them on Twitter.
So it's like, oh, it was.
Yeah.
I was impressed by that.
I mean, obviously nobody likes the ADL except Jews and I don't know, people they're paying.
But even with all the censorship and stuff, the fact that so many edgelords and just normal people were like, hey, thanks.
Yeah, I'll check them out.
Sounds good.
You know, the standard refrain.
Yep.
Very, very good.
Yeah.
They made you a lot cooler by associating you with me, too.
They wrote me in there, misspelled my last name.
And apparently you're still in the suck.
You're still slogging for Zog.
Yeah, I wonder how often the Army, like HR, gets a call from some shitheel leftist trying to, you know, get info and it's like, is Michael McKevitt still in the army?
What does he do?
And then here we are three years later and the ADL, like, you'd think that the ADL has the money to at least do a little bit of cursory research.
Oh, my.
Yeah.
But here we are three years after I got out and the ADL is like, Michael McKevitt is an active duty soldier at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
Like, oh, okay.
Is that actually?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, no.
Now you're a public figure now.
So you can't sue him for libel or slander.
Yeah.
No, I know.
It was remarkable what a slop heap that was.
It was like these cheap Jew bastards with God knows what kind of war chests they have, you know, roped in the like hungover degenerate Jew intern to like, like, give me something on the NJP with spelling errors and inaccuracies.
You know, I mean, Jayo's doing a great job as the head of security for you guys, I do have to say.
Yeah, yeah, he's doing great.
Yeah, I know.
He's basically invisible.
You can't see him.
He's just that effective.
Oh, God.
And hey, every meeting we've ever had has been in Lancaster.
Every single one.
No, I know.
Yeah.
Tired of driving out that place.
Yeah.
And yeah, Charles Bausman is the MC of every event.
Does a wonderful job hosting.
He's really great at what he does.
He's retards.
Yeah, I know.
Anyway, no such thing as bad press.
So you've got about two minutes to remember all the content that you thought of this week and yet didn't write down.
And yeah.
Anyway.
All right.
Finally, let's give him some love for being a highly competent, timely, and respectful producer of this show.
Rolo or Mr. Producer, as you prefer.
Rolo, how's it going, brother?
Oh, God.
He wasn't planning.
Good.
Thank you.
It's great to be here.
No, no, no.
Thank you.
Thank you for being a fine gentleman.
Yeah, I know.
It's all right.
Anything new in your world?
Did you go out trick-or-treating alone?
Yeah.
Every year I go out trick-or-treating alone.
And no, and no trick-or-treaters.
That was a joke, obviously.
I don't do that.
I dress up like a train conductor, Pepe.
No, I live.
I live in a cabin in the middle of the woods.
I have no neighbors.
Based.
I actually sat down to possibly rent Halloween 3, but I went to Rotten Tomatoes first and everybody was like, this is the worst movie ever created.
So I couldn't do it.
I was too cheap.
Yeah, because it's about Jews.
No, it's straight up.
It is about Jews.
It is about an ancient religion who used mass marketing and capitalism to sacrifice children to give them powers.
That's what it's about.
All right.
Maybe I'll revisit it next Halloween then.
Oh, I forgot to mention Sam.
I did my homework and my gut instinct was correct.
Vincent Price.
Yeah, he was married three times, but one of his daughters after he was gone said that on his deathbed or near the end, he told her, oh, yeah, one of his daughters was a lesbian, of course, big surprise, Hollywood actor, messed up kids.
And apparently, as he was about to punch his meal ticket out of this world, he told her that he had dalliances with men.
So I was just, you know, not to ruin the Vincent Price experience for you, but there was something about his face and his dramatic flair.
He had that sort of old school Hollywood homo status to it, to him.
For sure.
Yeah.
Sam or no, Smasher, did you hear the news about yardsticks this week?
No.
Well, they're not making them any longer.
Whoa.
All right.
Hey, Mr. Producer, do you know what kind of eye protection Jews use when they go swimming?
Hold on.
I'm retarded.
I didn't get that.
Oh, you know.
They're not making yardsticks any longer, Smasher.
So you're going to have to find another source for him.
Blame Neggy for that one.
My brain heard that is any more?
Ah, yes.
Well, you only have one good ear, so we'll cut you some slack there.
And Rolo.
Data comes in and my brain translates it into like the smallest amount of syllables that it can.
Yeah.
I'm really bad.
I checked the draft box for the show email account in there and I had like 10 emails that were like brilliant, thoughtful, considerate of the audience that I had not clicked send.
You know, it's like I was pecking them out on my phone while hanging with the kids and I forgot to send them.
So yeah, scourge of the 21st century is scatter brains and the rest of it.
But yeah, Rolo, what kind of eye protection do Jews wear when they go swimming?
I don't know.
Do tell.
Synagogles.
Blame my wife for that one.
Yes.
Yep.
I know.
All right.
We got a lot of system.
Yep.
Yo, Sirius, we didn't do a show last week because Sam just said he wasn't ready.
He wasn't feeling.
Oh, man.
I need to show to myself every week.
I know.
Speaking of which, yeah, Sam, I thought I felt really guilty because Sam has done two spoken word pieces or, you know, readings, one from MindConf, but that one, I'm pretty sure the fan was on in the background, Sammy Baby, and it was really loud.
So if we can get, let's give Mr. Producer some more work just to see if he can possibly filter that out.
And then you did another one that went.
All right.
We'll get that to you, buddy.
And then the other one was really religious.
And that one, I was like, I don't know about that one.
Yeah, that was Tracing Our Ancestors, Frederick Haberman, which there is religious stuff in there, but the entire thing is not exactly religious.
But I'll defer to your judgment on that.
But it's a very interesting book, you know, showing tracing the history of the Romans and other European groups, of course, to the Hebrews and the Israelites in the Old Testament.
Okay.
Yeah, I need to go back and listen to it.
Maybe I was grumpy at the time, but yeah, last week I was, oh, God, it was just, it was cold and I didn't have a lot of material.
And I was a little bit busy.
I didn't have as much time to sit down for the show.
And get this, my wife, she's like, I listened to the show this week and she usually has very good critiques or compliments of it.
And she was like, it was a little boring.
And that just, that really stuck in my craw.
I was like, we had a boring show.
So I don't know if the audience agrees with that or my wife is just, she's a, you know, she's a discerning character.
So that really got in my head.
So I just needed a week to recover, you know, full candor for the audience.
Anyway, Smasher's like, never listen to your wife problem solve.
Well, I always feel like I'm still continuously abusing you guys.
I'm just going to go home.
Yeah, I know.
I just, I could, I could do your bits now, right?
I know.
I always feel like we could, you know, even if we told some dad jokes, play some music, put a navigating the collapse in there, boom.
You know, you don't even need a lot of content if you don't feel like it or you're not up to putting something out there like that.
Sure thing.
Yeah.
But my mood is more important, Sam, really, than the audience.
So that's why Sam's number two and gets the keys to the show.
If I crash crash into a deer, one of these days I'm going to crash into a deer.
I swear to God, there's like hundreds of them around here.
But anyway.
Well, it's, you know, I mean, it's amazing because people will ask then about it, like, oh, I'm waiting for the show to come out.
Where's the show?
So that's, that's the only reason I say it's always important to put something out because people kind of, if I could put it this way, they kind of rely on it, you know, just because it's, it's whatever we're talking about, you know, it's, it's, uh, it's coming from their perspective or our perspective, put it that way.
You know, when you watch some kind of movie, I tried to watch a little bit Halloween movies or something over that weekend.
You know, it just, it's in the back of your mind.
This is some Jew had something to do with putting this movie out.
And you can never kind of, you know, give it your all or buy into the movie for those reasons.
You know, and so I think when people listen to the show, even if we're just kind of telling dad jokes or something like that, they know we're coming from their perspective and they can kind of relax and listen to the show and laugh along with us.
Absolutely.
I was just going for a little dramatic suspense.
Yeah.
Make them wonder what happened.
No, I'm kidding.
Sorry.
Sorry, Fam.
Yeah, we had done like seven or eight shows in a row without missing a week, which is not bad considering we all got jobs and kids and wives and travel and all the rest of it.
So anyway, I wanted to start.
We got a total softball from a longtime listener.
Again, we had that massive haul of new white life last week, which means, of course, that we have, it's not all firstborns, but a lot of them are first child on the way.
And one of those guys reached out and was like, did you ever do a show specifically on newborns?
And of course, I know we've spoken about newborns before and like good dad practice a little earlier in the show, probably.
The whole back library is on Telegram at t.me slash fullhouse shows.
But newborn advice for these first-time dads who are totally anxious.
And Sam, I know it's been a while, but I'm sure you got some chestnuts still rattling up there for what you went through or problems you encountered or anything just to put these guys' minds at ease.
Because in reality, you know, we've been doing this under far harsher environments and situations for thousands, tens of thousands of years.
Yeah.
Well, if I could read between the lines of the questionnaire, I know when I was a very young dad, I can remember the feeling that this baby is so delicate that you are almost afraid to touch him.
And you're picking up the baby.
Piece of fine china.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You know, and that's only natural because you got to get accustomed to the feel and all that type of thing.
But when people are afraid of the delicateness of babies and that, I would only say that, you know, Mexicans throw their babies in dumpsters in the middle of the winter and the baby survives, you know.
So, you know, that's because it's 70 degrees in January there.
Well, I'm thinking even around here or whatever, you know, they find there's always a couple stories like that every winter.
Sure.
And so, you know, they're tough.
And at the same time, you got to get your feel of it.
I would say the thing with a newborn and just having children in general is it can feel a little bit overwhelming, but nobody is supposed to do this thing alone or even just two people, right?
It's in times and better times when families came together, everybody helped each other and people were there to when mom needed that couple of hours of rest, there was somebody there to take that baby and grandma's there.
Grandma's there to counsel her daughter about everything.
sisters, aunts, mother, mother-in-law, friends, and all that type of thing.
And that's an unfortunate thing.
I can remember I had, when my children were very little and we were having children, that I had taken a job in a city that was somewhat far removed from everyone we knew and all the family we had.
That's just where I was in my career as a very young person taking that first big job, you know, landing that first big job.
And that was no doubt a lot of stress on her and on the family.
And that's just not how it's supposed to be.
And thankfully, you know, a lot of that is changing.
I say it's changing, you know, just reflecting on our own group of comrades we have in this area.
You know, people are there for each other and there to help, even if it's bringing food over or helping in whatever way that you can.
You know, we're sort of rebuilding our civilization in a way through our associations with other white nationalists.
Sure.
Smasher, you are much more recent to the newborn game, but I've got a, I could guess a snarky one that you could drop, but go ahead.
You can handle this sincerely or otherwise.
Having a newborn.
Just let your wife do everything.
Just let your wife do everything.
Is that it?
Just work like 14 hours a day to make sure that there's money in the bank for whatever new device or blanket or lotion or essential oil or demystifier, mystifier, humidifier, dehumidifier, antidepressants, bond bonds.
Yeah.
Just make sure that there's money for all of those things and you'll be a great dad for the first like five years.
And then after that, you have to like do real dad shit.
Joking, of course, but like that was going to be my snarky answer.
Like, oh, it's, you know, they didn't worry about it.
Just leave it to your wife.
But I mean, in reality, like, you know, it's no, seriously, like, there's truth to it.
The toddlers now are old enough that like I can talk to them and calm them down and tell them everything's okay and all those things.
But like the babies, dude, I don't have, I don't have boobs.
They don't care about me.
Like, right.
You know, if they're in a good mood, like they just snapped, they woke up and they ate, they'll smile for me and whatever.
But as soon as there's something wrong, nah, they need mama.
There you go.
And actually, it doesn't even have to be mama.
It just has to be somebody with boobs, to be honest.
Yeah, well, that's where having all those other female family friends around really comes into play.
I know we're joking when we say, well, you need sister wives.
Yeah.
And, you know, like we were joking in a way like, oh, let's let the wife take care of it.
But in a sense, you know, that's, that's right, but not by herself.
You know, she should have plenty of people there helping.
And then that is true.
And I would say having a good baby seat baby carrier, something really comfortable and sturdy and ergonomic, you know, easy to carry and all that type of thing.
Having a couple of those things really helps.
A baby bassinet.
Those are good things.
Oh, yeah.
Having your having your kit is essential.
Where is it going to sleep?
Where is it going to take a nap next to the bed?
All that stuff.
Yeah, I'll take this one.
If I recall correctly, there's basically four keys to keeping a newborn relatively happy.
They're always going to cry.
They're always going to be a pain in the ass about sleeping early on.
Keep them warm.
I remember my wife's mother, you know, sort of chastising me for holding the baby.
Like our first was in the, was in, was born in January.
So if I didn't have him totally bundled, oh, he's going to be cold or whatever, but keep it, keep it wrapped up.
You know, get one of those, whatever they call them, cradles, shawls.
I don't know, you wrap them up.
They have all these different contractions.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sling, just keep, keep it warm.
It loves skin contact, being close to your body.
Swaddles.
Evolutionary.
Thank you.
Swaddle.
And they make zip up ones now so you don't have to deal with like folding it or Velcro or anything like that.
But they're basically still kind of wanting to be in the womb in those early days.
So keeping them nice and compact reminds them of their old abode.
Keep them clean.
Change that diaper.
Check it regularly.
When they're that young, there's like not that much stuff.
So either you got the little blue stripe on the front or you do the little finger check to see if there's anything down there.
That's usually a major source of newborn anxiety.
Fed, of course, feed at will.
I don't think there's any feeding schedules for newborns.
You just slap them on the boob early and often and let hubby get a little dessert later if there's any left over.
Just kidding.
Yeah.
And then I was one and done on that.
I tried it once.
I was like, this is too deviant.
Yes.
I'm too straight laced for this, but Sam, Sam, Sam made a whole month out of it back in the day.
Yeah.
And then, of course, just the sleeping.
If you have to do the infant, the newborn in the bed with you to get some peace and quiet, I think it's mostly drunks and drug addicts who might roll over and crush a baby.
Now, that said, you know, if you can get that baby sleeping in a crib or in a bassinet early on, God bless you.
I think, you know, just think back to our evolutionary roots.
That baby wants to be close to his parents.
And it's not quite normal when they're totally little to put them in a separate room all alone in darkness because, you know, a coyote or something could come and grab them.
Speaking of which, I heard coyotes earlier.
That would be awesome.
If we could get some coyotes in the background here instead of frogs like in the summer.
And then don't shake them.
That's number five.
You'll get a lot of this information in the maternity wards these days because of our newfound diversity.
And they have to remind all of the Cretans bringing new non-white life into the world that shaking a baby is not a good idea.
It does not help the baby sleep.
But one guy did remind me that actually new first-time parents do sometimes get so sleep deprived and so frustrated and so stressed out that they are actually tempted or like just give in to some sort of rustling or something of the baby.
So I think it got you covered.
And don't sell your baby for crack, says Mr. Producer.
Thank you very much.
That's true.
My dad did.
Yeah.
I remember my dad said, you know, he admitted this to me once.
He's like, I got to tell you this.
I'm not proud of it.
I'm like, oh, God, you know, what's coming?
What deep dark secret is this?
And he was like, one time when you were really little and you just would not stop crying and your mother wasn't at home, I punched the bed next to your head in frustration.
I was like, all right, no, no big deal.
Yeah.
But I, but, you know, I get it.
I remember some of those situations where you're just like, oh, you're pulling your hair out and the baby's screaming and mom's not there.
And you're like, what do now?
So you got to go, don't put, don't punch a pillow next to the baby.
But maybe.
Well, as far as, yeah, you don't want to shake the baby for sure.
But I remember a little trick I would use.
I would lay on the bed or on the couch and I had to have the baby on my chest and just kind of give them like a rhythmic kind of a tapping on the back, you know, like you're lightly playing the bongo drums.
You know, it's just kind of a, not hard, but just kind of enough to, it kind of gets their attention, you know, and it's, it's, and it keeps them occupied where they're, they, they kind of stop.
And then oftentimes they would even fall asleep with that.
That's right.
Yeah.
And the gas too.
Yep.
Yep.
Just burping them and you get that nice big shot of breast milk that comes up on your shoulder.
I never like put a burping pad on my shoulder.
I can't even remember the nomenclature for this stuff anymore, but yeah.
Fed, dry, well slept, safe, and yeah.
Get the right thing.
And at the end of the day, if they cry, it's not going to kill them.
You know, if you if you've done everything and they're just in that crying mood, let them cry a little bit.
Put some music on.
Turn it up a little bit if it bothers you that bad.
Yep.
And they're all different.
Your first might be easy.
Your first might be a pain in the ass.
You will be stressed out regardless.
So just roll with it.
Keep it safe.
Keep it healthy.
And you too will raise an Aryan soldier into adulthood.
One more quick, one more quick dad content thing here.
Got a last-minute request from a guy who's got to get a diamond engagement ring for his hopefully soon-to-be fiancé.
He's like, I don't have, you know, Bubba's old ring from the 1920s to give as a freebie.
And he just, I guess, knows his lady and she expects a rock on her finger.
I totally get it sometimes.
You just can't avoid it.
So he's asking, how do I not spend $10,000 and support the Jewish power system?
Steal it.
There you go.
That's number one advice right there.
Fly to Africa, go to field.
Sam, what did you do for engagement ring?
Do you remember?
Well, you know, that's a good question, actually.
And I would say that don't wing it.
Lean on some people that can advise you and show you the way.
Now, in my case, it was kind of an interesting circumstance because my mother-in-law, she knew how to go into the jewelry district in the garment district there in New York City.
And where if you have the right credentials, you can go in there and buy like at wholesale prices and things like that.
And you could have access to a lot of things that maybe are not so easy to get access to.
So I turned to her and she had a really good strategy for getting something very nice.
And it was not obscenely expensive.
I would challenge anybody and say that you can get something very beautiful that is not necessarily that expensive.
So yeah, if you're looking for that gigantic rock on there, yeah, well, there is no way around that that gets expensive, but I don't think you have to go that way.
I do believe in diamonds, by the way.
I know sometimes people will say, well, diamonds are a scam.
And, you know, I want to get a sapphire or an emerald or something.
And that's fine.
I'm not going to gainsay that.
But diamonds are very hard and they will stand up to the use or abuse of daily wearing the thing.
So I do believe in diamonds.
I don't think you got to get a $7,000 rock on there, but you can get, I think, something very nice for well under $2,000.
Sure.
And yeah, those big, gaudy rocks that I see on, you know, wine ladies like from Real Housewives or whatever, like those are just hideous.
They're not receptive.
So it doesn't turn me on that type of thing.
I think something that's kind of very elegant or maybe has a feeling of like kind of antique looking or classic looking, I think that that goes a long way.
You could put a nice diamond on there for not too much money.
And maybe that's when you're looking at rings, that's going to be the thing that you, that's going to be what most of the cost in the ring is.
So, you know, you maybe want to put a dollar value like between, you know, $800 and $1,000 on the main stone.
And then you can kind of pick something, like I said, something kind of classic looking or a little bit antique or nostalgic.
Get cubic zirconium.
Well, that's, you know, I've known people to do that and no one's necessarily.
Yeah.
Just get cubic zirconium and lie to her.
No, don't do that because you might find out down the road and be really busy.
Yeah, you want to, it kind of depends on the way to start the marriage.
You know, like your woman might be.
I really can't tell.
It's very hard to tell.
I agree with you.
And I guess it would just depend on the woman.
You know, some women would have the attitude that I don't want an expensive ring.
Don't get me an expensive ring.
And then if you say like, well, how about we can get like a really pretty ring and it'll be like this.
And then, you know, we kind of haven't spent a lot of money, but you got something really fancy.
What do you say?
You know, for a certain type of woman like that.
On the other hand, you might want to go a little bit whole hog and go big.
But I would say anyways, you know, be conservative and don't go over a certain two months' salary is ridiculous.
But what did you guys do?
Get her an IOU.
That's what you should do.
I assume you did.
I don't, you didn't go out and buy a rock, did you, buddy?
So the first ring that I bought, I bought and it was too big and it was cheap, but it was the only one that I could afford.
It was sub $200.
Okay.
And then a few years later, I bought a much nicer ring.
Yeah.
Still not super expensive, but more than three digits.
Yeah.
And that's nice.
There's a value, I think, in getting something nice because it's something you both will enjoy and it'll be something that's special about the relationship and everything.
So I would say, you know, go do it, do the best you can, but don't go crazy with this.
You know, and it's just the same thing with like weddings, people that overspend on weddings and they're they're in debt for years and years paying off their wedding and stuff.
That's all that all of that is very ridiculous and very Jewish.
Yeah.
Looking back, I kind of regret what we did.
You know, we were 24, I guess, when we were shopping.
We got married at 25.
But my wife was actually searching on eBay for rings that she liked that weren't insanely expensive.
Found one that she liked, sent me the link, and then I got it.
It wasn't a solitaire.
It was like five individual attractive, nice diamonds of high quality and a pattern.
And I forget what we paid for it, a thousand, maybe two thousand that I paid for, of course.
And then later on in life, we got that remade into sort of like five in a row for a supplement to the upgraded solitaire that, in all candor, her father was like, you deserve a solitaire and got her one, which was very, very, very nice and generous of him.
But I did go to the expert and say, hey, honey, which advice should I give to this guy?
He's got to get a diamond.
And she said, Costco.
We've had good luck with Costco jewelry.
You're going to pay less than Blue Nile or something like that.
I don't know if Sam's Club or BJ's does jewelry as well, but you can't probably won't get ripped off by a diamond at Costco.
I was actually able to find the information from the NICE ring.
It's only a 1.1 carat Princess Cut diamond.
There you go.
14 karat gold, white gold.
And let's see.
It cost me $1,300 at the time.
There you go.
That's ballpark reasonable, right?
I mean, if this lady is like expecting something big and flashy and you guys don't have a lot of money, that's a bit of a warning sign right there.
That was like half a paycheck at the time.
I was brand new to the army.
Yep.
And if she wants something special and wants you to put in some work, just go into a jewelry store.
You know, go in and talk to somebody.
That's what they're literally there for.
That was my wife's other advice is if you don't want to just get something from Costco, go establish a relationship.
Hopefully not with somebody who has curly hairs coming down at his temples.
There's plenty of goy jewelry stores out there, even if the ultimate source is less than.
And it's also a good source of value too, a good store of value.
We won't get into the debate about diamonds as a prepping thing to have and use for barter down the road.
But point remains, if you get something nice for her, maybe it will be your son or daughter's engagement ring one day down the road too.
All right.
So I think we did justice to newborns and engagement ring.
So let's move on from this dad content and talk about Seaville a little bit.
I have very big news for the show.
Now, unfortunately, couldn't be on this show for us all to be here to talk to him.
But Christopher Cantwell, who is one of the defendants in the Charlottesville civil trial being brought by a gang of Jews and big money to try to railroad are innocent guys who absolutely conspired to exercise their First Amendment rights, even with a permit.
You need a permit to exercise your First Amendment rights, but they went above and beyond.
But Chris Cantwell is going to come on full house sometime this weekend.
He's going to call in from the clink.
I don't know what his living situation is in Charlottesville.
I'm guessing he's got like temporary housing in the jail before they haul him back to federal prison where he was railroaded for making an ill-advised remark against somebody trying to destroy him and his old show radical agenda.
But we're going to have Cantwell to talk what's going on down there.
And have any of you guys, Rolo, you've been able to tune in for a little bit, right?
No, I'm just reading people that are listening to play-by-play.
I know.
It's like the talk of the town.
So they have been allowing people to call in.
There's a 500-caller limit.
And when there's high drama, all of a sudden it starts to pick up toward 500.
And sometimes people can't get in.
But when I have been able to, I've tuned in.
Salmon Smasher, I assume you haven't been able to call in to listen to the show or pop it in your head to listen to the trial.
But it's absolutely wild.
It's more clown world and more Judeo-Bolshevik legal tyranny than even I expected.
You have, of course, these, you know, it's Roberta Kaplan and Karen Dunn.
And today we met this execrable Jew block, B-L-O-C-H, just grilling these guys on their political opinions and then making this very tenuous connection to somehow you have wrong think and you made some perhaps ill-advised jokes and somebody in the chat made a joke.
They brought up somebody and made a joke about bringing gas chambers and wood chippers to Charlottesville as if that was somehow evidence of a violent conspiracy.
But it's, I'm dying to see what happens, right?
Because they had, they have opening statements.
They had Deborah Lipstadt, this Holocaust expert.
It's the most striking thing is how obnoxious the plaintiffs, the prosecution in this case has been, how absolutely entertaining and frankly witty and sharp and borderline legal expert Chris Cantwell has been.
So I can't wait to talk to him.
I guess we have to speak gingerly because the trial is ongoing.
Uh don't want to get him in trouble or jeopardize anything, but just to see how things are going on in there and these guys can't.
They're that.
There's no way that they were capable of a conspiracy when they like.
Clearly you got Kessler like talking them on telegram, like trying to throw Spencer under the bus, Spencer's trying to throw everybody else under the bus, Heimback of all people.
Uh was handled himself on the stand pretty well, both under interrogation from the Jews and also on cross-examination from Cantwell, which was high comedy, uh.
And yeah, I guess we got Michael Hill from Legal League OF THE South coming up next.
But it's going on over the next two weeks.
I'll post the call-in number in the show notes.
Basically kicks off at 9 a.m every day and then you have this octogenarian Southerner, Norman Storm and Norman Moon there uh, who half the time sounds like he's about to fall asleep and the other half uh, he's basically chastising the plaintiffs more than the defense for just being obnoxious and clearly uh trying to impugn these guys to get them liable for their opinions because there was no Gd conspiracy and they're doing a terrible,
long drawn out uh version of it.
Now I put myself in the uh jury's shoes and the opening statements I was like, oh man, you know, this is a, this is a show trial in Charlottesville with virtually limitless resources being thrown at these guys who will not be portrayed as very sympathetic, and you know the jury is going to be tempted to just say, ah yeah liable, get on with their lives, not have to face any sort of consequences or Antifa showing up at their house or doxing or things like that,
because those are real legitimate concerns for a jury these days, especially in a political trial like this.
But the longer that it goes on and the more drawn out it gets even me the ultimate like nah Chauvin's going to be found guilty nah, this guy's going to be found guilty.
I find it extremely hard that there's not one decent human being on that jury who's going to see, who's not going to be able to see, through this uh, grotesque Judaic bs to essentially subvert the first amendment.
Somebody I think it was Long Shacks today said, guys like I know, like this is kind of entertaining and it's not a criminal trial, but this is, they're setting the stage for wrongthink to essentially be a one-way ticket to a trial and the clink um.
So it actually is really, really high stakes.
Yeah, they need.
They need to talk about the holocaust more juice, talk about blue balls and i'm going to ask Cantwell about this, because we were all on the edges of our seats listening into this thing and in the chat, when they called Deborah Lipstadt to the stand and she went on and on about gas chambers 6 million being a low ball estimate she she,
she cited some French priest who was like, oh no, it's much more than six, six million.
We all fell over our fell out of our chairs on that one.
So we were licking our chops.
We're like, oh my god, it's happening.
Uh, they're just going.
You know, they're letting her talk.
They're not objecting intentionally so that all of the holocaust can be Could be addressed in court, and then everybody is like, Yeah, it's a shame we can't get Mike Enoch, you know, re-embroiled in this trial.
So, can you like, could you just imagine Mike Enoch, you know, interrogating Deborah Lipstadt, the execrable lady who, you know, got David Irving basically in a lot of financial trouble for her slander that he was a quote-unquote Holocaust denier.
But Cantwell got up on the stand and dipped his pinky toe in cross-examining her.
And maybe I'll ask him about that for sure because we were all extraordinarily disappointed.
He got there and he asked her about two Jews, three opinions, and the meaning of a joke and whether Jewish humor was intent of violence or anything like that.
And then he just said no further questions, Your Honor.
And we were just like, oh, man.
So I don't know what was going on there.
Maybe they were reading the jury, but you got to tune into this, guys.
It's the Scopes monkey trial of our century.
I was trying to think of a snappy thing, you know, the Slopes racism trial.
I don't know.
I know, but it doesn't even make sense.
And as our pal Chuck, Chuck Neely said, well, at least these guys finally got to give their speeches in Charlottesville when they were giving their opening statements.
Right.
Yeah.
And of course, this obnoxious Jew interrogating Spencer today pulled off a miracle.
It truly was a miracle down in Charlottesville today.
He made Spencer seem slightly more likable than somebody else, just in contrast.
So stay tuned for that, fam.
I don't know if we'll just put out a quick 15 minutes of Cantwell special or we'll record it and just tap it in to a show this week.
Also, quick teaser for just before the break this week, we got a call from one of our guys behind the line who you heard once before on the show.
And it was close to his birthday.
So I reached out to him.
I was like, come on, let's do something for the show.
So we got that teed up here.
Sam, I know you got a lot in the hopper.
Do you guys have anything else on Charlottesville?
I'll just say you got to tune in.
You got to support our guys.
The precedent of it is a little bit upsetting.
You can see what they're trying to do with it.
I have many other reasons for feeling positive and enthusiastic.
This does not get me down in any kind of way.
You could see what they're doing, but it just feels like the momentum is on our side.
And just the tone of it, that you cannot question things, that you cannot have any different opinion or conclusion other than the one that they have for us.
Sure.
With the Holocaust and all that stuff.
I mean, if that doesn't show you the dynamic of what's really going on here, I think waking a lot of people up for sure.
These Jews literally said it in interviews that their intention was never to settle with these people, which was apparently, we learned today was contrary to some agreement that they that they were supposed to make a good faith effort to like reach a settlement without bringing this to trial.
And they're like, nah, we're not doing that.
Their intent is to bankrupt and ruin these people and, of course, discourage anyone else from ever possibly assembling with non-violent, with defensive intent from raising the flag again.
Yeah, sure.
It's heartening that they care that much about it and that they're that scared of something as simple as a public assembly.
But it's also terrifying what they can do with their virtually limitless resources and the pliant judicial system.
And God knows how many Jews need to deal with you.
I like, I can't listen to the trial while I'm at work, obviously, but I've been getting updates and stuff.
And I like how Richard had to explain the It's Afraid Starship Troopers meme.
Yeah, Wes Bellamy as the monster in the net.
Yeah, this is so ludicrous.
You know, that's a dehumanizing.
It's like, yeah.
And what, does that mean that I'm going to like, you know, punch Wes Bellamy in Charlottesville?
No.
Mr. Producer says, free can't well send him to law school.
I am going to ask Chris about that, whether he's going to possibly, you know, you got, you got some time.
You got some resources in there.
We know from Jack McCracken that there's tons of resources in the click for education and advancing yourself.
So I certainly do hope Chris takes advantage of that.
I don't know how much time he has left, but that's another one.
Sam, we got a little bit of time here.
What do you got in the hopper for the first half?
Well, you know, I was just making notes from things going on in my life over the last week or two, and especially we didn't have a show last time.
And so they're just notes and ideas.
Feel free to interrupt or comment on it, you know.
But we, as I've spoken about on the show, we switched churches a couple of months ago because these assholes that run the Oshkosh diocese, they closed down the place we were going.
And my youngest son and I, we enjoyed being servers there at the Tridentine Latin Mass.
And so it was a no-brainer to switch over.
You know, there are a lot of choices now since long ago when the interest in the traditional Latin Mass was building.
Now there's a lot of choices, but we always stuck with the place we were going just because my kids had received most of their sacraments there and my wife became a Catholic there and so forth.
So, but anyways, that's things I've already said.
But so we made the switch to a place over here.
And so I've been scoping it out, you know, because I'm not going to just remain quiet.
You know, I'm looking for our element, right?
And so, but, and at the same time, I'm just trying to get the lay of the land.
I have not sought to volunteer us our services on the altar because, you know, when you got a couple of trained servers, it's they probably would like to get us in there.
But I've been just kind of keeping my powder dry.
Well, a couple of Sundays ago, we were at the, you know, the coffee and donuts afterwards.
And this place, to call it coffee and donuts would be really an understatement because this is a very active parish.
A lot of good people, it would seem.
And the amount and variety of food and like gourmet stuff that people prepare and bring in, the coffee and donuts was like a, you know, a couple course meal after the mass there.
So I was in line getting something and there was this youngish couple, you know, is just right in the wheelhouse, you know, people maybe between the ages of, let's say, 28 and 35, you know, and just the type of people that maybe would be our people, you know.
And so I'm standing in line and I think that they can they could maybe sense something about me too.
So they struck up conversation with me.
And so I thought, okay, well, I got to be careful here because I don't want to exactly, you know, I want to see what the lay of the land here is.
And so we started talking.
I said where I was from and where they're from, which were close by.
But I'm in the bad area, you might say, you know, so I thought, well, I got to, I got to test these folks out, you know, and see what I can get to.
You know, I almost wanted to say, hey, I'm Sam from Full House.
You ever listened to?
You know, but I sure I didn't.
I wasn't going to be that bold so I said uh well, you know, when you live in a, when you live in a good area, you have the problem of the busybody.
You know, and and i've known people, they're homeschooling their kids.
This is before Covet, you know, maybe your kids are outside on a weekday in the middle of the day and then you got the busybody neighbor who says hey, why aren't those kids in school?
You know.
So when, when you live in a nice area, you might have to, you might have to deal with the busybody or other things like that, but i've never been asked.
By the way sam, since we started homeschooling nobody, nobody has said a word.
Like after Covet, they're just like you know, lord know yeah, they don't know what you, you might be, because more people than ever are homeschooling, but uh, you know, you might, you might get.
Uh well you, you live in a remote area, but uh, you know there's, there's reasons that people might pay attention to what are going on around here where I am, because of associations or the band playing or whatever it is, and um, so I said, you know, when you live in where I live.
Uh, no one's paying attention to what you're doing because of you know, the Negroes.
And uh so, and so I, I threw that little test comment out there to see how they react.
Oh, they like, they like, yeah.
So, you know I, I threw them a couple little little bones just to test them out.
They seem like they were all right.
So i'm looking forward to developing a little more with this couple and um, and then they yeah, and then, and then, as I I mentioned, they said oh, you're new here.
And so I said the little scenario.
I just told you how the assholes in Oshkosh, they shut down this diocese because oh, I threw them another bone.
I said, you know, because they, they shut it down ostensibly because of declining attendance and money problems.
They tell you how much it costs to heat the building and electricity and all this type of thing.
Uh, and so then they're closing it down because of the enrollment and attendance, but they're, but the, the building is still there and they're using it as a mission for African-american things.
So so, in other words, let me get this right.
So the African Americans are going to support this place better than we were supporting it.
Do I got that right, so you know.
So they like that too.
They thought that was cool that I said.
And so then when I said well, we're altar servers, they said, oh well, there they point the guy.
There's that guy there, you got to go talk to him, you can get in, you could, you could serve here and everything.
And I said well, and then I kind of hemmed and hoh and here's where now i'm leaning on you guys to you probably want to chime in.
This is probably, you know, probably you're gonna mog me on this, by the way.
Mog, what?
What is am I using that right, is it?
How do you use the server rush?
I don't know.
Yeah yeah, is it a video game thing?
Yeah, is it the same as using the word mock?
No, I don't think so.
Smasher, come on, you're mr Producer, you got anything?
Yeah, i'm going to Urban Dictionary.
Yeah yeah, it's when you stand next to someone at the gym and show how much bigger.
Oh, I see.
I see.
All right.
Maybe I'm using it.
Maybe it is okay.
You know, sometimes I got to ask people, I'll see some word and then I'll ask somebody, hey, how do you use this word in a sentence?
But so you might mog me on this.
I don't know.
But the interior in my mind, since now we've been going here about seven, eight weeks, you know, the traditional Latin Mass has.
You might say there's various levels.
So if they're taking little kids and training them, they train them up to a certain point, but then there's additional detail.
And, you know, there's maybe you teach somebody as an example how to bow.
But then once they get good at that, then you teach them there's actually three different bows.
Okay.
So, you know, there's these different levels.
Now, we, I think at where I was going, we had a pretty sophisticated level.
But here at this church, I have seen this before.
And this is, this is my, my dilemma.
So there's this thing of kissing the priest's hands.
And I understand like in another age, you know, when people were better or something, maybe that there was nothing wrong with that.
But I remember when I first, well, not even kiss the ring is because like the kiss the hands, they'll kiss the hat and then when they hand it to him, they'll kiss his hands.
And when I first learned to serve, we would kiss the cruets.
You know what the cruets are?
That's holding the water and the wine.
So we would, when we present the cruets to the priest, he would bless them and then take them and pour it into the chalice and hand it back to us.
And then we would we'd kiss the cruet as it was received back with the blessing.
And I kind of didn't like that because it's like I'm thinking Germany kind of thing.
But then when it, you know, and I've seen this before, like in videos of watching the Latin Mass or something, where they're kissing the priest's hands and I just can't do it.
You know, it's just, I just can't kiss another man's hands.
You know, I mean, if I'm thinking about like, yeah, I'm going to kiss your hands, Sam.
Well, I mean, let's say it was Christ himself.
And if let's say I get to heaven and I go and then Christ puts his hands, maybe I'd kiss his hands.
But that's it.
You know, that's as far as I'm going.
Next skinhead show, and instead of saluting Sam, just everyone, put your hand out for him to kiss it.
Wait, hold on.
Hold on.
Do you maybe kiss Jesus's hand?
Maybe?
No, definitely.
Maybe if I get to heaven, I think is what I yeah.
Okay, great.
Because maybe I would, you know, I hope I get there.
If I do get there, then yes, I would kiss his hands, but this priest's hands, I don't think I can do it.
So I kind of demurred.
Is that a legal word, right?
Is that the Cantwell trial?
I kind of demurred.
I said, like, yeah, well, yeah, you know, so I don't know, maybe my son, he could be an altar boy.
They don't, they don't kiss the hands, but the, the, the MC kisses the priest's hands.
And I, I, I honestly don't think I'm up to it.
And we didn't do that at the other place where I served.
So a little bit.
Croutons, I would definitely, I would kiss them and I would eat the croutons.
When you said cruets, that was the first thing that came to my mind.
But no, another things, you know, they run the troops of St. George over there, which is actually they have not only chapters, quite a few chapters throughout the United States, but also in Canada.
And it's a very based organization.
It's the equivalent of the Boy Scouts without the fags.
And so, you know, my son has joined up in that.
So all that's going good.
But somebody, Sam told me about trail life the other day.
Yeah, it's better.
It's better than Boy Scouts.
But guess what?
Of their activities was.
It was like putting together care packages for Afghan refugees.
Yeah, we're not, we're not doing that.
I don't know if he called out sick that week or uh bailed, but yeah, the trail life, hazards abound.
It did have some of those things in it.
I noticed uh, so I would say, be you know, trail life's way better than BOY Scouts, but uh, so far, this troops of St George is looking very good um, but they invited us to a now this is going up to coming up on halloween, and you mentioned coach, about doing halloween on the 30th of october and and yeah they, they invited us to a uh, bonfire on that night.
And I said well, we had this other thing, because it's a dear comrade I could mention off the air who it was, but celebrating his 40th birthday and this is this guy's a beloved guy around here, and um, so so we did that instead, because it was also a costume party and we were committed to being there and, of course, I just wouldn't miss it because he's a dear friend.
But uh, I i'm just mentioning all that just to say again uh um, just to, as a white pill, so to speak, the the great influx of new and excellent people that that i'm meeting um good in our area.
It's, it's just incredible I, you know I i'm not going to go into details of the person or the different people we also recently our group had a trip to the Zoo and that was wonderful.
I met a very nice young man who I turned on to the show.
Um, I told him to to have you add him into the show if, if he likes the show, he's listening to the show.
Uh, have you add him in.
But um, you know, just just wonderful talented fit smart, great young people.
This, this new guy I met, he's actually getting married uh, soon and uh, so that that was very exciting.
Um, but then uh, sam roll yeah, go ahead.
Yeah well, I was just going to roll into.
The next day, of course, is halloween, you know, and um, and it also got me to thinking on that day before halloween and halloween, about those different family traditions that you have brought up, and uh I, you know I don't do a lot of decorating of the house.
I don't know, I guess through the years is just like more expense than I was willing to do, but we do certain things and so one of the the big things that I always do for halloween is we get the pumpkin and we carve it.
You know, and you can get, I think, from the Dollar BILL store.
You could probably get like the carving tools, which is like a very precision little saw and um.
So I go on the internet and i'll, i'll print off some kind of design and i'll usually challenge myself, you know, and i'll take a pin and i'll poke all the holes uh, in the design, and then i'll take that very precision carving tool and I design.
You mean condom that you're giving to young teenagers, right?
You saying he takes the needle and the pinholes oh yeah yeah, Well, so, and I always try to enlist the family members to do it, but this is one of those little bit bittersweet things because it's always me kind of leading the thing.
I think they would just not even do it if I wasn't around.
But so I tried to get everybody involved and I put probably a good, at least two hours into poking the design into the thing and then carving it out.
And I did a tarantula.
If you search on the internet, you probably see the exact one that I did, kind of a very realistic looking tarantula.
But I did get some help with people scooping out the guts and scooping out the pumpkin seeds.
And that's another one of those traditions that I like is I'll get all the seeds out and then I'll make the pumpkin seeds in the oven with a little bit of cayenne pepper and a little bit of rock salt.
Yeah, some oil and some crack road salt.
Eight road salt to give your blood pressure a boost.
Yeah, wifey did the same thing with the seeds here.
All right, Sammy, we got to take a break, but hold, yeah, hold that thought.
And you're, you know, sort of testing the waters with your new brethren in the church brought to mind this sort of important poll that I put in the chat of heavy hitters.
There's never been debating where the no, this is a very important poll.
This is objective and just cracking.
Margin of error, plus or minus.
Now I get it.
So it was just a debate about fishing where the fish are biting leftists, conservatives.
God knows we like to crap on the GOP and sometimes that bleeds over into conservatives too.
But I asked the question, where were you ideologically before you became a racist anti-Semite, essentially, right?
The last step of the red pill.
And I gave four options, right?
I gave you a liberal Democrat.
You were a conservative slash Republican.
You were a libertarian slash ANCAP, or you were totally apolitical, which I think is a pretty fair, you know, I don't go into like every possible option that people are.
And as here we go, 9% liberal Democrat, 36% conservative Republican.
And again, I say this because this is a sharp group of people who have skin in the game and are committed.
48% libertarian or ANCAP and just 7% totally apolitical.
I was very surprised at how many we knew that libertarians to our side at a ledger was a real thing.
I didn't think it was that numerous.
Now, whether that applies today, because we're not in quite such a libertarian high watermark like maybe 2013, 2014, Ron Paul and all that stuff.
But point remains that at least for our guys who are in the suck, in the cause, and pretty sharp, if I can say so myself, the overwhelming majority are conservatives or they were conservatives or they were libertarians in ANCAP.
So take that one to the bank, fam, when you're targeting your outreach and you're testing the waters.
I think you're going to have better luck with those groups than with the others.
With that, let us go to our brother behind the wire for a shot in the arm and then MP after his courting is over.
Roll us right into Sirius by the Alan Parsons Project.
But it's a remix.
It's an update to it with a little 21st century flair from the old, I don't know, it's probably late 70s or late 80s.
So here we have another call, another recording, another letter from our man behind the wire.
Hit it.
Go.
On the 9th of November, we should meditate on sacrifice, but the sacrifice of those past and the sacrifices that the future will necessitate.
You are the culmination and pinnacle of uncountable generations of your ancestors who fought, bled, suffered, and died for you to be here today.
Your inheritance and your birthright, forged from the sacrifices and spirit of those ancestors, makes up what we consider to be Western civilization.
It is up to us to see to it that all which has been entrusted to us is not simply thrown upon the scrap heap of history or given away to the lowest common denominator out of a conditioned sense of universalist egalitarianism.
Become the change that you wish to see in the world around you.
Nothing in history has ever been gained or defended against external forces through wishing that it would happen on its own.
We must keep marching ever forward, holding high the flame of eternal truths against the encroaching darkness, no matter what we may perceive to be the risks or the costs.
Every path towards greatness is fraught with significant risks on all sides, but that is the way that it is and the way it is always has been.
A guarantee of success lies in that only the best and the most courageous will step forward in the most important and significant situations.
So hold your head high, stick your chest out, and keep putting one foot in front of the other until we overcome all obstacles because no one is coming to help us achieve our destiny and only victory awaits.
May we all someday find ourselves in the process.
Welcome back to Full House 107.
I am, as always, Coach Fedstock out here.
It's getting chilly, getting into Nordic Frontier podcasting territory.
I don't know if I'm going to make it through this whole winter doing it out here.
The guinea fowl are still alive.
They're sleeping in the rafters of this gazebo, deathly silent.
And we don't hear or see of them during the day.
I don't know what the hell they're doing.
It's not like they're going to go back into the little coop where I raised them from wee little Keats.
So I got some company out here.
The new pooch has been a delight so far.
It's a girl.
She's got one brown eye and one blue eye, which they call heterochromia.
New thing I learned.
And a couple pee accidents in the house, one poo, but that's about a week or almost two weeks now.
So not bad.
And the most delightful thing is, unlike our dearly departed previous dog, this is a real dog that barks.
And neighbor came over wearing a bike helmet or a motorcycle helmet the other day.
And oh man, she was ready to rip his throat out.
So that was good to see that she's got like she recognized that this was somebody and something was out of the ordinary.
She, of course, didn't bite him.
And we've been letting her run around off leash.
She doesn't wander off.
She chases the guineas, but doesn't bite them or anything like that.
So so far, so good with our new pooch.
And of course, we did surprise our daughter with it as her birthday present recently.
We took a trip up to grandma and grandpa's long hall on I-95.
And I must say, all my years of driving on I-95, I never saw more cars broken down on the side of the road.
And it wasn't just, you know, a pack of Indians or Mexicans stopping for a pee break or have a little picnic on the side at an interstate.
These were people with their hoods open and nine out of 10 of them were diversity.
So they are not maintaining their cars very well.
And yeah, got it.
I'm 40.
Keep that in mind.
For your SHTF plan that the highways are going to be filled with incompetent brown people with broken vehicles when you're trying to flee.
Exactly right.
Yep.
Which is why you should buy Tacoma and outfit it for overlanding so that you don't have to travel on highways.
Or a motorcycle, right?
I can hear motorcycle gangs saying, oh, yeah, you're going to get right around all those breakdowns.
But yeah, it was pretty jarring.
And then, of course, we always have to do activities when we're with grandma and grandpa.
So we actually, my mom was like, let's take them into Philly and do one of those bus tours so they can see Philly.
Yeah, they've been over to Philly and taken the train over before.
I was like, you know, Spidey sense Philly this time of year.
I was like, okay, but I'm going.
So I went along as the muscle and didn't have any issues.
But, you know, as soon as we got over to Philly and hopped out of the train station, just hit in the face with the smell of bumpus everywhere, trash everywhere in the station.
And unfortunately, my suggestion to take a walking tour, Kensington Avenue, which is the notorious like zombie land of people zonked out on heroin.
That was vetoed.
Grandma didn't want to take a walking tour of Kensington with the kids.
I'm kidding, of course.
But as soon as we got out of the train station, there was a probably schizophrenic and not harmful, but very angry and pacing black man ranting to the ether.
As soon as we got out, I was like, oh boy, here we go.
But the rest of the time was okay.
And then I did have this very strange on the way back on the train platform.
I'm thinking about New York and all those people who've been like shoved onto train tracks and just randomly slammed into trains and all the other horrors.
And I was definitely on edge and at peak dad patrol mission there with the kids waiting down there for 20 minutes for a train on a weekend.
So you did diversify.
Yeah.
I was like, I don't remember New York in the 80s, but we're returning to tradition in the urban environments.
And of course, Philadelphia used to be called Philadelphia.
It was probably really bad around the same time that New York was.
I can't remember the name of that damn black mayor that they had, but yeah.
No, Mr. Producer, Philly was, I don't know, Philly.
Yeah.
Well, Dinkins was up in New York.
They almost had like a mayor good.
You're talking about Philly, black guy.
Yeah, Philly.
After they bombed the move Africa, black nationalist headquarters there.
But anyway, yeah, we made it out alive.
Be careful out there, fam.
It is getting rough.
And I realized I had not been in a major metropolitan area for something like two or about two years.
And we're walking down the street on the way back.
You know, we had done our sightseeing.
And I said to Junior, I was like, so Junior, does this make you want to live in the big city when you get older?
You want to go to college in the big city?
And he's like, well, I don't know.
And then this random white guy on a bench, swear to God, he chimes up.
He's like, stay in the country.
Not hostile, just like this place sucks.
You don't want to live here.
So lessons learned all around.
And yeah, the kids were not terribly impressed.
I was worried they're going to be like, oh, this is so exciting and wonderful and vibrant.
But they were happy to get home to the mountain mama.
All right.
Let's get on to new white life.
We just got two this week, which, you know, figured it was going to be a bit of a downer after our bumper crop last week.
But our pal, Nathan, Nathan, swarthy German, I believe he is.
Nathan, congratulations.
He's got his first.
I think he just had his first.
Sometimes I forget whether they're in route or have already arrived.
But good luck, brother.
Let us know if you need any help and congratulations to wifey as well.
And our pal AK, he did a double hit.
He was like, here, have some shekels.
And by the way, got new white life here for you to announce.
So AK, bless you and your wife.
Good luck.
Let us know how it's going.
Send a non-doxy pic of the kid that's not reverse image searchable if you like.
Always makes a smile.
Let me share it with the with the full house core here.
And that's it for me.
Sam's got one in the hopper, though, which of course is always good news.
Yeah, well, actually, we're on pins and needles.
Today was supposed to be the day or possibly could have been the day for a good friend of the show and a dear friend of mine, Nate.
You know, Nate from Wellington Arms.
Yeah, today was going to be the day, but then the doctor said, no, we're going to wait maybe a couple more days.
So we're all on pins and needles over here, hoping and praying for Nate.
Yeah.
So, and at the same time, I wanted to mention Wellington Arms has just put out the first thing that you could buy.
Their music has been available online, but now you can buy a CD.
They did a split CD with Wellington Arms and Birthright.
It's on Rubble Records.
You can find that online.
And we had this birthday party the other day for another comrade.
And Nate showed up with an armful of these wonderful CDs, very nicely put together.
So if anybody's thinking about it, you know, Christmas time's coming.
It's uh, you know, a month and a half on the way.
You got to start uh getting some ideas, but I've been listening to that since he gave it to me.
And uh, so Nate's a great guy, and he's uh enlarging his family.
Sure, and I forget, Sam.
Is that their first in root?
Um, well, I don't.
There are some other children already.
I don't want to go into his first, that's fine.
The only reason, the only yeah, the only reason I asked is because that first one often runs a little bit long, at least from my experience, right?
So, yeah, for the dudes out there talking about having newborns, if a baby doesn't arrive on its due date, it's not the end of the world.
Yeah, it's pretty common, right?
Yeah, like that.
Okay, I see what you're saying.
Yes, right, exactly.
Yeah, you gotta, you gotta, you gotta, it's, it's right at the end.
You know, the mother, she wants this thing to be over for sure, you know.
And, and uh, but I gotta say, Nate's wife was handling it very well.
She looked great, she was you know, handling herself just fine.
Um, she was doing great, but you know, it gets hard to sleep, it gets hard to do things.
You're just big all the time, you know, you're you know, you see, you know, when you go to the doctor, he tells you how much you weigh, it's like you know, you've doubled your weight maybe or something.
You know, you put a put a lot of weight on, and it's uh uh it's just time.
Yeah, it's funny how many guys uh have vastly different experiences with their pregnant wives, right?
Like from the first trimester misery of morning sickness and then like the wonder months in the middle, and then just like the bloat and the pain and the can't do anything toward the end.
Some guys are really into their wives when they're pregnant, which I find a little bit strange, not gonna lie.
Like, you know, well, you know what, the thing is, when you're pregnant, you don't have to worry about getting pregnant.
Yeah, one of my buddies, one of my buddies in high school had a pregnancy scare with his girlfriend, and you know, at that time, we were like, oh, God, like, you know, I think his name was Jimmy Jimmy, like, we're so sorry.
And he's like, well, at least we can, you know, do it as much as we want, which in high school, that's a pretty, pretty bright silver lining.
Yeah, says I'm Coach Finn Stork, which is very kind of him, more like Coach Finn's dork.
There you go.
Stealing Smasher's Thunder again.
We got a couple of nice notes here.
I wanted to read real quick for the audience's enjoyment.
Eric, let us know.
He says, I've been listening to a bunch of your back muted.
I've been trying to talk about pregnant women.
Oh, please.
Yes.
Talk about pregnant.
No, dude.
Pregnant women are hot.
I mean, not all pregnant women.
I don't see them in like, you know, but like a woman that is pregnant with your child, that's super hot.
Like, that's your child.
She has life that you helped create.
She's like giving a huge sacrifice for you.
Like, that's sexy.
Absolutely.
I think it's beautiful.
I think it's heartwarming.
It doesn't exactly get my motor running, but maybe, you know, no, not November.
No, not November with a pregnant wife.
You can change your boobs get big.
That's true.
Oh, and the boobs get big.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I got to create that poll.
I got to get my trimester.
Third trimester wife romps.
Yay.
Awesome or a little bit strange.
Yes.
If you like those fertility dolls from the tribal peoples, that may be your thing.
Smasher likes pregnant women.
Let it be known.
Eric's.
That's like a whole thing, you know.
Oh, sure.
Yeah.
See, and that's what makes me think that there's something a little bit like the idea of guys with like collections of like pregnant woman images.
I don't want to.
No, right.
No, that is weird.
That is weird.
But, you know, a little bit of that when you're when you're married to the woman is okay, I think.
A little bit of that feeling.
Yeah, don't get me wrong.
It is a beautiful, wonderful thing.
Yes.
Eric says, great show.
Keep making these.
When you have some merch, please let me know.
Would love to support 88.
Yes, I have been terribly slacking on the merch front.
Here's the here's the deal.
Like, I'm just, I'm not a very entrepreneurial person, and I worry that people would be like buying it just out of obligation, not because they actually wanted to rock some merch, you know.
But it sounds like people would actually buy it and would want to do it, not out of obligation, but to actually support the show and show some logos and stuff like that.
So I just need to get my wife to do all the work because I'm, I don't know, I don't have a mind for that stuff.
But we got some graphic designs and we'll make it happen.
Well, it's a conversation starter is what it is because many times I've been wearing a t-shirt of something and you're standing in line or some kind of social situation and somebody maybe they kind of know what it is or they suspect what it is or they don't know at all what it is.
And so then you explain it and it's a great conversation starter.
I'm all for that.
All right.
Yeah.
We could just, you know, have a wide variety like caps just with an FH logo on a shield, you know, something like that.
So it wouldn't get you in trouble at all, but for the knowing hoodie, just a t-shirt with the full house logo on the left breast, you know, and then on the back, it says, I hate niggers.
I would wear that.
I have a, I have a shirt than that.
It says, I hope you get deported on the back.
Tiny logo on the back.
All right.
All right.
Let me make a note.
I got to merch.
I've got to get my wife to help me.
I wonder if that's the same guy that contacted me from the show that I, or the gig I was at recently, also going by that name, Eric.
I mean, there's a lot of Eric's out there.
Who knows?
Could be the same guy, but he was chatting about the show and stuff like that.
It's wonderful to hear from people that get something good out of the show, you know, that get encouraged or activated in some way or that just enjoy the show.
Yeah.
Got a kind note up your alley, Sam.
Here, this is from The Goy and the Plastic Bubble.
Really good stuff there.
He says, greetings, gents.
Just want to drop a quick note after listening to the Halloween episode.
The story of the young man going to his first show and the intrigue around his mom brought back some great memories of my first show.
My first show was a Max Resist one outside of Milwaukee.
I was too young for a driver's license.
So my mom drove me to the meeting point, which was no small feat since we lived in Ohio and hung out with a bunch of skins and WNs while we waited on word of the show.
Then she waited for me outside the venue.
I made some new friends that night and my mom did too.
So when you speak of a family environment around our community, that is very true.
Love the show.
Goy in the plastic bubble.
Yeah, well, that's exactly what I was saying.
I don't care who you are.
Like this, this kid's mom, if she went to the show, she would have a good time.
You have a lot of good, good, wholesome, honest laughs and some great music and meet great people who all have something different to say and pick up a couple of great records.
Like when I was at that gig, I picked up this band Whitewash.
It was a band that I have their first album like from 20 years ago.
And I don't know, it's just, there's just so many bands.
I just hadn't thought of it.
But I happened to meet the guy that's in the band, the singer of the band.
And I thought, you know, I was looking at him and I said, this guy, this young fella, he looks like the singer in that band.
It turns out it was him.
You know, he's just somebody who had aged very well.
And I even told him so.
And so I was perusing the records and I saw that they had just put something out last year.
So I bought that and a bunch of other stuff.
It's just, it's a great environment.
It's a lot of fun.
Sure.
I was just thinking about the pregnant woman conversation and polls and stuff like that.
We got another hot one.
It's a barn burner.
Female form presence, the question of the thin versus the thick.
It's not fat if it's T-H-I-C-C.
We just mean, you know, a million women.
A little dirtier.
It's split right down the middle.
No, if you like sticks, you're gay because you're into twinks.
Yeah, basically, you like your women to look like men.
No, it is split directly down the middle.
50-50, thin versus thick female body preference.
We're not talking about anorexic and we're not talking about fatsos.
You know exactly what we're talking about.
Yeah.
Meat on the bones or slender and trim.
And Smasher and I are thick gang till we die.
Sam, I'm going to rope you.
I don't know.
You know what?
I'm split on that.
I'm split on that one myself because I could see it both ways.
You know, a woman can be beautiful in different ways, you know.
And yeah, I like the idea of like a physically strong woman, but someone who's more demure or petite, that's, I could see the appeal in that as well.
So I think you got to be open-minded on that question.
There you go.
And on the tall versus short woman question, I'm short gang all the way.
How about you guys?
D1 athlete children.
As long as she's shorter than me.
Sure.
Yeah.
Sometimes a really, really tall woman, like much taller than a man, can be a little bit awkward.
But in general, I could see it either way, but yeah, the idea of like long legs on a woman, that's very sexy.
Well, I like them squat, loopa loopa, not a midget, but you know, close.
My wife is short.
Well, she's not short.
She's average for a female.
Yeah.
She's like 5'3 or 5'4 or whatever, which is not terribly short.
But like I couldn't be with a chick that was like 6'2, you know, like just two or three inches taller than you, than you.
That would be weird.
But if we're talking like she's six foot seven, it's like, okay, now we're now we're reaching the area where you've passed the too tall for me threshold.
And now you're like, I'm feeling submissive and breedable.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Get yourself a seven foot tall woman.
You're going to make some white children that will take over the NBA at that point.
Okay.
I feel like you can't turn that opportunity down.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I think that there's something.
Yeah.
Well, my one theory is that men desire women who are not physically like their mother, you know, a reverse edible complex.
Like is which I don't know if that's like creepy psychology or whatever, but you know, like without getting personal, you know, like I like them to look really, really Aryan and buxom and short, which is not exactly what, whatever.
Maybe it's just my theory.
Funny that you bring up Oedipus stuff.
And I think I actually agree with you.
It's like my wife's body type is the exact opposite of my mom.
My mom, people have told me, what's Jennifer Aniston?
People have told me that my mom looks like Jennifer Aniston.
I don't necessarily see it, but she does have, she's the same build as Jennifer Aniston, at least.
If you could like just take the faces off.
Okay, sure.
Yeah.
But somebody on Twitter today tweets at me.
You should ask yourself what happened to you.
Did your mother not breastfeed you long enough?
Maybe she breastfed you too long and you grew attached to her boobs.
Now you can't get over your Oedipus rage against your father, leaving you with feelings of inferiority.
And like, I might make jokes about race war and murder and like roping journalists and stuff, but I would never say some crazy, off-the-wall, disrespectful shit like that.
That is insane.
What is wrong with these people?
My mom told me that when she was like, she was absolutely wrong with these people, dude.
When she was pregnant with me, she was like, the doctor thing was to not put on too much weight at all, which I found kind of strange, you know, in America, you know, but I guess it was a different time.
So she told me that she like starved herself, not literally, but she was ravenous and resisted the temptation to eat.
I'm like, damn it, mom.
You know, like, what could I have been if you had properly sustained me?
She wrote in utero.
Yeah, I know, right?
Be leading the revolution would be over by now if I had proper nutrition attached in at the belly button.
Come on.
Yeah.
That's why you're so bad at mechanical stuff.
Right.
She took that from you.
She robbed me.
Yeah.
I was robbed.
It's not idiocy or laziness or I'm not good at it because I don't like it and I don't like it because I'm not good at it.
It was, yes, that is the true determinationist outlook.
It's all it all depends on how well your mother eats while you're in there in that warm embrace.
I don't think being very careful about your weight is the thing to be doing when you're pregnant.
I would be focusing on the quality, the quality of the food.
And if you're hungry, I bet you that's nature telling you.
Right.
Some good stuff in there.
That's right.
You challenge down on ice cream and pizza than dooming your child to a life of retardation, basically.
No, don't freak out there, ladies.
Got one more nice note here.
Won't say from who because it was just in a private chat and you didn't intend this to be read, but it is a white pill.
It deserves to be out there.
In the past six months or so, the tempo of activity within the white nationalist movement has increased to such a point that I have to turn down invitations to events or choose to go to one over another because I can't take off two weekends in a row to go do cool stuff.
This speaks to a healthy and dynamic social environment in our movement.
No non-whites required.
So for our lonely solo listeners out there living atavistically through the birth panel and our ribald tails and meetups and NJPs and manor buns and kulaks, you name it.
There's tons of groups out there that we don't know.
We're still very siloed, believe it or not.
Yes.
New Jersey European Heritage Association is one.
They're still around doing activism.
Patriot Front, of course.
There is something for you, even if you're a, you know, you got cold feet and you're like 45 years old and your wife's not down with it and you're worried about losing your job.
There is something for you, more of us every day.
And basically, there you go.
ADS.
If you're more worried about getting in trouble than doing the right thing and getting involved, shame on you.
Yes.
If you're more worried about getting in trouble, all I really have to say to you is that like you're already in trouble.
Your life is already over.
If you have children, they are going to be, you know, forced to do terrible, terrible things because Jews are going to abuse them.
They're going to get beat upon by Negroes and you refusing to get involved are actively saying, my child, I am not willing to fight for you.
Yep.
And if you don't have children, then guess what, homie?
You ain't got nothing to lose.
Get doxxed.
Who cares?
Yeah, I mean, you know, obviously, I don't mean that 100% literally.
Isolate that place.
You should not.
Right.
Yeah.
You should not go out and like recklessly get yourself doxxed, hand our enemies a victory.
But, you know, you don't have anything to lose.
If you're just you, you can take care of yourself.
I'm absolutely sure you can.
So why aren't you being, why aren't you involved?
It's never been easier to get involved in things.
And just the affection and the warmth and the fun and the sense of belonging that comes with this.
I can't even get it across to you.
If you're involved with this already, then you know what I'm talking about.
Yep.
Or just send money.
If you're going to be a behind the scenes guy, send money.
Not just us to whatever.
You would do it.
And that's beyond.
That's ultimately what everything should come down to is like, how can I be the most beneficial to the destruction of the Jewish race?
That's what you have to ask yourself with every decision that you make.
It's like, okay, so if you make $150,000 as a single dude with no family, then yeah, you should get involved with extremely low dox potential organization.
You should not be out doing activism and all this other stuff because you can make a bunch of money and almost all of your income is expendable if it's just you.
So now you can like help set up all of these different things that need help setting up.
How many different things need money and they don't have it and they're asking other blue-collar people for money to help, you know, get this thing accomplished or whatever.
Yep.
Meanwhile, there's dudes sitting around listening to podcasts making a ton of money and not giving any of it away.
Shame on them.
No, you know, I've never spoken about my docs in any level of detail.
And I still want to do that very desperately, but have been advised not to for quite some time now.
But like, you know, the truth is I slash we went through one of the gnarliest ones, at least in recent history.
And hey, we're, you know, we're alive.
We're happy.
We're married.
Our kids are healthy.
We're fine.
And let's also be honest, the most recent spate of doxes won't even say who, like, they landed with a dull thud and like nobody gave a shit.
Like Trump's not in office anymore.
You know, the labor market is extraordinarily good right now.
And it's just a broken record for a lot of people.
Now, all that said, you know, we're not advising anybody to do anything stupid.
We're not tempting fate knock on wood here.
But it ain't what it used to be.
And get involved.
Yeah.
I think we've made that point on the show a lot.
Moving on, I had a major shift in my Veltan Chong, my world paradigm view the other day because I went to Aldi.
That's not a setup.
Don't do it.
Went to Aldi and I said, no, you what?
This place really is great.
And I never liked Aldi.
This is the discount German chain with the stupidity.
Let's also very nice.
Leidel?
Leadle.
L-I-D-L.
That's another German chain.
Maybe I'm thinking of Lint.
Lint Lint makes chocolates, L-I-N-D-T.
Lint trap.
But yeah, so I was in an Aldi in a white area.
And I was like, oh, the produce seems to be fresher here.
And the people seem to be, you know, slightly less rough around the edges.
And okay, this little quarter thing is pretty cute.
And I even inadvertently scammed Aldi out of a quarter because I had the kids.
I had the kids with me and I literally just planned to go in and grab like a milk and bananas or something like that.
It just happened to be on the road.
I was like, all right, we'll pop into Aldi to get these couple things that we need.
So I went into the store without a cart and I was like, oh, son of a bitch.
They got a lot of good deals here.
I need a cart, but I don't want to have to go back out with the kids.
So I just grabbed a cart.
that was in the store.
So then when I was done, I put the cart back in and I got a quarter from the thing.
So I 25 cent profit right there.
No, but seriously, like the milk was cheaper than anything I've seen.
I don't know if the audience, if Aldi's are all over the country.
I think they're pretty widespread.
But if you need to get like essentials and you're not particular about stuff, bro, the produce and the meat and the milk and the basics, they were all the bomb.
So Sam, do you have a hard line position on the Aldi question?
Sounded like you're familiar with it.
Yeah.
At one point, I was very anti-Aldi's.
First of all, well, at least around here, if you go there, man, the clientele, whoa.
Sure.
I mean, it's like that.
You ever see that website, Scene at Walmart?
This is the same.
People of Walmart.
Yeah.
EBT land.
Not that there's anything wrong with getting that EBT, but yeah.
Yeah.
So I would say through White Nash List, you should definitely apply for all the gibbs you can get.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
For sure.
You know, for certain things, like you say, milk or kind of staple type things and all that.
That was always my position was, okay, fine.
If you're going to get some of those staples, you get them there.
But also, my wife is very pro-Aldis.
And so we kind of- I'm resisting.
I'm going to say it.
I'm like Michael Scott.
That's what she said.
All these nuts.
All these nuts.
But you know what?
They do come up with some good products.
And the thing about Aldi's is they're always kind of, they've got like a rotating different product.
So sometimes you go in there and you see different products.
So if you keep your eyes open, you see different things.
The thing that I really like they had is like a frozen thing full of like eggplant parmesan.
And it was, you know, you just put it in the oven, you cook it, and it's ready to go.
Man, that was really good.
But yeah, I have been kind of anti-Aldi's, but they do come up with some good products sometimes in there.
And it's certainly for the staples.
It's well worth it.
It's like a poor man's Trader Joe's.
You know, Trader Joe's is more for the upscale sort of very same size stores.
Yeah.
Isn't it the same company?
Isn't it one of those?
I don't think so.
Maybe not.
Some of those companies are related.
Maybe Walmart or something is related to one of those.
I forget what it is.
Yeah.
Trader Joe's.
That's another one my wife really likes.
And there's one in the area.
We're generally food lion or Walmart people just by virtue of that being the closest thing.
And yes, I know.
I always want to, there's like a local meat store that I've been meaning to stop into.
Shame on us for supporting Big Zog, Big Ag, mass-produced slop for the Goyam.
But the reality is sometimes you just got to bang out that grocery.
We're shared with five people.
We found a local butcher, relatively local.
They're like 45 minutes or so.
And they have amazing deals on all of their meat, basically.
We're getting like 45 pounds of chicken for like $65 or something like that.
Is it like a little storefront that, you know, it's like modern.
I don't know.
I haven't even been there yet.
Okay.
We, we just, we, a friend of ours that we actually met through the AFA, well, we met them in the wild and then really got involved with them with the AFA.
They showed it to us.
And so we just have done the ordering process.
We haven't actually been there yet.
Sure.
Yeah, dude.
And it's like, I think, I think we're getting like 65 pounds of pork for like $88 or something like that.
Sure.
Really, really good prices.
And it's a lot of meat.
You know, we bought a half hog from a buddy who actually raised the pigs on his own property and then he had them sent off to a professional butcher place.
And to be honest, like a lot of the, when you get half an animal, you get a lot of weird stuff with it that you don't want, like, especially with pork.
I forget exactly what I mean.
Yeah, you get half an animal.
Yeah.
It's like, well, I really kind of just want some sausage and bacon and pork chops, you know.
But you can still order that stuff.
I mean, sure.
Like, yeah, you could, I'm sure you could, you could definitely get higher quality.
And I don't know about the pricing.
The stuff that we're getting is all like very normal stuff that people eat.
You know, it's no like extra clippings.
And, you know, we didn't order half a pig.
We just, you know, just however he manages to produce all these things, he's able to sell it kind of at extremely bulk prices.
And it's local, not gay meat.
Yeah.
All right.
I wanted to mention for the audience's benefit, they probably saw this, but just in case not, the word did come on down high from the White House.
January 4th, vax mandate goes into effect.
Oh, you thought you weren't a federal employee or a contractor.
You were going to be sitting pretty.
Uh-uh.
Not so fast.
January 4th, all companies with more than 100 employees, they have to certify that their employees are vaccinated or for the time being, test them once a week.
And the employees have to wear masks in the office or wherever they're working.
And of course, that is now just a temporary, like the SOP.
I think they did that with the federal employees originally too, where, oh, yeah, you don't want to get vaccinated.
That's fine.
You just have to get tested once a week.
And then they're like, no, we're not doing that anymore.
You're getting vaccinated.
So the big pain, the big choice, you're going to bend the knee, you're going to compromise on this one is now basically going nationwide at a time of record tight labor markets and cops and first responders starting to resign, retire, which opens up the back door for immigration or immigration.
Watch, you just watch after the Virginia and New Jersey election results.
They're already teeing it up that the Republicans are going to take control of Congress.
And then there's always like this push to do something after a midterm.
Remember DACA with Obama?
Yeah.
You could say that amnesty is more, you know, they take Congress and then, oh, we got this problem with labor shortages because people don't want to get vaccinated and employers don't want to pay more.
Let's finally do the comprehensive amnesty.
I could totally see that coming.
It's in my crystal ball.
And yeah, a time for choosing.
That was Reagan's famous speech to the Republican Convention and whenever it was back in the 60s, made a name for himself.
It's a time for choosing for you, dear listener.
You're going to bend the knee on this one?
I'm smiling because I know I got friends who have bent the knee and saying, ah, yeah, whatever.
I'm just going to get the jab.
I'm not going to lose my job.
What are you stupid, stubborn bastard?
And then I know other guys who I frankly respect a lot more who said, F you, I will find something else.
And it is forcing us into a point where we're going to have to start starting our own businesses and working for friends and family or just working for smaller businesses.
Wouldn't that be wonderful if that whole parallel society idea that people talk about is actually a real outcome from this where people say, Screw you, Zog Globo Homo.
I'm not bending the knee on this one.
That's my professional advice is not to do it.
But Smasher has been vaccinated four times already, so I don't want to get him too angry.
I am vaccinated.
Yes, Sammy, baby, you still got pure blood.
Yes.
Yeah.
Sam, Sam still got pure blood running through his veins.
And Mr. Producer, God knows, friend of mine got an aneurysm from the vax.
Do tell.
Do tell, brother.
Well, that's it.
He got the vax and then he's like, my heart hurts.
And then he had to go to the ER and they had to put a stent in him.
Did he have myocarditis or whatever, exploding heart disease?
It is, yeah.
Uh, I don't know.
I didn't ask, but yeah, he was in the hospital for a while because of that.
And well, now he's uh, he's uh changing his life, he's doing everything he can to fight off this failing heart of his.
Yeah, I mean, the side effects are real.
I did see something today, and I didn't know if it was legit or them doing a little jujitsu and coping that all of the heart inflammation, oh, it's actually the COVID virus itself that is more aggressive toward your arteries and your veins.
And why hasn't this been an issue prior to the vaccine?
Oh, shut up, that's why I'm so overwhelmed.
Yeah, this stuff, like, just really you could see the like NPC gears just locking up and like breaking, and they just shut down and do the like angry NPC face.
Shut up, yep.
Like it's, I've been arguing with these people for years now, for more than half a decade at this point.
And COVID stuff literally has like activates them harder than racism or anything else.
I've had people be like, oh, maybe, maybe you are kind of right.
Like, I've had people acquiesce about the JQU or race realism or whatever, but like COVID, no way, dude.
There's no acquiescing.
There's no like, hmm, you have actually proven me wrong.
Let's continue discussing this.
It's literally just angry face, shut up.
Yeah.
No, yep.
COVID is their god.
Mr. Producer says, yes, they find validation in being good little toadies on this.
And oh man, is it the perfect topic for them to hate others and love themselves for getting that stupid effing jab for this GD virus?
They just still talk about new strains and new outbreaks coming.
You know, it's funny.
Our pal Old Skull, you know, a long time ago, just put down his foot and said, oh, yeah, not taking the vaccine.
I do worry about those guys getting like too over their skis in terms of conspiracy stuff and focusing on all this wacky stuff instead of what's right in front of their faces.
But I totally salute every single one of you and do encourage you to don't bend the knee on this.
This is evil.
You know it's wrong.
You know it's a trial balloon for what else they can force.
They're doing the kids next.
The kid, you know, you want to send your kids to public school.
You're going to have to get them vaxed.
It's not going to stop.
You're going to have to get boosters, right?
That's the other thing.
Okay.
All right.
You're going to, you're going to bend the knee on this one.
All right.
How about the second, the third, the fourth, the fifth variant?
The new chorus.
Yep.
It literally doesn't affect kids under 12.
We all had it.
Our two sons had no noticeable symptoms, and our daughter was like sleepy for a day.
It's absolutely effing ludicrous.
And if the teachers are so worried about it, go ahead and get vaxed, right?
I hate to like drum up some like libertarian, sparse libertarian priors of mine, but it's like your body, your choice.
Good lord.
Getting worked up here.
Well, and like conspiracy stuff aside, and this is how I've always argued, like, I think a lot of the conspiracy stuff with the vaccine, there's definitely some truth to a lot of it.
And I think it's interesting, regardless of whether or not it's true.
But you don't need any conspiracy to say that you don't need the vaccine.
Like, according to the CDC, your individual chances of surviving COVID are like a 99.82.
And with the vaccine, it's like a 99.9 or something like that.
Like, it's literally less than a 1% difference.
So it's like, why?
Why would I bother?
And like, that's it.
That's, that's literally all you need.
You don't have to come up like, oh, I got this data from Zero Hedge or like rightwingnewsnow.com slash cumbucket or whatever like crazy retarded sites that, you know, people pull some wacky ass news from.
It's like, just pull it, just use the CDC's data.
And it's like, okay, I don't need it.
I'm good.
Thanks.
Oh, and the whole natural immunity thing too has been beaten to death.
Everybody knows that there's like they're just ignoring that.
But the real thing is they're saying that, oh, well, we don't know exactly how effective natural immunity is or how long it lasts, right?
And yet we've got mountains of evidence of people getting vaxed and then getting sick.
And sure, there are people who have gotten COVID a couple times, but it's like, well, why would I want big pharma advanced technology pumped into my veins rather than rolling the dice with my own immune system, especially if I got it and wasn't that sick and I'm good to go?
It's just, I don't, I don't, you know, there's a lot of people out there coping too, right?
When you, when you, the old Upton Sinclair line, it's, it's tough to explain somebody, something to somebody when his salary depends on him not understanding it.
And I think our guys know it, but that's a pretty to say no and to risk getting fired is a big boy moment.
It's talking about putting on your big boy pants.
You know, it's tough.
It's tough.
I get it, but time for choosing.
All right.
Yeah.
Let's do let's do navigating the collapse.
It's been a, I think we haven't had it too often, and I want to give it some good airtime here before we start to begin to land this puppy.
Mr. Producer informs me it is seven minutes and 10 seconds.
The great Nathaniel Scott, let's see what's in the hopper this week.
Welcome to Navigating the Collapse with your host, Nathaniel Scott.
Hunting season is here, and with it comes butchering season.
Many hunters decide to take their catch to a professional to save them some work.
However, they all need to know how to field dress an animal before taking it to the butcher.
As failing to field dress within two hours after an animal's death can start to spoil the meat.
I can't teach you over audio in the next few minutes, but I can give you a general idea to start with.
If you're the ideal listener, you'll seek out more specific advice and videos and put it into practice.
If you're not, maybe one or two things will stick in your head, and you can survive long enough to find the first guy.
This guide will have a deer in mind, but I tried to make the tips applicable to many different animals.
First off, have the necessary equipment.
You'll need a very sharp knife, multiple sharp knives, and or a knife sharpener.
Ensuring your knife is sharp will make everything much easier.
Rope will enable you to hang your quarry, giving you a very convenient workspace.
Gloves can help if you're a little squeamish, or want to ensure you aren't exposed to disease, and some kind of cooler will prevent the meat from spoiling too quickly.
Once you have caught your prey, it's time to field dress it.
Do this as quickly as possible after the animal is dead.
Position it on a downward slope, with its head at the top of the slope.
This will help you remove the internal organs.
You don't want anything in the digestive tract getting on your meat.
It's got one way out, so cut around that area, detaching it from the rest of the body.
Depending if it's a doe or a buck, cut around the gender-specific areas.
Listen, I'm doing my best here.
This is a family show.
Then carve a slit in the gut, up to the bottom of the ribcage, being very careful not to puncture the stomach or intestines.
Start pulling out the digestive tract.
This next part is a bit difficult to explain, so a video is probably your best option.
But basically, you reach up under the ribcage, cut the diaphragm, get a hold of the esophagus, cut it, and then pull everything out.
Heart, lungs, liver, digestive tract, etc.
You'll need to use your knife a little bit, so don't be shy, but just make sure not to cut open that stomach.
Now that you've taken it out, don't throw away the heart and liver.
They can be some of the most nutritious parts of the animal.
You can also eat other organs like the lungs and kidneys, although it's not as commonly eaten and might take a bit more work.
If you want to have a better understanding, there are about a million videos of good old white boys gutting deer on YouTube.
Everyone has their own method, and the only way that's wrong is the one that spoils the meat.
H.P. Lovecraft was a writer from Rhode Island, best known for his horror, science fiction, and cat.
Lovecraft initially supported monarchy and wished America was governed by an aristocracy.
However, he became a socialist during the Great Depression.
His form of socialism was directly opposed to Marxist socialism, and he occasionally described it as fascism.
His writings often contain a racial subtext, such as miscegenation in the shadow over Insmouth.
While he wasn't as well known for it, he also published several pieces of poetry.
Here is Lines on General Robert Edward Lee by H.P. Lovecraft Whilst martial echoes o'er the wave resound, and Europe's gore incarnadines the ground, Today no foreign hero we bemoan, but count the glowing virtues of our own.
Illustrious Lee, around whose honored name Entwines a patriot's and a Christian's fame, with whose just praise admiring nations ring, and whom repenting foes contritely sing.
When first our land fraternal fury bore, and Sumter's guns alarmed the anxious shore, When factions reign ancestral rights o'erthrew, And sundered states a mutual hatred knew, Then clashed contending chiefs of kindred line, In flesh to suffer, and in fame to shine.
But o'er them all, majestic in his might, rose Lee, unrivaled to sublimest height.
With torturing choice, defied opposing fate and shunned temptation for his native state.
Thus, Washington, his monarchs ruled, o'erturned, when young Columbia with rebellion burned.
And what in Washington the world reveres in Lee with equal magnitude appears.
Our nation's father, crowned with victory's bays, enjoys a loving land's eternal praise.
Let then our hearts with equal reverence greet his proud successor, rising o'er defeat.
Around his greatness, pour disheartening woes, but still he towers above his conquering foes.
Silence, ye jackal herd that vainly blame the unspotted leader by a traitor's name.
If such was Lee, let blushing justice mourn, and traitorous liberty endure our scorn.
As Philippeman once sublimely strove and earned declining Hellas's thankful love, so followed Lee the purest patriot's part and waked the worship of the grateful heart.
The South her soul embodied form discerns, the north from Lee a nobler freedom learns.
Attend, ye sons of Albion's ancient race, whate'er your country and whate'er your place.
Lee's valiant deeds, though dear to southern song, to all our Saxon strain as well belong.
Courage like his, the parent island won, and led an empire past the setting sun.
To realms unknown, our laws and language bore, raised England's banner on the desert shore, crushed the proud rival, and subdued the sea for ages past and aeons yet to be.
From Scotia's hilly bounds the pean rolls, and Afric's distant cape great Lee extols.
The sainted soul and manly mien combine to grace Britannia's and Virginia's line.
As dullards now in thoughtless fervor prate of shameful peace and sing the unmanly state.
As churls their piping reprobations shriek and damn the heroes that protect the weak.
Let Lee's brave shade the timid throng accost and give them back the manhood they have lost.
What kindlier spirit, breathing on from on high, can teach us how to live and how to die?
All right.
Thank you, Nathaniel Scott.
Good reminder.
It is hunting season out there, I believe, depending on where you live.
And I will shamefully admit, I still have never shot a deer, nor is it field stripped or field dressed?
I can never remember.
Field stripping is for guns.
That's right.
Field dressing is for animals.
I feel like, you know, stripping those guts out would still work.
And I've also never read any Lovecraft either.
Shame on me.
Two bucket list things to do for any real man out there.
Read your Lovecraft, preferably while up in a tree stand, about to take down some dinner for your family.
Just got to get out there and do it.
All right, I'll put it on the list.
Dressing in deer's not so bad.
Yeah, I think it's probably, it seems like one of those things where you like psych yourself out that it's going to be like really gross and really hard to do, right?
And then you just do it.
Well, it's good if we have to.
The butthole is the most dangerous part.
Yeah.
Always.
Speaking of buttholes, go ahead, Sam.
Sorry.
No, that wasn't to say I've done it before, but I had somebody guiding me, you know?
And so, yeah, it's not bad.
Yeah.
And yeah, I did actually.
JO is a big YouTube guy, and he's always like quick on the YouTube links.
He's like, here you go.
This is the best, you know, field field dressing.
Mental hang up about that one uh video for deer and stuff like that.
So use those resources.
And I get to get the Mossberg out, got a rickety old tree stand and then like one of those metal ladders up on a property here and deer everywhere the the, the dog barks at him.
It's so wonderful to have a new home alarm alarm system with a dog that actually has ears that work for poor Mako and actually has some some bite to to go along with it.
Um, really overjoyed if you don't have any sort of animal at home.
And young kids, uh, just seeing the kids cuddle up with that pooch and seeing her trotting around with her tail wagon on a beautiful fall day uh, it has sincerely made my heart sing and I will give credit my wife was the one who did it, because the the flip side of that is that uh, going from having a dog to not having a dog, I was like huh, life sure is easier without having to worry about, you know,
taking them for walks and cleaning up after messes and food here and fleas and ticks and vet appointments and stuff like that.
But lots of things in life would be a lot easier without them.
But they're not necessarily richer, so get a pooch for your kids if you can.
Uh, the only other thing I had here in the hopper was uh, listening to Nat Scott Do Lovecraft.
I recently narrated Leon De Grell And The Waffen Ss for the Voices Of The Past project and i'll tell you he it was in my head trying to take on.
You know, i've, i've narrated Pierce uh before.
I did two Pierce recordings and obviously this show.
But taking to Grell's words and bringing them back to life, I don't think he ever gave that.
Maybe he did give, give that speech, but there's not a recording of it.
So uh, having him in my head, trying to do justice to him while also not trying to be, you know, falsely pretentious, or he had a very strong way, a flair of speaking that I wasn't going to try to imitate, but regardless, i'll put that link in the show notes and it's a wonderful reminder of the glories and the nobility and the sacrifices of the Waffen Ss.
If you hear Waffen Ss and you think bad guys, evil henchmen of Hitler, then you are still programmed.
You are gay, you are, you are bad and you should feel bad.
You look gay.
Look, if you still have hang-ups about swastikas and national socialism and all this other stuff, you're simply not going to make it.
Okay, if you're not willing to strike at the, the heart and soul of the issue, the Jewish race, you are never going to make it.
You are just a roadblock on the path to victory.
Yep, and communism.
Communism, bad Chikoms, bad America Capitalism, heck.
Yeah, i'm sorry, but you're still re you're.
You're gay and retarded.
Yes, you are.
You are, in fact, a nigger faggot.
What we're we're?
Bully, siding you right now.
Dear, not truly red-pilled listener, we were all there.
Now we're saying it with humility to a certain extent, I was.
I was, oh god, Mp's having some fun at the the soundboard.
God bless him Hey, coach.
Anyway, listen to this.
There's nothing that scares the Jew more than a national socialist.
I got your back, Hitler.
A million white men under arms from virtually every European country, including a handful from America, sacrificing everything, leading from the front.
These weren't some rear echelon MFs.
These were not officers in their little train cars sending other men to die.
They were out there at the front line, suffered horrendous casualties.
And I guarantee you they didn't cuck even when they were staring up at the field dying out.
These were men.
Yeah, these were men that stood their ground and fought knowing that they were going to be slaughtered or worse than that, captured by the Russians and chose to do so in order to buy the civilians that they were fighting for time to escape so that they would not be raped to death by Russians.
Bolsheviks.
Asiatic hordes.
Yes.
I do not hate Russians and the Soviet Union certainly did employ plenty of Mongols and other Siberian beasts.
Not to mention, of course, the Jewish commissars goading them on to do their worst.
Rape, kill, rape the Hun.
I forget the Soviet propagandist who said that, but yep.
Common probably gook.
Some gave all, all gave some, or vice versa.
Sam, was that a hey coach drop that Mr. Producer dropped, or was that actually you saying it?
No, that was me actually saying it.
Yeah.
Hey, coach.
If we got a few minutes left, I just wanted to bookend some of the little story I was telling in the first half if we got time.
Have at my brother.
Yeah.
I carve my pumpkin like a retard.
Every single year, grug mindset.
You just take a steak knife, a couple triangles for the eyes and the nose, and then a terrible smile.
But go ahead.
No, yeah, you got to get the, you got to get the right tools.
You buy this little kit.
It's, it's literally, you get it from the dollar bill store, and it's got a little saw in there that you can cut very precisely.
It also has the scooper in there where you can kind of scrape the sides of the inside of the pumpkin and get all the guts out.
And then you could separate the seeds, wash off all the pulp, separate that in a colander, and then you can make your pumpkin seeds, which are great for snacking.
So that was really coming like the day or so before Halloween, you know, but it is a, it is also a, it's, it's a, it's a fun moment, just like when you're having any kind of family tradition, there's a certain joy in it.
But there's also that little bit of melancholy, like I feel like I'm pushing everyone to do this activity.
And I'm the one, you know, and there's moments where I'm the one left sitting there and I'm carving away and working at it and rolling up my sleeves and everyone else is off doing something else.
And I got to drag people in to help me.
But, you know, even still, it's a joyful thing.
But there are those melancholic moments.
And that's, that's what I wanted to touch on for a moment because I can remember all the other children when they were little, you know, and then when they grow up and some of some of them are not there with me doing it, you know, this, and I wanted to mention that.
I know that some people, when I meet people, and, you know, I think some people have the impression like I'm someone who's done everything right in life and I've succeeded in life in a sense because I have all these children.
I have seven children.
But, you know, no, no journey like that is without its blemishes or without its struggles, you know, and with several of with my sons, I have very close, warm relationship.
But with my daughters, well, with one daughter, she's really rather estranged, you know, and that shit really hurts, I got to admit, especially in those moments when you're carving pumpkin or doing something like that.
But, you know, my other daughter, she's kind of a little bit cool towards me, but, you know, and two of two of my kids, one son, one, one daughter, I think they're just like my one son described it.
They just have bad social skills, you know, which is unfortunate.
So, you know, sometimes they'll chime in and, oh, yeah, hey, dad, how's it going?
Like, like everything's fine.
But, you know, you want to say, you know, where you been?
How come, you know, you don't talk to me like my other sons or some of the other children talk to me all the time.
So, you know, that's, it's some of those things kind of come back to you.
I have an oldest daughter who is literally not my biological child.
I think I've mentioned that before, even though I raised her from when she was very little.
And as she's gotten older, she's kind of gone her own way a little bit, but, you know, remains on good terms.
And then I have three sons.
Two of them are, you know, just very extraordinarily talented and successful.
But then those lesser, those, the lower three, two daughters and one son, it's a little bit difficult.
You know, and I guess I'm telling this story because it is possible.
It's probably probably won't happen to Smasher or coach there, but maybe somebody out there could happen.
Or in case it does happen with you, you know, your kids do go through some kind of thing when maybe, I don't know, 19, 20, 21 years old, 22 years old, where they kind of, you know, they might go in some directions you don't like exactly.
I can remember even my sons who have done extremely admirably in life when they were that age and my wife would say something like, did you hear what he just said?
That's like such a lefty thing to say.
And I said, yeah, I know, I know, just sometimes you got to have an easy hand with these things.
And sure enough, after a couple of years, they became very much more, I guess, what we would call right-wing in their views.
And so my youngest daughter, I'm looking at it like that.
She's in that age range where I don't know that it serves any good interest for me to bully side, if I can use that.
Is that the right use of the term, Smasher?
You know, to bully, to bully too hard.
And maybe if you don't make yourself seem like the bad guy, they might come back after a little while.
So I just thought I'd mention, those are some thoughts that came to me while I was sitting there by myself carving the pumpkin.
Sure.
Well, you know, Sam, you know, the fact that they're alive and they're still, you know, healthy, not to set too low of an example, right?
But I'm just, you know, thinking about the truth be told, I was watching this damn show.
What's it called?
Not great as cat.
It's a reality show about the yacht and uh below deck, below deck.
It's, I don't know if it's on Bravo or whatever.
You stream it.
It's actually a great reality show.
This sounds like a terrible distraction from what you're saying.
But long story short, the captain lost his son to opiates and they had on a bunch of guests.
Now, the guests on the ship were total Cretan Jews, but they lost a child to opiates.
And just seeing the two of them talk about the loss, the death of a child to drugs made me think, oh boy, man.
Count your blessings, right?
Knock on.
That's just it.
As long as you are alive, you have a chance to do better in things.
And like I said, my life is not perfect, unfortunately.
But in your life, you may go through these times where you are very acutely aware of things you could have done differently or done better.
And, you know, that's true of everybody, though.
And also, that's a little bit of a trap because everybody, of course, in hindsight 2020, you think you know better, but who's to say that even that conclusion would be right, anyways?
So the thing is, I would rather have tried to do the right thing and failed in some part of it than to not have tried to do the right thing at all.
And so exactly like you say, they are, they're all alive, they're all healthy.
We did have two miscarriages along the way, but those that I have here, they're all alive and healthy.
And I can just remember that time, like what our brother Nate is going through with his wife, you know, getting ready to give birth and how, you know, you're going through all kinds of feelings of being a little bit scared, but excited and happy, but worried, and all those things.
And as long as they're alive and you have them, you know, then there's the chance to do better.
So, you know, those are some of my thoughts on the day before Halloween and Halloween.
And on the day of Halloween, actually, we talked a little bit about that, but the day after was, of course, All Saints Day.
And we went to Mass again, you know, two days in a row, Sunday, and then into All Saints Day.
And so we're in the church there on All Saints Day.
And I'm watching the communion line go ahead of me there.
And I see this skinhead in line.
And I'm like, well, at first, I'm looking like, okay, just because you have a bald head, that doesn't mean you're a skinhead, you know.
So I'm watching him and he comes around, he goes to communion, he comes around the side, and he's coming forward.
And then I see the big 10-hole oxblood Doc Martins ladder laced all the way up with, you know, white laces.
I thought, oh, this is our guy.
He had a leather jacket on, which is not necessarily what skins always wear, but he had the shaved head.
He had the whole thing going on.
I said, so then I gestured to my wife.
I said, hey, you know, I'm trying to get her attention.
And, you know, I must be doing something wrong because anytime I do this, whoever I'm trying to get their attention, they're not looking around.
I guess you're not supposed to look around or be distracted during Mass, but I guess I just, that's just the way my mind works.
Maybe just over the course of three seconds, I might take in a lot of information, you know, because I don't feel like I'm looking around, but I did notice this guy.
So I turned to my wife and I give her the hey.
I try to get her to look.
And then she gives me this dirty look and she thinks I'm looking at this girl.
I said, no, no, no.
And then I said, the skinhead.
And she said, oh, yeah, I saw that guy walking around earlier.
So the mass was over.
And I started, I got up right away and I turned around and I looked.
I want to see if I could spot him, you know, and I didn't, I didn't see him, but I guess I'm just mentioning this as I'm, is now that I'm new in this parish, I'm looking for our guys, you know, and so I mentioned the couple I talked to and now this guy.
So I got to check this guy out.
There you go.
One more quick thing or a couple of quick things I was going to say here.
I received in the mail the our year 2022 calendar.
That's right.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
What a beautiful project this is.
And Clarion gave me a nice, very lovely little note with it that was very complimentary to our show and the time we were able to talk with her together and everything.
And I'm just telling people, I think that they're already having trouble keeping up with the demand because I said, I want to.
I wanted a second print.
Yeah.
I said, I want to buy some more of these because I want to give them for Christmas.
And so just because they're running low on supplies, I don't want anyone to be discouraged.
Go to ourpeopleouryear.com.
Get your order in and try to get this.
This is a beautiful calendar, very thoughtfully done.
I mean, you know, and it includes the inspiring as well as the sobering things.
Like in January, they talk about the holodomor and things like that.
But there's, you know, the happy days to celebrate as well as more serious things to keep in mind throughout the year.
And this calendar will be going up in my kitchen, let me tell you.
That's right.
If we go into any of our guys' houses and we don't see this calendar on the wall, we see some other crap commercial calendar on the wall or ripping them off.
And we're going to have a bonfire in the back of Mr. Producer's house with his cat calendar on the wall.
So, you know, get that if you can.
And then also a coach you sent me.
I don't know who provided it, it's from you or from somebody else.
This Walter Daray, A New Nobility of Blood and Soil.
I got that book you sent me a couple of weeks ago.
Was that like a donation from somebody or are you just giving me a gift here?
No, Antelope Hill sent that to us.
They sent one to Smasher, two to me, and then I, you know, I forwarded on to you.
So that's on our reading list to talk about that in terms of I started reading it.
I was just finishing up Let Them Look West, which I did finish.
And I started reading this.
Let me tell you, you better, if you're going to read this book, you better, first of all, set aside a little extra time to read Ahab's introduction or his foreword, which is quite a few pages.
You know, it's a little book unto itself.
But no, I'm kidding.
It's very, very well done.
Warren is a brilliant guy and a good friend.
But I've been tearing into this book, and it's really good.
I mean, just like the name says, New Nobility talks about what is a nobility, what has happened with the nobility, like the Germanic, you know, before the eighth century versus the Deutsch or the German since the eighth century and all those things.
Very interesting.
And I recommend that one.
Hell yeah.
Finally, I wanted to mention, I know it sounds a little funny in a sense, plugging another podcast on our own podcast.
And I could sit here and talk about for probably 30 minutes the 15 or 20 other podcasts that I love.
And I try to bounce around and listen to.
But I'm just going to mention this one, The White Power Hour on Halloween.
They had Katie 8 on there.
It's episode 103.
I would encourage everybody, go listen to that one.
That's a really good episode.
And she's a really unique talent.
She's kind of like uh, I guess you would.
You could say you could understand her.
Her style is that she's very inspired by the misfits, so it's sort of uh, it's definitely got the skinhead feel to it, but it's it's also uh, a touch of uh like goth and a touch of metal to it, and so she's she's uh, she's the host for the show um, so so check out Katie 8 on episode 103.
And uh also, i'm going to take this moment to bully side.
Use that word again, bully side.
I'm going to bully side, coach into getting on there.
And I I yes yes, I got my assignment sam, I got my marching orders.
I, finally I got a due date.
See uh, you know, bureaucrat gang needs a deadline.
Yep, that's right that I got a deadline.
So that you know, i've got like about 25 tabs open in my browser.
I'm like a cat lady looking at uh, I don't know yeah, but it's all these different tracks and uh yeah, having the due date uh, i'm gonna get those tracks to them and then do my little uh commentary.
Yeah, I was only going to say that.
You know, when we say white power hour, this does not necessarily mean literally 60 minutes of material that you have to provide.
Typically, those shows are like two hours long and, you know, even if you felt like you could only come up with whatever x amount of tracks, I would say it'd be better to do something than nothing, and I think it would be a real hoot to have you on there first.
First of all, be such a change of pace for that show, and it would be.
It would generate a lot of interest, and just to hear you on there, I think people would get such a hoot out of it and maybe some of our listeners would go over there and and listen to uh, White Power HOUR.
It's amen, you know, here's.
Here's what I say about that.
Okay, we all, occasionally we get blown out on listening to podcasts where it's just like I can't listen to any more podcasts.
You should have White Power HOUR in your Telegram feed or something, and you need breaks or you need to mix it up.
Go over there and just listen to something.
You know, Mark does his rants on there a little bit, but it's mostly music and uh, it's, it's good.
You hear different things and you might hear something you like.
So that's all about that.
Yep no I, I can't wait.
Yeah, the only challenge with that was I.
I have such a a deep background in the commercial stuff and then not so much in the pro white stuff.
And to Jay Hate's uh credit.
He was like no, we're not, we're not boosting these, you know whatever.
Like some European dj with skinny jeans, he's like, keep, keep it pro white.
You can mix in maybe one or two if it's really important to you there, coach.
So uh yeah, just required a little little bit more work and a little bit more exposure to our guys, of course uh, Zurius and Cyber Nazi being most prominent, and that would play some of my parodies.
No, mr producer, this is my show.
Play what I want to play.
Yeah, my tyranny.
Yeah no, i'm really.
You should just get really good at beatboxing.
Yeah it's, it's really good.
I mean, it's, it's fun.
And even on that channel I think it was on that channel, you know Brutal Attack AND Blue-eyed Devils just played in Mexico City.
Oh, so I mean that's kind of ballsy Ballsy, if you think about it.
Oh, yeah.
So you can see some of that, those excerpts, some video there of them playing.
I think that's really cool.
They played all these interesting places in the world.
I mean, not that Europe and America is not interesting.
Yeah.
But I think it's cool that our guys go everywhere, go everywhere and play.
Yep.
Amen.
All right.
Thank you, Sammy, baby.
My toes are about to fall off.
It's only November 5th.
What's going to cut?
I'm going to have to go in the shed, aren't I?
I'm going to have to go in the cuck shed to record.
No, I know.
I got a big propane heater out here, but I'm so cheap.
I'm like, nah, I'll just tough it out.
Makes for dramatic content.
Anyway, thank you, Sammy Baby.
Potato Smasher, thank you.
Great to be with you again, brother.
Hell yeah.
Glad to be back.
All right.
Same.
And Rolo, my man, thank you so much for being with us.
Glad to be here.
Long show this week, Gabby Guts.
That's what happens when you skip a week.
Anyway, all right.
Full House 107 was recorded on a literally freezing November 4th.
I'm looking over there just below 30.
Now, November 5th, 2021.
Follow us on Telegram at ProWhiteFam and on gab at gab.com/slash fullhouse.
Good engagement over there recently.
And check the show notes for all the good stuff that was mentioned during the show.
And of course, givesendgo.com/slash fullhouse if you want to throw some shekels.
And to all of our guys in the dock at some Jewish show trial in Charlottesville, including the loose cannons, the weirdos, the supremely arrogant, and also the great guys who are there, and even the absent ones still on the run on the lamb.
We are pulling for total Aryan victory for all of you against this Jewish law fair.
Mr. Producer, this week we're going out with something a little atypical.
We're going to call this DJ Potato Smasher New Delhi style.
He uncovered a lovely Hindu nursery rhyme.
Yes, really back to our Aryan roots.
Very fixed, but return to the Ganges.
But parents, content warning.
This one is a little racy and it features a certain word that you may not want your kids to hear unless they are already totally based and you guys are really candid under the roof.
That is the word.
Anyway, so let it rip if you don't care if they hear the N-word.
And if not, just cut it right here.
But this.
I don't care if your kids hear the N-word.
I'm going to tell them.
The white race is being genocided, and white men are afraid to say nigger.
There you go.
This is 10 Little Nigger Boys.
This is Full House.
And we love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
See ya.
White pal.
10 little nigga boys going out to dine.
One over nine.
Nine little nigga boys sat up very late.
One overslept himself and then they were eight.
Eight little nigga boys traveling in the morning.
One said he'd stay there and then there were seven.
Seven little nigger boys dropping up states.
One chopped himself hot and then there were six.
Six little nigger boys playing with a hive.
One bumblebee's come one and then there were a five.
Five little nigger boys playing on the floor.
One bitch is thumbnail, and then there were four.
Four little nigger boys going up to sea.
A red herring swallowed one, and then there were three.
Three little nigger boys walking in a zoo.
A big girl hugged one, and then there were two.
Two little nigger boys sitting in the sun.
One got frizzled up, and then there was one.
One little nigger boy living all alone.
He got married, and then there were nine.
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