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Feb. 5, 2022 - Full Haus
01:12:45
20220205_The_Solomon_Show
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Time Text
Dear listener, we have a bit of a different show in store for you this week, as you will be hearing just our second hour.
That's right.
We recorded a sincerely wonderful first half with a Christian nationalist in which we parsed race, religion, the Old Testament, the JQ, and more with our usual Ilan and Bonhoe Me.
It was clean, and we were all pals going into the break.
Unfortunately, however, our fondness for certain historical symbols and great men that give our enemies the vapors are apparently also still too spooky for some of our own people, even those fully aware of who holds the whip hand in the sick society.
So just as we were about to post this show, we were asked not to.
Gentlemen that we are, we regrettably obliged.
I frankly was prepared to scrap the whole thing in disgust, but good old Rolo saved the day, smacked me about the face, told me to stop being a drama queen, and made some fine edits to make the second half salvageable.
So we split the baby, our two only, and we therefore present the Solomon episode.
And welcome back to Full House, episode 117, part two.
Rolo is with us to defend himself.
Man, blood.
That sounds like blood and soil.
That sounds bad.
Or like blood and honor.
Blood and honor.
Yeah.
I know.
Blood.
It's pretty bad.
Hey, Nana.
He's got good photo.
He's got some good.
He's got some realistic writing up on there, too.
So we're here back in the second half with just our regular our core for the first time in quite some time.
It's a delight and I wanted to say hello to Rolo, who's off his stupid call from the first half.
What's up, Rolo?
Hello.
Glad to be here.
I like that hello wrong.
I like the song.
Purple drank.
Thank you.
Favorite one.
When you say hello like that, you got to imitate William Pierce.
Hello.
i'm william i'm glad to hear a great library of Just Pierce.
All right.
All right.
Yeah, we're going to lose audience.
No, I wanted to say, I wanted to say that Rolo has got an awesome library of parody songs and they're going to be played on this show, but, you know, a couple of them just need a little fine tuning so that if I can't understand the lyrics, totally like what's going on.
It's the classic challenge of doing a parody song, unlike O Crystal Knight, which I knocked out two takes and loved and adored.
Late November back in 38.
Uncle Ladoff was the head of state.
Yes.
So glad I had to get that off.
I had to get that out of my creative box.
You know, the number one problem with parody is, and this applies to Sven's parodies too, is the mixing.
The mixing, they will make the vocal tracks less quiet than it should be because they're not as confident on the singing.
And it's like, it's okay if it's a little out of tune because if the lyrics are funny enough, nobody's going to care.
The whole point is the lyrics.
But people that are typically capable of recording these things and mixing them and whatever hyper-focus on musical perfection instead of the end product.
And so you get a really good end product with slightly quiet vocal tracking because they're less confident on the tuning of their voice, even though nobody cares about that.
Like just make it loud and proud because we all want to understand those lyrics and sing along just as poorly as you did.
That's right.
Rolo's got purple drank in the hopper.
Hi, hi, Yala.
Yellow.
Hi, Yella.
She's Louise.
Oh, Purple drank.
Oh, I think I did a good job on Purple Drink as far as being able to understand the lyrics and the audio, the volume.
Yeah, I thought it was just right.
And what's the other one, Rolo?
The feds are watching me to the tune of somebody's watching me.
Yeah, by Link and Rockwell instead of just Rockwell.
Quick housekeeping note: I will be going on the Hammer Stream this Saturday, 10 p.m. Eastern with Jazz Serby.
I have been reliably informed that that is a pro-white men's knitting circle, that show.
So anyway, I don't mean to laugh at them, but that just me look at the trunk.
I said, I don't think you guys are hardcore enough for me.
I mean, you know, I'm concerned that this is going to be bad for my rep going on a week show like that.
But anyway, check out the Hammer Stream on Saturday at 10 p.m.
Hopefully they can keep up.
And my reliable hound has just woke up.
She's been my co-pilot this whole show.
And also, in terms of streaming itself, I just talked to Rolo today.
I said, Rolo, the kids demand streaming.
These, you know, they need live.
They need it now.
They want to watch and interact with us.
And one of the reasons we don't do that and send money to, and we have done a couple streams and they've been great, actually.
But one of the reasons we don't do it, and Rolo reminded me, is because you really have to have a reliable internet service to do that with the video and not be glitching out left and right.
And both Rolo and I do not have Starlink yet.
Salmon Smasher might be able to do it.
But yeah, we got our best minds on this.
We should do like a pay-per-listen, you know, like pay-per-view, paper listen.
We talk about like, I don't know, our sex lives or something.
The black show.
Yeah, I know.
Mike's free.
It's just two hours of silence.
Good self-burn there, Rolo.
We have one new white life this week, and our old pal, Towns Van Plants, did the deed.
That salty old dog.
I don't know if it was a boy or a girl.
He's gone quiet.
I think he's doing a digital fast to like be the best new fucking.
No, seriously.
I've known about this one for a minute.
Well, did the baby come officially?
Yeah, I think because I was going to say, I knew that Mrs. Towns was pregnant for a while now.
I just didn't say anything because I know Towns is a little bit more quiet than other people.
Yeah, you're reserved.
I didn't want to say anything, but I'm glad that you're doing it because now I feel like I can.
Yeah, I mean, I didn't ask for permission.
I'll ask him after the show and we'll cut this out.
It's easier to gain forgiveness than permission.
That's true.
That's right.
So congratulations, Towns.
I'm not going to ask you for permission.
Very good.
Good job, buddy.
Yeah.
Post it all over the internet.
That's right.
We were going to continue the religious discussion.
I had a bunch of other questions.
It's always fun and fascinating.
Just ask them.
Yeah.
The most important thing.
Well, I was going to, well, one of them, Sam, was like, is there any, are there any churches out there that you support and agree with?
I mean, God knows there's tons of bad ones.
But, you know, if you're not churches, you mean Christian churches?
A preacher or a website?
Like, so the USS Liberty guy said Liberty Fellowship in Kalispell, Montana was Ron Kugel's personal endorsement.
And a couple of listeners went to it and they're like, yeah, that stuff is pretty good.
I mean, it's not like exactly up our alley, but as Christian churches, fellowships go, it's pretty good.
So are there any, Sam?
I mean, other than people can always find a traditional Catholic Mass, probably somewhere.
Well, yeah, there's a few things I would say quickly about that.
I mean, as far as going on the internet and looking up things and being able to listen to a message or a sermon or a thing, there's a lot of things.
There's, first of all, I'd say quickly, Christagenia.com is it.org.
I keep mixing these up, but you could find it.
Christagenia, a lot of great stuff on there, scripturesforamerica.org.
That's a great one.
There's a Kingdom Identity Ministries.
I just want to say, sorry, Sam, but one of the problems with Christaginia is that they have a forum and a lot of people on that forum are absolute like Sperg retards that you don't want to deal with.
And I don't know much about their website outside of the forum because I've seen a lot of stuff that links to their forum and seen that stuff.
So I'm not talking about the entire website, you know, the more, you know, need to certain might be better.
You get a certain type of person who's going on there.
And sometimes people are, you know, the autiste type person and all that.
That's all true.
I would not take away from that.
As far as I like the traditional Catholic Mass because it's mostly silent.
And then it's when it's not silent, it's in a language that is not English.
So there's, you know, there's not a lot.
There's not a lot to disagree with there.
And even when you read the Latin translated, there's not a lot to disagree with there.
So it's, you know, there's not a lot of this opportunity for even making it something different or something that we would not agree with.
So, you know, that's as far as having something to do on Sunday morning to worship God.
I think the traditional Mass is really great.
And I would recommend that.
But as far as, you know, going and reading about the Bible and all that, you know, we live in a very confused time where everybody kind of disagrees with each other.
And I can accept that.
And I understand that.
Like you say, Smasher, some of the people on that forum are a little intense or negative or something like that.
And those are people that are probably new to the message.
But and I feel you, what you're saying there.
But as a member of the European folk religion or as an enjoyer of European folk religions.
You know, I have to admit that a lot of people in my camp are kind of LARPy weirdos too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm more than willing to just, you know, take it as it is.
That's all part of it.
Like I was saying in the first half, Tom, I grew up on Tom Metzger, especially Tom Metzger, but William Luther Pierce as well.
And those guys had their things that I certainly didn't agree with, but in a lot of ways I did agree with them and stuff like that.
And I'm okay to work with things like that.
But, you know, sometimes certain people are not okay to kind of just take things on the whole and agree to disagree and all that type of stuff.
Yeah, I just want to say Sam's version of Christianity and cosmotheism.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sam's interpretation of Christianity, interpretation and practice of Christianity.
If there were more, many more men like that in the cause, I'd practically say there's no problem whatsoever.
The problem is with the really cucky Christians and then the really sanctimonious, holier than thou, insulting, like people who go around shouting Christ is king and calling us all wig nets is just like, yes, I will remain agnostic.
Thank you very much.
You've gosh done right.
I'm a wig net and you're never going to stop me.
Yeah, I think more and more there's more of the right type of person you're looking for there.
And yeah, you always got some kind of really extreme people that maybe put it, don't put it in the best light.
Yeah.
And then the other thing I was going to ask, Sam, and you might have a view on this, is what's the end times, the rapture, revelation?
Some people say that we're living in it right now.
How do you think this story sort of wraps up?
Everything goes to hell and then Jesus comes back and saves the worthy.
Serious question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure.
There's a second coming.
I think that we don't know the time or the date.
We could tell the seasons.
It feels like it's that type of season.
But anyways, whatever age we live in, we fight for the good and we fight to have a society that is good for us to raise our families in and things like that.
And I think that regardless of what kind of how you're treating the religious question, you can certainly be on board with that.
So we're fighting for a better day for our people if Christ comes in a thousand years or if he comes next year.
Either way, we have to be ready for him in our hearts.
And we should be fighting for a just society anyways.
Amen.
Yeah, I could not, I know that we have this existence and this corporeal reality to deal with.
So the idea of sacrificing this one for what is to me an unknown or an unknowable is just a non-starter, right?
I'm fighting here for sure.
And if it pays off in the afterlife, great.
No, we're supposed to.
We're supposed to fight.
You know, it gives our life meaning and stuff like that in a certain way.
We're fortunate, you know, in a time to live when our struggle means something, you know, and we don't have to be so abstract or esoteric about it, but it's right there in front of our face.
Yeah.
I love that he brought it back to kids too, a future for them, providing a role model for them, not being a shirker or a coward.
Yeah, I was supposed to put it on the line.
Really impressed with that.
You know, I'm not always really impressed with people that lean more towards the Christian and less towards the white nationalists.
But really, really impressed with him and the way that he handled that and his opinion and stance on that was that the two are almost inseparable.
And that if you aren't fighting for the future of your children, grandchildren, et cetera, then I got the sense that I don't want to speak for him or put words in his mouth, but I got the sense that like, if you aren't fighting for your family and for your lineage, then why do you even deserve to get into heaven?
Right.
This is the struggle of our time, especially.
This issue of white nationalism, for a person of conscience, is the struggle of our time.
And if you question that at all, I'd say go read the everyday channel.
That's right.
Imagine turning on your people, on your extended family to win some points from people who hate you already are going to contribute to the absolute destruction of the greatest race to ever walk the earth.
Handshots.
I mean, imagine.
Yeah.
Like being on the receiving end of that is rough, you know, because it's like we all know better than these people.
And that's not to say that we're all super smart, super geniuses or whatever, but every single day we see the things that we believe confirmed.
You know, we experience confirmation bias every single day.
Yeah.
You know, at an almost alarming rate.
So it's like, you know, I'm not telling you this stuff because I'm a super smart, super genius.
I'm telling you this stuff because I see it.
Right.
And I just recognize it.
And I'm willing to accept the uncomfortable truth of the world that we live in.
I would say that.
You don't have to be smart to see this.
Right.
Right.
And people, people are going to probably like record this and take this out of context and be like, Michael McKevitt is a cook retard or whatever.
Got that one away.
You know, I would love to live in a world where egalitarianism was true and that meritocracy was how everything was run and everything was just super simple, no nuance.
You just take people as they are.
No.
That would be so, that would be so much easier.
Right.
And I don't mean that I would literally prefer that, but from like an extremely just practical perspective, like that would be so much what we have to do.
It would be so much easier than what we're dealing with.
Yeah.
You know, but mankind grows great in eternal struggle and only in eternal peace does he perish.
Amen.
Yeah, it's a fascinating question.
You know, sort of one of those things I've been asking guests is what, yeah, why are you, what makes you different, right?
And it's absolutely true, Smasher.
You got, you know, galaxy IQ people who are probably genuinely oblivious to this.
I think that for a majority of them, though, they are simply cowards and selfish.
Yeah.
I got to say, most people that are truly big brain, high IQ, that refuse to take our positions.
I don't think any of them are genuine.
They're all liars.
They're either liars or they're absolutely brainwashed.
And I'm almost like, if you are brainwashed to that level, then you aren't actually a galaxy brain IQ, right?
Yeah.
You're a miracle.
You're a big bank accounts more than eternity.
It's to me, those people are pure individualist pragmatists, right?
So they don't care about the struggle that we face, even though they recognize it.
They recognize the problems with the world and society, but they don't care.
They are more interested in their personal stuff.
And so those people are cowards.
At the end of the day, you know, your big brain 150 IQ liberal is just a coward.
Yeah.
Or even worse, like the Ayn Rand.
Well, racial solidarity is a form of communism.
So, you know, on that ground, they don't agree with it.
We're all individuals.
Yeah.
That's a gay up.
I think that's a gay up because correct me if I'm wrong, but Ayn Rand is a Jew.
Yeah.
That is a gay up.
The real name is like a funny Jewish name.
Yeah, I'm sure it's like Steen Herbert Levowitz, Pike, whatever.
So that type of stuff is bait not for the big brain galaxy people, but for the midwit and the grug brain that managed to read Ayn Rand.
And they read that and they're like, oh, you're right, dude.
I shouldn't like agree with other white people because that's communism and communism's bad.
Meanwhile, this Jew is like, you know, communism bad, racial solidarity bad, but I'm a Jew and I'm going to punish and destroy your society if you disagree with the Jewish agenda.
Rosenbaum.
Alisa Zinoviana Rosenbaum.
There you go.
There you go.
Well, here's the thing.
Like, by the time you're my age, like, you're usually bought into the system and the system is working for you in some kind of way.
Right.
Like, like, you know, and so that's why people my age, so then they're, they join AARP, you know?
I would like to say that AARP actually has no age limit.
Anybody can join AARP as long as they're above the age of 18 and you can gain access to all the AARP benefits.
Just saying.
So Sam was talking about the American Association of Retarded People, though.
Sam's talking about boomers.
That also has no age limit.
And if you want all the benefits to that AARP.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes, sir.
But when I sign up for Spotify, I do understand what you're saying.
Well, what I'm saying is, is like, so the way I have lived my life, I've gone, you know, from the time I was 18 or so, and I was understood how things, I've been going all the way to the wall, you know.
Unfortunately, you knew about Jews before you were eligible to join AARP.
Yeah.
But so like someone like me, in a certain sense, like the system doesn't hold much promise for me, you know, like I'm broke.
I don't have like a bunch of investments that are doing really good or something like that.
You know, I'm, I've, you know, I'm, and I'm still in a way.
I'm not bought into the system.
I'm still going to gigs and I'm still spending my last dollar on the new record that comes out or whatever it is.
So it's like, you know, I've had too many kids that I couldn't afford like a nigger or whatever.
And so like, so, so I don't care.
I'm like, I'm a revolutionary.
You're my favorite nigger, Sam.
Yeah, that's right.
But I'm, I'm not, you know, my mindset is I'm a revolutionary.
You know, it's like, like they say, the revolutionary is already dead.
So they don't, they don't, they're not afraid of anything.
That's right.
But the difference, Sam, between you and most people your age is that you knew about all of these problems well before you were your age, right?
Right.
And so you, to a certain point, like, you know, I know about your job and your life circumstance.
The system does in a way sort of work for you.
You know, at least by the time I'm your age, the system is going to work a lot less for me than it's working for you.
Yeah.
Right.
And that is obviously not meant as an insult in any way because you have done great and wonderful things and you continue to do them.
But you are in a better position to benefit from the system than I am.
But that doesn't stop you.
That doesn't stop you from being here every day and talking about our issues and having too many kids and doing everything that you feel like you can actually absolutely give to the struggle of our of our race.
You know, people are cowards.
And I'm, I'm sorry, Rolo, you're going to have to edit this, but people are cowards.
And I'm so sick of it, dude.
I could scream thinking about this, man.
And we're not even.
I'm going to have a warning.
And let's be honest, guys, we're not even that brave, right?
We talk and we associate and we put out propaganda.
Yeah.
The times, you could argue that we are shirkers too.
We're just less of shirkers.
Not put, you know, smashers like say that to my face.
But you know what I mean?
Like, it's, We are out here and we are talking and we're doing stuff and every single one of us on the show is creating real associations.
So we're not just doing a podcast.
Yeah, cute little podcast.
That's on we are out here doing stuff every day.
There are real networks that we are all a part of and that we share and that have grown from 100, maybe 100 people, less than 100 people that are now literally tens of thousands of people throughout the world.
Throughout the world.
Friends, supporting each other.
Yep.
Yep.
You can't NJP, whatever, all this stuff, everything.
I could go anywhere in the world, anywhere in the world except for Israel, and I could couch for free on the couch of a white nationalist and not have to worry about a single thing.
Exactly.
What are you going to do?
You shack it up with Andrew Anglin in Nigeria when you go to Nigeria?
I try my best not to go into Ohio.
Very good.
Hey, I wanted to read this one.
Ambrose.
Everybody knows Ambrose.
He said Ambrose.
He can be Ambrose.
I've actually never met Ambrose, but he's like an old pal on mine already.
I met him.
He's gay.
He's gay.
Lucky, man.
He's lucky you didn't meet him.
I'm sorry.
I was getting that.
I like Ambrose.
He is a character.
He sent me a picture of his beautiful, handsome baby boy already starting to walk or struggling to walk.
He said he threw down the gauntlet.
He took two steps.
He was like, no, no, no.
Give me five or six.
Well, the doctors said that he was going to be a quadriplegic.
So the fact that he's like, I'm just kidding.
I'm so sorry.
I'm picking on Ambrose way too much.
A high quality content Ambrose.
He messaged me this a while ago and I let it slip down.
He says, Coach, all I have to do now is say peekaboo.
And my son laughs from the other side of the room.
I'm the funniest man in the world.
And when my son is on the changing table, I'm partly trying not to throw up while also crushing the greatest stand-up comedy set of all time.
And I mean, literally, I threw up into a waste bin of nasty diapers and the visual of my own puke on top of the poopy green diapers had me retching for five minutes.
I was locked in and I couldn't move, but I still wouldn't trade it for anything.
Thank you for that, Ambrose.
Man, wait till they're eating real food.
Ooh, yeah.
You want to delete that as long as you can.
To be honest, it wasn't even really bad until, I don't know, maybe two years.
And then it was like, man, this is a real, this is like a real poop.
Like, this is as long as the stains.
As long as the babies are breastfed, it's not bad.
It's when you start giving them food that it gets.
Well, I mean, even like our first set of twins before two years were done with breast milk, you know, but it still was not quite the same.
And like now it's, you know, at three and a half years old, it's just like they go to the bathroom with the door open because they're still just like kind of dumb toddlers doing what toddlers do and whatever.
And it's just like, bro, you got to turn the fan on.
You got to get some freeze.
And they're like, I don't know what you're saying to me right now.
I told, I told this on Telegram, but I introduced the kids to the scrub versus safety game or doorknob, you know, when you, when you let one rip.
And if somebody says scrub before you say safety, you have to name five breakfast cereals.
They keep pushing you.
I think the Proud Boys.
Are you familiar with this, Sam?
Yeah.
And then you're a member of the Proud Boys after that.
No, I mean, it was around for a decade.
I remember my cousins growing up.
I never heard of that.
Oh, really?
Yeah, it's a total thing.
It's been around for years, but it was the biggest dad mistake ever.
I taught them that game and now they expanded it to burps, too.
So basically, it's like a royal rumble.
You know, somebody emits any slight amount of gas and then even potato gets in on the game.
He comes over.
He doesn't respect the rules.
Oh, dude, I'm eating as many beans and as much carbonated liquid as I can handle, and I'm coming down.
And then the dog gets into it too.
She's like, are you guys really fighting?
You play it?
Yeah.
So she comes over and tries to like defend whoever's getting hit.
She's such a good girl sitting there next to me, not barking for a change.
So careful out there, fam.
Yeah, these nuts, jokes.
Good God.
Yeah, it's been an absolute nightmare of bad, bad judgment in terms of introducing these sordid things.
However, on a bright note, I have to share this.
I'm so proud.
Last week, there was a sort of math Olympiad, or they called it Math Field Day for all of the kids, for the best math performers from all the elementary schools in the county.
And do you know who was the number one math student in our county for his grade?
It was my own, very own son, Junior.
Number one.
He's moving on.
What a dork.
Wow.
We were so proud.
We were so proud.
He came out of school that day with his little blue ribbon and he says, I'm going on to regional.
So boys.
Unironically, coach, get him reading music and playing an instrument.
Math and music are extremely connected.
Oh, yes.
I will always bance Junior about being a dork and I'll tickle him and throw him and all the things that he hates that I do to him.
But he's a smart kid.
You know that.
Get him playing an instrument, like for real playing an instrument too.
Like not like diddling on the guitar, reading tablature.
Like really get him, try to get him into a lessons.
Lessons, maybe the music program at the local school, if they have it available at his age.
You know, I waited.
I didn't join.
I didn't start music until seventh grade, which was junior high school for us.
So like I know every school kind of seems to be different, but our elementary schools were one through six.
Our junior high was seven through nine and then we were 10 through 12.
So I started super, super late compared to most of the people that I was in orchestra with.
They had already started when they were in elementary school.
I started in seventh grade, first year, junior high.
And I really wish that I had started earlier.
I wish I'd continued doing it, obviously.
But the sooner that you get your children into something that is actually interesting, the better off they'll be.
And this applies to music.
This applies to literally anything.
You know, I was talking about school and how just like gay school is with my wife the other day, because how much stuff did you learn at school that is absolutely useless that you have not thought about ever again?
Sure.
You don't really have the same.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Physical education is the most important thing.
Right.
I am willing to agree with Hitler that physical education is superbly important, but there are some kids that just aren't great at physical stuff.
You should encourage them to continue physical education just for their health.
But, you know, there might be a kid that's really good at one thing.
He's terrible at all physical things.
So you make him do a little bit of things for his health and then let him do the things that he's really good at, you know?
Yeah.
And that might be a result of just the modern society where we are, in theory, more educated and we know more about stuff than we did 70 years ago, whatever it may be.
But, you know, we should really try to be encouraging our children in the things that they're not only interested in, but the things that they're good in.
And typically those things overlap a lot.
Yep.
Amen.
And music is a fusion of it's not physical activity like working out, but it is using your, you know, dexterity, your fingers, your brain, and your hands to create.
So yeah, high hopes for Junior.
He's got math under his belt.
He's pretty athletic, good at soccer.
We did sign him up for baseball.
He's got an electric keyboard that Santa Claus brought him last year.
He can play a couple of little diddies, but good point, Smasher.
Piano, I think would be the way I'd go with him.
That is maybe a good segue into something that's been in the hopper that we didn't get to over the last few shows, which was this, it was a post on poll.
And I think this is up Sam and Smasher's Alley, maybe Rolo's too.
And it was intentionally antagonistic.
And it was basically poo-pooing the meme of get into the trades, work with your hands, forget the expensive professional route to the meme is to get in the trade, skip college, don't try to be a lawyer, doctor, whatever.
It's just going to make you a bankrupt and you'll get kicked out for being that anyway.
But this post was saying, no, that is wrong.
I'm just characterizing the post as I recall it.
You're going to break down your body.
You're going to be working long, hard hours with your hands in cold weather, hot weather, or whatever, and you're not going to be able to change the world being in the trade.
Sure, you might make a solid, reliable book, but that it's a false meme that we should all encourage our kids to be electricians and plumbers and mechanics, et cetera, and that we should still encourage them to go enter the Satan's nest of college to become white-collar professionals too.
I'll just leave that.
You can go to college and not be a white-collar professional.
And I would argue that Sam is not a white collar professional.
Sam is a college educated man.
He works a good blue collar job.
He's able to provide for his 468 kids.
You know, I don't want to speak too much for Sam, but like college, college, here's the thing about the don't go to college, go to college dichotomy is fake and gay.
Do what makes sense for you.
Do what you are good at that will make you money, particularly in a way that is anti-fragile, right?
So like for me, I'm actually considering going to college for like architecture, civil engineering, residential type stuff like that, because that's what I do within construction all the time.
I've gone and gotten a bunch of just certifications, whether they're single day, 40-hour blocks of instruction, things like that for residential construction, all the stuff that I deal with.
And I've got a lot of education in this stuff.
Maybe not a full college education, but a lot more than most people in just a trade go and do.
I've read more books about construction, home building, building science, energy efficiency than most people that would just be a regular tradesman ever read.
So the idea that education isn't important is stupid.
But the idea that you have to completely blow off college is also stupid.
But the idea that you have to go to college is also stupid.
Like, don't fall into these stupid traps that Normie set.
If a Normie says it, automatically assume that it's stupid and then evaluate the spirit of what they're saying.
You know what I mean?
Exactly.
Well, I remember this.
He's like screaming.
Rolo's like screaming.
Crazy little funny little comment.
And then I had to turn it over to Rolo.
I remember, you know, maybe this, this term has lost currency, but in another decade, this term yuppie became a thing, you know, the young urban professional.
And then they started to have other things like Dinks, double income, no kids, or dick, double income kids, you know, and then, but the one that I thought described me the best was downwardly mobile professional, a donkey.
Either of those two latter ones.
Yeah.
Oh, Rolo's got the fire of Jesus in his belly.
He's really got to get this.
Just go ahead, brother.
It's the second half.
You've got free reign at the mic.
I don't like to interrupt people.
It's rude.
That makes one of us.
But the problem with this is this is kind of a meme that has been perverted and the origin of it has been lost in time.
So the idea, just go get a trade, that's as opposed to just go to college and figure it out because that's what I did.
I was told, oh, just go to college.
And I was like, I don't know what to do.
And then I ended up going.
And then I ended up going to art school.
And while I did get an education in that, there was no job waiting for me in that.
So now I have a college education that's completely worthless.
And had I gotten a trade, I would, I'd be more prepared for dealing with the real world.
But if you want to be a doctor or an engineer or a chemist or like something where there's a job for you, yeah, then go to college over a trade.
But if you don't know what you want to do, the trade is probably the preferable option because there's no reason now to go to college.
And if especially if you're white and be told that you're a piece of crap, everything is your fault and be surrounded by hostile browns.
And you're going to probably end up being $60,000, $70,000 in debt.
And you're going to make probably $30,000 a year.
You're starting starting whatever career you get.
And you're probably honestly, if you get a four-year degree that's not in STEM, you're going to be the manager at a Walgreens or you're going to be a waiter or bartender.
That's honestly.
That was good, Rolo.
You should have your own show sometime.
Yeah.
You could get handyman insurance, register with your state government as a home improvement contractor and just do handyman stuff part-time and make more than $30,000 a year easily.
And even if you don't know anything about construction, you can do handyman stuff because you're going to be doing like touch-up paint.
You're going to be doing stuff that is homeowner tier that people with money are willing to pay for instead of doing themselves.
That's the handyman exists to do homeowner tier maintenance on houses for people that have enough money to not want to do homeowner tier maintenance.
That's why handymans exist, right?
And so you could easily do that.
You could easily learn that stuff.
Being in the trades is kind of a meme of like, oh, this person learned how to be a tradesman from YouTube or whatever.
But for like handyman tier stuff, you could really actually do that.
You know, you spend a couple of dollars on tools.
Know there there is that small barrier to entry.
But, generally speaking, like you could go get a job at Mcdonald's or the gas station or whatever and be able to buy your tools to get into that.
And i'm not saying that everybody should go out and become a self-employed handyman.
But if you really don't know what you want to do, don't commit to any contract.
I joined the ARMY right uh, right out of high school.
I had a full ride for bio, chem and a full ride for performing arts, for playing the cello.
I didn't go to school for either of those things because I knew that I wasn't mature enough to make it through school and that if I failed I would owe all of the money back for my scholarship.
So I was mature enough to know that I wasn't mature enough to go to school right, so I joined the ARMY.
I signed a six-year contract.
Six years was way way, way too long.
By my third year I was like, dude, I want to get out of the army, I can't do this anymore.
I knew what was going on in the world and I was trapped, so don't go to school.
But also, generally speaking, I think everybody here is like, don't join the military, even me a few years ago.
I would have told you, you know you could probably join and get some stuff out of it.
At this point, there's nothing.
Nikki's the only one saying don't see the military, and everybody else is like, dude, you have a lot of good takes, but that's not one of them, not to mention the fact that you're absolutely, absolutely get out of the military.
Do not, do not join the military at this point.
If, if this was 2017, 2018 or even probably 2019, I would have said, you know what?
Go ahead, sign up, do the shortest contract that you can.
At this point, don't do it.
It's not worth it.
Even then, you have to get jabbed.
Yeah yeah, you're not getting in there without endless jabs too.
Another news, do not do it, like absolutely do not do it.
It's not worth it.
But you can join a trade.
You can join a trade with no, no contractual obligation.
You know you could.
You could walk away from.
You, get into the Electricians Union.
You could walk away at any point, you know.
So why not do it?
Because if you fall in love with the trade that you end up in, then you can have a fantastic, fulfilling career that pays for your family uh, good benefits and all that stuff, and you have the potential to go to the private sector if you want to.
And if not, you can still do your 20 and retire with a great pension and all these other wonderful things.
And if, in the four or five years that you're there, you figure out what you want to do with your life again, there's no contractual obligation.
Walk away and do whatever you want to do.
Yeah well, what?
Like I told a couple of my sons they they wanted to go to college and be engineers and stuff like that.
I said you got to work first, work in the factory.
Work in the factory for a couple of years.
First of all, you make some money so you're not penniless like I was when I was 18 and 19 years old.
Make some money.
See what the real world works like.
See what it's like to work in a place.
You see that how the different people in that company, how their careers have gone, the people who have stayed with an hourly wage, people have moved into management.
You see the, the college educated people, how they function in the company.
See how the real world works for a few years and then, if you really believe in it, you want to go to college and you want to suffer through engineering school?
Okay fine, go go ahead and do that, but at least you, you got to know how to do something.
I've met so many young college graduates who literally do not know how to do anything.
You know and it sounds funny to say they know how to drink and get fat and go into debt and scroll those things, eat hot chip and lie.
But to how to handle machinery, how to drive a forklift, how to handle machinery, how to look at a process, how to understand things.
You know.
You know who's braver than us marines sam, forklift drivers?
Yeah, no doubt, no doubt.
So you got to learn how to do things whatever, whatever that thing is.
But going and working in a factory somewhere for a couple of years before you run off to college is a smart thing to do.
I agree with all of you for your various inputs and reasons 100.
Not a single thing I heard I didn't like.
The only thing that comes to mind is for the parents out there, our friends, our listeners, with young kids or teenagers heading up, heading toward the college years.
It is on you to grab them by the scruff of the neck and say, no, I am not letting you just waltz into some four-year private institution public doesn't matter to find yourself, or you think you might want to do this or you think you might want to do that.
You know your kids best if they are driven and they know exactly what they want to do and they have the commitment to do it.
You think they're serious?
Okay, I like Sam's idea of go work for two years first.
You'll be two years older in college.
You can buy beer for all your friends and be cooler and get more girls.
Uh well, and one of the things you know, obviously my children are very, very young.
But one of the things that I kind of think of put trying to put myself into that position is like i'm not going to tell my kids no, you can't do this because i'm your dad and I know better.
You know that is the case, but you know you got to try to relate it to them and it's like you know you can't go to college and just do this because I was your age.
I understand and I want you to do what's going to make you happy, but you are still too young to really work through these things.
You know what i'm saying 40 times but yeah, go ahead.
I was just going to say, like I, I have the experience under my belt to realize I mean, I even knew I wanted to go into international relations study that.
Go to four-year college, get degree, start working, maybe get a master's degree.
It worked out for me after a while, but just barely.
I remember coming up toward graduation at the end of four years at American and not having a job lined up and having this like vice around my neck, thinking like Jesus Christ, like this, you know the CIA hasn't recruited you yet, or like they're not just banging down on your door for another kid with a bachelor of arts degree to, you know, offer them a sinecure in the system, uh.
So I had to kind of scrap through like internship into full-time job, into other better full-time job, then get the master's.
That it was damn expensive, it was a long journey and one or two variables go one way or the other way and I am i'm one of those poor saps with tons of education and no real employable uh expertise.
Yep, go ahead rolla, uh.
Well, what I was gonna say is I think that the whole idea of the go to college, find yourself that is very much a boomer thing because once upon a time college was affordable.
That was something to do like.
How many times have you heard the boomers say like I went down on a summer job where now it's thirty thousand dollars a year for my four bedroom, two bathroom house and I paid fifteen thousand dollars for my college education?
You lazy millennial are stupid and gay, Yeah, so that's passed down from.
Uh well, I guess just Coach Smasher and I, like our parents, are of that age.
Like, you know, that's what I did.
I Sam's like roughly the age of my dad.
Oh, yeah, and college for them, remember, was still this pie in the sky.
Well, maybe not for our parents, but for their parents for sure.
It was a it was a major accomplishment, you know, be the first one in your family to go to college.
College was everything, right?
And it wasn't completely anti-white, Jew-owned.
And yeah, $100,000 minimum to get a freaking useless degree.
It's just, yeah, I think the audience gets it.
It was like, you know, the people that fought in World War II looked at college as this really got you a lot of clout.
It was a great accomplishment.
You know, it showed that you magical device.
It meant something, though.
It meant something.
It doesn't mean anything now.
They joke.
Credentials people are the ones that raised boomers, right?
And so they applied this to boomers and boomers went to college.
But college at the time was super affordable compared to what it is now.
That's why boomers are like, okay, I was able to work at McDonald's and buy a car, raise a family and go to college.
And I didn't get any debt from it.
Right.
And it's like, okay.
So you went like, I mean, I know we always talk about this, like boomers literally had the golden age, you know?
Yeah.
If boomers were all national socialists, the world would be an incredible place.
But instead, they were corrupted and Judaized.
They were liberal hippies.
And so they have, they have the like, you know, one of the best economies in the world, affordable college, good wages, all these other things.
And they take full advantage of it.
And now they've taken full advantage of it and ruined and ruined it all or let it fall into ruin or sold it to the Jews.
And then they yell at us for being bootstrap, weak-minded, you know, pieces of liberal slam poetry dipshits.
And it's like, no, boomer.
No, boomer.
I'm living in the world that you created.
I'm living in the world that you created.
There's one more aspect to that, too, is now because society is so fractured and everyone is so anti-social and we have no trust in society.
Boomers could go to college for four years, not graduate and have a great job just from the networking that they could get.
Like my dad ended up owning an insurance company and he did not graduate from college.
Like you could, you could just meet people and you would just get hooked up.
Like now you you're not getting that and your degree, unless it's in STEM, is worthless.
Yep.
And the debt that you pile on and all the mental abuse that you suffer.
Like it's, it's like, I feel like anyone that that signs up for college, it's like, are you on, am I on candid camera?
Like, where, what's going on here?
Yeah, you're doing.
Are you serious?
Yep.
I just put in the chat.
This just reminds me.
Just tonight, my dad, I guess, you know, he's getting a little long in the tooth.
He's probably going through the family archives and he's been sending me pictures from his wedding.
And this one that I just put in there is from my Germanic paternal grandfather in the South Pacific with the Marines.
You know, they fly Marshall Islands, Iwo Jima.
And look at it, look at the pictures or something.
100% white.
And I don't see a fag or a soy boy or a fatso in the group.
It's it's it's the red arrow.
I'm assuming that's your ancestor, the red arrow that looks yeah, that's that's my grandma.
That's my grandma.
Yeah, I mean, that looks so much like you guys, he's got a flat top and a must and a mustache, which is awesome.
But grow your mustache, dude.
Grow your mustache.
I can bunch with Daniel Scott's in that picture.
I know.
That's attracted to you, right?
I mean, that could be like if you change, if you change the clothes, that could be.
I see a couple Italians in there, but that could be a German Wehrmacht unit.
That looks like an NGO should have been there.
None of those guys should have been there fighting that stupid war.
One thing that they have going for them is a significantly higher testosterone level baseline than we have.
Yep.
And some of these kids are barely 18 years old.
You can see in that front row, you see some baby faces, but they're all smiling and proud as hell to be there.
It looks like they were maybe CBS or something.
They're like, I can't trash talk baby faces because if I shared, you'd be like, Jesus, kid.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Ah, hello.
Hi.
Well, you mentioned the testosterone.
That was one of my good takeaways when we had an Ascot bro on there.
You know, he said about waking up in a certain state.
You know, oh my gosh.
I, oh, that changed my life.
Well, I, I, I always kind of was kind of annoyed by that, you know, waking up that way all the time, but now I feel good about it.
Yeah.
Keep a boner notebook.
Yeah.
Holy telling you, every day, man.
Just take a picture of it and send it to some girl.
I hate it.
I will.
Yeah, I will.
Broke is Sam waking up and being grateful to be alive.
Woke is Sam waking up and grateful for a boner.
Well, like I said, like I said on that episode, my time schedule is all messed up.
You know, I have really bad problems with insomnia.
And so I noticed this a long time ago.
But since that episode, I've really thought about it.
And it's every day, right around seven o'clock.
It's like morning wood.
And I'm like, it's seven in the evening.
What is going on here?
I'm still waking up tired every morning, despite my best efforts.
But I mean, I realize it's just, it's, well, I am overweight right now.
It's the depths.
It's the depths of winter.
No, it's true.
I mean, this, I mean, this happens every winter.
I'm sort of like, it's cool, you know, like I got a little insulation for the winter, but I just can't wait.
I mean, now we're in February.
I'm like, give me, give me some of that vitamin D. Let me get out there and pound the pavement and do push-ups and pull-ups and stuff.
I can't wait.
It's coming up today.
We're almost there.
If I could recommend one supplement to take, that would be it right there.
The vitamin D, a good vitamin D3 supplement.
I recommend NSM.
We've been taking MSN.
Is that a setup for something?
No, no.
It's like methosotomas or something.
I don't know.
I mean, you type in MSN supplement.
It's really, really good for you.
It's good for joint support.
So supposedly, it ups your testosterone.
NSM?
Socialist movement.
That does everything.
No drawbacks.
Microsoft molecules.
NSM, D3, and ZMA, and you'll be in good shape.
And we took, I got Fennew Greek Smasher at your recommendation.
Good.
No, but my wife took it and then she got sweaty and she was like, I think I smelled like curry.
I could smell the fenugreek.
Fenugreeko actually tastes like tomato soup to me.
I have it every morning.
What I do is I have 16 ounces of water and I put in apple cider vinegar, kelp, and fenugreek.
That's how I start my morning.
I like SpongeBob diet.
Can you grow?
You still have a baby face though, Rolo.
Can you grow a beard?
No, I do.
I do the mustache, but I was going to say, I can see the mustache.
I can see the mustache and I can see the chin.
Yeah.
But they're not connected.
They're not connected.
No, I shaved.
I had the mustache like the last six weeks.
No, but I can just say your skin is darker in these areas.
I can just.
Yes, you can see it.
And Rolo, I forgot.
Did you, I mean, you didn't get to hear the first half because you were occupied, but what is your genuine religious outlook?
Forgive me, but I'm curious.
I am Christian.
I'm a Lutheran.
Devout believer, no, no qualm.
Yeah, I'm a believer.
Yeah, I believe.
What do you think about the oldest?
There you go again.
I think it's just strongly of the old testimony.
Nervous chuckle from Rolo.
All right.
No, that wasn't a nervous chuckle.
That was a all right.
Let's go.
I think that it's the tale of Jews.
I think there's some good stuff in there, but largely there's a lot of awful Jewry in there.
Oh, you agree with me?
All right.
I win.
Sam, you lose.
Suck it.
Sam, BTFO.
If I came to believe that, I would just not be a Christian anymore.
Yep.
Yeah, we didn't get to quite fully parse out the differences between Sam and completely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I kind of got the idea at certain points, like he agreed with me, but then I wasn't sure at the very end.
And after our in-between talk, when we were off air, I think I maybe turned him off even.
I don't know.
Well, as the outside non-Christian observer, I think that you guys agree in spirit.
I know spirit, you know, is a religious term, but you know, if you want to really get that in the same text, you know, you're really on the same wavelength.
Yeah.
You know, perhaps.
And you guys have some, you guys, I think if we had a really artistically Christian theological discussion where you guys are referencing specific passages and this, that, and the other, I think you guys could have a really good, interesting conversation.
And even if you didn't agree with each other at the end, it would be, you know, a good condo.
Yeah.
But at the end of the day, you guys agree.
Obviously, both people know about the Jews and name them.
Yeah.
Right.
And have gotten in trouble for it.
So yeah, the most important thing to take away from this episode is not like you must believe this particular interpretation of everything, but above all, you know, agrees, Sam agrees.
We all agree.
It's a racial struggle and faith is an important aspect of it.
I don't actually blame Christians for, you know, I don't blame for saying no.
I think you're going to hell if you don't accept Jesus Christ.
You've certainly gotten enough chances and exposure to him.
And if you're still saying no, then, you know, don't expect them to open the pearl eight gates for you.
I don't actually believe that a righteous God would send me to hellfire for honest skepticism and disbelief, but time will tell.
But the absolute most important thing is that we cannot allow this stuff to devolve into nastiness and divides and that we can handle it like men agree to disagree, even if we fail as a podcast to solve this solution for all eternity.
That's one of the beautiful things about white nationalism, though, right?
Like I've had more intellectual and thought-provoking, stimulating conversations since I became a Nazi than I think I ever did in my entire life beforehand.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I agree.
When I go to our get-togethers and stuff like that, I just like to listen to people because we have all kinds of people coming from all different kinds of angles that are coming to the same conclusion, so to speak.
And it's educational to me to listen.
And I always learn things when I listen to people.
Yep.
Bless his efforts.
Do check out his site, subscribe to him, listen to him.
It's fun.
It's a fun show, bloodandfaith.com.
We're honored to have him on, and we will have him back on sometime in the future.
A couple quick teasers here at the end.
The great Jay Holio said he wants to get back in the game.
Yeah.
Speaking of the Bible, he's wandered in the wilderness for long enough and he's got the burn again, but we got to get his damn schedule synced with ours because when we normally go to tape is not good as it is.
So Jayo will be returning, inshallah, at some point in the future.
And also we were talking about big brains and 200 IQs before.
And we have been in communication with a certain big brain man named Chris Langin, the world's smartest man, who is definitely our guy.
If you read his posts on Gab, I think it's real Chris Langin.
He's a weightlifter and was literally certified as the highest IQ in the world.
And I've just been communicating with his management.
They're a little circumspect and he's also a busy man, but they certainly seem receptive to the idea.
And I don't pull any punches about who we are or what we're about.
I just phrase them diplomatically, if you will, in a way that doesn't spook people because it shouldn't spook people.
It doesn't have to.
Gentlemen, let's go around the horn.
Last call for any comments.
We'll go to Rolo first.
Rolo, thank you for joining us, brother.
Always a pleasure.
Great to be here.
Thank you.
It's been life-changing.
Was that your Teddy Kennedy or Jack Kennedy impersonation?
Were you drunk at the time?
Have you ever pretended to not know this there in the bathroom and coming out nude?
You sound like the Kennedy from The Simpsons, at least, if not one of the Kennedys.
Thank you for that.
There you go.
Yep.
Teddy Kennedy, that bastard, made you rot in hell.
And listen to the final storm as well as.
Sammy, baby, we'll just go to you next.
Wonderful having you on.
I was so glad to see.
I was hoping you wouldn't miss this one because no, wouldn't miss it for the world.
I was glad to be here.
And I love your Wellington Arms hockey jersey that you got on there.
Yeah, great band.
Check them out on YouTube or anywhere where you can find good videos.
Bit shoot, Odyssey.
Yep.
Plug for Wellington Arms.
Go see him live.
Yeah, go see him live if you can.
That too.
Get in the pit.
Get cut.
Bleed.
Bleed for your music.
You don't have to do that.
Smasher, brother.
I hear a little bit of crying in the background, but it wasn't bad at all.
And thank you for making time for us.
We have multiple chimp outs happening.
It is February.
Fukushima tier extinction level event.
I just say that because I've been spurting about nuclear energy and I saw a bunch of people on Reddit like, oh, Fukushima was an extinction level event.
It's like, literally, nobody died.
There's no measurable health impact.
Faggot.
Go shove a solar panel in your butt, you weirdo.
Yeah, I told that to the guy, my good pal Tom, who gave me Dark Age America by John Michael Greer.
I was like, he makes a really lot of good points, not to go too far afield here at the end, but it's basically like America is going to collapse.
Yes, you are right about that.
It's following the pattern of historical empires.
Yes, I agree with that.
But then he gets all into that it's because we're going to run out of fossil fuels and climate change.
And there's no mention particularly about race and its thing.
So it's like some weird autism.
I don't know if he avoids that on purpose.
And having worked in the energy industry for years, I'm like, yes, of course, eventually one day we will run out of fossil fuels, but they're pretty ingenious.
And there's a lot of it still down there.
And there's lots of things we can do to still keep using that and do other things.
So it was just, I couldn't get totally down with it, but we did excerpt a bunch for some gentlemen.
It's a very efficient and your energy source.
I mean, the combustion engine is very, you know, the most efficient thing we know.
Yep.
I'm still fossil fuels.
Black oil is not going to be the downfall of America.
Black Negroes will be the downfall of America.
Here, here.
Yep.
Puppeteered by their masters.
All right, fam.
Full house episode.
Both resources controlled by Jews.
Yeah.
Actually, I mean, the oil and gas industry is arguably the least Jew industries, probably in America.
But regardless, Full House episode 117 was recorded originally on February 3rd.
Now, February 4th, 2022, it is an absolute slop heap out there.
We've had snow on the ground the entire month of January, and we got rain all day today.
So it's just slush and nastiness.
And there's no school tomorrow.
They called it, I guess, because they were afraid of ice on the up here.
It was slushing all day, and now it's below freezing.
Really exciting stuff.
Wait till you get this snowstorm coming your way.
Sam is the harbinger of doom.
Follow us on Telegram at pro whitefam2.
Follow us on gab at gab.com slash fullhouse.
And please, if you like what you hear, if you appreciate our efforts, do consider donating at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
So to all of our listeners, whether pagan, atheist, Christian, and everything in between, except Jewish.
Be good to each other.
Yes, except for the enemies listening to this episode.
F you.
Be good to each other.
Remember to keep your eyes on the prize.
And just as the great Shia LaBeouf said, he will not divide us.
Religion will not divide us.
Remember that?
Yeah, that was great.
Yeah, but he did say that.
Shia LaBeouf is a Jew and he had the, he will not divide his flag protesting Donald Trump for being a white nationalist.
And then Paul is the one that was like, actually, screw you.
Suck on D's nuts.
Yeah.
Have some milk and some pizza with swastikas on it.
Sam, I got a special one here.
This one's from 1984.
And I could see rolling deep together in high school in jean jackets, maybe some sunglasses, little mullet, some little mustaches at midnight in a Trans Am blasting this while shouting at all the idols on the street to repent.
No, no, no.
This is a little group called Saxon.
sam you remember 1984.
I thought that would be a little bit.
I swear to God, I could just picture you and Fritz causing hell, righteous hell, Blair and this in 1984.
All right, everybody.
Enjoy.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
We may have on Alex McNabb and Durrendel to talk about the absolute state of emergency services in this country and why you need to be concerned, especially parents, because those ambulances are coming late and they're not staffed great.
All right.
Put them up.
White power.
We'll talk to you next week.
We love you.
Go ahead, Smasher.
See ya.
Crusader, crusader, please take me to you.
The burden of God to lead Crusader, crusader.
Don't leave me alone.
I want to ride out on your quest.
I'm waiting, I'm waiting to stand by your side to fight with you over the sea.
They're calling, they're calling, I have to be there.
The Holy Land has to be free.
Fight the good fight, believe what is right.
Crusader, the Lord of the realm.
Fight the good fight with a delight.
Crusader, the Lord of the realm.
We're marching, we're marching to a land far from home.
No one can sail in turn for Christian's sake.
We'll take our revenge on the pagans from out of the east.
We Christians are coming with swords over high.
United by faith and the God.
The sirens and heathen will soon taste our steel.
Our standards will rise by the land.
Fight for the fight, believe what is right.
Crusader, the Lord of the realm.
Fight for the fight with a device.
Crusader, the Lord of the realm to battle, to battle the sirens and horse.
We follow the warrior king onward, right onward, into the fight.
We carry the sign of the cross.
Rollers of England, knights of the realm, spilling their blood in the sand.
Crusader, crusader, the legend is born.
The future will honor your beasts.
Fight for the fight, believe what's right to set it up the glory of the realm.
Fight for the fight, wherever you fight, to set it up the Lord of the Realm.
I never fight, Beauty one is right who's made up Crusade.
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