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Jan. 24, 2022 - Full Haus
02:14:59
20220124_Patriotic_Parents
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Time Text
Ours is a transnational cause because at root it is a racial struggle.
Now that's not to say that there is a global white nationalist conspiracy afoot, although it would be a lot cooler if there were.
But the same atrocities perpetuated against our people in North America are, of course, also well underway in Europe, South Africa, Australia, and frankly anywhere there are white people by the same means, by the same perps.
You, white listener, are to be a virtual slave if you're not one already.
Worker, taxpayer, platitude repeater, and also a race mixer, garbage and debt consumer, COVID-compliant surf, until you're dead or your posterity is mixed into oblivion.
And there's no shortage of reasons to be skeptical of our prospects or critical of our efforts to date.
The overwhelming majority of our time consists of day-to-day life management, jobs, kids, chores, and the such, and then chit-chatting with our kindred or posting the same idea repackaged a million times over to whatever social media we may still be clinging to.
Now, this may not be true for our special guests this week, but I bet it largely is for the majority of you listening.
And yet, there remains a fire in our minds, a burning in our souls, and a growing stone-cold worldwide awareness that we, all we sons and daughters of Europe, are in this terrible timeline together.
And to escape this death rattle requires positivity, proactivity, and a devil-may care approach to our enemies.
New parents, Sam Melia and Laura Teller from the United Kingdom, are in the white room with us tonight for another transatlantic special, and it's go time.
Mp hit it.
Welcome everyone
to full house.
Episode 115, the world's most Anglo respecting show, except for a prickly Irishman in our midst, for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
I am your Winter Doldrum's emancipated host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of content intended to be listenable if I were in your shoes.
That's true.
I try to make stuff that I would want to listen to, hypothetically, and often do.
Anyway, before we meet the birth panel and our very honored guests this week, big thanks to David, who said he only sends support to shows and groups that do good work.
Thank you, David, and we will continue to do so, good sir.
Might call you King David going forward if that doesn't bother you too much.
If you'd like to be like King David, please do check us out at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
And do not forget, please, dear listener, to purchase and watch Sacrificing Liberty before our very special show with USS Liberty survivors later this week.
All right, enough of me.
Let's get down to business.
First up, he almost renounced his American citizenship and attempted to defect to the UK upon the very first time he heard white power by screwdriver.
It's true.
I didn't make that one up.
Sam, how are you, buddy?
Samuel.
We'll call you Samuel this week.
All right.
All right.
Good.
Good.
Well, first of all, coach, I hope you're ready for some snow because you got some big snow coming your way.
We just got dumped on today.
You're bad.
Yeah, I had to fire up the uh my French snowblower.
All the writing on the console is in French for some reason and got it snowblowed and all that.
But yeah, it's it's uh I'm excited to talk to our guests today.
Uh, you know, the this in America, if you are 50 percent of some ethnicity, it's like you're a purebred, really.
And uh, you know, I'm I'm uh whatever, probably six or seven ethnicities that I know of.
And uh, but but also in America, if you are even 10 something and there's some sort of uh reason for you to signal that uh ethnicity, then um that that makes you like a hundred percent, whatever that thing is.
So, sure.
So, I am a little bit English, and uh uh so I'm excited to to talk about that.
Uh, I did get my order in for the uh the four DVDs with the the uh uh USS Liberty, so that'll be really excellent.
Excellent, Sam.
Are you listening to music as you sit there?
There's some some some little jingle going on in the background, but anyway, a phone, a phone call started coming in through the computer for some reason.
I don't know what the hell that is.
Good deal.
I didn't want you to be innovating on this very special show and like adding a little background track.
That's all right, but yes, uh, good to see you, big guy.
I too have a little bit of Anglo in me, ironically, through my Irish grandfather.
He was like 80% Irish and 20% Anglo, something like that.
That couldn't be that much.
Well, whatever.
But you know what I mean?
It's like people in this country, they're some small percent of something and suddenly they're entirely that thing, you know?
Oh, absolutely.
Yep.
You know, in America, we're just Americans, I guess.
Amen.
All right.
Well, he is AWOL this week.
No Smasher.
I don't know if this is his version of an Irish strike due to our guests.
Of course not.
He said he was excited to come on.
Oh, he's calling right now.
Let's see.
All right.
I can't hear you, buddy, but you're on the show.
Anyway, join the show.
Can you hear me?
Hello.
Hey, what's up?
I was just doing your intro.
You're live on the show right now.
My soul said Lowe's right now.
Oh, okay.
Just hop on when you can.
All right.
Yeah.
All right.
I'll be back at his place in like 30 minutes.
All right.
See you, buddy.
Okay.
There he is.
Anyway, Smasher will be joining us.
Real, real innovations this week.
Let's move on to the much besmirched man without whom we'd be lost at sea, like Lord Nelson after a coolie broke his chronometer.
Rolo, you ready to go this week?
As ready as I'll ever be, Coach.
Good enough for now.
And finally, our very special and patient guests.
First up in order of traditional hierarchy, Sam Melia is a British nationalist, a regional organizer for Patriotic Alternative in Yorkshire, a proud new white father.
And I hear the meanest, nastiest SOB on the internet.
Sam, how's it going, big guy?
Honored to have you on.
I am well known for being just a horrible, a horrible B-word, I guess.
I should be used to not swearing, considering we do tea time on Mondays and we're supposed to be doing a clean show there, but I seem to break it every week.
But it's fantastic to be on.
I've been a fan since the good old days, but probably, yeah, all 150 in shows I've listened to.
So it's amazing to finally be on here.
Oh, a gentleman of rare distinction and taste and shows for sure.
And also, coach, we we share the same preference in pilot pens as well.
My man, the V5.
Get that uniballed crap away from me, Rolo.
You look more like an inkwell and feather pen or whatever those things are called there, Sam.
But yeah, the Japanese pilot is good enough.
Hey, I suppose that your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood statuses are easy to roll through here, big guy, but go ahead and lay them on us just for the formality.
Ethnicity, I'm half English and half Welsh.
Basically the same thing.
I know you Americans, Anglo is kind of incorporates the entire United Kingdom, but we've waged war over less.
So yeah, half English, half Welsh.
And religion, I don't really have one.
I was raised by one kind of LGBT Christ kind of, you know, everyone loved everyone on my mum's side.
And then my dad's side was atheist.
So didn't have the best upbringing in religion.
So I've ended up coming out of it kind of agnostic.
And then I'm married to the lovely lady next to me and with the lovely lady in the Moses basket on the floor here who's sleeping at the moment.
And hopefully she remains that way for a little while longer at least.
Amazing.
Welcome on.
It's so good to see you.
And really, I was all smiles when I got the email that said that you guys listened to the show and wanted to come on.
I was like, yeah, I think we can make that happen.
And we want to dig into all things about, you know, how you guys met and how the baby's going.
And then also politics writ large and the UK, patriotic alternative and all that.
So we got a jam-packed first hour here.
And let's make progress while Smasher is not with us before he derails us.
And finally, of course, perhaps the reigning queen of most trusted and respected pro-white women on the planet.
And I'm not even joking about that.
She is the brains to Mark Collett's brawn, the honesty to Tommy Robinson's dishonesty.
And of course, the purveyor of the finest teas the world has seen since the East India Company.
All true, fam.
And she's also a new mom.
She's in her PJs there.
And it's so lovely to have on.
Laura Teller, welcome to Full House.
Hey, thanks for having me.
I do apologize.
I'm sat here in my pajamas.
I wasn't expecting to go on camera.
Yeah, it's lovely to be here.
And Sam listening to your show in the car.
So I often listen to it too with him.
And we really enjoy it, don't we?
It's one of the few shows that you don't mind me playing when you're.
Yeah.
Some of the shows you listen to are just stupid.
If it's Full House on that, yeah, that's fine.
We'll listen to Full House.
Awesome to hear.
And Laura, let's do it.
Let's do the bit.
Ethnicity, religion, and motherhood status, please, my lady.
Okay, so I am English, entire English.
Both my mum and dad are English.
And religion.
So I was raised Church of England.
So I was christened.
And then we went to church until, I think until I was about 13 or 14.
And then I kind of lost interest in it.
I'm sure you meet a lot of people like this.
You become a teenager.
You're no longer interested.
You just want to hang out with your mates, that kind of thing.
So I don't really have religion in my adult life, but me and Sam actually went back to church last year as adults.
And did we go three times?
Three times.
It was three times, but the church was, they were just preaching about refugees and it was just a proper list of the church.
And we were both like, we just can't be doing with this.
So we stopped going.
But I don't know, kind of, not a very spiritual person, but then I do kind of want to get involved a bit as well.
So yeah, I guess I would say Church of England, but not religiously.
And then motherhood status, I gave birth to my daughter four weeks ago, first child.
And yeah, we're hoping to have more children in the future, aren't we?
I need a break in between.
I need to have a rest and recover.
But yeah, we're hoping to have to have more as well, all being well.
Amazing.
Yeah, God willing.
We certainly hope so.
It was so nice to see that smiling photo.
I guess probably the day that she arrived.
And I guess let's talk about it now, if you don't mind, before we do the relationship background, because that's of interest too.
We are going to try to keep this one cozy and comfy.
Did you deliver her at a hospital?
Was it, you know, COVID nonsense?
Did they make you wear a mask?
Or how did you bring her into the world?
Aside from the obvious physiological aspects.
Yeah, we did go to a hospital.
We actually wanted to have a bit more of a natural birth and give birth in a like a midwife unit.
But unfortunately, when we got into hospital, they told us that they thought something was wrong with our daughter's throat.
And they kind of just, they didn't really have any evidence to suggest that something was wrong.
It was.
You had a bit of excess fluid.
Yeah.
They couldn't explain it.
Therefore, it must be the worst case scenario.
So they thought her throat was connected to her lungs, which meant that if she'd fed, she would have drowned herself.
Oh, boy.
And that got sprung on us when we were coming into the delivery.
So we think it could be this.
And it was like, okay.
It's like, is this going to be bad?
And they're like, could be fatal.
It was like, okay.
And yeah, so we kind of had that to worry about.
But it also meant that your natural childbirth kind of went out the window, didn't it?
The idea of being in a birthing pool, having being having like a midwife-led birth instead of a doctor-led birth, that went out the window.
And instead, it meant that you had to have heart rate monitors for the director.
Strapped to a machine for the whole thing.
It was just very medical.
There were like surgeons coming in and out all the time and that.
So yeah, we had a hospital birth.
And then as soon as our daughter, Catherine, was born, they just, they, they basically ruled it out, didn't they?
Well, she had an x-ray.
They did it wrong.
Then they did another x-ray.
And they were like, oh, no, she's fine.
There's nothing wrong with her.
So yeah, we were happy, but it just meant that we had to have a hospital birth instead.
But regarding COVID, the midwife we were with actually called it the pandemic.
So I think we got kind of lucky because our midwife was sort of on board with everything.
But it wasn't too strict.
No, not at all.
The hospital itself, I don't know if American hospitals are like they are on TV shows where there's just bustling.
It's like the people always at least the ones where we are are just the hallways are empty.
You never see anyone kind of walking around.
There's always like one person down like the far end of a hallway, but it's never that busy.
And I mean, there's signs all over saying wear your mask, wear your mask and everything.
But no one challenged me on it because I was in and out a bit more than you were.
But no one challenged her at all.
There was no expectation of wearing a mask during the delivery or anything like that.
It was, but the signs were there that if you were weak wills, you'd be, oh, I've got to wear my mask.
And who knows, maybe some of the other people delivering were, but not us.
Yeah, maybe it could have depended on the staff that you got as I think we were really lucky with the staff that we got.
But they did ask you to do the, you had to do a test, didn't you, before you came in?
Oh, yeah, you know, there's lateral flow ones, the ones you just, you know, you're supposed to swab on your mouth.
Just we didn't even bother doing that, did we?
We just scanned.
You have to like scan it into the NHS app, like our national health service.
And their app wasn't working.
So I actually brought the physical one in and was like, it's negative.
And they're like, no, you've got to do the website.
And it's like, all right, but she's in labor.
So how can we get this going quickly?
It's like, I thought for sure if I actually had it with me in my pocket, they'd be like, oh, yeah, that's more, you know, proof.
But it wasn't.
So I think we went through, they were giving them away free at that point.
I think now they're charging people for them.
But if you're pregnant, you get them free from a pharmacy.
But we actually got out just in time as well, because when we got discharged, I think it was a day or two later, they made it where there was zero visitation unless it was end-of-life care.
So I wouldn't have been able to be with her possibly during the delivery.
I'm not sure how strict they would have been with that.
Oh, God, that would have been awful.
Yeah.
Were there other, yeah, go ahead, Tim.
Were there other?
Were there other mothers giving birth in the same time that?
Were there other mothers in the ward when you were?
Yeah, I could hear the woman in the room next door to me screaming during the whole thing.
Yeah, she was.
I remember.
Hopefully it was in English.
Yeah well, you get your own reason.
The only reason I mention is it was a number of my children were being born and we were literally one of two people even there to give birth at that time.
You know, it was weird to me like like, in this busy metropolitan area, it's me and one other family that's having a baby.
It's a little hard to believe, you know, but uh anyways, I was just curious.
I remember being terribly, terribly black pilled at the birth of our first and probably second and third, just by the demographics of the maternity ward.
Even before I was based in red pilled thinking, oh man, this is, this is not good.
But uh, how about that is?
Is your area pretty good in terms of the uh, the non-native influx?
You guys in a decent area?
Not really too bad.
So we're in Leeds, in Yorkshire, which is in the north of England um, and I think Leeds is about 80% white um, but it's different.
Like the city center is really really bad um, lots of students, lots of businessmen, like Chinese um, and then there's like north east, south and west leads uh, and our area is is quite white, but the other three are quite diverse, to use their language.
Yeah, there's like one which is full of Pakistanis, one which is full of Blacks, one which is full of students, so we're not too bad, but you can kind of see it creeping in around the edges um, but the villages are still quite white.
I mean, where my family live, I'd say it's 99% white.
So it's, it's really nice there, but it's.
You do see it creeping in, don't you?
Around the edges?
Oh yeah, yeah.
And then obviously we're right um, right around the corner from Bradford which um, I don't know if it's, if Americans know about Bradford, but Bradford used to be a kind of industrial powerhouse of the north, and then the mill owners who echo, they brought in cheaper labor, and that cheaper labor was of the Indian and Pakistani variant.
And now that Bradford is now basically theirs, they call it Braddystan because it's basically Pakistan.
Yeah, all the shops are Arabic and you know, selling shalavakamees, and there's like all their curry houses and textile shops and mosques everywhere instead of churches.
It's basically another country in in Yorkshire yeah, and I think the only areas of Bradford that are still white are on the south side and there's like some really poor enclaves were basically the ones who couldn't get out in time.
So yeah, it's just the kind of the poorest areas now are left that are white.
But yeah, you see it all over the country.
There's towns like this all over and especially Yorkshire in the north.
We've been hit really hard by immigration.
God bless you guys for standing up and being prominent in vocal opposition to it.
I always tell the audience that's that's the least you can do is to speak out.
I know you do more than that, but just to give a face and a name to people to trust and see that they're not alone too, right?
That they're not crazy, they're not bad people in recognizing that this is an evil being perpetrated against your country, against ours, all over the world.
Sometimes it's too dark to even contemplate.
You have to stare away from it somehow.
Yeah.
Well, it really, this type of immigration, it really upsets like the natural dynamic.
So in the area where I live, could I drive you to some areas that are all white or mostly white?
Sure.
It's basically rich people that live there who are paying to have a certain type of community that they live in.
But if I was to go door to door to these half million dollar, million dollar mansions that people live in, and I was to say, okay, what is the occupation of the of the adults that live in this house?
Oh, well, vice president of a bank, whatever, some superintendent of a school.
You know, you would go down the line and it would be all these very high-end type of career people, but that's not a natural community.
A natural community has firemen and the guy that works on cars and factory workers and yeah, a doctor and a lawyer and sure, maybe a bank president.
You know, there's got to be a mix, but the communities we have now are not natural or healthy.
If there's an all-white area, it's usually not that type of a diverse background of people living there.
And so you have to ask yourself, like, how viable is that?
You know, this is just like a false thing that is stratifying the community in a very unhealthy way.
Well, how about let's before we do the relationship thing too, we'll hop around here a little bit.
How did you guys wake up, get red-pilled, et cetera?
I guess for both of you, what was the process?
How did it happen?
I'll stop my line of questioning there before my wife busts my chops again.
Well, mine was quite early on where I grew up in Leeds, an area called Hare Hills.
When I was growing up, it was predominantly white.
I remember going to primary school there, elementary school for you guys.
And it was entirely white.
I think there might have been one or two Pakistanis in the class.
And around the age of six or seven, I remember seeing the first mosque being built.
And then my parents divorced when I was about seven.
And we moved away from the area.
And that area is now entirely Pakistani.
And there's a few Eastern European.
There's some Africans as well.
But basically, it's a non-white area.
It's, as Laura mentioned, with Bradford, all the shops are takeaways, they're sari shops, you know, the East Asian kind of fabrics or South Asian short.
And that was a big kind of awakening, seeing my essentially my hometown just getting completely darkened and not being at all what I would what I remember it being.
I think I think I drove you through it before Christmas, maybe late summer.
And I said, oh, that's where I grew up.
And across the road, there was someone who had spray painted Black Lives Matter on the wall, except that they'd missed the C out of black.
Which is all I was saying.
It's like, yeah, I mean, the C stands for colonialism.
Like, we have to get rid of that, you know?
Yeah, it's a completely different place now.
And it's like, that was a huge awakening.
Oh, somebody's.
There she is.
Let me tell you about where I grew up.
You think you got it, bad dad?
Look at the world I just came into.
But yeah, it's that.
And then a misspent teenagerhood on 4chan as well.
Kind of awakening.
All the elements that are involved.
Anyway, go ahead.
Yeah, we don't want the authorities.
All right.
And how about you, Laura?
I mean, obviously, most of our listeners are familiar with you.
But if not, you know, give them a little bit of background about yourself and what you're doing there.
Yeah.
oh bless her and so i i also grew up in it don't worry about it guys The audience will understand.
It's cute.
So I grew up in an area that was also entirely white.
And when my friend was 19, she went to university in Bradford, the area that we were just speaking about.
And I went to live with her while she was studying there.
And the area that we lived in was basically just 100% Pakistani Muslim.
And it was just such a wake-up call to me.
I remember the first night we went out looking, you know, just trying to figure out the area and find out where the shops were and stuff.
And we got followed by this group of Pakistani men who were like getting right in our faces and breathing on us and that kind of stuff.
And I lived there for two years.
In fact, I left early because I couldn't deal with it anymore, but I was supposed to live there for two years.
And the amount of times that we got chased, attacked, spat at, offered money for sex, we were told you're white slags, you're not welcome here.
There were times when we were like physically chased.
I remember once having to run into a shop and phone the police who came and picked us up and drove us home.
It was just horrible.
And every single time it were Pakistani Muslim men.
And I was just like, get me back to Leeds.
I just, I want to get away from this.
And I guess for a while, I was thinking, what is it?
Like, why are these different to our men?
And I kind of was stuck in the Islam bubble for a while, you know, thinking that Islam was the problem.
And then as I started traveling around the country, I went to places like London, Birmingham, Leicester, where they have high percentages of blacks rather than Pakistanis.
And then I realized that I was getting those problems with them as well.
I started to learn about demographics and, you know, the fact that we're on track to becoming a minority in our own country.
And I was just like, I totally, totally disagree with this.
And the area where I grew up, where it was entirely English, that's what I want the future of our country to be.
So yeah, I guess I figured out that I was a nationalist and I've been working in politics maybe about six years or something.
Bless you for that.
And I asked the same question to Tom Sewell.
What makes you different, Laura, that you decided, damn this, I'm not going to take it.
I'm going to do something about it rather than just biting your tongue and going about life.
Well, England just matters too much to me.
I just think we have too much to lose.
So I'm not going to sit back silently and watch my country be destroyed.
It just, it's my everything.
It's my world.
So I'm driven by a love for my people, really, and my homeland.
So anything that you throw at me, I'll I'll take.
And I think we maybe might get into this a bit later.
You know, our house being raided by counterterrorism and stuff because the opposition or the opposite choice is for us to lose our home.
And that's just not an option to us.
So yeah, it's a pleasure to work with Sam and people like Mark Collett at Patriotic Alternative.
And there's a really good community in Britain of people who've stood up and said, no, we're not going to take this.
And I think they're struggling to kind of pigeonhole us at the moment because a lot of the other nationalists or so-called nationalist organizations in the United Kingdom, they like to paint them as being, you know, football hooligans, people who like to go out and have a fight, people who are maybe not very intelligent.
And then with us, we have a lot of really thoughtful people, you know, professional people.
And we don't go out and have a fight.
And, you know, we don't go out and throw cans of beer everywhere and get into trouble and that kind of stuff.
So I think they're struggling to pigeonhole us.
But the route that the media are taking and the government is that we're just pure evil.
So it's not that we're thick or that we're thugs.
We're just pure evil.
In fact, we're so smart that we actually hide our true intentions behind doing good things like homeless outreach, litter picking.
But it's like secretly, they want to genocide everyone.
And it's like, right, okay.
So you can't, you can't win, basically.
It's like either way, you're going to get painted with the same brush.
But that's why we don't pay any attention to them and we just keep on pushing forward.
Yeah.
And some of the articles that you read about us are just so over the top.
They're just, they're just hilarious, the stuff that they write.
You can't take it seriously at all.
I think my effectiveness of my finger is waning.
I think she's going to need to.
Well, let's let's Sam, if Laura has to run there for a second, that's fine.
You can turn off the camera if she needs a boop.
That's fine.
Sam, did you ruthlessly pursue Laura or did you two crazy kids just happen to bump into each other at a patriotic alternative meet up?
What's the backstory there, big guy?
I think we'd known each other online for quite a while because we'd been obviously within the nationalist scene, it's like patriotic alternative only kind of came about two years ago.
But I think I've probably known Laura for four or five years, purely online until what, three years ago?
Was it?
We first met.
That pre-PA meeting, didn't we?
Yes.
Well, that's what I mean.
That was kind of the first time.
But I remember as soon as she walked through the door, I saw her.
I was like, wow.
And I think I've told you before, but I do think I did fall in love with her then.
Amazing.
And it was, I think it was after the first PA conference, you'd spoken.
And I just sat at the back of the room.
I was just a guest.
And you got in touch and you said, oh, you know, we should go.
I think that was it.
We'd spoken and you'd broken up with a boyfriend.
And I was like, interesting.
And then we'd spoke at the conference.
We realized that essentially we lived and grew up in the same city and we hadn't really spoken about it before.
But she grew up in West Leeds.
I was in East Leeds.
And, you know, a matter, it's not a big city.
It's like a matter of two, three miles talked.
And you said, oh, well, we should go for a tea or coffee sometime.
And I came back with a time and a date and a place.
Tomorrow.
It was.
So I wasn't wasting time.
And I mean, I mean, basically, you asked me out is what happened.
She's asking me for a tea.
There it is.
But we hit it off.
Yeah.
I don't think you thought it was a date, that first drink, did you?
I didn't.
Was it?
It wasn't my head.
And yeah, from there, I just kept asking you out, kind of taking the lead in things.
And we just hit it off really well.
I remember probably the first proper date we had.
There's something called Leeds Light Night.
And it's basically, there's all sorts of art displays around Leeds that are based around lights and fluorescence and all this kind of stuff.
And I'd planned out a route around Leeds to kind of see some of the best sounding ones.
And I showed up to the date and I had a piece of paper, things listed where they were and everything.
And Laura's got a little bit of OCD.
So she was quite impressed that I kind of organized everything.
But we had a really nice time and it culminated in a really underwhelming art display where it was supposed to be like boats that were like flying around on this canal that were lit up.
It was going to be beautiful.
And then we got there and it was, it looked like Christmas lights.
It was really bad.
And I was just like, do you want to just go get something to eat?
And we had a glass of wine, something to eat.
And yeah, from there, it's just been, I think after one year, we were married.
This little bundle of joys come along after two years.
Amazing.
So it's just been just been a whirlwind.
And we're still massively, very, very much in love.
And Ethan, it's really, really, really good.
I'm smiling through the mic.
I always say that when we're not on camera, but you can see me warming my heart.
But how about, I mean, Sam, it's not easy being married to one of those strong, independent women's, right?
Especially not a prominent one.
You know, how do you, I mean, I guess you knew what you were in for already, right?
So you just, it works, it works for you guys.
Yeah.
The thing with Laura is she's, it's, it's not a case of like, I'm standing up because I want to be on the front line of this thing.
It's a case of duty where there's no one else standing up.
So I've got to, um, and, you know, more than it'd be great if she could just be a mother.
And it's like, and I could take this fight entirely upon myself, but she does things that no one else can.
So until someone else steps into that role, we've we've just got to, we've just got to fight this fight.
And I'd love to not have to, you know, go out there onto the street and protest things and just have a lovely white community and be able to raise my children in a safe environment.
But instead, I've got to worry about what's coming down the pipeline for Catherine and make sure it's better than what, well, trying to change the future basically because we all kind of see where it's going and we're all trying to divert that tram.
Yeah.
So she's so noisy.
This is the first, I think this is the first breastfeeding on Full House.
You guys get the crown.
It's awesome.
Well, hey, let's talk about, I alluded to this in the opener about the sort of the feeling of inadequacy or insufficient progress activity for myself too, right?
Oh, like you do a little podcast and try to wake people up and stuff like that, but the gears keep grinding, right?
The invasion keeps happening.
The culture keeps coarsening.
And there's green shoots all over too.
But at the same time, if you look at it the wrong way, there's cause for despondency.
So let's talk about one of those green shoots and patriotic alternative if we could.
I guess do soup to nuts.
You know, do you aspire to be the biggest political party in Britain or is it more about networking and culture?
Let the audience know all about it and how they can support it too.
Well, I'll let Laura lead on this soon as she is the deputy leader of Seda.
Sure.
So we're a community building and activism group.
So we currently have around 16,000 supporters and hundreds of those active, like actually on the ground.
So in Britain, there are 11 different regions and we're active in every single region.
So that's from the top of Scotland right down to the southwest coast.
And we do things like we have the community building side of PA where people network, you know, and form, well, communities and friendships really.
People have got different skills.
We've got people now who they employ people from within PA when they need work doing, you know, decorating or plumbing or whatever, that kind of stuff.
And then we also have the activism side, which is obviously like leafleting protests, that kind of stuff.
But there's a lot more to PA as well.
We have a homeless outreach initiative.
We have a project called the Great British Cleanup, where we go out and clean areas that local councils have abandoned.
So that might be parks where we go up and pick up needles and stuff or churches where we clean up graffiti.
And then we also have an alternative curriculum, which is created by teachers and that's free.
So if parents want to home educate their children, they can download the content from our website for free.
And then we also have the most successful nationalist website in the United Kingdom.
We're beating all the other groups and parties and stuff.
So, and I've probably only mentioned there, I've probably missed stuff off that we do, but yeah, so no, I was going to say Patriotic Alternative has put in applications to become a political entity.
But we have something called the Electoral Commission, which is basically the gatekeeper of democratic politics in the UK.
And so far, they've knocked back our application for all sorts of, I think it was the last one.
Oh, just stupid stuff.
The V in alternative kind of looks like a tick.
And that might influence people who are voting into voting for you.
Therefore, this application has failed.
And that took six months for that application.
So then they knock that back.
Then you get to reapply, but then it's another six months before they respond to you again.
So it's like it's.
Yeah, the last one was in our 20-point plan.
It says that we would ban full face coverings in public places, you know, like the Burkers and that the Muslim women wear.
We say that we'd ban them.
So they rejected us, saying that that might make Muslim women not want to vote for us.
So it's not inclusive.
So they rejected our big technical.
So it's like basically, we have to appeal to every single person in the country.
Otherwise, you won't accept us.
Because Labour don't appeal to me.
The Tories don't appeal to me.
You know, there are things there that I find offensive.
When they use the phrase liberal democracy, then they're not talking about democracy.
They're talking about it being, you're on a train and it's a liberal train and it goes in this one liberal direction.
And it's like, if you want to go off in a different direction, that's not liberal, then that's not democracy.
You know, a total plaything for the elites now.
Yeah.
Completely managed political process.
Yep.
That was one of the last things to take from me.
You know, I still, democracy.
Like, I could be pro-white democracy, right?
And when you'll look at it, it's what a dumbass.
Hey, go ahead.
Hey, Laura.
So you mentioned having the most popular website.
I hope we can mention the name of it, which is Radio Albion, right?
That's what you're referring to.
So that's Sven Longshank's website.
And he works closely with us.
And when we do a stream, he does just audio, doesn't he?
He streams audio and then he streams the audio on his website.
And it does really well.
It gets really good viewers.
But yeah, our website is obviously patrioticalternative.org.uk.
Okay.
Because I've heard you, I've listened many times with you and Mark Collett on the Patriotic Weekly Review or the Daily Show as well.
Yeah.
It's a really great site and I can't recommend it highly enough.
I always feel a little funny talking about other websites or other shows on our show, but truly, this is a great one.
And I'm sorry to derail for a moment, but Sven Longshakes is quite an interesting guy and particularly Patriotic History.
My youngest son and I, we listen to that every week.
And if you want to have your mind blown, I'm talking to the listeners now, download that, listen to that on the site.
What a great program there.
I also like the audio insurgency program where he's playing a lot of different music on there.
If you ever catch that one, that's a great one as well.
And I enjoy Mark Coletta.
Sven's really committed.
He does a show called The Daily Nationalist, which I think you're referring to there.
And it's like every night.
And he is going through some legal trouble at the moment.
So if you can support him, please do.
Okay.
They're trying to string him off like they do with.
Everyone where it's like, well, you said this, did you mean this?
And uh and, and he's basically going into court and having to defend himself.
But he, he isn't.
Yeah they, they looked through his website for like years and years of content and then pulled out a load of tiny, like little bits from each show and then they've put a case together against him.
So he's I think he's up for inciting racial hatred or something which is mad, because he's the most gentle guy.
He's so high yeah, and his website is just historical stuff.
You know, it's just historical facts, where he he has conversations about history and things.
He's not, you know, planning any violence or anything.
So yeah, it just really isn't too.
And I and I know on there they were asking hey if, if you write a letter to to say what, what the shows mean to you at the site, the value you find in the site and all that.
So I I wrote him a short little letter because uh, I have certainly uh gained um value from, from that site and from those programs and, of course, Dennis Wise and the others that have been on there.
But uh, he's certainly an interesting character.
I uh, if you could uh remember me to him.
I'd appreciate it, of course absolutely, Radio Albion, we'll put that in the show notes.
And shame on you, Samuel.
I have no problem whatsoever with with bumping other programs out here.
I guess I tried.
I tried to do it kind of sparingly, you know, but it's, it's fine, it's totally fine uh, so it's.
It's always funny when speaking with our international guests.
We're not used to having to tiptoe around our language to a certain extent right, because it's ironic.
And you know especially uh, Old Albion, the source of our liberal democracy and our enlightenment ideals uh, how bad is it there, guys?
You uh, in the Uk, writ large, not just we know about the demographic issues, same ones that we have, but I mean you, you have, especially when you're prominent and you're and you're well known, you have to watch every word.
You've got uh, draconian speech, speech regulations uh, and the fuzz has already put pressure on you so well.
Bong Bong Island.
A lot of our guys say England is lost right uh, how how bad is it really?
But what, what's it?
What's it like living there?
I guess it's.
I mean, it's not like you know, like was it viva vendetta, when there's like the police are like around every corner just checking to see if you're in bed at eight o'clock or anything like that.
It's uh, it's more, if you become a target, they will dig on you and um sadly, a lot, a lot of it is a case of your fellow countrymen kind of reporting you.
So if, if you start saying something on facebook say uh, you know, I don't know why you'd still be on Facebook but say, you said something in a comment, and then uh, a neighbor like report oh, this guy's.
Clearly, you know he's, he's using hate speech, and the police will come around, and we have something called prevent um, which I think is an acronym for something, but the idea is for them to come around first and to uh kind of head you off at the pass to becoming an extremist um, so they could come up like the, the pre-crime unit yeah, pre-thought crime, you know yeah yeah, so it's like you haven't said anything illegal, but you might.
So we're gonna come in and kind of put you on this list, um and uh, it's uh, we know a fair few people who've had the knock on the door, and it's normally it is for something as innocuous as a comment on a Youtube video uh, on a facebook post um sometimes though, it's just who you associate with.
We at Patriotic Alternative, we did a baking competition about 18 months ago and there was an elderly lady who entered the baking competition and that was it, and she got a visit from prevent.
Really yeah, they put a letter through the door because she didn't answer.
It's like we think that you're uh likely to become an extremist because you've entered a baking competition.
granny glowing eyes start getting activated.
You can flood my island with hostile invaders, but you come between me and my baking.
Oh baby, it's on.
Yeah, it's uh.
So that that's the kind of they're definitely engaging in, the kind of pre-crime.
And then should you do something?
They uh not like.
Do something obviously like physical, but even um, I think just recently we've had a teenager, I think 18, 19 um, he had an online presence, but um, they raided his house on his hard drives, I think they found the anarchist cookbook and uh initially um, the judge took leniency on him and they let him get away with.
It's like, just stay away from all this online stuff.
Read the classics Shakespeare and the Cs Lewis and stuff like that and uh, and then get back to us and we'll see how you're doing.
Um, but uh, Anti-white organizations like HOPE NOT HATE, uh campaigned to have a more stricter sentence and then the Crown Prosecution Service went back to the uh court, appealed it, and I think he's now gone away for seven years.
No, got two years.
Two years oh, was it two years for this guy?
Yeah, so it's like, just for owning a book on his computer yeah, and he actually he had.
I don't even know if he'd read it, because he'd downloaded 10 000 books, you know, including communist books.
Yeah, one of those like archives you, you see, on bit torrent and it's like oh, you know, 10 000, the best books ever.
So it's, you know, it's got the uh Mouse Little Red Book um, and it's like, and then it's also got anarchist cookbook, but one of those will get you done, and a lot of times um, after we got arrested, we were looking into the kind of counter-terror arrests that they'd made and normally it was spurred by an online comment which then gives them reason to raid your house.
And then, once they've raided your house, that's when they find the copy of uh anarchist cookbook on your hard drive, they find uh, an air rifle under your bed or something like that, and it's enough for them to go.
Ah see, you know, this comment plus this book equals terrorism.
And then they can uh, you bang to rights.
It's like yeah, we've got it to the point where this pdf yeah, is literally the death knell.
And it's like we've said countless times, it's like, don't even have it on there for a joke.
Uh, you know, it's like that in so many cases that one book is getting cited as like he clearly has an intent um so, hopefully no one still carries it in this country, but it's just, There's a lot of arrests and a lot of imprisonment of people who have no intention of doing anything.
Sure.
And I mean, at the moment, it seems to be every other week.
It's an autistic teenage who gets picked up.
This just shows you the value the system places on having all this idiotic diversity that seems to be so important.
You know, the more diversity there is, the more problems there are.
You know, so the way to not have problems is to not have diversity.
Yeah, well, that's the doubt.
Essentially, what we're arguing is that you wouldn't have to police the population so hard if you hadn't put us in this situation in the first place.
Forcing this unnatural, immoral situation on us.
That's what's causing all the problems.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Why are the white kids so angry?
Why are they so radicalized by the internet?
This is the reality that you created.
And they knew it too.
It's not like this is just some accidental consequence of it.
They're just, I guess they have the trust that they can just play whack-a-mole and suppress, suppress, choose that option for a civilization in decline and fall.
And God willing, it will be their undoing because it don't come cheap.
Yep.
And they don't have enough officers and pre-crime units to deal with all the white people waking up there and overseas.
Ultimately, they need guys like us to enforce these laws.
They need guys like us in their police force and their armies or whatever.
And they're not going to have guys like us because the guys like us are going to be on this side.
Yep.
And I was just reading a court case the other night about a January 6th attendee who got pinched because of attending.
And of course, he live streamed it.
So, you know, he sort of was his own undoing there.
But then they used his meme stash.
You know, of course, they offloaded his phone or uploaded it.
And he had Pepe's and rare Hitlers, et cetera.
And they used that to justify keeping him detained until his trial as opposed to otherwise getting out on bail or on bond.
And Laura, if I could ask, you wrote a wonderful article, maybe half a year ago, I don't recall exactly about what happens when you get that very unpleasant knock at the door or worst case, raid.
And all of a sudden you don't have a phone or a computer.
Could I ask you to bump that and share some good reminders for our audience?
Not that any of ours would ever get in trouble like that.
Yeah, I think that, excuse me, the article that I wrote was called Things I Wish I Did Before Being Raided by the Police, because she's been a little monster now.
The police basically walked into my bedroom at half past seven in the morning and Sam had set off to, do you want to just take out our moment?
Yeah, she's changing.
Let me see if I can give her a change.
Yeah, so they arrested Sam when he was on his way to work.
And then they just let themselves into the house and walked into the bedroom when I was actually undressed.
Four men walked into my bedroom.
And they took everything that we had in the house.
So all devices, laptops, mobile phones, cameras, USB sticks, everything like that.
And I was in a situation where I couldn't contact.
Sorry, is that really noisy?
Don't worry about it.
Family show.
It's easy for me to say, oh yeah, don't worry about it.
Just a crying baby.
And you're like, I'm tired.
And this is the 10th time today.
Yeah, I was at home and I couldn't contact anyone because I had all my phone numbers in my phone, which the police took.
And they took all my devices.
So I didn't actually have a device to contact anyone.
Yeah, it was just a really difficult situation.
Luckily, I ended up walking to my grandma's house and my grandma had Mark Collett's phone number.
So I was able to phone him off of her phone.
But I just wrote a guide for people, just stuff that you can do so that you're in a good situation if that does happen to you.
And that even involves things like the police took a load of notebooks from the house, which they didn't actually have the freedom to take because the warrant only covered them for electronic devices.
But they took a load of notebooks and they were just my old notebooks from when I was at university, you know, full of like notes from classes and maybe a few recipes and stuff like that in.
But I was thinking back, like, did I write anything in them?
Like even just a joke that they could construe as being something else.
So one of the pieces of advice I put forward in the article was you don't need to keep old notebooks in your house from 10 years ago, just throw them out.
And also, if you have a landline phone plugged in and people's phone numbers written down so that you can contact people, that helps.
You might want to have a mobile phone stored elsewhere where you're logged into Telegram on, because then you can log into that phone on Telegram and log out of all other devices, you know, things like that.
I think it was just about eight things that I suggested people do just in case they get raided.
But in our situation, Sam was arrested for distributing material with the intention to stir up racial hatred because they've said that he has posted some stickers online, not stickers that say go out and kill people, stickers that quote facts.
In fact, the government's own facts.
It's from their census.
And he hasn't been charged with anything.
But I think what they did was arrest him for that and then raid our home, probably thinking that they were getting a two-foot one because I live here too.
But they haven't found anything.
You know, they haven't found any anarchist cookbook book.
They haven't found any racial slurs on our computers.
They haven't found any weapons or anything like that.
I think they were expecting to find something when they raided us, but they haven't actually found anything.
So they're in a bit of a difficult situation at the moment because they haven't charged Sam with anything.
But I think they also don't want to drop it.
So Sam is still on bail at the moment, which means that he just has all these really annoying conditions.
But he also hasn't been charged with anything.
Kind of sexy to have your husband pinched, though, for activism in the cause.
Rollo says he's going to send Sam some very dangerous and spicy memes after the show to sabotage him.
No, Rollo didn't say that.
Yeah, we will definitely bump that article today.
Did they give you your devices back or they still have them?
They still have them, don't they?
He's still on bail.
You get through, it was one month of bail.
Then they extended it three months, then they extended it for another three months.
I'll hear on February 15th if they extend it again.
But the latest one was December 15th, was it?
Or just before?
And they said, basically, they had to appeal to a court to get it extended.
And in the appeal to the court, they were like, oh, we haven't found anything bad, but there's this hard drive that's encrypted.
And we think there's something really bad on here.
So that's now being sent off to MI5.
Jesus.
It's so outrageous.
You know, it's so outrageous.
These pigs think that they're going to get away with this forever, that this isn't building some, you know, you reap what you sow type of a problem for them.
And there's nothing on the hard drive either, but we're not going to give them the password because screw them.
Like, why should they comply with them when they're making their lives help that?
They can waste a year of their time for all weekend and we'll put it out because we've got nothing to hide, have we?
To kind of compare and contrast, there was an operation.
Obviously, you'll have heard about the grooming gangs we have here in the UK.
Of course.
Rotherham was a big wake-up call, I think, for a lot of people over here and around the world, tragically.
And there was a recent operation was concluded, operation Marksman and it's they'd spent two years because um, a number of girls in a city called Hull in east Yorkshire had um basically come forward and given them names dates places, um all the evidence that you know to open an investigation, and having arrested and taken devices off a hundred and just over 150 men um,
they concluded the investigation with not a single prosecution.
So I don't think they've even charged anyone, did just no, you know 150 men.
And it's like, are you going to tell me that of these 150 men, they went through their devices as thoroughly as they're going through mine?
It's like, you know, did they send them off to MI5 because at this point they're now looking for like, are there like uh, shards of deleted files and stuff like that?
Like they've, you know?
I mean, it's like it isn't just a quick look through my, my computer on your you know desktop, it's like we're going to do a deep kind of forensic search to see if like, there's something you deleted years ago that we can get you on.
And they're going, they obviously haven't done that with them.
Um, there's actually quite a large protest coming up in Hull because the, the population, essentially, people knew what was going on and the police were supposed to have been handling it, but nothing was done.
I mean, the story that came out, it was girls in the primary school uniform were seen with these men and, you know, like elementary school girls.
So yeah, that's up to age 11.
Yeah, one of the girls who came forward said she she, she pegged her as like nine years old and and heard a scream.
It's really horrific, like and and, and that comes out of it with like, I mean, I mean, I don't know what they talk.
They say you're, you're lying and it's like, but it's like.
Well we, when someone says like yeah, it's just wild that it's like, you know, pigs cared as much about this as they care about somebody with a pepe me, you know yeah, and our Anarcho-tyranny doesn't do it justice.
Yeah, the great Sam Francis coined anarcho-tyranny, which perfectly nails, of course, the idea of rape gangs running free and you guys getting the third degree for service and the cause of your people.
The government published a report last february um, that named me and Mark by name, and they said in the report that we hadn't broken any laws because we don't encourage violence.
Um, so they proposed that they change the law to make what me and Mark talk about illegal.
Uh, and the thing that they mentioned was demographics, you know, and telling people about 2066.
So I think, out of everything that's happened to us, that was the one thing that I read and I was like oh, my god, that's the scariest thing i've ever read, to know that your government has named you by name and actually wants to send you to prison.
Yeah um, and just for talking about certain things.
It's like the eye of Sauron like kind of yeah, kind of falls across you and you're like, oh my god, it's like they, they know who you are yeah and, and they were just literally like they haven't broken any laws because they don't encourage violence.
So let's change the law so that they can't talk about This.
And luckily, it didn't make it through.
It got dropped.
They didn't take the guidance.
But to know that that's on their agenda and it could come up again in the future, it is pretty scary, I think.
I wanted to add as well while I was changing Catherine.
You mentioned the stuff that you'd known prior to being raided.
One of the things that really helped was having a real life community that we're part of in this local area.
So when I was offline for two days, a fellow nationalist and his friend came over and they said, is that all right?
And I think he actually brought over a new burner phone.
He's like, here's a number so we can reach you in the meantime.
But it's like, if we hadn't have had that, if we had just been, because I mean, these people who get picked up and arrested, no one knows who they are.
These are people who are working entirely behind like a pseudonym on Telegram or Twitter or something like that.
And when they get picked up, they just disappear.
There was something recently where your 4chan buddies can't help you if you get pinched as a total anony isolated on the internet.
Yep.
Yeah.
It's like the people who have been picked up who aren't a part of PA, but then they get a knock on the door, they get picked up, and all of a sudden they want to call us and like, oh, can I just talk to you about this?
And it's like, it's like, if you'd been part of this community, it's like we could have warned you off certain things and it's like, and just made it so you weren't just posting edgy memes in an anonymous group, which turned out to have a fed in or something like that.
You know, it's yeah, the community, the community was a huge help.
I think a close friend of ours even like donated a laptop to us temporarily because obviously we had, you know, we've got an online business with the team coffee and everything.
And they took all of our computers.
You know, they took the label printing machine because they said it could print stickers.
And it's like, okay.
So thankfully, we managed to get back online relatively quick, kind of within the week.
But if we were someone else and it's like, say, you work from home or whatever, it's like, what are you going to do?
Explain to your company that you've had their laptop taken because it was in your house and you've been posting stuff online and the police feel that it's illegal.
And yeah, it's so disruptive.
And I think that a lot of the time that's the idea is to disrupt and basically kind of ruin your life.
And, you know, I mean, thankfully, my wife is also a fellow nationalist.
She understands.
But it's like if you've just been some normal woman and it's like you've had the door put through and all your devices taken and then you'd be kind of like, what the hell have you been doing?
And it's like, and whatever you're doing, stop doing it.
Yeah.
Sam, I was, I was just thinking, why the heck does my hand hurt?
And I realize it was because I was gripping the arm of my chair as you were describing the grooming gangs and the horrors visited upon innocent British girls.
And that just thinking about that motivates me.
I'm already thinking like after we were done with the show, like, what can I, what can I go do?
So that's, that's the human drive, the emotion to channel this bad stuff into proactive, positive, good work.
Start small and build up bigger for yourself, for your family, for your community, for your friends, and for the race too.
Rolo has patiently had a question.
I was not trying to icy out there, buddy.
Please, by all means.
So I don't pay attention to a lot of news across the pond.
So how frequent are terrorist attacks?
Because I feel like it happened a lot a few years ago.
I don't know if that slowed down.
And the only reason I ask is because you got raided.
And if terrorism is still an issue, like what does that say about how functionally retarded cops are, that they're not just quitting the job?
Yeah, well, there was actually a report done recently that said that Prevent were targeting far right, you know, speech max far right so-called terrorists and they were ignoring Islamic terrorists.
But if we look at everybody who's been killed in a terror attack in Britain since a millennium, it's between 98 and 99% of those that were killed by Muslims.
And then we've got the man who killed Joe Cox, who was declared insane throughout his entire life, apart from the moment just after he killed Joe Cox.
So apparently he's a right-wing terrorist, but he was actually just the crazy guy.
And then there's Darren Osborne who drove his van into some Muslims outside a mosque and one of them had a heart attack.
But everyone else, it's just, you know, Muslims.
But they target nationalists.
And like Sam says, what they usually do is they find a route into your home, maybe something that you've said online, you know, like an edge joke or something.
And then once they're in your home, they'll find the thing that they actually charge you on.
So they know that they can't charge you on the edgy joke.
They'll find something in the house.
But it's constant.
You know, every week there's a new article in the news about a so-called far-right extremist who's usually just a teenager with autism who said a joke about Hitler on Twitter or something.
And they'll get sent down for two years.
Right below that will be the article about 43 men convicted of sexual assault on one girl over the course of three years.
There was the Liverpool attack a couple of months ago where a man tried to blow himself up in a taxi.
He wanted to do it Remembrance Sunday at the Remembrance Sunday parade, but he couldn't get through because of the traffic.
So he tried to blow himself up outside a women and children's hospital.
But luckily he messed up and he only ended up killing himself.
And then we also had another guy recently who stabbed an MP to death as well.
But these stories have already been buried.
You know, no one's talking about them.
Everyone's talking about far-right terrorism, which doesn't exist.
Yeah, that stabbing by, was he Somali or something like that?
The stabbing of an MP by a non-white is now being justification for why you can't approach your MP.
Like if you go and confront your member of parliament with anything other than adoration, you will get the book thrown at you.
So there's really no way to kind of express your discontent either.
But yeah, it's remember what my lawyer, obviously for the, or solicitor for my terrorism case, because it's counterterrorism who were trying to do me for inciting racial hatred.
You don't have to incite it.
It comes natural to all of us.
White, brown, yellow.
It's in our genes, guys.
Sorry.
Sorry.
He used to work in Bradford or Bradistan.
And I said, oh, you must have dealt with a lot of terrorism.
He's like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I said, oh, is it similar stuff in Bradford where it's, you know, it's like stickers and leaflets and posts online.
And he's like, no, no, it's really serious, really serious.
Like, you know, plots that are definitely about to go ahead and then get shut down.
You never hear about those.
That won't get the media just won't pick it up.
They won't be there in court for the, you know, the gang of three Pakistanis who had a bomb plot going or anything like that.
But the autistic 16-year-old, they're going to be front row seats in the court for that one to plaster it all over the front pages and make the public know that the far right is obviously the rising threat in Britain.
Whereas in fact, the Trojan horse is already through and the invaders are pouring out and they are doing untold harm.
And at the moment, we rely on the media, the anti-white media, to tell us how much harm they're doing.
And even they can't cover it up.
Same exact thing here.
Yeah, black crime off the charts.
And what you hear about is white domestic extremism and new task forces.
Number one threat.
Laughing because it's sangri.
It makes me sangry.
We're at the hour, guys.
And I know it's getting a little bit late there.
And Catherine has been such a good sport for us.
Yeah.
Let's see.
Patriotic Alternative.
Is there a way?
I know it's a little dicey because of international issues.
Is there a way for our non-UK audience to support Patriotic Alternative?
Do you accept donations?
Or how can our audience help you guys in the cause there?
Yeah, if at all.
Well, we actually have three groups on Telegram called Australian Friends of Pierre, European Friends of Pierre and North American Friends of Pierre.
So if you send us a message through the contact form of the website, people abroad are welcome to join those groups.
But the best thing that you can do really is just share our stuff.
I mean, we do accept donations as a donate button on the website, but just, you know, spreading the word about the work that we're doing and the issues that we're trying to highlight, sharing our streams and articles and things like that.
And we have a good relationship with nationalists in other countries.
We get on well with Labour Arts in France, NJP in the States.
Northrop.
Yeah.
North New Zealand.
New Zealand.
What's the New Zealander called?
Actually, yeah, we get on well with those.
So we like to form good relationships with other nationalist organisations as well.
So if anyone's listening abroad, feel free to get in touch with us if you want to link up and do a stream together sometime or something.
But yeah, that's and the tea, of course, Laura.
Come on, be shameless.
You want new tea orders too, right?
Yeah.
I got a question on that.
Make Sam work harder, right?
He's doing the fulfilling.
You're just the pretty face of the operation.
Sam's back there toiling in Laura's sweatshop.
Yeah.
Yeah, I started a tea company just over a year ago because my favourite brand of tea, Yorkshire tea, told me never to buy their tea again because I don't support Black Lives Matter.
So I thought, well, screw you guys and I'll start my own tea company.
So I did.
And we sold out of tea, I think it was within four hours or something.
We sold every bag of tea.
Had to wait another two weeks to get a restock.
And luckily, a year and a quarter later, it's a successful family business.
So Sam works at the tea company full time and that supports us as a family.
We have coffee as well now and also Earl Grey tea.
But I think the reason it's doing well is people like to support a nationalist couple.
But also we did put in a lot of work to make sure that the products were really nice.
And the packaging is like a really nice sort of English woodland theme.
And we have a lot of returning customers, don't we?
We get new customers, obviously, but it's like a dedicated group who have switched to Grand Metabolis Tea for their tea.
We do have a US distributor as well.
We work with Antelope Hill.
So if you're in the States, yeah, they're really good.
If you're in the States and you want to get some tea, you can do.
And we're at grandmatablas.co.uk.
Awesome.
Okay, I have a question on that because back when you started, I remember hearing about that and going on there.
And then it said, we don't ship to the US.
So I waited.
And then recently I noticed that it says on there, you do ship to the US through US distributor.
So do I need to go on Antelope Hill and place the order?
No, you can just go to our website.
Okay, because when I did that, it said there was no shipping option available to do our contracts with Antelope Hill because we didn't know how much demand there would be.
We stock the English breakfast tea, the Earl Grey and the coffee with Antelope Hill.
If you put anything else, like the mugs, the badges, the mugs, then it'll make it so you can't order it.
Yeah, I was going to order some mugs.
So, okay, I will reorder it with just the tea.
If you're really intent on having one of our mugs, if you drop us an email at um hello at grandma talis.co.uk, I can make up a parcel and give you a kind of a shipping quote from the UK.
I've done it for a few people.
Yeah, I will do that.
I will do that because even when you weren't shipping to the US, my thought was, well, okay, I understand because it's quote too expensive, unquote.
But what if we want it anyways?
You know, so okay, that's good.
You know, I don't care what it costs.
You know, yeah, we want to have your stuff.
So I will, I will drop you a line and you can I will buy the mug from you, but I will buy the uh just the tea then.
Sam's Sam's not gonna take the stuff.
He's just gonna throw it in the trash.
He just wants to support you guys.
No, I don't.
Well, here, let me let me tell you truly is everybody in my family is a tea drinker.
I occasionally drink it once in a great while.
I'm not a big tea drinker, but everybody else is a big tea drinker in my family.
So all my kids love tea.
My wife loves tea.
So I do want to order it.
I'm going to order it.
Oh, well, thank you.
Yeah, we just felt bad for the customers in the US.
They were paying like five pounds for a bag of tea and then paying 20, 20, 25 pounds for the shipping.
So yeah, we obviously have the US distributor now, so it's cheaper and it gets tea quicker as well, which is good.
I didn't feel bad.
I've never forgiven you if you lost some tea parties.
Yeah.
No, I was going to ask questions about like the American Revolution and all and Boris Johnson and all that stuff, but maybe we'll save that for another one.
Sam, you are welcome back on anytime you want.
Big guy, if you want to join the birth panel and chime in, Laura, we don't want to let too many women in the club too frequently.
No, I'm Jim.
From one religious skeptic or cynic to a couple, God bless you guys and your new white life.
And seriously, so happy and honored to have you on and proud of everything that you do.
Keep at it.
Yeah, well, it's been a pleasure to be here.
And Sammy's now stood up rocking the baby because she's crying.
But do you want to?
And I'll go down.
Do you guys want to do mom talk and I'll all right now we can get him in trouble.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Remember, you're on bail.
Be careful what you say.
All right, guys.
Yeah.
Thank you so much.
God bless.
We will be back, audience, with another hour.
Maybe Smasher will join us.
He said he was coming on.
And Song for Lindy by Fat Boy Slim.
We'll call it Song for Catherine here.
It's one of his early works.
And he is, of course, a British DJ.
And God bless Sam Melia, Laura Teller, their new baby, and their cause.
And this is Full House, and we'll be right back.
Take care, guys.
Breathe yours, breathe.
You're the order, breathe.
You're the order, breathing yours, bringing yours, breathing, yours, free towards it, breathing yours, breathing yours, bring it towards it.
You're the only one, And
welcome back to Full House, episode 115, second half.
Sam Melia has decided to stay with us and get in trouble with the boys while he sent Waifi to take care of dear daughter.
I'm kidding, you big guy.
So glad to have you here with us in the second half.
And let's do it right now at the top of the second half.
Be honest.
How is it with a new baby?
I'm sure we have a ton of expecting first-time fathers out there or ones who are looking to get into the game brutal honesty first couple of weeks with a new baby in the house.
How is it?
We're at four weeks now, almost exactly.
And it's not as bad as I thought it was going to be.
I thought it'd be a lot more intense.
I thought there'd be a lot less sleep.
But there's only been maybe two or three nights where I didn't realize babies have to learn how to fall asleep by themselves.
So they can just get really tired.
And you'll see their eyes rolling back in the head and the eyes fluttering and it only makes them more angry.
It's like those nights are pretty intense.
And she always seems to fall asleep exactly as the sun comes up as well.
But it's she's really, I mean, she is an angel.
We've heard some stories from other people with young kids, and we seem to have got away pretty lightly with this one.
So we're overjoyed.
And she's just, she's just starting to learn to smile at the moment.
So we're getting our first few smiles.
I think I came home the other day and Laura was with Catherine on the sofa there.
And she kind of turned, turned her around.
It's like, oh, daddy's home.
And I went in for the kiss and she smiled.
And I was like, oh, this is the crazy reason.
Yeah.
It's what I've wanted for years.
And it's like to finally have out of it here.
And it's like, I just can't.
I'm overjoyed.
It's so much fun as well.
Like, it's, I don't know if it's with other people's babies, maybe you get annoyed, but it's like with Catherine, she can like fill a nappy.
And then it's like, while you're changing the nappy, she'll wheel all over herself.
So you have to change clothes.
And then when you put the new nappy on, she'll immediately fill that with poo, get that all over herself.
And all you do is laugh and you just go, that's silly of you to do that.
And it's like those nights where you're up all night, her just screaming.
And it's like, you just kind of rocking her as you walk around the room.
And yeah, it's just beautiful.
And I wouldn't change her for the world.
She's absolutely perfect.
You're a lucky man.
Yeah.
They are all different.
They are all different.
I have seven children.
And most of them were, if they cried, it's almost like a little lamb crying, you know, kind of, kind of a quiet, but one of them was just, she would scream bloody murder.
And it's just, it would throw you into a state of somebody do something about this child screaming, you know.
And so they are all different.
And some are more calm and some have a blood curdling cry.
And it sounds like you're doing good.
Cheers, man.
Yeah.
From the experts.
The manual labor aspect of it comes to you real quick naturally.
I remember that being anxious about swaddling and diapers and keeping them warm.
And then like after a day or two, you're like, all right, I got that down, Pat.
But yeah, the sleep, sleep management is probably the number one consternation for new parents is, you know, themselves getting married and freaked out about the babies once and feeding, of course, making sure they're gaining weight.
But, you know, when it's, when it's your own flesh and blood, nature kicks in and you just get the job done, right?
You've been doing it for millions of years or hundreds of thousands, whatever evolutionary timeframe you want to go back.
And yeah, got to get in the greatest game of all time.
Speaking of the greatest game of all time, let's do new white life before we get too far afield here.
And we got a good crop this week.
Johnny Cash in the, I think he was in the comment zone, just said, hey, guys, you know, notice me, Senpai.
Yeah, we notice you, Johnny Cash.
He sent a picture.
Beautiful.
It was his and his wife's second.
So congratulations there.
I was gonna, I was gonna do a Johnny Cash, but I won't do that.
Let's see.
Our lovely couple, Nom and his wife, welcome New White Life recently.
They're getting numbers.
Yeah.
Really?
Awesome.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
She came in at the seven pounds.
It's perfect.
All my kids were seven pounds.
You know, not too little, not too big.
And yeah, and over the moon for them.
Jill McCracken, the lovely other son McCracken, sent in a lovely little note here.
Let me pull it up.
New White Life update.
Greetings, full house crew.
We hope you are well and enjoying the new year so far.
We are, ma'am.
Thank you.
Just wanted to give you the latest update on the McCracken clan.
That's a good name for a band, McCracken Clan.
McCracken Scrums Clan.
As you may have already noticed on Telegram, Jack posted about our latest ultrasound.
And I know sometimes sometimes I assume every oh, everybody must have seen it on telegram, but I'm pretty sure not our entire audience is pinned to telegram like the rest of us.
We have a healthy baby and we are having a boy exclamation.
Jack Jr., the son and heir, is scheduled to come into this world at the end of May, beginning of June.
We couldn't be happier.
We literally jumped up and down outside the hospital after the appointment.
Careful there, Jill.
You know, you don't be jumping around with the baby.
Yeah.
Careful, yeah.
Yeah, shake them up too much.
I see that you see that you admitted Jill McCracken to the whole house chat.
That's right.
It was my oversight.
I realize, you know, I figure now she's fully proved.
Actually, she's not fully vetted until that baby comes out and Jack is a white baby.
Sorry, Dad.
Well, I saw some of the guys, some of the guys were teasing on her kind of hard, like, ah, there's a girl in here, another girl in the club out.
I know, right?
Everybody run.
No, I messaged her.
I was like, oh, this, I should have done this a while ago, but I did.
I asked husband first to make sure.
I was like, you know, sometimes it's not the most fun to have your lady in a chat with you when you're bancing with the guys.
But he said, yeah, of course.
So just real quick, she jumped up and down.
And God has been so good.
And we continually thank him for his grace, protection, and strength during this exciting time.
God willing, this is the first of many new white lives we will be bragging about to everyone.
Thank you again for all that you guys do.
God bless and hail victory.
Jill McCracken.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Hail Michelle's clan.
Jill is cool to hang out with.
She's funny.
She's smart.
She's cool.
Yep.
And just before we went to tape, I believe that Alex McNabb announced on Telegram.
I didn't see it because I didn't go over to the web version, his censored channel.
But I think Alex McDad, they welcomed their third possibility today or raising.
Oh, man.
And I think it's a girl too.
Heaven help her.
Beautiful.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Alex got in the game here late.
Yeah.
He's been on it.
The Alex McDad show.
He's been on the game.
He got in the game late, but they're really, that's like three and like four years or five years, I want to say.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's what they aim for as well.
I think we've got to it late, so we're going to have to crank them out in the next couple of years.
Hey, go for it.
Are you twins, man?
Yeah, are you?
I assume you guys are in your 30s.
Sam, I don't want to judge the lady or whatever, but yeah, she's actually a cradle robbing.
She's 34 and I'm 32.
Ooh, spicy.
All right.
No time like the present.
You know, do what you can do.
That's the time.
My brother had Irish twins.
Yeah, he's got, I think she, he was born two, three weeks before Catherine was, but they've got three boys.
And yeah, the last two are born within a year of each other.
So it's like that's been pretty intense for them.
But Laura's asked for at least three months off before she's pregnant again.
But I make no promises.
So, hey, let nature run its course.
Amazing.
Yep.
And then, you know, this doesn't just have to be new white life.
This is like the white pill bulletin board for the cause.
But our pal Hans sent us a message and said that both of his sons won first place in their wrestling tournament recently.
So he sent a picture of his oldest one looking like a total Chad, decimating the opposition up on the podium, up on the stand, I guess, with his medal.
So congratulations to the Hans clan for their amazing boys and their struggle.
Wrestling is a great sport to be in.
You know, my youngest son, he spent three years in the park district wrestling.
And that's a great overall sport to be in for fitness, strength, and everything.
I always wished we had wrestling here in Britain, but we don't at all.
It's just not on our balls right now.
You know, what I think is good about it is just the idea of like how you react when somebody puts their hands on you.
You know what I mean?
Just the presence of mind you have to have, how to handle yourself and everything.
It's a very practical sport.
Totally endorsed.
I was not tough enough.
I saw those kids like rolling around on a mat as a kid.
I was like, no, I'm not doing that.
Looked a little gay, but total support for the wrestlers out there and getting your kids involved in that or Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
We know a lot of guys getting their kids involved in martial arts so that, like you said, Sam, be able to take a hit and keep cranking.
Yeah.
How do you react when somebody puts their hands on you?
You know, that takes some experience.
Yeah, we got a thoughtful question from the audience here that I think we've visited this topic maybe once or twice before, but it is a fellow traveler, somebody who wants to get involved, save the white race, but who is not himself 100% European.
So he writes in, hey, Full House Gang.
Don't call us a gang, sir.
Get us in trouble.
We're a crew.
No.
Anyway, he says, today I come to you with a question regarding involvement in our movement.
I've thought our way for a few years now, but have only just discovered a lot of things like NJP, TRS, you guys, Telegram, et cetera, within the last year.
I want to start working toward the future of our people.
However, I have one snag in the road.
I am not 100% white.
My wife, who shares similar genetics to myself, and I were both from the Southwest.
So both of us are mixed with Hispanic.
Genetically, we're both 75 to 80% European.
And he says, for the autiste in all of us, I'm Spanish, Scottish, English, Irish, Basque, Northern Italian, Swedish, Danish, but also 20% Native American, particular to the Southwest, and a little bit of North African and Arabian mixed in.
I assume these are leftovers from the Moors and Iberia and have white phenotypes.
Anyway, I have plans to move to whiter pastures.
Ozarkia is one I've recently been introduced to and would like to start advocating and working toward the future of what I view as my people.
He even attached a photo of himself with his green eyes to have a little bit of clout there or whatever, just to show what he was talking about.
But that's something I've been nervous about addressing for a while now, as I don't know the general opinion of the movement.
So any words of advice or opinions are appreciated as I respect you all.
Hail victory.
Go away.
Yeah, we don't want you.
Go.
Yeah, you're all good.
I'm joking.
Go ahead, UK Sam.
Have at it.
Special guest.
I'm glad Nicholas Fuentes wants to get involved now.
Sorry.
He didn't say he was so much more than a second.
He has the one.
Softball.
Yeah.
We have a similar thing in the UK, and we have got a number of members of Patriotic Alternative who are of mixed race.
We have this one gentleman of this way who's half Japanese, for example.
And as far as we're concerned, personally, it's a case of are you working towards the same goals as we are?
In which case, we can work with you.
Obviously, he's got a wife.
She's mixed as well.
So it's like it's not, it's not going to be a case of he's going to enter the movement and then sequester a nice white girl and kind of take her away or anything like that.
It's going to be a case of he likes white civilization.
So he's going to want to continue it, which I think there are a number of, there's a number of non-whites who believe that.
And I think there's a number of mixed people who believe that.
And if he can contribute to the cause, there's plenty of pure-blooded white people who are doing nothing.
So if this guy can help in some way, then that's great.
I mean, the biggest detractors from this thing, at least in the UK, for it's like, oh, you've got this guy who's there's one quite well known one who's, I think he's half Iranian.
And the ones who really kick off over it are the do-nothings.
They're the slackers.
They're the ones who they're online a lot, but they're never, they're never at the protest, they're never with you out leafleting.
They're never at the banner drops.
But yeah, it's like if he wants to help, then help.
But obviously you Americans might have a different perspective on the thing.
Sounded pretty good to me.
Sam Rolo, you want to take it?
Well, I would say that there's two different things, like someone who is genuinely non-white, but who shares our aims and goals and things.
Yeah, it's almost like there needs to be another tier of like supporters or something like that.
That certainly somebody who is helping and of goodwill, we're not going to look at gift horse in the mouth and all that.
So I think that in a way, I guess I would say broadly, like those who are not our enemies do not have anything to fear from us, you know.
So I would say that.
But then when it comes to this other thing of like, well, it gets into kind of an interesting philosophical almost debate.
What is a white person?
So I would say generally I would go with somebody that looks like a white person and has white person values.
I would tend to accept them.
And somebody who says, oh, yeah, but I have this family lore that says that we are part this thing or something like that.
That gets into a very much of a gray area.
And so people could get caught up in this gray area and you'll have those who are for and those who are against and things like that.
And I would say just that anything in life has a gray area to it, no matter what you want to talk about, right?
So like there's always a gray area and we're not going to make rules based on gray areas.
So I would say if that guy, because I've met people like that who here's here's somebody who presents to me like they're absolutely perfectly good white person and they have this hang up about, oh, I'm, I think I'm quarter something or part something, but I'm 100% with you.
I would say like, well, I don't know that if there's enough of a question mark about that thing, that other thing that we don't, you know, it's hard to pin it down exactly what it is.
Then it defers to this thing like, well, a white person is the one that you're discriminated against because you are white.
That's a white person, you know?
So I would say like, let's not get caught up in those type of details too much.
And then there are those people who are genuinely, they're mixed and they are not white, but they see the right and wrong of this whole thing we're talking about.
And I think that there could be like a supporter class, I guess, the way I would look at it.
Yeah.
And I told this guy, I said, look, personally, if I were the Fuhrer, I'd say, yeah, you're good to go because you're three quarters or even more white.
You look white.
You're on the team and nobody's perfect.
Right.
The other thing is that you should not conceal if you have some non-white up in the genetic attic, just don't lie about it because that's always bad when it comes out after the fact that, oh, you're actually no, Jewish is a separate thing.
I'm not too worried about this guy's like engine blood.
He's going to go around scalping people at meetups.
But Jewish is a different thing.
Having Jewish blood is more problematic.
That's one that I would be a little firmer on.
And so to this guy, I would say, absolutely, get involved, reach out.
Don't hide, you know, your little engine blood.
And correct, Sam, don't be too autistic about it and get involved in the game.
And at some point, and another good metric too is like, are you white enough to marry my daughter?
That would be the gold standard, right?
I'm aiming for 100% European on that one.
The other thing I would say is to the purists out there, which I would even at one time in my life, I would have been more like autistic, we would say now about that type of thing.
But I would say this, that nature has a way of working these things out.
So like what we're talking about here, somebody might say, yeah, but what there's some little error in there that we're making, you know, we're allowing some kind of thing to get in.
I feel like like nature or God is going to going to sort that thing out anyway.
So all I'm being is practical, what I'm saying here.
Yep, absolutely.
And Rolo gives the advice that he should ride a buffalo over the nearest cliff.
Sorry, a tough, tough line from Rolo.
No, I'm totally just putting words in his mouth.
Hey, my great wife.
Gosh, why do I text you anything?
I'm just totally fabricating lines now.
You're not being cringe enough, Rolo.
Come on, step it up.
I gotta have a whip.
I gotta have a whipping boy here.
Anyway, thank you for reaching out, buddy.
Get involved.
Don't worry about it.
Don't hide it.
And your case is easier than some others that would give me more pause.
Get a load of this.
We talked about the gent who wrote in last week on the last show about his wife who shut him down and gave him the permanent hall pass to basically sleep around or even take on sort of a second wife because she said she's just not doing it anymore.
Sorry.
And oh boy, everybody was like, she's cheating on you, dude.
Or she's not, we on the show were like very skeptical, cynical, like she's not being honest.
Well, guess what?
She wrote in and to provide more context.
So get a load of this.
Greetings, full house crew.
And thank you for your advice to my husband on the question of polygamy as a white nationalist.
By the way, it's polygyny is where the male has multiple partners.
So she busted me on my pronunciation, which somebody else did that about Kratom, Kratom.
It's not Kratom, coach.
It's however they pronounce it.
I don't know, the opioid chewable plant that helps you get over it.
But regardless, she says, to recap, I told my husband I don't want to do it anymore and encouraged him to find other women, hookups or serious.
This happened after we had our first kid and we, mostly me, did not like the experience.
You raised some questions I wanted to answer and ask a few on my own if that's all right.
Yeah, it's all right.
We made hay with your context here, lady.
Okay, so here we go.
I was radicalized first and I red pilled zero.
We arranged our marriage with white nationalism in mind.
I do what is expected of our women, provide pleasure and children, handle the household, homeschool, and he would provide for us while getting us vetted and involved.
Number two, our kid was a colic nightmare that we couldn't have prepared for.
After a year, we agreed to continue doing it, but to not try for more children.
Our main focus in getting married was to have kids.
I don't want to obstruct that chance for him.
So I suggested he find a second partner and promise to continue all my duties and include any other children of his in raising and homeschooling.
I'm also fine with sharing his resources and provisions with another red-pilled woman.
Oh man, Smasher's going to kill himself for not being on this one.
Number three.
I know, right?
I'm like, whoa, if this is an elaborate troll, I'm going to be very upset.
Number three, we had, I'll just say sex, whatever.
It's the second half.
I'm not trying to be a total prude.
We had sex regularly for a year and a half before I cut him off.
Since this was also a tenant of our marriage agreement, it would be wrong to restrict him just because I don't feel like it.
This is when I brought up the polygamy bit again and offered him a total hall pass.
He's got to blow off steam as well as so as though it's better than self taking care of himself.
You know what I mean?
If it comes to a point where another woman has more kids with him and he is the main mom and she is the main mom who gains more of the benefits of a marriage license, I don't object to divorce so long as our boy is provided for.
And number five, this is not a shit test.
I swear.
I really just don't get much out of sex.
And there are feasible alternatives I never had a problem with before suggesting them.
Early on in our marriage, we're worried about infertility.
I endorsed polygyny as a way to boost our rookie numbers.
I certainly didn't expect to be encouraging my husband to twirl his pike elsewhere, but to me, it's a win-win.
The women have other mothers for support.
The father has extra hands to assign work to.
The kids have multiple reliable stewards, etc.
Wow.
And then she goes on, would this lifestyle be damaging to our cause or even our children, even if we raise them super duper extra far rightly?
So I'll stop there.
She's got a couple other questions, but have that guy.
Holy smoke.
Well, you know, I want to point out that this does not sound like anything a woman wrote.
Like this honestly sounds like something like a 20-year-old on 4chan wrote.
There is a lot of like weird stuff by twirling his pike.
I think Rolo wrote this response.
No, I'm not that retarded.
Like this sounds like, unless like the twist of fate, like both of these people are like 20 years old.
And then the girl was traumatized by this because she was raised as a Zoomer, like, don't ever have children.
You're white.
That's bad.
But this, if this came out that this was a troll, I would not be surprised at all, just because the wording of this is so bizarre.
I've never heard a woman talk like that.
I don't know.
Well, here, I'll kind of agree with Rolo in a sense.
And let's say she did really write this.
Then I would say maybe in another six months or a year, you will not feel this way.
And if you saw your husband with another woman, you would not like that.
So I think this is part of just, you know, women have the baby.
Sometimes it's difficult.
It's painful.
It's disruptive.
Whatever the personality of the woman, all those things together, oh, she's turned off to the idea of having more children.
I would say, anyways, it is early in the game.
Your feelings will change and all of those things.
One more thing I will say is, you know, in olden times and like the Bible, right?
The patriarchs, they had more than one wife and stuff like that.
And so, you know, I think that that's not a good situation normally, but like when society gets to be in a kind of a desperate state, it becomes necessary.
I think the patriarchs that had more than one wife, they were not, you know, saying, woohoo, I got more than one wife.
I think they were doing what was necessary and things like that.
And so in extreme times, sometimes that does become necessary.
But I think that she's in a six months or a year, she's going to feel differently about it.
And she's going to maybe be around a relative or a friend that has a new baby and she's going to get that new baby smell again and say, I want another baby.
This poor guy, he's like on the verge of getting to live the caveman's dream, right?
Multiple partners, like, you know, Genghis conning it out there.
And we're still trying to, you know, assuming this is legit.
And let's say, hey, let's assume this is legit.
Like the poor wife, she's like, guys, you know, I'm giving you more context here.
So basically, she doesn't enjoy sex and the baby had terrible colic.
To me, that still sounds, it happens, right?
It sounds like a pretty extreme or interpretation of those things to just be like, all right, no more of that.
Like, right.
How many women really enjoy sex anyway?
Right.
You know, like join the club.
And two, like, you know, colic comes and goes.
So that way, all right.
So, okay.
So I guess our final answer here is, come on, give it, give it another shot.
Do it the old-fashioned way.
Yeah.
Keep the stay together.
Yeah.
It's not normal or natural to let this happen.
I could see it going off the rails, despite your best intent.
Go ahead, Tim.
UK.
I was just going to add, Mormons do exist.
And whenever I've watched a documentary about Mormons, I always think that everyone involved is kind of a fringe psychology.
Like there's something just a bit off about them.
And she may be one of these people who it's like, like they, they're friends with the other wives.
They, they raise the kids together.
Rolo's a Mormon, obviously.
So maybe you didn't write a writer right in.
Rolo's a broke-ass Mormon.
He doesn't have one wife, let alone seven.
Come on.
Yeah, you know, these people are out there.
I mean, all right, she never really enjoyed sex.
I mean, those people exist as well, people of different sex drives.
And I mean, she might just be a real fringe case.
But like Sam was saying, it's like you go ahead with this and you see your husband with someone else, see that they've conceived a child together.
And once that's done, you can't undo that.
I know there's stories about couples having a threesome because they think it's going to be great.
You know, it's the age of porn where three threesomes are just being thrown about everywhere.
And then they do it and it destroys the relationship because now you've seen them be that intimate with someone else.
And while she might not have enjoyed sex, there's an element of sex that isn't just a case of pleasure, but it's being as intimate as you can be with another human being.
And to share that or to just toss that away and be like, yeah, you're not going to be that intimate with me.
You're going to be that intimate with someone else.
That's going to be the death knell for a relationship if you're normal.
But if you're a weirdo, as these is a really weird situation and it's like both humanoid to it.
I mean, the guy seems to be more, his head seems to be a bit more screwed on because he's kind of going, is this a trick?
I don't think this is going to work out.
But the woman's like, oh, yeah, it's going to be great.
And in this case, what a trip.
You know, it's a really, really wild one.
And I think it's going to be a case of you're going to have to dive in one way or the other and the consequences are going to be lived with.
It might work out great.
You might find out you become a Mormon and you have two wives and it's great and you have a bunch of kids and life goes happily ever after or you might go somewhere else.
But either way, it sounds like this guy isn't going to be happy with this woman in the long term.
So I think I think he'd be better formalizing like, I'm sorry, but we've got to go our separate ways because you're a bit tapped, to be honest.
And if she's sticking to her guns, then he's got to, he's got to go.
I would say he's not going to be happy in the short run because the long run is, I think that's uncharted territory because I think the wait, like the six months to whatever is more the plan because this woman is basically saying the short run isn't working for me.
So I don't know if it won't work out in the long run, but it's just, it's not working out right now.
And then that's kind of the dilemma.
I wouldn't say the divorce right now, but it's like it's hang in there for a while.
If after a year, yeah, it's not going to happen.
And it's like, if she stops pushing, then I mean, all right, you've had one child.
Maybe you're just one of those couples who has one child, but you go on and you grow old together and you love each other.
But it sounds like she's really pushing him, like, go out there, have, have other kids, have other relationships.
And that to me, that's not healthy.
And if she stay together and she's constantly saying it's like, you should have gone somewhere else.
You should have slept with that other lady, you know, then that's going to be a really unhealthy kind of basis for a relationship.
Yeah.
Yep.
And she asks, would this lifestyle be damaging to our cause or even our children?
More white babies would certainly be helpful to our cause, but it would be definitely weird and not traditional for the children are not healthy, not normal.
A bunch of babies in a broken home or a broken relationship is not going to help her cause.
Right.
I still want more white babies, even if they're not in the ideal situation.
But yeah, call me greedy.
So here, and here, here's a little more context.
Her next question, how do people even handle colic?
I'm talking eight to 14 hours of wailing daily for six months and so many tummy problems that I couldn't breastfeed unless I ate only lettuce and turkey.
My experience with it soured the soured me on the idea of more babies completely.
So nightmare colic has scrambled this woman's instincts as well.
I never had colic to deal with.
So go ahead.
Yeah, there's, you know, okay, that's something you could Google, you know, Google it.
But anyways, like in a couple years, that's going to be all forgotten about, you know, so.
Yeah, you got to go to a doctor for that.
I mean, I don't know.
I don't think there's any easy, easy answer we can give you for miracle colic cure.
Except that in a couple years, you're going to be past that.
We'll be, hey, remember, remember when the baby had colic?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, that was bad.
You know, you're going to get past that.
Whatever bad thing you're in, you're going to get past.
I like Rolo's idea of just six months, see where you are then.
And Sam's.
If you can change a little bit, then that's huge because at the moment, it's like you're talking about exploding your life.
So even if it's changed to like, oh, yeah, I do love you, but maybe we'll just have one kid, then you've kind of dodged a bullet there because this could go really south really quickly.
Just drink a lot of red wine, lie back and think of the white race.
Come on.
You can turn the music up a little bit.
Let him cry.
Turn the lights around.
Who knows?
All right.
And then finally, yeah, she says, we need our women out here rebuilding our numbers, but we're not immune to the propaganda we grew up with either.
I was sure my feelings against more babies would change once the colic stage passed, but they haven't.
Is there a middle ground to be had?
Or am I only as good as the number of kids I pop out?
Can polygyny mitigate that?
Can anything else?
All right.
So that speaks more.
This is legit.
She's here feeling, she's feeling guilty.
And no, you are not only as good as the number of kids you pop out.
That's one factor.
Yeah.
And remember, there's, I know that it might seem like there's only a few of us at the moment because of censorship and everything like that.
But the entire white race doesn't rest on your shoulders.
And if you have one child, it's not the end of the world.
So and it's like you're, you, you can still be involved in this cause in this cause with one child.
I know a number of couples who have one child.
And it's like, it's not that you shouldn't beat yourself up.
Oh, I should have, you know, obviously Sam's got seven.
So, you know, he's making up for you.
So it's like, you can have one.
Sam has seven.
Maybe I have two.
Maybe I have three.
You know, Coach has got two.
It's three, three, three.
It sounds like she's kind of blaming herself and feeling like the reason he has to go elsewhere is for the cause.
And no, you shouldn't detonate your own relationship because you haven't lived up to the cause or whatever.
It's like, it's not like Adolf Hitler's looking down on you and being like, oh, you didn't do good enough.
It's like, you know, you had one child and you've battled through colic.
Colic is one thing I'm scared of happening because I've heard it's hellish.
But you're through that now.
So if that means you can raise your child within a loving household, that's better than attempting Mormonism, but without the religious fervor, because that's just a recipe for disaster.
Yeah.
Give it time.
Give it time.
You know, in a year or two or something, your feelings can totally change.
I mean, look at how people's feelings change about things.
That's right.
UK, Sam, you're pretty good at this.
I think you might have a future in content creation.
Yeah.
Come on back at the time.
Let's go back to you here real quick before I talk about a couple of things.
The COVID protest, Boris Johnson ending the lockdowns there.
Is it actually over there?
Like, have people come to their senses?
And the total 10-part question here is, is the COVID resistance, is that a coping mechanism for the obviously far more serious demographic invasion there?
What's the mood on the ground among the UK population in terms of the government and COVID and resistance to that?
Or I did it again.
But yeah, give us some more.
Yeah, give us some colored commentary on the ground there in terms of all that.
I was actually at a, I don't know if you guys will have seen on Telegram, like the Worldwide Day of Freedom.
And I was at one yesterday and the numbers were huge.
I think there was like 2,000 people.
We shut the city that I'm in down and huge police presence.
Everyone was really impressed.
Speeches were a bit lame.
A lot of talking about ending tyranny and fascism.
And you just, you know, whenever you hit that, you just kind of, oh, it's like that old chestnut.
You know, there was an old, he looked Jewish, but he was handing out, he had a big box full of clip-on yellow stars that said unvaxed on.
And he was handing them out.
So like tons of people had these on.
I was just like, please, no.
But I think with this COVID thing, it's like with everything else, it's always two steps forward, one step back.
So through this COVID, they've managed to put through a ton of new legislation, especially here in England, where basically we've lost our freedom of speech, freedom to assemble.
And I think freedom to, there's another one as well.
Oh, and now there's like also an inability to hold your representatives to account.
And they've done all that.
And then they've kind of gone, COVID's all right.
We'll go back to normal.
And people just go, all right, cool, we've won.
Especially a lot of these new COVID people, it's they don't realize that this is part of a huge agenda that's been going on for definitely since World War II.
Longer than that.
Um, you know, the tendrils gonna sweep backwards uh, through throughout history, and I think they're gonna think like, oh right cool, i'm not getting fired for not getting a vaccine job done, I can go back to victory.
Yeah um, and uh, I think, I think some people are going to stick with it, but the number of people who, after two years of just obvious um, Jewish tricks, they're still there going like, it's like I don't see it at all.
And what do you mean race?
You know, and it's like you know uh, you know, I mean, all the speeches were about coming together in unity uh the, the population of the world coming together against the elites, and you, just then you're like, you're knocking on the door, can we please go through it?
But it's like no, they're just intent on staying there.
So um, I think it's gonna return to uh, a bit normal, but that there's gonna be a hangover and it's gonna be a kind of legislation hangover where there's gonna be new laws that can be brought in.
Um, I know they seem to be pivoting on to the climate change now.
So uh, and they're talking about climate lockdowns and maybe uh maybe, you should all work from home, and I mean just the loss of life from uh, isolation and all this.
It's it's, it's broken.
A lot of people, the number of people who i've seen where the question is asked would you carry on wearing a mask?
Um, kind of like uh, East Asians I don't know if you have it in your country, but if you see a Chinese person in England, they're wearing a mask and they're doing this.
They've always done this.
And when you see footage and SARS yeah yeah yeah yeah, with the sales stuff and it's like they've, they were broken by SARS and they now live in constant fear of SARS.
And there's a lot of people who are going to be in constant fear of coronaviruses now something we've lived with for millennia, you know and now they're just going to be terrified constantly.
You love, you love to see the spirit.
You love to see the spirit people going out.
There was just a big anti-vax protest in Washington Dc today, just as, of course, the mandates are starting to get struck down here in the courts.
It's almost like there's a coordinated ratcheting down.
They're like, all right, like you said, move on to climate change or we really milk this one for all that we could.
We broke enough people, we smashed enough China, let's bring back little normalcy.
We kind of need these people back in the office anyway, because economy, supply chain, all that stuff sees.
You see the fight, january 6th, people, good Middle Americans, going to the barricades for Trump of all things.
So it's yeah, like you said two, two steps forward, one back, or one forward, one back.
There's plenty of fight and resistance left in people, but they're just getting animated for the wrong reasons or not.
The ideal reasons, blood and soil and the actual survival of your country.
So uh keep, keep working.
I know it's like yeoman's work.
You know you're tilling a field and very few crops are coming up.
It's so frustrating.
Yeah uh, I think, in terms of our, our best crop to yield.
I mean, obviously you don't have this issue in uh, America to my knowledge, but people who are against grooming gangs there's.
Obviously they're called called grooming gangs.
Obviously, we know what they are.
They're rape gangs and we know who's involved in perpetrating the rape, but everyone knows it implicitly.
So when you go to a grooming gang demo, they'll talk about kind of, oh, you know, the community needs to come together and they don't want to talk in racial terms, but everyone knows.
Whereas the COVID stuff, people are like, oh, yeah, this is like a fertile field that we can pull people from.
And it's like, no, this is a lot of kind of people talking about if we all pray at 12 o'clock, then we'll raise our vibrations and that'll cause the earth to kind of side with us and crystal healing and all this kind of stuff.
And you're just like, this, this isn't a crowd that's going to be, you know, take, oh, one more step and they're at racial nationalism.
It's like, no, it's that they've got a long way to go before they reach that point.
Sadly.
Yep, absolutely.
Sam, who's your favorite Englishman from history?
Quick, quick detour.
Who in English history really inspires and motivates you?
Other than a certain obvious one, Rolo's got the flag behind him.
I don't think you can mention Mosley.
Oh, God.
Other than Oswald Mosley.
Bowden, I think, was a really powerful speaker and then someone who understood that it wasn't just about kind of, you know, not racist, just don't like him.
He was very much, he was in tune with the kind of European spirit and what made Britain what it is and what made our people who they were.
And he spoke on that.
And then the ability to orate without a script and without amplification and just be able to just go off the, it's a real shame that so much of his speeches were caught on grainy footage in the back of pubs.
I would have loved to see him speak at like a patriotic alternative event where it's like, it's, you know, beautiful, beautiful surroundings, HD cameras, great microphones, and we can really appreciate it for what he was.
Absolutely.
We have a friend who, I guess, saw Bowden deliver one of the greatest speeches of all time to a place where there was no recording equipment.
And I take this guy's word for it.
He said he was just magic in a bottle.
He never even prepared his speeches.
He just let it rip.
He's like, no, I never, I just, I just go up there and do it.
So definitely, if audience, if you're not familiar with him, Jonathan Bowden, taken from us too early, wonderful orator.
He sort of has the Kai Moros, fighting, pugnacious, you know, zero apologies spirit just imbued in every word that he says.
I wanted to mention here that I went to the March for Life on Friday this past week.
A friend of mine suggested it.
I had never gone to one before, despite living in or around Washington, D.C. for two decades.
So go figure.
Now I'm not that close anymore.
And I go.
I was curious.
Of course, I am pro-life full stop, except for the obvious ones where you think the baby's going to be really sick or the mom might actually die.
Or yes, if a white woman gets raped by a non-white or a white, then I think in that case, she's not obligated to raise a rape baby.
However, I had this idea in my mind that it was a cucky event, 50 years of failure, as Niggy says.
Go march, shout platitudes, go home and forget about it.
The train keeps on rolling.
And of course, this year in the context, there was, I don't know if there was more people, but there was more optimism because of a looming case or two at the Supreme Court where they might actually, if not strike down Roe v. Wade, take an axe to it or some type of cutting instrument to make it less universal and widespread and give the states more leeway to do what they will with it.
Impressions were basically a, it was 80 to 85% white, I would estimate.
A lot of young kids, you know, their kids there from their Christian school or their church group, which was lovely to see.
The speeches, of course, were pretty lame, just about God and baby.
Lame in the sense that they were not to the barricades.
You know, you've had 70 million babies slaughtered in this country roughly since Roe was legalized, which is almost exactly the number of aliens that we've admitted legally and maybe even more legally.
So we've literally been destroying our own type and importing the replacements.
However, got to see, so basically a lot of good hearted people there for a good cause, right?
Big surprise.
There were some good banners up there.
One said, and I think I posted this on Telegram that, you know, the politicians change, but we still keep killing babies, which of course is our thing, right?
Like you keep talking about this, yet it keeps happening.
You can't keep doing the same thing and expect a different result.
We also got to see Patriot Front in action.
That was the first time I had ever seen a Patriot Front demo.
We happened to be marching past them as they were halted.
They had a heavy police escort around them.
There were a couple hangers on there, you know, trying to get their goat and the rest of it.
But absolutely inspiring to see those men standing there at the event, not upstaging it.
They weren't harassing anybody.
They weren't there to disrupt the March for Life.
They were there to raise the flag, hand out flyers and show people that there is another way, a stronger medicine out there.
So we salute them for that.
And then finally, marching with these people, many of them with banners.
My buddy had a fairly obscure historical flag that was our standard bearer.
No, it wasn't the Third Reich's flag.
It had the feeling of being like in a religious procession or maybe even like marching off to the crusades to know that you were around people who shared your ideas and were there for a cause.
There was definitely a little bit of magic there where I thought, ah, you know, even if I think this is a little bit lame and I'm a little bit of a fish out of water here because I'm not particularly religious and I have certain caveats to being pro-life, it was an amazing experience.
So I would recommend to the audience, if you haven't gone to a demonstration, even if it's not totally your cup of tea, to give it a shot because I will have those memories for the rest of my life.
It was not a day wasted in any sense.
And then, of course, we were able to go to a good Irish bar and have some brews with comrades and stuff like that.
So just a little, if you're not going to do, I know a lot of people are against activism for the risk or the, you know, possible ineffectiveness of it.
But just get out there and go to something.
Get, you know, mill about, see the scene and get involved.
I don't know.
I went on for a long time there, but that's all I had on the March for Life.
No, yeah, I mean, these causes are really important.
And if you're not going to, if you're not willing to be like a shield bearer for the Patriot Front, you can at least add numbers to the people who Patriot Front are marching alongside.
You don't have to constantly draw attention to yourself or be explicitly nationalist when attending these things.
Obviously, the event wasn't organized by nationalists.
So we don't have to put our stamp upon it.
These COVID things, they're explicitly not ethno-nationalists, but you go there and the energy is something that I think our people need to get used to.
Again, kind of kicking off of it.
I think we've got a lot of very docile people who think, oh, I could never go out there on the street.
And it's like, no, get out there.
Get up to the front.
So you're right behind the police line, you know, and it's like, or you're right up in the police's face and get a feel for what that feels like.
It's kind of like we were talking familiar with the sport, like what it feels like to have a man grab you or to get punched in the face.
It's useful to get to know what it's like to be in a big crowd of people who are all going in the same direction.
Yeah, there's definitely momentum on our side.
And this particular movement is maybe just, you might say a sector or something.
It's not exactly all everything we have to say, but that is something we definitely are in favor of these pro-life causes and everything.
So when you're around that thing, you will definitely sense the momentum and that's that's energizing.
Yep.
Nordic Resistance Movement put up a banner and had torches on the margins of an anti-vax anti-lockdown protest in Stockholm, I believe it was.
I couldn't read what was on the banner.
I assume it wasn't just about COVID, but maybe about the great replacement.
So yeah, you can use these things for your own purpose.
There was a group called, I keep forgetting, it's like the New Columbia movement or something, but there were some fashion guys also there on the margins of March for Life who seemed pretty strong and pretty brave, just massive banner, good talking points and handed out flyers.
So to get involved and get living is important.
And yeah, speaking about living, I took Junior skiing for his birthday last week.
It was a bitterly cold blizzard the entire way there.
The last time we had gone out, he tried snowboarding and it was a giant failure.
Not his fault.
You know, we got like a short lesson and then I struggled to go down the mountain.
I couldn't give him any tips.
I never snowboarded and he was just on his butt more than he was on the snowboard.
So this time, so Junior, come on, let's try skiing.
We'll get you nice short ones or whatever.
And no lesson, just dad on the bunny slope, a driving snow the entire time.
It was probably 15 degrees, blizzard conditions.
Only one of the lifts was open.
And he was a total trooper, didn't get discouraged by falling, took my advice.
And by the end of the day, he was shredding back and forth from the top of the lift.
There was like a stop halfway and the ski coach guy there was like, no, no, just take, get off at the first stop.
Don't go all the way to the top.
So by the end of the day, it was just me and him out there.
I said, do you want, you want to go up to the top?
You want to give it a shot?
And he gave that look like, oh, I don't know.
I said, come on, let's try it.
And he said, all right, let's do it.
So talk about a proud dad moment.
And this is stuff you have to look forward to, Sam, is seeing your son or daughter, of course, skiing down a mountain in front of you on their first day out, just totally shredding the alpine mounds and things like that.
I couldn't have been happier.
And we almost didn't go because it was cold and snowy and we were worried about the road conditions.
And we just did it.
And I joked with him.
I was like, yeah, we drove through a blizzard to go engage in one of the most dangerous activities because people die skiing all the time.
He said, yeah, that's pretty cool, dad.
So just a little white pill, a little boast, I guess.
That's great.
Yeah.
Snowboarding really is a skill unto itself.
So I'm not surprised your boy had a hard time with it.
But I mean, I used to skateboard and I thought snowboarding would be dead easy.
And it was like the, no.
Yeah.
Again, just like your boy, I mean, I was 17, 18 at the time and just spent my entire day on my ass.
So I'm really glad he picked up skiing and found it a ton easier because I haven't tried skiing, but that was always recommended.
If you didn't know how to snowboard, just do skiing because it'll be a lot more enjoyable.
So that's great to hear that he's big.
Oh, yeah.
Come, come visit Sam and we'll, and we'll take you out there.
I'll give you a personal lesson myself.
We'll have you shredded in no time.
All right, we're coming up on another hour and it's almost dinner time here, so I I don't want to rush us, but uh sam us, Sam and Rollo, anything you got in the stack, i'm happy, to happy, to take it on, or we can let our good friend there go get a good night's sleep.
I got nothing right at the moment.
All right, Rollo brother, anything in your stack?
No okay, all right.
Well Sam, did I pronounce your last name correctly it's, it's Melia or Melia?
How do you say?
It's Media?
But everyone says it me uh Melia um, from school and everything like that.
So i'm not too precious about it.
Really um, what one thing I did?
Because one of the questions you listening at on was on the Civil War uh, or the American Revolution right, temper tantrum, temper tantrum or uh, like legitimate split.
Yeah yeah, and I know it was kind of a really foundational act for you guys, but since uh, what?
The Roman invasion in like 50 bc, we've spent all of time just killing each other and revolutions and everything like that.
So, you guys, having a revolution was just par for the course.
It wasn't really a big deal for us.
We're just kind of, oh all right, you guys, you know, set up your own, your own country, but we're not we, um.
But I did do some reading on it because we don't get taught about it at all, and uh I, I was looking at the kind of laws that and the taxes that they were putting on you guys and I was like yeah, i'll do a revolution as well.
It's like it was really petty stuff.
And I was just like I can't believe that they thought they would be able to do this to like like a bunch of hardy um, I mean, at that time they were Englishmen as well who had kind of gone over and expecting that not to kick off.
Uh, obviously it did.
And um, I I imagine that's probably why they didn't fight it too hard was because they're like yeah we, we were kind of pushing our luck and we should have expected to get shot in the face at some point.
But uh, and yet yeah, and yet, in contrast to what the, the elites are doing to us now, it does look like a little temper tantrum.
I mean, they're literally oppressing and and killing us and seeing us replaced.
As I said on uh, I did an interview with Texas VET last week.
I said like if Thomas Jefferson were alive today and were a white nationalist, he could write the declaration of independence like drunk, half asleep, and it would probably be like Talmud length.
The number of uh legitimate offenses that would give forth a new document like that.
Yeah, it definitely seems like there was a different breed of uh, of of uh white people, people around at that time who were willing to kind of throw the yoke off and uh and and and make something of themselves and I only wish we had that kind of energy today.
But they've had a long time to kind of beat that out, that out of us and uh, maybe they learned lessons from then and they thought, all right cool well, we'll couch things in better language and we'll slowly, slowly approach and uh, you know, next time they won't see us coming.
They didn't beat it out of you, my friend, glad to see it.
Seriously fam, uh wish uh to all of our audience.
Uh be, be more like Sam and Laura.
If they have any skeletons in their closet, they're really well hidden behind trapdoors.
I don't know, secret doors.
No, I'm sorry.
But Sam, honored to have you on.
Yep.
Yeah, exactly.
Anything last?
I'll put your Telegram channel in the show notes.
Of course, the Patriotic Alternative sites, your tea company, your and your wife's tea company.
And anything else you want to mention before we put a ribbon on this puppy?
Tomorrow night, Monday night, we do tea time with Sam and Laura at seven o'clock UK time.
So that'll probably be like one o'clock American time.
We're trying to do a lifestyle show, but we're two people who are heavily involved in white nationalist politics.
So we're probably the last people who should do a lifestyle show.
So it does get a bit political.
Occasionally the finger starts wagging and we have to shut lying mouths.
But it's normally just a kind of good bit of fun, a bit more relaxed.
We do politics all week, every week.
So it's nice to kind of let our hair down and talk about.
I think we talked about like the sex in the city clip the other week where the white woman gets guilted for trying to be an ally by the black woman.
It's stuff like that.
Just kind of a bit lighter, a bit more fun.
But it's been an honor to be on here tonight with you guys.
Obviously, Smasher couldn't make it.
The potato fears, the red coat.
Clearly.
Couldn't handle it.
So hopefully he'll pluck up the courage next time to come on with us.
It's been a pleasure to finally see you, Sam, and speak with you, Coach, and Rolo as well.
It's been an absolute pleasure.
Thank you for having me on.
Pleasure was all ours.
Turn my camera on here.
Hopefully the internet can handle it.
Sam, thank you, sir.
Kind of interesting doing it on a Sunday afternoon, right?
You know, it feels like it is a different field for sure.
And it was a great show.
And thanks to Sam and Laura for being at.
It was so interesting and such a pleasure.
Absolutely.
So honored to be in the same cause with them and their new beautiful baby girl.
Really good feels all around.
Rolo, my friend.
Excellent work lately.
No joke.
All right.
All right.
How's the final storm going?
Still storming?
Still the final storm every week?
Every week.
Well, we are not the final storm.
How many times I got to tell you?
Gosh dang it.
But yes, it's coming.
It's coming.
And we're there every week to prepare you all.
Good stuff, brother.
All right, fam.
Full house episode 115 was recorded from Ice Planet Hoth here, deep in the hollers.
Seriously, it's like snow and ice everywhere, and there's more on the way.
Thank you, Sam.
It is still January 23rd here.
I do believe it's turned January 24th over across the Atlantic for a wonderful news.
Sam Melia and Laura Teller.
Follow us on Telegram at t.me slash pro whitefam2gab.com slash full house.
And please do consider supporting our efforts at givesendgo.com slash full house.
So to our listeners out there around the world, be more like Sam and Laura.
I mean that and never despair.
Never get discouraged.
Always do your best.
Eat your wheaties, take your vitamins, have more kids and all the rest of it.
Sam, I insisted on Fat Boy Slim for the break, but you got anything you want to take us out to this week of any striping?
Yes, actually, I do.
I'll give you a bit of high lung.
I don't know if you've heard them before, but Hi Long.
I don't know how you pronounce the word Narupo, but yeah, it's kind of like our European history brought to life, which is really impressive.
I'd highly recommend watching them live as well.
It's like a ritual, a pagan ritual.
So I'll send you a link to that.
Godspeed.
Good stuff.
All right.
We love you, fam.
Enjoy the selection from our pal Samilia, and we'll talk to you next week.
Put him up, put him up.
We love you.
See ya.
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