to full house episode 120, very special European wartime live stream edition.
And we are the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and aspiring foreign policy analysts, apparently.
I am your not gloating host.
It's true, but we'll talk about my predictions and the emperor drop there at the top a little bit later.
Coach Finstock back with another probably two hours dedicated to discussing what is, I think, unquestionably biggest development in Europe since World War II.
We are going to do this in good faith, civilly, and with the sole intent of providing information, opinions, and probably some predictions for your benefit.
This is going to be made with a full awareness that we are still less than three days into this legitimate happening.
There's still a long way to go, and there is obviously an information war underway by all sides, Washington, Moscow, Kiev, and probably Tel Aviv too.
And I'm serious about that.
No opinion or point of view is going to be off limits tonight, but I'm not going to let this turn into a public pro-white pissing contest of dishonest argumentation and personal attacks.
I think that would be worse than not doing a show at all.
Live streams are always a little bit riskier than a set piece show.
I was tempted to go with the set piece show, just record it and be able to edit it after the fact, but we're going whole hog here tonight because it's more exciting that way and will probably be a little bit higher energy.
Before we meet the birth panel and our special guests, big thanks to everybody I see there in Telegram.
Thank you for tuning in with us tonight.
At least while we get going, we're going to focus on our pre-invited guests first, give them a chance to kick around the biggest issues surrounding this war.
But as we get longer into tonight, I'd be happy to take questions from the audience.
I guess put your hand up later.
It's probably not going to be for an hour or 45 minutes before we get to that, maybe an hour.
Again, all opinions.
Welcome to rules.
Keep civil and no Fed posting too, please.
All right.
Devi, let's see who is with us tonight.
Our birth panel rock Sam is on his way.
He's going to be a little bit late tonight.
So we're going to skip over Sam here and I won't have to his balls about being old and very fertile.
But number two, riding shotgun with me with a shotgun, potato smasher.
How are you, buddy?
I am doing pretty good.
Glad to be here on another great live stream here at Full House.
You bet.
And if, you know, if I could characterize, I think you have a unique perspective of everybody that we have lined up here and that you are a little bit of a sad Eeyore or a neutral on this one.
No disrespect.
Like you're not pro-Ukrainian or pro-Russian.
You're kind of bummed out about this whole fracas.
Is that?
Yeah.
You know, I'm not pro-Ukrainian government, to be fair.
You know, I think Ukrainian people are real, and I'm pro those people, and it's sad that like they are being killed by Russians right now.
Uh, but I'm also not pro-Putin.
I'm happy that America is, you know, kind of getting beat up and it does make us look bad, uh, which ultimately is good for us in the long run.
You know, I am an accelerationist, uh, so I think that you know, this is part of a bigger, uh, bigger picture type deal where this can be very good for us.
Um, it doesn't change the fact that it's kind of sad to see you know, white people killing each other, uh, for I mean, Jews in my mind, question, yeah, we're gonna talk about that, the JQ role or likely role just right up top.
I'm all of us burning fathoms or you know, impartiality on this, uh, a bloodbath, Kiev, or elsewhere in Russia.
I mean, I'm sure there are some people who do from the two sides, I'm sure there are Ukrainians who want us killed on Moss and vice versa.
Uh, but whatever way this goes, it's like a no-brainer that we hope it's as bloodless as possible.
So, uh, thank you for joining us as always, buddy.
You've been with us from show one on April 2019.
And let's move on to our trusty producer.
I'll be here until you find you have, yep.
Yeah, I just thought I'll be here.
You were okay, very good.
Or you, yeah, I can fire you.
You quit for like a nanosecond before I fire you.
I can already see it happening.
Uh, Rolo was born in Moscow, currently lives in Kiev, and is Jewish.
So he has perhaps the most unique perspective on all this.
What's up, buddy?
The triple threats, what they call me.
You got all your bases covered.
You have actually been quiet about all this.
So, any uh general stance before we get rolling?
Well, my general stance is I like that it is making America look pretty bad.
And I also like that people are not biting that war bait that they're so used to, everyone grabbing.
Just they cannot get the public excited to go to war for another thing that really doesn't affect them.
And that is a good thing because that's showing that the empire does not have the gay hold that it once had.
Yeah, two things there.
I think that you are absolutely right.
I haven't seen a single person like remotely in our cause express solidarity with NATO expansion or with Washington's intentions toward Ukraine.
I mean, maybe there's somebody out there, but if there is, I haven't seen it.
So, that's one.
And two, I hope you are right.
I suspect you're right that Washington is just utterly defanged when it comes to ginning up the usual war drums propaganda machine, go to Europe, young man, to save democracy and liberty and Ukrainian independence.
We've been through so much, especially since 9-11, that I sincerely hope and I'm optimistic that it's true that people are older and wiser now.
And even if the Zoomers are younger and dumber, they just don't care because they're distracted or selfish or whatever.
I don't mean to dump on the Zoomers.
All right, Rolo, thank you.
Let me know.
I don't know what we're supposed to do for the chat for this.
I don't know if you want to just respond to whichever.
I don't know.
Somebody other than me, I can't keep my eye on the chat, but for whatever, wherever it makes sense for people to be able to respond to this live.
Okay.
But what should people use to comment on this by text?
I see some hands going up already.
Should they respond to like a message on the main channel or what?
Okay, full house comment zone.
All right, full house comment zone.
Just use that top of the channel.
Click join.
Somebody said that, but I don't see any comments in there.
All right.
Anyway, I don't want to get bogged down on that stuff, but I am not going to be looking at the comment zone.
I'll be focusing on running the control panel here with Roland.
All right.
Onward to our good pal, Zyklon Kui, qui, qui bono.
Z, how's it going, brother?
Welcome back to Full House.
You came on like over a year ago to do Around the World with Z, impressions from your many world travels.
And you, my friend, have a bloodline that is basically a small cauldron of various squabbling ethnicities.
I don't know how you make cohesive sense of any of this.
Z, welcome on, brother.
I make sense of it because family reunions are a disaster always.
But seriously, your ethnicity is German, Polish, and what else?
You don't have to be too specific, but German, well, Polish-Germanic, like Silesian.
Also, like part of my family.
A bit of Armenian in there, but generally you could say I'm a product of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
There you go.
But generally, over there, I just, with all of this going on, it's like, I mean, as much as I'm no longer really looking at anything Putin says with any kind of admiration, you could say, he was right with one thing where he said, no one's going to win this war.
Yeah, he had two, I think, important statements.
One was his long essay or manifesto on Ukraine and the larger Rus idea about a year ago that you could say almost laid the groundwork for this.
And then, of course, the lengthy speech that he delivered before they recognized the two breakaway republics, which, well, I'll save my takes.
We're trying to get through here at the top.
But why do you, so it sounds like you used to admire or at least lend credibility to what Putin said, but now you don't anymore.
What changed for you?
So I'll start out with saying that eastern Ukraine, Luhansk, Krim, and Donetsk, those regions, it's even if at one point they belong to Ukrainians, just demographically, Ukrainians lost to it.
Ukrainians and Russians do see each other as different to an extent, but it also depends on where you lay politically.
And I just wasn't worried about Eastern Ukraine, really.
I thought it was a lost cause demographically they lost.
But the second that I saw airport, the airport in Ivano-Frankivsk being bombed, air sirens in the Dviv going off, that's when I suddenly saw that this is not just about getting ethnic Russians or like having a Bolshevik microstate somewhere.
He was going to be.
So Western hitting West.
Well, we don't know if he's going to invade Western Ukraine or leave a rump state, or maybe they were just knocking out some military installations there.
I haven't seen too much about any destruction or death in Western Ukraine.
But point taken, that got a little personal for you there once your ancestral stomping grounds got going.
The lads have told me that I'm roboting a little bit.
That's why I'm not on camera because this damn internet.
Let me, if I keep roboting, I apologize, fam.
I'm sorry.
All right, Z, thank you very much.
We're going to move on to possibly the first person in the history of Full House to be a guest one week, a special guest, and then come back immediately for the second one.
And that is our pal Yvonne, who I thought did a great job on our most recent show on Mormons and had sort of a nuanced or a broad range of European exposure on this.
Yvonne, can you hear us?
And welcome back, brother.
Thanks for having me again.
Yeah, I definitely have maybe nuanced experience in that I've traveled and lived all over Eastern Europe and Western Europe, but I don't have much of a nuanced opinion on this issue.
I'm upfront that I am a Russophile.
I have been for a long time.
I am pro-Putin.
And I think overall, the invasion is a great thing, not just for Russia, but also for Ukraine and for Europe as a whole.
And although it's unrealistic, I would actually ideally like to see Russia continue to expand further westward after this.
All right.
So we'll call you the Bolshevik on the RQ here, but I understand that.
You are a little bit hot on the mic there, Yvonne.
So he's ready to go.
He's ready for total Russian Imperium Constantinople.
Here we come.
Thank you.
We're going to dig into that too.
And I'll give my two bits or two cents after we get through our guest here.
Next up, I am delighted to welcome on really his first full appearance on Full House.
And that is the delightful Nikkei of the third rail.
I think you were on for like a nanosecond on a live stream, hooting and hollering in the background of a party.
I remember how mad you were.
I expected better of my there at that party, but I was immediately sorely disappointed and took all of the blame for that.
Weren't you like trying to get a chant going full house at a party?
Everybody's like, shut up, Nikkei, nerd.
Well, it was more like everyone's carrying on their conversations at too loud a volume.
It doesn't matter.
It was Christmas, what, one or two years ago, a time dilation with COVID?
I can't even remember.
I know, right?
No, it definitely wasn't last Christmas, the one before that.
Yeah.
Well, welcome on, brother, and give us your top, I guess, just your general opinion.
You are Orthodox gang, so I can take a guess as to your opinion on this.
But I also want to mention here at the top that you are one of the top full house love connections/slash feds meeting feds candidates in the pipeline.
So, ladies, ladies, I see some ladies in the chat.
Hit me up for Nikkei's number or whatever.
I promise you, he's not actually a Fed.
I can't promise that.
I don't know what you represent to EQ.
Greek women, most welcome.
And Ukrainian wife UGs get a limited time offer for special treatment.
We're not a refugee intolerant household here when it's the right country.
But yes, I will come out and admit from the get-go, I've been a Slavophile broadly ever since I learned that there are other Orthodox people who aren't Greek.
I mean, I've just had a fascination with other Orthodox cultures and Russia being the just huge country that it is with the storied history that it has, that's been my largest fixation.
So, it's not wrong to call me a Russophile.
That said, throughout all of this conflict, my number one priority has been the preservation of solidarity between different sides of this debate.
I think that's most important.
I don't think it's an issue worth like fighting over to the point of not being able to talk to each other anymore.
So with that in mind, I've kept an open ear to both sides of the debate and tried to understand what different people in our movement think.
And I want to foster that understanding more than prove somebody right and somebody wrong.
Fair enough.
Yep.
And I think if there's anybody who wants to be at the head of the procession marching into Constantinople to reclaim it, I couldn't think of anybody better than you with a giant cross, a giant flag.
And I'm not even joking.
I think that's probably high on your bucket list.
I would give anything for this war to be against the Turks than against Ukraine.
And I don't think anybody here would disagree with that.
Yep.
And I am so glad.
Thank you, Nikkei, for joining us.
And thank all of our guests for being candid.
And to the audience, too.
I know we're just getting started here and a little bit light at the top, but we're working into it.
We're going to start with the intros, then get into areas of agreement, and then stay tuned, have a couple cold ones because we'll get into the areas where we disagree.
But I am so glad, honored, and delighted to have on our next guest and our final one for right now.
We got some others.
Somebody mentioned DK.
DK may join later, Sam and a couple others.
And I see our pal Nick there with his hand up.
We may tap him in too.
But regardless, Jason is going to, well, I'll let him present what his position is, but he is the pro-Ukrainian side of this.
I suspect he is vehemently angry and upset about the Russian invasion.
But I'll stop there.
And Jason, you came recommended from a pal, and I'm so glad to have Jan.
Welcome to Full House.
Thanks for having me.
Yeah, I agree with some of the sentiments that are being said, but I definitely fundamentally disagree with a lot of the overarching premises and narratives that are repeated ad nauseam surrounding Ukraine, this conflict.
I think there's a lot of bizarre things and people, you know, but anyways, I used to think a lot like a lot of people here.
I used to think that Russia, you know, Putin was based in 2014, 2015, people who knew me, you know, I shared the Putin memes.
I shared the silly quotes that people, you know, make and that are not actually him.
And yeah, through my travels and my further involvement in nationalism, racialism, travels, I met a lot of guys from Russia and guys from Ukraine.
And they changed my opinions.
Fair enough.
Yeah, learning on the ground from the people with real blood stakes in the game.
So thank you so much for that.
I'll add that, you know, I spent a total of six weeks in Kiev myself in three in 1998, three in 1999, high school student exchange, right?
That doesn't make me a Ukraine hand, but I will say if anybody had, aside from you, a reason to be sentimental or perhaps soft on this invasion because of knowing people there, it's me.
I still, I'm not in touch with them anymore, but I have very many fond, extremely fond memories.
It's the first I ever visited in my life, going from a kid who grew up in South Jersey, just getting plopped into Eastern Europe like babes in Toyland.
And honestly, I don't want what's worst for them.
I want what's best for them.
And I personally think that it's going to be under Russia's wing as opposed to under the West wing, but we'll get to that and more.
So that's our panel to start.
I wanted to deliver brief remarks on how we got here as objectively as possible and see if you guys disagree with the framing on getting to the point of the first major war in Europe since World War II.
No disrespect to the Yugoslav civil war.
What we have now is the Russian reaction to the sustained and accelerating Western, by Western, I mean, basically Washington-led designs on Ukraine and underway for decades.
Ultimately, the crescendo in 2014 in the Don coup or the revolution, as the Ukrainians call it.
Essentially, what happened, a little bit of backstory is there was a national election that I think was more or less fair.
I'm sure some people would say it's fair.
Some people would say it was totally rigged.
But the pro-Russian Yanukovych won was installed and basically said Ukraine is not going to be joining the EU in total and it's going to maintain some semblance of neutrality or good orientation toward Russia.
I'm sure the Ukrainians would say, oh, he was like, you know, abandoning all Western designs and joining the Russians.
Doesn't matter.
The protests happened in Maidan, right in the heart of Kiev.
I have no doubt that many, if not the majority of the people there were well-intentioned Ukrainians who were unhappy with what they thought was a stolen election or didn't want to have their Western dreams dashed.
And eventually they overthrew Yanukovych after some, I have no doubt there were Western gayops there.
There was funding for the protesters.
Of course, there was the famous walk through the protesters handing out sandwiches by Victoria Newland and Jeff Pyatt, the American ambassador, not exactly neutral there in the undergoings of that country.
And then, of course, some people got shot by snipers up on a roof, and we still don't know who they were.
I suspect it was a Western or Ukrainian gayop to give the excuse for things to kick off, boot out Yanukovych.
And of course, we had the intercepted recording of the United States basically declaring who was going to be the next prime minister.
So there's a lot of skullduggery underway on both sides.
Go ahead, Smash.
Oh, I was just going to say, it was either 2019 or 2020.
Very recently, what the hell is the Jew's name?
Zemensky Zelensky.
Zelensky.
Sorry, I just drew such a blank.
They closed that investigation.
The investigation was still open.
And then he just closed it.
And they're like, oh, there's nothing else to see here.
And then they cleaned up the site where it happened.
It had been maintained for forensic purposes and they cleaned it up and it's all trash now.
Isn't that funny?
Right.
Yeah.
Everything's lost.
Doesn't that always happen?
Oh, yeah.
The FBI lost the evidence.
Oh, yeah.
Epstein's dead.
Sorry.
All these, all these inconvenient things.
The FBI doesn't lose evidence.
They just have to take it out of the evidence locker to use it for the next gay.
Yep.
So, and here's the other thing.
Still no motive for Vegas.
And I'll finish up here real quick.
Basically, Putin was like, okay, this is serious now.
Like the West, in his perspective, the West just engineered a coup in our soft underbelly, a massive country vitally important to our national security where tens of millions or millions of Russians, Bolsheviks, Soviets, et cetera, died in World War II in Barbarossa, unacceptable.
So he took a little, he took Crimea, not wanting to lose that naval base where they had a lease to eventually NATO.
And then so 2014 now to 2022, you had essentially like a frozen conflict or a low intensity conflict all along the line of control with the eastern, largely Russian ethnicity provinces of Lugansk and Donetsk, the Donbass, Donbass and beyond.
Putin's chain of home goods stores.
He's open.
Low intensity conflict, and then it eventually kicked off.
Now, whether those were all gay ops left or right.
Go ahead.
Well, I was just going to say on the other side of the country, you have the Baltic states with Americans moving up and down all over the Baltics, hanging out, literally just like hanging out, flying around in circles outside on the Belarusian border.
NANA members.
I've said this a bunch all over the place.
I guess worth saying again, like I was in the first aviation unit.
I was actually on the first aircraft to fly into like the Baltic, Eastern European airspace and up to Belarus.
We didn't enter their airspace, obviously.
No airspace has ever officially been broken, at least until recently.
Maybe that's different now.
News cycle will catch up with that eventually.
But up until very recently, airspace had all been respected.
Nobody had been like, no aircraft had been shot down or anything like that.
But so this has been going on.
This conflict has been a very real thing brooding, you know, since at least 2014, but obviously, you know, much earlier than that, like you said.
Even further.
Yep.
Yep.
And then, so essentially what, and we know more now at the time, it was like, why now?
When we did a special with Charles Bausman, by the way, that show has aged well in our predictions and what we thought was happening.
Why now?
And I think the consensus was one, Putin thought he was in a better position to actually be able to pull this off.
Two, the conflict was still continuing in those eastern provinces.
And three, I think there's legitimate evidence that NATO was starting to accelerate its weapons deliveries, its involvement in eastern Ukraine, drones, and all the rest of it to the point where it was clear that they were accelerating things.
Now, I'm not 100% confident on what's exactly the realities along the line of control and all that.
And I wanted to go to Jason too, because I know before the show, he disagreed with my characterization of Madan as largely well-intentioned people, even if I think they're wrong, Western-oriented Western gay ops.
Jason, were you there?
Do you know people who were there?
And do you think that was really like a noble flowering of democratic idealism and a rejection of Russia?
So yeah, I don't, yeah, I'm not a fan of democracy.
I don't think that, I don't know, I understand what the people and you think.
I've seen, you know, I think that that premise is very similar to the statement that was just released.
And ultimately, I like the people who released the statement.
But I think, yeah, when I read stuff like that, I just look at it and go, I don't see, I mean, if this was written by RT, how it would be much different.
And I don't think that the, you know, it's like, it's, it's tough.
I get where they're coming from.
I don't support all the stuff that our country, NATO does.
I'm not super interested in the actual big politics of NATO and Russia.
I met people that were there.
I met ethnic Russians that were being told by Russian television, oh, you know, these protests, they're killing Russians.
You know, this is bad.
And they stopped what they were doing and they went to go check it out.
They decided it was an interesting thing.
They wanted to stay there.
They participated there.
And ultimately, I think, yeah, I think most of the people were well-meaning.
I don't think they were angry about democracy.
I don't think they were angry about any of that.
I think they were mad about their government not representing them, about police brutality.
The initial protest was like 12 people that were college, like liberal wanted to be EU people.
And it was explained to me that, you know, basically the project, the protest was hijacked and that these people got beaten pretty severely.
There was footage.
A lot of people came out in the streets and that the people who were most organized were soccer hooligans, nationalist organizations, and neo-Nazis.
And they kind of, you know, had their day.
Meaning, so pro-Ukrainian nationalists got active once there was some suppression by the militia in Kiev against legitimately peaceful, well-intentioned protesters?
That's how it was explained to me.
Okay, fair enough.
Yeah, and I'll get over to the rest of the panel here.
But I guess the long lineup there is my conclusion from seeing everything that's happened, not just back to Maidan, but back to 1991 and independence, is that net net at the end of the day, the West has made it abundantly clear that it had Ukraine in its sights to join the Western community of nations, eventually join NATO one day or another, and to reorient it away from Russia,
which is the more natural historic orientation for at least the center to the east of Ukraine.
Western Ukraine, of course, is not Orthodox.
It's more Catholic.
It was under Polish dominion for a while, briefly independent after World War I.
And then the Soviet Union essentially swallowed the whole thing.
And I don't think that Putin is completely inaccurate in saying that Ukraine's borders, as they today, are a creation of Lenin and Trotsky and getting off some of those eastern provinces, which Appal equated to like Russia's Ruhr Valley for Germany, heavy in industry, essential and integrated with the Russian economy.
I completely understand Russia being concerned, upset, very deeply concerned about losing Ukraine, not to mention having a hostile military alliance on its borders.
To the panel, anything you want to add there, context or disagreement with how I frame that?
Well, I agree to the point where you mentioned how Western Ukraine has always been like a condominium of Poland.
It's been.
You said that, not me.
Well, no, it's always been under Polish care.
Lviv was historically known as the city of four nations, Ukrainians, Russians, Poles, and Armenians, and there was even a Greek minority there.
But that was during times of Poland being a commonwealth with Lithuania.
And if you today even talk to Ukrainians in Western Ukraine, they will gladly tell you, like, oh, my grandmother was Polish.
I have Polish roots.
The Polish ties are still very strong there.
And I think that an issue in Western Ukraine, you had absolute atrocities happen, like the Volinia massacre.
And I'm ready to say Poles also took revenge upon Ukrainians.
A lot of the problems happen when foreign powers metdle in there.
What happened at the beginning in 19, well, it goes back before 1939.
A large part of the creation of the Western Ukrainian state was Under the uh guidance of in the 20s, under the guidance of Marshal Juzef Biosutsky, who let in 1920, I mean, a bunch of Polish peasants beat the Red Army back, and he did his famous key expedition with Simeon Petura, and they created the Republic, the People's Republic of Western Ukraine,
and could have even gone far.
Like at the time, the Red Army was in such a terrible state that they could have gone all the way to Moscow, and Poland would have gone two for two in making Russia, excuse my language, female dog.
Yeah, however, I noticed that a lot of troubles between Poles and Ukrainians have been due to outside meddling, whether it be the Soviets trying to cause trouble between them because Soviets first arrive in 1939, tell Ukrainians these Poles are your enemy.
And it was just left that way.
And resentment through Soviet propaganda grew to led to things like the Volinia massacre.
Real quick, what's the Volinia massacre?
It was a massacre done by the Ukrainian insurgent army under the leadership of Stepan Vandera.
Sure.
He's basically a saint to Ukrainian nationalists and a demon to Russians and perhaps others.
And Poles.
But now it's, I don't even really talk much about Vandera because the current situation, Western, especially Western Ukrainians are fleeing.
And I think Poles and Ukrainians right now to put those historical differences aside.
And ultimately, a perfect situation I would see right now for what it's worth.
Ukraine be split into Russian sphere of influence and Western Ukraine, as terrible as it sounds, being a Polish puppet state.
And I support the idea of intermarium, which is between the seas.
Poland itself is a puppet state and always has been.
It can't be.
Currently, it is a puppet state.
I'm just kidding.
I'm just kidding.
Don't take that.
Poland did have a hell of a century or two.
Yeah, it did.
Big boss in the bloodlands.
Yeah.
Well, you know, according to Smasher, Poland is wholly Irish clay.
But that's for another time.
And so is Ukraine.
So is Ukraine.
We were talking about this.
Yeah, well, so UI is actually how where the O came from.
So if you look at ancient Irish names and stuff, it's UI apostrophe the name.
So Ukraine is actually spelled UI apostrophe C R A I N because there are no K's in Irish.
It's all Ireland always has been, says Smasher.
They all use potatoes for everything, so they're somehow related.
Yeah, real quick, go ahead, wrap up this section.
And so where does the name Crane come from?
It comes from the old Gaelic of Kirin.
So Crane means son of Kirin.
So Ukraine is the holy land of the entire Kirin dynasty, essentially.
Smasher is bullshitting.
Ukraine means frontier, essentially.
It was the original mean, right?
Yeah, it does.
I'm not bullshitting though.
That is real, like, as far as the gate goes.
That is real.
Okay.
All right.
All right.
It's going back to like the idea of intermarium, and I would prefer expanded, just Central Europe neither having Moscow nor DC nor Tel Aviv just forming an independent block.
As that was actually an idea in the 20s.
So that's an idea I ultimately support.
And I just do think that Western and Eastern Ukraine, completely different people and new power blocks need to be created.
I 100% agree with that.
Nikkei, I saw you perhaps trying to get on the mic there.
We'll go to you next.
Real quick anecdote.
Again, just because I spent some time in these countries doesn't make me expert.
I'm sure there are going to be plenty of Ukrainians and Russians and bulls like reing to this.
We're doing our best, guys, right?
So, and if we screw up, then like recognize it for ints on our part and correct us either by email or whatever, fullhouse show at brothonmail.com.
But 1998 or 1999, we took an overnight train from Kiev to Lviv with it was our American exchange group and the Ukrainian Kiev students that we were with.
And I clearly remember them being almost creeped out being Lviv.
It was possibly the first for a lot of them.
They were like, this doesn't feel like Ukraine or this is a foreign country or a city.
So it's, yes, to your point, it's the country.
Apal said, Ukraine's kind of like America.
You know, you got a lot of ethnicities, religions, languages, and people squabbling over things.
Sad, but true.
Nikkei, is Ukraine real?
Here's another thing.
You know, Ukraine is fake.
Yes.
What's up, Rolo?
Ah, I didn't see him.
I'll go in and tap him in.
But Nikkei, go ahead and add some color if you'd like to, sir, while I try to find Sam here in our roster.
Yep.
Well, the original reason I had unmuted was just to join in on the memeing about, you know, Celtic mysticism of Ukraine.
But as to your question, which I can't answer my opinion on is Ukraine real?
I fall on the side of yes.
I do believe Ukraine is a salient identity, Ukrainian.
I believe there are language differences between Russian and Ukrainian.
That there are some disagreements as to the specificity of Ukrainian as an ethnic identity.
But to put it in the broadest terms to be accepting of this, I think Ukrainian is an effective catch-all term for a group of people who comprise a distinct ethnic bloc that at one point or another in time have been called Galician, Ruthenian, and Cossack.
Some Cossacks, not all of them.
But some.
As the sort of root ethnicity for those peoples.
Was there a state of Galicia and a state of Ruthenia, or were they more like principalities?
Not too much in the weeds here, but just the basics, if you know it.
I mean, you could argue that that's true.
It's not like black and white as far as I know.
I'm not like a total expert in the medieval history of it, but you can make that case.
And some people do.
As far as I'm concerned, as to the modern times, these people are very similar in their ethnicity and culture.
They're most similar in their language.
And the convergence of these salient categories has created a ethnicity that I think we could fairly call Ukrainian.
It is distinct from Russian.
And I think a lot of where our current crisis comes up is the fact that not all of Ukraine is populated by what I would call ethnic Ukrainians.
Sure.
Yeah, I hate it when our guys say like, Ukraine isn't real.
It's a social contract or whatever.
It's like, well, even if that's factually true based on history, like, well, it's real now in their minds.
They see themselves as that, whether you like it or not, whether it was a fake and gay operation or not.
America is a social contract and you dumbasses are fighting for it anyways.
Yeah, America's not real.
All you have is a squabbling tangle of various ethnicities, mud bloods, and mystery meat.
We have had constantly.
I've never thought about that is that it just, especially as an American that has gone over there.
I mean, if Ukraine is not real, what is America?
Sure.
As an American, you're not allowed to tell anybody that their country isn't real, except for Israel.
I don't know if Yvonne's been to Ukraine, but Jason certainly has.
Jason, give us some color commentary on the people.
I'm sure that you met some pro-Russians too, but any color commentary from your time on the ground and people's attitudes toward nationalism, both from man on the street to like ultra-radical neo-Nazi, if you met any of them.
So, yeah, I only met one person that was like, what you could say was pro-Russian over there.
And she was a younger like lady and basically just said that she thought the language thing was stupid and that she liked to speak Russian.
And that was the extent of the pro-Russian stuff.
Pretty much everybody else was very, even just random people on the street were extremely supportive of nationalist stuff and the battalions are by common folks.
They're like treated as heroes and just the overall.
And most of my time was in the capital.
And it was just, yeah, it was pretty unreal.
I mean, coming from growing up in the United States and being out there, it was just like quite something to be in a subway shoulder to shoulder in a huge city.
And everywhere I go, everyone is white and mostly with the same views.
And that's a big change.
When I was there in the late 90s, there was, I vividly remember way more pro-Russian language, Russian ethnicity people conversations.
So that's almost a point.
Yeah, maybe this is a, but it's a point for Russia's perspective that like there is a drastic shift underway that is at least partially Western engineered that is creating a problem for us.
But go ahead, Smash.
I just, I have a friend that grew up in the Ukraine under Soviet rule.
And so essentially what you had happen was Russia is what was taught at schools.
It's what was spoken at schools.
So instead of being able to speak Ukrainian or Galician or whatever, whatever you want to call the language, you know, yeah, I'm going to say Ukrainian because I'm a dumb American and that's a vernacular that I know.
Instead of being able to speak Ukrainian, they had to speak Russian.
And so ultimately, you either knew Russian because your parents grew up under the USR and essentially didn't get to speak Ukrainian.
Maybe they grew up without parents or whatever because of all the death in the war, et cetera.
So you have the situation in which people are primed to learn more Russian because of state mandates than Ukrainian because of the destroyed family.
And so you have all these people growing up speaking Russian, speaking Russian in business dealings at school, et cetera.
So, you know, that's essentially why so many people speak Russian as their primary language, even in a place that may not be ethnically Russian, arguably is not ethnically Russian.
And the Ukrainians that I know don't see themselves as ethnically Russian.
Sure.
And when you look at the ethnicity maps of Ukraine, I was actually surprised.
I mean, obviously, there's high and majority Russian compositions in the far eastern territories, but at least in the relatively mainstream map I saw, it was majority Ukrainian in the big overwhelming majority of the country from the center west.
Sam, can everybody just and then we'll tap in, Sam.
Oh, I was just going to say the sections of the country, like as you get closer to Russia, there are more, you know, Ruses.
There are Russians there.
And my question would just be like, well, were they always there?
How did they get there?
Were they ethnically, were those areas ethnically cleansed?
I'm inclined to say yes.
I don't know the history, you know, perfectly, obviously.
It's just a question that I'm asking for anybody that knows or, you know, people that are listening to think about these things.
Like, stop taking everything that you see, whether it's from Russia or from the West at face value.
Like, use critical thinking skills.
You listen to the show and you know about Jews because of your critical thinking skills.
Stop allowing yourself to be propagandized, unless it's by us.
Yeah.
Keep your mind completely open to the reality that you're in an information war that has centuries and civilizations at stake here, from Russia to perhaps to Ukrainians who just want the right thing for their country.
Zoghis is better.
Thank you.
Yeah, we'll talk about that too here.
We're building up to the juicy stuff.
Hang with us, audience.
But Sam, our resident birth panelist, actually served on the front lines with Pravi Sector and was reportedly seen in Odessa around the time of that horrible house fire when people died.
I am not serious and I shouldn't even joke.
Sam, how are you, brother?
Good.
Can you hear me all right?
You're really low.
I don't know if you're on your regular mic.
Yeah.
I'm on my headphone, Mike.
I guess I should change it.
Give me a second.
Change it up.
All right.
If there's nothing else on that, I'll loose it up here as we go along.
Go ahead, Avobad.
Please.
Yeah.
Listen, while I was listening to all that, I started making notes on there were too many things that I wanted to dispute.
I started making notes, but I ran out of paper.
So I hope I can have that.
Well, I don't even know what's the best way to start to make sure my arguments are constructed in the best way.
As a Scotsman, you automatically have to take the side of the oppressed people.
Sorry.
Scotland is a different story.
In fact, if you're really into Gallic and Celtic politics, we should discuss that sometime.
You're actually Irish.
On a long enough timeline, you're actually Irish.
Well, and you know, I agree.
That's actually to go to my point.
In fact, Scots Gallic is derived from Irish.
Oh, I know.
I have a Scot, one of my best friends growing up was Scottish and I used to tell him all the time, I was like, the Scots wouldn't be here without the Irish.
And so we kind of had this joke of like, oh, were there Irish monkeys that were completely separate from everybody?
And then they're the ones that populated Scotland.
And I just, you know, ironically say yes, but it was always just kind of like, no, for real, this is how it happened.
Yeah, I mean, I'm in completely different.
Not Irish monkeys, but well, not to derail totally, but I've been reading Irish stuff all day, so I'm kind of thinking about that.
Yeah, also, also not to derail, but in the same vein, I guess I'll start off, you know, talking about Ukrainian language and Russian being enforced.
You know, I just want to say that unless you're being dishonest or you just don't speak either of the languages, if you speak Ukrainian, you speak Russian.
I mean, it's the problem is that I don't think there are any languages in the West that are similar enough to one another to really get people to understand how close together some of these Slavic languages are.
But I mean, I, you know, Ukrainian and Russian, it's like Czech and Slovak.
Really, if you speak Ukrainian, you speak Russian, you know, at least well enough.
It's not really that much of a stretch.
I've seen Spanish and Italians figure it out in real time.
Yeah, and you know, a lot of the Slavic languages are much closer together than any of the Latin languages are, which is why I struggle to have a proper, you know, comparison there.
But yeah, I mean, you guys are right about the attitude towards Russia varying in different places in Ukraine and also over time.
And some of that, I think, accounts for the ethnic makeup in different parts of the country.
Certainly the West, as people have already mentioned, they're not Ukrainian or Russian.
They're their own people.
And in the East, they are certainly Russian.
And regarding the Ukrainians as an ethnic group, this is sort of a funny question, but personally, I don't really consider them to be an ethnic group because you don't have to go back very far for them to be essentially the same people linguistically, culturally, ethnically.
I mean, they're almost genetically indistinguishable from Russians.
And I'm not talking about Western Ukrainians.
I'm talking about, you know, because to clarify, all of the Western Ukrainians that I've ever met don't even consider themselves Ukrainian.
But the people who do consider themselves Ukrainian are functionally indistinguishable from Russians.
And if you, you know, the identity hasn't even existed long enough, I think, to be really significant unless we want to start getting into weird sorts of, you know, philosophical games.
And then the lines that we draw start to become sort of arbitrary.
You know, again, talking about Scots and Irish, You know, how far back do you have to go for them to just be Celts?
You know, you can go back less than a thousand years and they're the same people.
But that's neither here nor there.
I think a lot of the Ukrainian identity nowadays and the changing attitudes towards Russia is directly a result of Western cultural import and Western media influence.
I mean, I've met people from all over the spectrum in Ukraine, and the only people I've met who didn't like Russia or at least have sympathies towards Russia or consider themselves in some way ethnically related to Russians were either people from the West or people who were like literally gay for lack of a better word, but you know, obsessed with the Western paradigm, obsessed with this idea of diversity and, you know, drag queen story hour.
Those people certainly don't consider themselves Russian.
They don't like Russia.
They're, you know, functionally Ukrainian nationalists, but for all the wrong reasons.
You got Libtards in Ukraine, you got Libtards in Russia, and people intoxicated by the false things offered by the West.
Or it's everywhere.
People need to keep that in mind.
Like, Libtars are everywhere.
Go ahead, Ivan.
You really have to ask yourself at the end of the day, I think, you know, if you're being honest, both what's best for Ukraine and what's best for the world as a whole.
And if you ask me, as you know, I've not lived in Ukraine, but I've lived in nearby countries.
I've been to Ukraine many times.
And I would much rather live in Russia than in Ukraine.
And it's because of the culture, because of the politics.
And a lot of that is directly correlated to this idea of Ukrainian identity.
And, you know, if you travel around in there, you can really see that.
And, you know, I don't want to ramble on for too long.
I'm sure we'll get to this later.
But frankly, I feel the same way about the other identity that was mentioned earlier, this idea of broadly Central Europe, Central European identity.
You know, if you don't have to go back, you know, even a thousand years for them all to be basically, you know, from the same original tribes in the area.
They're all Slavs.
And the problem with a lot of these Balkanized smaller countries with sort of arbitrary identities is they don't have the military or the economic capability to fend for themselves.
And, you know, without throwing in together with countries like Russia, you know, it's just a question of how are they going to be able to maintain sovereignty without selling out to other powers.
And the other powers you have at the moment are the West.
And that's who they've been selling out to.
And I've witnessed firsthand the degradation, the culture in these countries, and also the rapid changing of demographics.
If you've lived in Poland, you've lived in Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine, any of these countries in the last 20 years, it's absolutely disgusting.
And it's so obvious how the demographics are changing.
You have all of these international companies coming, making deals with the government, mass importing people from Africa.
I'm serious.
I mean, it's you go to these major cities, you know, places like Kiev, you will literally see Africans walking around on the street.
It's because these international, you know, German-American companies, they're basically conspiring with the Jewish governments of these small countries to import these people in.
And they do it.
The governments agree to it, not only because of, you know, Semitic influence, but also because simply they cannot survive economically without imports.
And we could have a long discussion about the economics behind that.
But frankly, they just don't have the infrastructure to support these things.
And part of that goes back to communism.
After the Warsaw Pact fell, in a lot of these countries, they sold off the farmland to third parties from Israel, from China, from the Middle East, from many places.
But it's not that they don't have the farmland to support themselves, that it's being held by foreign powers and intentionally done so to exploit the people economically and without some sort of radical restructuring of the government and without throwing with people who have similar ethnic, linguistic backgrounds and goals to them.
I just don't see any other alternative.
So I really think that Russian imperialism is a net positive, not only for the world abroad, but actually for these countries as well, even though a lot of the people have a sort of misplaced but understandable fear slash aggress Russia in the wake of what happened during the Soviet Union and even going back prior to that.
But times are changing and they are really the best alternative.
And it's not even that bad an alternative.
I mean, Moscow is a wonderful place.
And I would love to live.
I'm living in the US.
I just got back here a few months ago, unfortunately, for other reasons, but I definitely plan to take my family back there.
It's, you know, just culturally everything.
If you're interested in the sorts of ideals that people like us hold, there's no better place to be in the world right now.
I would bet, yeah, Yvonne, I would bet big bucks that we, okay, Ukraine under the West.
That's going to mean eventually EU accession, NATO membership, et cetera.
I guarantee you it will be paused to the hilt and it will be far less white and far less Christian and far less pleasant to the extent that it is today than is, you know, today compared to total Western dominion.
Guarantee it.
Ukraine under Russia, I don't think it's going to be a magical wonderland of peace and harmony and everybody's got flowers in the ears, but I guarantee you it will be less bad.
I think that is a no-brainer.
And unfortunately, there's two ships in Europe right now, Washington and Moscow.
So these great states that haven't already been assimilated to the Borg or to the Zorg have a really tough decision.
You know what the whitest country in Europe is?
Belarus.
It's either Belarus or Iceland, depending on the demographics that you look at.
And Iceland probably won't hold up for too much longer.
We got to move on.
Yvonne, anything else from your copious notes real quick?
Or anybody else on the panel?
We're going to talk about the war right now.
Go ahead.
I'll leave up my granted for too long.
No, not at all.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Bronze Age Dad seems to have a lot of experience on Ukraine in the comments.
He's angry.
He said bullshit.
And he may join us later, assuming he is a good actor.
I see an anime, or maybe it's not an anime.
It's hard.
It's just some graphic.
But I hear Jason or somebody else on the mic.
Go ahead.
Yeah, man.
I guess something that I was thinking about while the last guy was speaking is that I feel like I, prior to going to Ukraine, assumed and thought of, and a lot of people say he's saying that Ukrainians are similar to ethnic Russians.
I was under the impression that Russia was a white country until going to Ukraine.
And I was informed that it's, you know, not and that it's a multi-ethnic empire and that, you know, white Russians, they say, make around 70% of it, but it's decreasing.
And it's kind of honest to be like, oh, well, they're the same as Russians.
Well, if Russians have Chechnyans and, you know, the biggest mosque in Europe and lots of non-white immigration, how would you use that, you know, a 98% white country is the same as Russia's.
Well, we have to make the distinction between Russian ethnicity and Russian nationality.
And also I push back on the Chechens.
You know, we talked about this in the chat earlier.
Sure, some Chechens are Turkestani, but if you want to call people who are Chechen uniformly non-white simply because they're Muslim, then you're using a completely strange definition of white.
I'm just not sure, you know, what the argument there is.
Yep, and teaser for the audience, we are going to do all of the knocks against Russia.
We're going to go through them after we get through some of the current events stuff.
You know, Russia is a Zog puppet of a different stripe.
Russia is replacing its own people with Muslim immigrants from the stands, et cetera, et cetera.
But yeah, I lost my friends out there, but yeah.
Well, I just want to, I just, this, I think, I have a problem with the whole like Muslim thing that Americans do.
We do this thing where like Muslims are like evil dumb brown people because that's how a lot of us kind of grew up, right?
With 9-11 and the wars in the Middle East and stuff.
But like Muslims are this like hugely diverse group of people.
Like you could do the same thing with Christians, right?
Like Mexico is predominantly Catholic, right?
But we still don't want Mexicans here, you know?
So like the, you have to think about Muslim as a religious category.
The majority of Muslims are probably brown, definitely brown.
Brownish.
Yeah, it's not like they're coming from Arabia.
50 shades of brown.
But even Arab, dude, even Arab, man, Arab is, and there's an Arab peninsula.
The people from the Arabic peninsula are Arabic, right?
They are Arabs.
But there are people who speak an Arab language that are like white in all reality.
Maybe not European, certainly not European, but arguably white.
So people, there's a lot of nuance and, you know, you kind of, you could get as specific as you want and autistic as you want about it, but people have this tendency to just like, oh, they're Muslim, so they're brown.
They're Arabic, so they're brown, you know, this, that, and the other.
And I know people are going to call me some like Muslim Arabic loving apologists.
Yeah.
But, but, you know, it's just like, I try not to fall into these traps of like generalizing people.
You'd rather have Central Asian Muslims than sub-Saharan Africans flooding its country.
Yeah, I'd rather have like Jordanian Muslims or Palestinians over some Pakistani, you know, or 50 shades of invasive.
Yeah.
Right.
Let's people, people, people want to cry about Muslim rape gangs in the UK.
It's like, how about the fact that they're Pakistani?
Like, this is racial.
That's a racial problem.
It has nothing.
They're not raping them because they're Christian or they're not raping people because they're Muslims or even Christian.
Like, yeah, they'll talk about jihad and stuff like that.
But, you know, Christians will do the same thing.
They're little IQ Pakistanis.
They love Israel.
Yeah.
It's all revenge for loving Israel.
All right, let's move on to where we stand right now.
It's only been like a little over 48 hours.
It's hard to believe this was Wednesday night or Wednesday afternoon when this kicked off.
Thank God we didn't do this show on Thursday because everybody was like had smoke coming out of their ears, like overloading on memes and data and stuff like this.
And I'll just say that it's extremely difficult to get the lay of the land.
This is the first time where I've actually gotten the majority of my news and information about this straight from Telegram.
Like you go to CNN or Daily Mail or the Drudge Garbage Report.
Like you get more information from individual channels here and people then, of course, none of us are on Twitter anymore.
So it's tough to see what's going on.
I'll just say it looks like you know they've made significant inroads in the south out of Crimea.
They came down from Belarus and Russia.
They're going after Kyiv, a massive industrial city in northeastern Ukraine.
Of course, they already rolled into the eastern provinces.
And as of tonight, I haven't been totally on top of everything up to the minute, but they're on the outskirts or basically threatening to take Kiev and Zelensky is doing the attention hog thing.
They're coming for me.
They're coming for me tonight.
It appears that the Russians were perhaps pulling punches in the early day or two to just strike military targets with airstrikes, missile strikes, and not directly engaging Ukrainian troops to have bloodbaths.
And so far, as somebody noted, they're not flattening Kiev and the Lavra and the beautiful churches.
They're basically trying to get this done.
And I'll add the comment that if Zelensky were not Jewish, but were actually a real Ukrainian, insofar as we understand that, he may not have been so willing to say, to the ramparts, all of you, up to age 60, handing out guns, fight to the death, feeding Ukrainians into the Russian meat grinder.
But I am not a military analyst.
All I can do is summarize what I've seen.
It looks like it's going okay so far.
I did see some American military commentators say that Russia is not as impressive as you'd think.
I guess they've only committed like a third of their troops, but it's not this like blitzkrieg.
Although, granted, we're only two freaking days in and they're already at the capital.
I think somebody said it took three weeks for the United States to reach Baghdad.
Of course, that's not apples to apples.
So I'll stop there with the military summary.
How about it?
Well, I was just going to say, you know, in two days, they've reached the capital.
It took America about three weeks to reach the capital in Iraq, and we were fighting like dumb brown dirt farmers.
So, you know, we basically didn't really have a real opposition.
You know, Saddam's army was a lot more competent than the Iraqi army that we built.
But, you know, that's kind of neither here nor there.
At the end of the day, it's still like what is essential at the time at least was the greatest army on earth, maybe in the history of earth to still take three weeks, you know.
And I don't know about the geography, but they probably could have done it faster.
And it took them, what, you know, two days, 48 hours, maybe as short as 36.
And I get the feeling that Russia is legitimately not trying to destroy everything.
You know, I think not an army plowing against the Germans.
Right.
Based on what I know about the Russian military, they certainly could flatten Ukraine if they wanted to.
And I just get the feeling that they're really, they're pulling their own punches and it might be costing them casualties and equipment, but they really aren't trying to destroy Ukraine and kill a bunch of Ukrainians.
Yeah, I suspect they want to bring it as intact into the fold, even if it's just selfish to not have to do a massive rebuilding to keep the human capital and the industrial capital preserved for their usage.
I'm sure that Jason has strong opinions on the fighting and the Ukrainian domestic resistance.
I would just say that the West has already said that they're doing nothing but feeding arms into Ukraine.
There's still no prospect of NATO coming in to save the Ukrainians, no matter how much Zelensky complains.
Therefore, if I'm a sober, disinterested observer, I would say, Ukraine, there's no way you can beat Russia.
Why in God's name would you die to defend a Jewish president?
Just don't get killed, except your new master.
And of course, I understand that that's not acceptable to people when your country is being invaded.
But yeah, go ahead, Jason.
So yeah, I as far as that, I just think that it is, yeah, it's hard.
How do you, like you said, how do you ask people that?
And really, man, I feel that if Russia was everything that a lot of people in the West want to believe, these really the only people fighting were the same people that would be doing what the separatists are doing.
If they really believed that Putin was really going to put the Russian people first and all the stuff that they really make you think is going on in Russia, and if there weren't lots of guys that believe like us and care about the things we do, fleeing and getting asylum in Ukraine and fighting for Ukraine, this whole invasion would be unnecessary.
And I mean, I understand saying them not wanting to destroy.
Yeah, now they can hear me.
So hard.
I don't understand how noble it is, but it's like, is that it right there?
I'm going to mute Sam.
Sam, I just muted you there because you were coming through.
Yeah.
Yeah, there was somebody said, like, you know, what do you expect?
Like, your country's being invaded.
You really expect these men to just like roll over and die.
And unfortunately, you can correct me if I'm wrong, Jason, but I like, I can understand that human response.
My country is being invaded.
I don't want to be under Russia.
Okay, it's go time.
You know, let's go.
But I think this is a fair statement to say that a Ukrainian fighting for Ukraine right now, Ukraine is a plaything for the West.
I don't think the West, do you really think Washington cares about the well-being of Ukrainians or do they see Ukraine as a pawn, as a piece to be played on the chessboard against Russia?
I'm 99% certain that's what's going on here.
And I suspect that the Ukrainians are smart enough or they should know, unless they are completely cut off from like honest reporting, that they are being used as pawns by the West to screw Russia.
I would not give Ukrainians not, shoot, I don't want to say it like that.
I was going to say I don't want to give them that much credit, but I'm not trying to say that they're stupid.
But look at America, man.
Look at America.
Most people don't have access to real information.
They don't have access to, you know, the truth, essentially.
And their ability to think critically has been cut off.
So you have these people that grew up under the Soviet Union and in a poor Eastern European country that is a Western puppet state, essentially, and has been for a long time, even arguably before the revolution in 2014 and whatever.
So do these people really know better?
Like, do Americans know better?
Do most Europeans know better?
For the most part, no.
And so I don't, you know, I think the Ukrainians are probably looking extremely pragmatically of like, there are people coming in that want to kick my door in.
I'm going to shoot at them.
Yeah.
I would agree with that largely.
And that, yeah, man, it's most stuff like that.
And a lot of these people are ideological and they're not, they're definitely not fighting for their president.
This is not about, oh, we got to save.
You know, I'm not defending the Ukrainian government.
I don't think any of the people that are actually doing the fighting are doing that.
They're fighting for what they believe in their race and their nation and they don't want to be under Russia.
So let it right now, Jason.
I'm going to like bump up the Ukrainian nationalist or quote unquote neo-Nazi.
One of those cases where obviously, the media in the West and in Russia throw around Neo-nazi left and right like so much bird seed at a park.
I just came up with that.
I don't know where that came from, but it's true, uh.
But in this case, those militas, uh.
Back in 2014, I remember Svoboda.
I remember, uh Property Sector, but today the one that seems to get all the attention is the AZOV Battalion.
Uh unabashed, uh Neo-nazis, without any negative connotation there.
Uh, but how the hell does a Neo-nazi militia come to terms with fighting for a country and, by proxy, a government in control that is a pawn of the west and governed by it's?
You know there's a Jewish president.
That president, now Zelensky's, been in for like two years and before then.
It's not like they had some super base nationalist.
Uh Poroshenko, I think the uh, the Chocolate, the chocolate sultan, who was before him.
Uh, how the hell do you get around fighting?
Well, it would.
It would be like white nationalists in America, like taking up arms with with Biden's, like tacit approval, it just it doesn't.
There's like a cognitive dissonance there.
I don't know if you can make sense for us, so I can't really speak for any direct of this stuff, because i've been out of the uh yeah, out of everything for a while, but ultimately, you know they have, they manage social media.
They put out their stuff.
I mean, it's still current today and yeah, they're not supportive of their president, but I think they're.
Most of their stuff is yeah they they, they really don't want to be part of Russia, and I think they understand all the negative connotations and I don't disagree that there's going to be serious consequences for uh accepting the help that they are from, from the west and if they end up joining with the West.
But these people lived under that stuff.
They don't want nothing to do with it.
They have people coming from Russia that you know are just like us, that are like hey man, this is, you know, we're here, we got your back, we're gonna do this and I think it's you know.
But ultimately yeah, I mean I think that in the, in the future, you guys should probably have somebody on from there and and that's the the main reason that I wanted to come on, this sure is um, I just feel like there's this overwhelming uh thing in America where these people want to go overboard on the slander of these, these people and to me.
I have never seen any thoroughly convincing evidence that these groups um, I mean, with the exception yeah, the one that most people like to say was funded by an oligarch is right sector, and i'm not gonna, you know, get into that.
I don't know, was that I have?
Uh yeah, Igor Kolomoyski comes up all the time like yes, but i've never seen any overwhelming evidence to say that, you know okay, all of these guys are funded by this.
This is all fake, this is all bad.
I've heard this said a lot.
I don't know the origins, but what I will say is, even if that's the case, there's thousands of guys uh, that you know, and people from all over the world.
There was a volunteer regiment from all over the world through misanthropic division, and all these guys that came out that believe what we do, that fought for a majority you know a 97, 98 white nation against what they believe is a multi-ethnic empire run by, you know, an Ex-KGB agent.
That is very oppressive to people who feel we, the way we do.
So when I see stuff, specifically in America, of people just bad mouthing them and say oh, those guys are all fake and gay this that oh, they're all cowards oh, they're all fighting, even on our side right because, of course, the mainstream.
But what's interesting?
I mean, when they were operating, there was a curious like there's a clear, curious lack of interest in the mainstream media about talking about Ukraine, legitimate Ukrainian Neo-Nazi militias.
They just like sweep it under the rug, like it doesn't exist because it's inconvenient to their neighbors.
It's a good, dirty little secret of the West.
Right, like we fund Neo-Nazis to fight Russia and, of course, like the Jew-run West doesn't want to talk about that.
Yeah, but I mean that's it's like a well-known thing that governments uh promote or tacitly allow things they would never allow in their own country elsewhere.
So a lot of people are like, oh well, look at the January 6th and how it's treated different, but it's the same thing as like, quite frankly, nationalism in and outside of Russia.
In Russia that's they back in the day not, the things were different, but currently racial nationalism is I am under depression is completely not tolerated in Russia.
But they, you know, they allow people like you know that they, they entertain ethnic nationalists around the world because they know that that is harmful to their opposition.
And what if I were to tell you that they might be legitimate in their motivations and their nobility and the rest.
And maybe they also I don't know who's making a racket there, and maybe they are.
They, maybe they made a uh a pact and they're like, all right well, better to get uh, get it from this oligarch than somebody else.
But you know, like every everybody's got Jew on the brain right so like, if you got money from oligarch, then you're a pawn of Jews.
Maybe maybe, maybe not uh, go ahead.
Well, I was just gonna say it.
I mean, these guys are, you know, legit.
I think you know there's no reason to doubt what they believe and what they say.
They are right, they are.
They are national socialist warfighters uh, in Ukraine uh, we know that the CIA and Israel send them money and arms.
But you have to think about it.
You know, if America had uh, some problems to the point where a, a nationalist militia could pop up and the Chinese wanted to send you money, or Russians wanted to send you money, or or maybe Israel decides that America needs to die and they want to send you money, like you are in that position.
You are, you as a, as a, you know, a small fighting force.
You're going to take whatever you can get from whoever will give it to you.
Uh, and that's been true of of militias, you know, throughout history.
So uh, you know I I, I believe, I believe them when they say that they are legit.
I have no reason to doubt that and I understand.
I try to put myself in their position, like, you know, would I take money from the CI if I was them?
Maybe, probably.
And also from a practical perspective, like, why wouldn't you?
If somebody wants to give you if somebody wants to give you the arms and the money that you think that you need to fight the battle that you think you need to fight, you're going to take it.
You're just going to take it.
And consequences be damned.
So let's also address the fact that who were they fighting against?
They were fighting against, everybody's like clutching pearls over brother wars, but those militias were active in eastern Ukraine against Russian, pro-Russian separatists.
And a lot of people would say, why the hell are you fighting against them rather than against your corrupt government in Kiev, no more brother wars advocate?
And I'm pretty sure we know, like, I'm not getting on my high horse about like who's noble and right, but like we know in America, there are knuckleheads looking to start fires and perhaps do bad things in our ideological tent.
I have no doubt that there are some hooligans and guys who would do bad immoral things in Ukraine, supposedly under the banner of national socialism or white racial unity, if we're being like completely open and fair here.
Like nobody is like pristine and pure in all of this.
I don't think the Ukrainians are.
I certainly don't think the Russians are.
And I would wager without perfect information that there are probably some bad actors or some knuckleheads in those militias too that legitimately like what happened in Odessa?
I don't think that was a false flag.
I don't think the Russians like burned the barbecue things.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you know anything about that, how about it?
Yeah, I don't know enough to speak on that.
I've definitely seen a lot of stuff on Telegram about it.
I didn't go to Odessa and did not hear about that.
But back to, I don't know, to the thing about the separatists, I mean, to me, it's just like I think of it, yeah, as, you know, with the United States, if Arizona, New Mexico, California, all these places that have all these mixed go, hey, we want to be a part of Mexico now.
I don't think that's going to go over very well with most people.
And it's just like a pretty understandable reaction.
It's like, okay, well, why don't you move?
You know, Russia's got a lot of land go there.
You know, the idea of changing borders, especially in the manner in which things go about, I mean, to me, I think it's a pretty understandable thing that that would lead to conflict.
Sure.
Fair enough.
Yeah, it's sticky.
And I'll say everybody is up in arms.
We're going to talk about Russia next, I think, and this, like the civilizational states, the really juicy stuff.
Teaser for the audience.
But I would just say that from a Russian perspective, you could see the justification.
First off, whether Putin hates national socialism and neo-Nazis.
Yes, he probably does.
He's a Russian leader.
It's not going to be a big selling point for him.
But I think that there were legitimate actions that those guys did there that were legitimately offensive to Russian national pride and their legitimate blood ties with their co-ethnics who live in Ukraine without sounding too much like a Kremlin shill.
As I see or I saw, yeah, I see you, Pat Little.
We'll get you on the mic later.
I got to get through this stuff with the guys who are in the court.
We will take questions from the audience.
And we're already almost an hour and a half in.
Well, if I may add really quickly on the issue of Azov and whatnot, I just have to say, you know, I've seen lots of people making comments regarding Russia and Putin.
Oh, Putin is not a white nationalist.
You know, white nationalists are jailed in Russia.
You know, he's not a Nazi.
I would just say, do you really expect Putin to openly say I'm a Nazi?
Or do you even really expect him to be a Nazi?
And do you remember what happened between Germany and Russia during the Second World War?
How many Russians were killed by the Nazis?
What was Hitler's general position on certain Slavic peoples?
I mean, it's not really a surprise that Putin is not going to take up that position.
It would just be kind of ridiculous to expect him to do that.
With regards to white nationalism in Russia, I see people mention Holocaust denial laws.
My only comment on that is I think you're going to be hard pressed to find a European country that doesn't have some form of Holocaust denial laws.
I mean, none of them really have freedom of speech.
I would just say that when I was in Moscow, people would get drunk and scream nigger at the top of their lungs in the middle of the street.
They would throw up the Nazi salute, you know, scream whatever sort of racial rhetoric they wanted down the streets and cops would just walk by.
So I'm not saying it's not enforced.
I'm not saying it's never used as a sort of political tool to silence certain people, but I would just say that maybe the way that it's being used is a little bit, you know, not really accurate in what's trying to be portrayed by that.
And frankly, with most of the European countries, at least the Eastern European countries, I think it's the same way you can say most things regarding the racial issues and they may be technically illegal, but people won't bat an eye.
But not to sidetrack too much on that with regards to as of, I would just say that, you know, I think as of, you know, I like what they stand for generally.
I have, you know, nothing really bad to say about them other than that I feel that they've simply made a mistake in their positioning on this.
I feel they've gotten caught up in this sort of weird nationalist identity obsession that I see very often among our guys, so to speak, or people with these sorts of sympathies.
And as a Celt, as a Scot, I'm particularly familiar with this.
You know, even in Scotland, you'll have people from Glasgow don't consider people from Edinburgh, Scots, or, you know, there's the Highlanders and the Lowlanders.
You know, who's really a Scots?
You know, I'm, you know, I'm the real Ukrainian.
I'm the real Russian.
They're Russian.
We're Ukraine.
You know, like there are a lot of feelings there.
And I'm not saying they're invalid, but you sort of have to think about the bigger picture and what it's going to mean for your people.
And in this case, I think that if those folks really thought hard about it, they realized that the Russian invasion would bring, I think it would advance their overall societal goals more than it would set them back simply because they identify as Ukrainian, Ukrainian nationalists, and that identity is important to them.
And the Russians are not Ukrainian.
Well, look at pushing back NATO, getting NATO out of your country, reducing the foreign influence in your economy.
These are all positives and choosing to get hung up on the fact that the Russians are not perfect and literally give your lives for that.
If that's what they want to do, then power to them.
But I personally would make a different choice.
I think it's not really a pragmatic idea.
And I think if we're going to be dissidents, then we might do well to have a little bit of pragmatism in the way that we practice because we're certainly the underdogs.
So that's the only comment I'd make regarding that is I don't think the Azov, you know, I don't have anything negative to say about them.
I just think they've gotten too caught up on these border ideas.
Yeah, on the off chance, I'll play devil's advocate here.
I could see one of those guys.
I assume one of them will hear this or maybe is even listening now.
And they'll be like, you GD sons of bitches, like who the hell are you?
Like, we're here in the suck, like, you know, fighting for the white race.
And you're like tut-tutting from a podcast in the West, criticizing our means and our motivations and efforts.
But there's a lot of people too who are like, guys, we're just looking at this from the outside and like it looks really bad.
Like you're in an impossible position.
Maybe go to safety, thus settle.
And like you're just going to get steamrolled and probably not be treated well because like it or not, Russia views you as neo-Nazis and has designs on Ukraine.
Yvonne totally cracked the seal on Putin and Russia, which I think we have to go to next.
I'm just going to, I'm going to make, I'm going to make a statement.
I don't know if I put this out on Telegram.
I can't remember all these damn takes, but this is an important one.
I'm going to save it for later, but I want to get this out there.
I think way too many of us, particularly in America, white nationalist dissidents, project our desires and our preferences on ideology, on politics, on specific policies that we want for our countries onto Russia and onto Putin that is completely unreasonable.
It's a world away.
It is a massive, sprawling, multi-ethnic country, multi-religious country, whether you like it or not, for centuries that was accomplished by white Russian conquest of Siberia and all the other territories in Asia and in the Caucasus that they painstakingly fought for over centuries and bled for to build that massive country.
And to expect Putin, who for 20 years has governed, in my opinion, in the net, net best interest of what are Russians, what throughout Russian history, what do they want?
A strong ruler and stability.
There's no comparison to Russia in the 90s to Russia starting in 2000 when Putin took over in terms of wealth, in terms of control, in terms of the ability to basically put an end to the national ransacking of the country.
There's tons of criticisms that you can level.
Sure, he hasn't executed every single oligarch.
Sure, he has, there's corruption there.
Sure, he might be setting himself up with an insurance policy in the back of his pocket in case he gets deposed or whatever.
It's a big, dangerous game.
And to expect Putin to publicly or even tacitly support national socialism or neo-Nazis in a country with still 25, 30 million deaths as a result of Barbarossa, I think is completely unreasonable, short-sighted, and just like a me first thing.
On the lesser of two evils, this is important too.
In America, of course, we know the game with Republicans and Democrats.
You get screwed either way, kush or sandwich.
Lesser of two evils voting for Republicans is now officially bullshit.
But that's in our backyard.
That's in our countries.
When the stake of Europe is at risk, the future of the civilizational orientation of Europe is at risk.
When there's literally two choices, now I know the like, you know, we want national independence for our people are going to be like, oh, we don't have to be under Washington or Moscow.
Sorry, as of today, there's two options.
There's literally two options.
And when you literally only have two options, and you're either going to be brown, globo, homo, imperium, or perhaps Russian tyranny that is perhaps not going to be importing Africans and Muslims en masse into Europe.
I think that choice is clear.
And we're cutting off our noses despite our faces and like not and looking a relative gift horse in the mouth when it comes to Putin and all the rest of it.
That's a big one.
I'll stop there.
And we haven't heard from Nikkei in a while and we lost Z, But have it that one, the Putin question generally?
We could talk about this for hours, but let's just do it right now while we still have-I personally heard a respecter.
I didn't see dead people on the freaking street corners.
If that's not national resurgence, even if it's not to your like perfection and liking, granted, my observations are not like conclusive.
I don't know what I'll tell you.
Nikkei, have that.
If we want to talk Putin, let's do it.
Putin's not in your mouth.
I didn't even see that coming.
All right.
Go ahead.
All right.
Well, if you want to talk Vladimir Putin, you'll never recover.
Putin chills will never recover.
Go over.
Maybe not, but I can still say a few words, you know, to reclaim what's left of my dignity after that.
The state of Russia in the big picture, it's incomparable to Russia under Yeltsin.
I mean, that's the most salient comparison we have to make.
The Russia of Yeltsin is far worse than the Russia of Putin.
And undeniable.
Objective analysis.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'm not going to act like I was old enough to know what was going on during the reign of Yeltsin, but I'm not dumb enough to not be able to read what historians say about the time period and draw my own conclusions.
objectively russia under putin is superior the condition of russians uh under putin's literally being proven on the ground right now National resurgence, they have their mojo back.
Yeah.
Russians under Putin are faring far better than they have since the collapse of the Soviet Union.
And to that, I owe Putin a lot of credit that I can't take away from him for any sort of Jew connections.
You know, as much as I would like to subtract such connections from his credit, the numbers speak for themselves.
Russians have a longer lifespan and a better standard of living since Putin became the president of the Federation.
I've heard that from many, many, many people.
And of course, there are expats who say that's bullshit too.
I just want to add that I find expats in general to be almost universally insufferable when it comes to the land that they fled because they have a motive to shit on it to justify their leaving.
Well, I've got to ask them, what country did they flee to and why?
And when?
Did they flee to the United States and Germany when the average lifespan of Russians was declining rapidly?
If so, then I get it.
You left Russia at a time when it was sucking really hard, but it's not the same country you left.
Things are always the way that you left.
Right?
At least from your own personal memory.
Yeah.
Right, exactly.
And that's one thing, you know, coach, you and I agree on the Judaism of Russia, et cetera.
But like, I'm completely willing to agree that like life is probably better for Russians now than it was 20 years ago.
And for certain people in Ukraine and stuff, it's probably going to be better under Putin than it is under the West, at least on a, you know, a 10 or 15 year timeline.
Right.
Time will tell.
We don't know.
We can't know.
We know what to expect with the West.
We don't know what to expect from an expansionist Russia under Putin.
On the oligarchs, I'm trying to read the comments there.
This is important.
There's like no perfection.
Like on the Bausman show, we were like, well, maybe he's doing revolution by evolution.
He's doing it gradually.
Again, this is speculation.
We don't know.
Interestingly enough, it was Christia Freeland, who is now the foreign, I believe, foreign minister of Canada, who was in Russia and saw what was going on with the oligarchs, basically looting hand over fist the former Soviet state assets to enrich themselves and gain control of Moscow.
She wrote a book called Sale of the Century.
I don't know if she's Jewish.
I think it's probably likely that she's at least part.
And of course, she's a demon now for her role in suppressing Canadians.
But of all people, she wrote a book about the rape and pillage of Russia under the oligarchs.
Putin, when he comes in, what does he do?
He says, listen with his FSB, former KGB friends, he said, the Russian state is going to reign supreme here.
You are not.
And as somebody said, Bronze Age Dad, he said, yes, you're going to play ball.
You can stay and probably stay rich and influential, but you're not going to run a show and you're not going to own this country and continue raping it.
And for that, many oligarchs fled.
Most prominently, Mikhail Kordakovsky, who was, I think, the wealthiest man in the world at one point, was arrested and charged with tax evasion and all the rest of it.
You have to remember, Putin doesn't just lock up neo-Nazis and go around hunting for people denying the Holocaust.
He arrests Jewish oligarchs and suppresses libtards too, which are not consistent with the actions of someone who is being puppeteered completely by Jews.
It just doesn't jive.
I can't prove that he's not.
I can't prove that he is.
I can just judge by the facts on the ground.
It's a very strange dynamic in Russia if Jews are calling the shots.
Now, Smasher hypothesized that they're creating a new host for them to flee to after the American fleecing is done.
But it just doesn't make sense to me.
This is the same damn thing with people who said Trump was going to win in 2020.
I said, I don't think that makes a damn bit of sense.
And I'll risk my clout on saying that he's going to lose because there's going to be a massive reaction by people who hated Trump throughout his presidency, plus all of us who lost our faith in him, plus all the Americans who died, plus all the new Americans who continued to flood in and get naturalized under his fat, lazy orange nose.
It's the same reason why I said, and I'll do my clout collection right here and do my quick victory lap.
On January 26th with Bausman, I said, I think this is happening.
It looks like it's happening.
Force me to guess.
They're going in and they're going to invade.
They've got the troops there in place way more than they did with their previous little exercises.
They issued an ultimatum to the West that they knew could not be met and they would not get concessions from.
And Ukraine is extraordinarily important to them from a vital national security perspective.
The actions and the developments in Russia are not consistent with being completely governed by a parasitic Jewish host.
And when I look at Chabad Lubavitch, I mean, they stand out.
They're Hasidic.
They like stick out like a sore thumb.
The idea that Putin is being puppeteered by them for material gain is to me a big stretch.
That's a lot.
I'll shut up now.
And now that we open this can of words.
Well, I guess I'll take it since I think I'm probably the only one that on the call that is more in line with that.
I don't think I well, and to be fair to Putin, I don't think he like Russia is not completely under the yoke of Jewish rule the way that we are here in the United States.
Like that, on its face, is ridiculous.
I think Putin is a legitimate Russian chauvinist and Russian nationalist, probably more so of a civic nationalist understanding that Russia is kind of this multi-ethnic empire in reality.
You know.
But yeah, it simply is.
And the Chechen War, which Putin suppressed, remember the Chechens were agitating for independence.
He ruthlessly suppressed them and effectively broke them.
He broke the Chechens to the point where they're now, yeah, they're literally like now on board, like we will go wherever you say, Master.
Which to me, less important than the Jew stuff.
But to me, that says that he either wants them for their military function or he isn't an ethnic nationalist, right?
If he was an ethnic, at least a principled ethnic nationalist, he would let them have their own country because it's just one less thing he has to deal with, right?
I think he cares most about stability in Russia and realizes that opening this box of ethnic passions and religious passions would be devastating to the Russian state.
I suspect cares more about the Russian state than anything else, probably as a means to ensure that Russia does not fall apart into a million pieces and get utterly devastated by the West.
That's my guess.
He is a good statesman.
Jew or not, he is a good statesman.
It's been a while since I listened to the Fash of the Nation where Jazzhands laid all this stuff out.
And I don't get all of my takes from Jazzhands, but the connections with Putin and Jews was fairly convincing.
And I don't think at the end of the three episodes, I can't remember exactly what they all are.
It's like 291, 295, and like 315 or something like that, whatever.
I wasn't thoroughly convinced that Putin was like just a Jewish puppet.
I think historically, historically through Putin's presidency, that doesn't make total sense, but he has a lot of connections to Jews.
The Jews have ruled Russia for 100 years or more at this point.
I know that has ebbed and flowed throughout the entire history of the USSR in Russia.
But the idea that a single goi was able to outdo or to outjew the Jew in a matter of 20, 30 years, I think is kind of on its face ridiculous.
You know, even the mainstream.
Yep, as we knew from Trump, we all coped with Trump thinking, ah, sure, he's got to say that, or sure, he's just taking their money.
And lo and behold, he was an utter twirl to them.
Right.
And so, but he didn't accomplish 1% of what Putin has.
Sure, but he doesn't have to because America is much more thoroughly ruled by Jews than Russia.
Right.
I think that's a fair statement.
And so there are funny with Trump, there are a lot of connections with Trump and Putin through Jews, specifically Chabad Jews.
And one of the things that kind of one of the things that I kind of look at is, you know, the beginning of Trump's campaign, he's much more of a so-called wignat in his rhetoric than he was towards the end of his presidency, right?
And to me, the big difference there is Kushner, Kushner became more powerful throughout the Trump presidency.
At the beginning of Trump's presidency and during his campaign, we kind of missed it, glazed over it, coped with it, but is much more connected to like Chabad, like jignat style Jews.
His rhetoric is much more intense, much in theory, better for America than what happened towards the end, where we were all just like, you are just obloviating buffoon.
And that is also, I think, an important difference between Trump and Putin.
Putin is not obloviating buffoon.
Putin is an experienced KGB agent, a good statesman, you know, probably because of his time in the KGB and maybe natural inclinations and whatever.
So Jews understand that they can't just own Putin.
But at the same time, the connections are there.
You know, there's connections.
Sam.
Hey, I've been listening in.
Very interesting.
And I just want to jump in to say hi to everybody.
And yeah, you know, when Putin came into this like second time, right?
Because he left for a while.
He was in and then he left first.
It was sort of a, it was a charade.
He stepped back and Medvedev was the president for a term.
And then he was like, look who's back.
Yeah.
And, you know, when Putin really came back with prominence is when we had this nigger Obama as president.
And, you know, at the time, you know, just a regular guy like me or like any of us, we're just looking at things the way they seem at face value.
And when you have this nigger Obama with his manner.
He wanted to come on to his manner.
Yeah, Michael Obama, you know, the first husband or whatever that the country has had.
I mean, first gentleman, yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
You know, in that milieu, sure, Putin looks great.
You know, he was manly, a guy who you could respect.
And without even knowing too much about him, he just presents in a good way.
You know, there was the meme.
Remember the, he had the shirt off and he's riding a bear.
Remember that one?
Yeah.
And he's a man.
He's judo.
He's, yeah, all those things.
You know, I mean, for whatever else we don't know about him, I mean, you could at least respect him in that kind of way.
You know, so a lot of these things are like that.
Like, how much do we know about it?
And, you know, it's, it's conjecture in a lot of ways, but just comparing things to other things, like when Obama was in there, yeah, sure, Putin looks really good compared to him.
Biden, Putin looks great compared to Biden, you know, so there's, there's that just sort of instinct that you could have about a person.
But yeah, I think it's a real tragedy, you know, that this would be going on, that there's that people in the Ukraine are being killed.
And I've even read reports that the Ukraine people are not so defenseless that they can't inflict a lot of casualties too.
And somebody wrote in the chat there, I thought it was good.
The longer Ukraine holds out, the more of our people get killed on either side.
And that's a real tragedy.
Are these Ukrainian fighters, are they going to be able to wage like a really successful guerrilla war?
It doesn't seem likely.
It's like they're in no different position than we are in this country.
Like, you know, somebody might have a feeling like, oh, man, if we could just fight back in some kind of way, but this is not the time for that.
That's not practical.
Like Yvonne was saying, we have to be pragmatic.
We have to fight the fight that can be won, not some idealistic idea that is beyond reach.
And here's another thing.
We have grown to the Putin and Trump and Biden comparisons.
We in our cause have grown so jaded and cynical over the years by the myriad disappointments, betrayals, and Trump in particular.
Trump left a ton of scar tissue, myself included.
Oh, yeah.
We saw what we wanted to see.
And we, you know, sort of averted our gaze from the massive, obvious problems that were right there.
And with Trump, there is obviously the same risk because of the scar tissue that we have from Putin and whoever you like thought was based and was going to save us in the past.
Then we take an instantly cynical approach to Putin that says it can't possibly be as good as we hope.
That is good to be guarded and all that stuff.
But at the same time, when you look over 20 years and you read his speeches, when you look at his interviews, when you watch his interviews with Western media, with Megan Kelly in particular, I'll put that in the show notes.
It was so enlightening.
I believe, and it's actually funny.
It's like the first thing I actually agree with George W. Bush on when he was like, I opened to his eyes and saw his soul.
Like, you know, call me a fanboy.
Call me a shill.
But if you force me to guess, I suspect that I suspect that I suspect that he is a good man and that he is doing his best with almost the most impossible job.
And yes, of course, he has to make compromises.
And yes, he probably can't, you know, institute total Russian ethnic imperium all over the country.
I don't think he's a Jew.
I do think he's acting in the best interest of Russia, but there are plenty of things that we could certainly criticize him for.
But at the same time, we can't project our perfect ideals upon him.
I just want to round out.
I want to round out what I was saying.
So, you know, do I think Jew is completely Putin controlled?
Do I think Putin is completely Jew controlled?
No.
But admittedly, oligarchs retained some influence.
Otherwise, Putin would have kicked them all out.
And I think his relationship with Jews goes into him being a real and serious statesman.
We don't have that in America because we are completely and thoroughly Jew controlled, right?
Yeah.
Who is the last one?
Maybe Nixon.
Probably JFK.
Because Nixon knew about the Jew and said he refused to do anything.
Sure.
You know, JFK said that he wanted to, JFK wanted to attack Jews and not directly, obviously, and they blew his freaking brains.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Henry Kissinger was the most powerful American after Nixon and his Russia has a lot of Jews in it historically.
It has a lot of Jews right now.
It has extremely powerful Jews in it, the oligarchs, et cetera.
And to think a country that has been ruled by Jews for 100 years or more overnight collapses, I think that collapse was entirely planned by Jews.
And that's why they were able to profit and become oligarchs in the new capitalist system.
To think that one dude died, handed the reins over to the next guy, and the Jews just disappeared, even though a couple of them got kicked out, I think is flat on its face ridiculous.
Are Jews all powerful in Russia the way they are here?
No, of course not.
But they have a lot of influence and they have a lot of sway, whether it's because he cares about what they have to say or it's just gaming because he cares about the Russian people genuinely, but understand he has to kowtow the Jews to a certain degree, or whether it's just money.
There are multiple options for Jews having undue influence, and there's a historical precedence for Jews having a lot of influence and power in Russia.
So to dismiss Jews and say that Putin is this wonderful statesman and patriot nationalist fighting against Zog, I think is ridiculous.
But to say that Putin is a complete Jew shill is also ridiculous.
And I hate to sound like the cuckoo.
Big grand centrist.
Yeah.
But it's just like there's so much nuance here, right?
Like in America, it's actually really easy.
It's just the Jews.
In America, it is just the Jews.
But not everywhere in the world is America.
So you have to be willing to take that perspective on the criticisms of.
Yeah, go ahead, Sam.
I don't know if you look through the names of everyone who's listening.
Some of these handles are really, really funny.
I don't know if we can say them on the air or not.
Can we say it?
Like Bro Magnon Man and Johnny Darko, like Donnie Darko, the movie, you know, and the guy Marshall Law, like, you know, like the name Marshall.
I don't know.
But I see one of my sons is actually.
One of my sons is actually listening.
So, you know, hello to him.
I'm saying hello to my son right now.
He must be Nasbull redneck cyberpunk.
Real quick, I'd like to touch on something real quick in regards to Putin.
Yeah.
Andrew, I see.
Oh, yeah, my wife's on too.
My wife's on listening too.
So, so, yeah, I hear a lot of what you guys are saying and talks of the overall benefit to the Russian state, the overall thing.
And I'm not going to dispute that.
What I'm going to say is what I care about.
And when I was in Ukraine and when I met Russian guys that have moved to Ukraine, there's quite a few that have.
There's famous bands.
There's a lot of big celebrities in this movement that have ended up there because they had to.
And what a lot of them said is that things were like great.
They had a period where it was like the Wild West there between 2008 to 2014, where you see a lot of these great pictures and these things that a lot of our guys think is like still happening there.
They see these huge marches, these white, black, and yellow flags, this Orthodox bro thing.
And they're like, oh, yeah, that's fucking great.
Yeah.
In reality, how it was explained to me is that all of that ended in 2014.
Interesting timing, Jason, that it was 2014, right?
What happened in 2014?
Yeah.
Well, yes, but it was also that a coordinated thing from top down in Russia that they rounded up.
You know, this person told me that 300 people about were arrested in one night, that they were all from separate different organizations, all influential leaders, and that basically it's just been squashed ever since.
And that, you know, people like us do not fare well.
And that there's just, yeah, there's no, there's no room for actual ethnic nationalism in Russia.
And that, to me, completely changed my view on that.
And just, you know, that's one of the most common.
Yep.
Yep.
Sorry, I didn't mean to cut you off.
Go ahead.
Yeah, of course.
But yeah, I don't want to dispute the claims that, you know, I don't know enough about to speak on it.
I'm sure that the quality of life has probably improved to some extent or to for the average Russian, but you know.
But at the end of the day, I'm not pretending to care about that.
I'm caring about people that look like me, that think, you know, care about the things I care about are that, yeah, that are just bumbling through life, like, oh, I just want to eat good and, you know, like that's what I care about.
Yeah.
Hey, I just wanted to do a shout out to Victor's girlfriend.
She probably giving him dirty.
She knows she's giving him dirty looks.
Hey, coach.
Hey, Sam.
Coach, I see Ascot Bro is on the list as well.
How come we didn't get him out here yet, man?
Because he said, I'm driving.
I can't make it.
He's not in there.
Yeah, anyway.
I wanted to talk on, I wanted to talk to Jason's point because that is the number one thing.
Good God, over the past 48 hours, if I see one more picture of Putin at the whaling wall or a mosque getting built in Russia, I'm going to jump out of the window into the pond, not out to the ground, kill myself.
But seriously, so yes, there are mosques being built in Russia.
I can't tell you, like the idea that Putin is trying to George Thor the country and turn it into Islamo-Caliphate, I think is not consistent with spending God knows what they did on the massive, gorgeous, powerful cathedral to the Russian forces outside Moscow.
But seriously, the one thing, and I'll totally admit that I don't have perfect information on that, is about the Roundup or the suppression of national socialists or pro-whites in Russia.
I suspect that from the Russian perspective, they maybe viewed those guys as troublemakers and national security risks and said, sorry, you are not going to do that on our watch.
Stability is more important than your preferences.
I think there's a lot of evidence to support the fact that they are slowly but surely coming around on language.
The Russian government is at least.
And Anatoly Carlin, who I believe is smart and he's on the ground there, has written extensively about Russia's nationalist turn and the fact that being Russian and Russian being the core of the country is now more or less explicit with Russian finagling.
Yes, I know.
I see Pat Little there.
We'll get him in.
I just wanted to, on principle, get through all this stuff and let our panelists get through.
They passed a hate speech law, but then all of a sudden in 2018, the hate speech law was basically decriminalized and it's been largely negated.
I guess somebody got killed in prison.
I'm not familiar with the story.
I've seen the name there, Maxim Martsinkevich.
I saw somebody say, yeah, they would call him Hatchet.
Sure.
And I saw somebody say, how do you know that the Russian state killed him and he was killed in Russia's brutal prisons in a fight or something?
Do you know anything on that one?
Please, by all means, Jason, like give him some airtime or the story there.
So, yeah, he was a pretty big deal.
I mean, yeah, I watched YouTube videos of him as a teenager.
That guy was a very influential person around the world and uh, yeah, had a long history in that uh in Russia and other places promoting the stuff that we believe in.
He did a lot a lot of a whole lot of different things.
I can't really get into it, but I would definitely encourage people to look him up.
There was a lot of stuff recently about uh, I mean, a lot of it unfortunately is being taken off YouTube, but he had a pretty tremendous showing at his funeral.
About, I don't know, between three and five thousand people showed up during the height of COVID for his funeral.
But, anyways, he had been, you know, in prison multiple times for the stuff.
I believe the first time was for throwing a Roma's loot and interrupting a Alexei Navalny thing back in the day.
And he received like a five-year prison term for Navalny for sure.
Yep.
Yeah.
But he, you know, he received a five-year term for insight and hate speech for Roma's diluting.
And yeah, he did lots of things a lot of people, even some people in this thing don't like.
I mean, he was, they were kind of, it was a different time, as described to me as like the wild west in Russia.
They were, you know, making uh hate crime, quote-unquote, attack videos and lots of stuff.
So he was in and out of prison, but apparently, in yeah, you know, relatively recently, a year or a little over a year ago, I think, he was being transferred.
He was about to be released from however long of a term he had just been doing.
And they brought him to a different place, ostensibly to interview him about a string of murders in the 90s.
And he was tortured to death.
I mean, they had they ripped off his toenails, his throat was slashed.
This is a very big, powerful, you know, violent guy, not somebody didn't get shivved in the courtroom.
Yeah, no, no, no, he was he was tortured to death.
And, you know, yeah, and pretty, yeah, pretty gnarly thing, something that a lot of people knew about, and a lot of people that were involved in kind of like the international nationalist thing were very bothered about.
And since then, I believe since his murder, there's been more people that, you know, they say he, you know, under torture, confessed to these murders that have had to flee to Ukraine.
And it's a, you know, it was a big thing.
But the, the fan, a lot of people are saying that, yeah, that was a top-down thing from Putin.
This guy was a very influential guy.
I think his old telegram has like 30,000 people and you know, it's not obviously run by him anymore, but he had a lot of followers, a lot of stuff.
I mean, I can't even get into all of it.
The uh, the Navalny corollary to that, which interestingly enough, Navalny, I think originally when he was starting to speak out, they I remember some uh commie Russian calling him a brown shirt.
That Navalny was a Nazi and a Russian nationalist, and then he sort of morphed from that into anti-corruption crusader and darling of the West.
And he currently is in a shitty Russian prison and looked particularly wan and skinny when he was at his recent thing.
So that I would only not making excuses at all.
I would just say that there's evidence to say that Putin goes hard on anybody that he views as a troublemaker or a disruptor to Russian stability and his program as he sees it.
Whatever judgment you want to go ahead.
Nikkei did you have something there?
Yeah.
I was just going to say on Navalny that, I mean, he is at least in the Western perspective throughout the period of time he's captured their attention.
He's been a vocal opponent of the regime in Russia.
And that's going to come with the opposition of the established power.
I don't see any way around that.
If you're a critic and you're specifically a pro-Western critic, you're going to be faced with the scrutiny of a Western asset.
You know, as for what he really believed, I don't actually know.
I can't really tell from what he's said other than he's critical of the current regime in charge of Russia.
It's not really a bit of a chameleon.
Yeah, it's not a coherent ideology that's entirely distinct from, you know, if you want to call it Putinism.
It's just a regime that's not led by him.
And it comes with a policy prescription that we don't actually know what it involves.
That's right.
Go ahead, please.
Yeah, I just said, I mean, I just wanted to say that I just said the name because I was aware of it.
But I mean, I don't follow like, you know, normally, for lack of a better word, politics.
I know nothing about Navalny other than that these guys were disrupting it.
These guys went to, he was at some sort of debate or some sort of something.
And these guys were, you know, younger neo-Nazi type that went in and disrupted it, you know, accelerationism stuff to promote their stuff.
And that's what happened.
But I don't know anything about Navalny or find that interesting.
Fair enough.
I was going to say that we're two hours in with no break and I'm happy to keep going.
God bless our audience.
And I want to open it up.
I want to open it up.
Yeah, put your hands up.
Pat Little's been a little patient there.
I'll throw Pat in here.
Pat's been burging in the comments.
Coach, but he's a good, yeah.
Yeah.
coach hey i like this guy's i like this guy's handle joseph gerbils there's so many that's just funny you know just go through it Fraudline Bonnie.
It's just funny.
Oh, man.
All right.
Elaine Hackswoman.
I'm going to give a shout out to Dan Breen.
That means nothing to you.
But Dan Breen, shout out to the name, the name Dan Breen, he real person.
He was in Fiennafall, etc.
But shout out to Dan Breen.
Not a funny name, just a cool guy.
All right.
I think we're at the point where you put them hands up if you want to chime in.
I've seen, I want to give Bronze Age dad.
He's been chiming in there from the Ukrainian perspective in the comments the entire time.
Victor Carpathian has been going at it.
Son and Steel, we see a brother.
Don't be offended if we don't hang up.
It's a little bit tough in that thing.
One thing that we haven't talked about, this is very important, is did the West want this to happen?
We're going to go do total geopolitical speculation here.
I think a lot of people didn't think the invasion was going to happen because the West, Washington in particular, was going so hard.
Invasion, invasion, invasion tomorrow.
And everybody's like, okay, this is clearly like a gay op.
They're trying to back Putin down by crying wolf over and over again.
And lo and behold, who was right, frankly, the U.S. intelligence and public affairs sections and your old buddy coach here.
But did the West want Putin to go in and eat Ukraine to get bogged down in a guerrilla warfare, to have Putlerman bad for the next five years, at least through the midterms, to quote unquote distract the Goyem from everything that's going on.
I don't give any credence to that this is a big distraction puppeteered thing.
I think that the powers that be don't give a rat's ass what we think about most of this stuff.
Like we are but serfs and manipulated by mass media.
But did the did the West want this to happen?
Are they happy that Putin's in?
Or are they actually taking it on the chin?
Because that's the number one, we didn't even talk about Damn DK didn't show the number one response to this is I'm happy that the arrogant gay Zionist empire is getting dickslapped by Russia right now.
Unfortunately, it's happening to good white people, good white Christian people in Ukraine.
I'll leave it at that.
I bet Aval has a opinion on this.
And remember, put your hands up if you want to submit your fans.
Sorry, I just want to, before I get into that question, I want to make a few other quick remarks about the previous discussion.
Sure.
Regarding Martsinkovich, you know, I just want to say, you know, the speculation on Putin regarding that, you know, before his death, he had made an accusation against a very powerful man in Russia who was closely involved with Putin, that he was a paedophile.
And it doesn't matter whether you're an Avalni, whether you're some gay Western person, you're a communist, you're a neo-Nazi, whatever.
One thing you do not do in Putin's Russians is threaten the stability of his government.
And I don't think it had anything to do with Mart being an ethno-nationalist or a neo-Nazi, but rather the sorts of, you know, weighty accusations he was throwing around and the sort of political activism he was involved in.
You know, it doesn't matter what your ideology is, Putin has made clear from the very beginning he's not going to tolerate any sort of threat to his rule and that he takes it very seriously.
So I'm not surprised that that happened to him.
It's certainly regrettable, but it's like the equivalent of Fed posting for us.
You can't be surprised when the Feds show up at your door.
But also, we had brought up Trump earlier, and I'm sure this is not a popular opinion, but I believe when Trump was first elected, he did have some sort of intention to make better progress on the border and things like that.
But I think he quickly found that the deep state, as he calls it, or what we know as the Jews, Kushner, and the other powers that be, were not going to allow him to do that.
And that as a president, he didn't actually have the means to do any of those things that he had claimed that he was going to do.
So I don't know that Trump was in and of himself an entirely Jewish trick the whole time.
I think he meant some of what he said, but he just found that the U.S. president really doesn't have any control.
And further, regarding the comments about Putin and the Jews, I think comparing Putin to Trump is a little bit bizarre because the sort of situation in which Putin came to power is very different than Trump.
Putin, he assumed power when Russia was in the middle of chaos, shortly after Europe had had a period of very recent major instability and wars.
The situation in Russia was such that people had seriously bad living conditions.
People were starving at risk.
You know, it was absolute chaos.
They lost all their savings when the ruble crashed.
It was 1998 when Russia defaulted on its sovereign debt.
And basically the country went to shit in a year flat.
Although it was bombing Belgrade at that time, 99.
Yep.
And this is a totally different sort of situation than the one that Trump inherited.
And the other difference is that Trump was just some old, you know, reality TV star who might have one of the ideas that he's willing to throw off the cuff because he's no filter.
Now, Putin, what he believes, he's demonstrated that he holds his core beliefs, you know, very close and he's taking action on them and further.
He was actually a KGB spy.
He's, you know, not a reality TV show.
He, you know, was actually willing to kill to take power, to hold on to power and things like that.
I just think the situation in which he got power and the man himself is different enough from Trump that people say, well, he couldn't have come into power without Jews, whatever.
Well, I'm not saying there's no Jewish influence in Putin.
There absolutely is.
And I just think that to compare him to Trump is bizarre.
If you look at a lot of these European countries, you know, where people have been fighting and dying very recently, it's a totally different game than the West.
It's a different political substrate.
People are much more desperate.
They're much more capable of violence.
You know, you can't play the same banking and interracial commercial games to gain influence when people are starving and literally willing to murder each other.
So, yeah, again, I'm not saying there's no Jewish influence in Russia.
I just think it's a weird comparison to make.
On the Christian question, too, we haven't addressed that.
And Pat Little, you are added into the stream here.
Hop in after this if you have a question or if you want to just float a balloon that says Jews rape kids.
I love you, buddy.
So there's an argument that the Christian stuff is fake and gay and it's a smokescreen.
It's an artificial Christian revival.
Sergei Shoigu, who is the defense minister, he's been the defense minister for, God, almost a decade, I want to say, when they had one of those massive Red Square parades, there was a big deal made of him very prominently.
You know, they ride in those old Soviet cars or ladders or whatever the hell they are.
He made the sign of the cross while standing up and about to take his ride into Red Square, which was a huge symbolic thing.
Bausman, who's on the ground, said that there is a massive and growing and influential traditional Christian Orthodox population in Russia that gets virtually no media coverage in the West, but which has influence and which actually was responsible for smacking down the looming COVID restrictions in Russia.
So I'm not saying that like it's all of a sudden going to become the third Rome, but we have absolutely imperfect information about what's going on on the ground there.
And it might not be like total Christianization.
I've seen expats say, yeah, but the churches are empty.
They're building Potyomkin churches, right?
Okay, but they're building churches.
They're not tearing them down like the Judeo-Bolsheviks did.
So there's a lot of things that just don't make, it just don't make sense to me, as Billy Bob Thornton may have said in Slingblade.
Nikkei, go ahead.
Yeah, I have to jump in here and say a lot of the religious conflict has to do with the political differences between the diocese of the Orthodox Church.
For people who haven't paid attention over the past few years, there's been a break in communion between the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the Patriarchate of Moscow.
I personally am part of the Greek Orthodox Church of the United States, and that falls under Constantinople.
And if I were to believe everything that the Patriarchate says, I am not in communion with any Russian Orthodox Church.
I have denied that from the start, and I continue to deny that to this day.
To not deny what, Nikkei?
Hold on, Nikkei.
I have a question for you.
I have three questions for you.
Your first time on Full House, man, after my heart.
There you smasher.
Three ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status.
I am Greek.
I have no children.
I am single and looking for a wife, specifically of, you know, Greek ethnicity.
Well, so that was partially to do the full house bit to make sure that, you know, our boxes were checked.
But at the beginning of the show, you said that I don't want to quote you exactly, but basically, you said that you were interested because there were, you found out that there were people that were Orthodox that weren't Greek.
Yeah, when I was a child.
That was my first introduction to the wider Orthodox world.
Okay, because to me, that implied that you weren't Greek.
Now, I knew better, but I was that kind of threw me off there.
So I just wanted to clarify for everybody else.
Oh, yeah, no.
No, I am Greek.
When I learned that there was a broader Orthodox community other than Greeks on the planet, I became interested in those cultures.
And I only said that to establish my history, you know, individually as a person who took specific fixation and interest in Orthodox countries like Ukraine, like Russia, etc.
Congratulations to Nasbull Redneck Cyberpunk Revolution.
He's got some number four coming in June.
There's your shout out, brother.
New white life on Full House.
But Nikkei, seriously.
Yeah.
Nikkei, yeah, back to, I mean, you were making a profound point.
Either I missed it or what were you denying or rejecting?
Or what's the big thing on Christian development?
I'm sorry.
What I was rejecting.
Holocaust.
Oh, enjoy it now.
Yeah, try to try to deny the Holocaust in Russia, coach.
See what happens.
All right, go ahead, Nikkei, and then we'll go to Pat.
I do deny the Holocaust.
Separate from that, there's the question of like Orthodox unity.
And I do support that.
In terms of political concerns, there has been a split in communion between Patriarchate of Moscow and the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
As an American, I reject this.
I do not see any split between us.
There is no split in the heart of Orthodox faithful in the United States.
I have received communion from a Roque Corps church, the Russian Orthodox Church outside of Russia.
Since the split, I've received communion from a Ukrainian church, one that's accepted by the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
And obviously, I've received communion from a Greek church, which is also within the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
There is no schism here.
In the United States, there is no split between believers.
This is a purely political matter, and all faithful members of the church see that as the case.
Orthodox inside baseball, Nikkei.
I know, I mean, maybe it is boring, but you did ask.
Well, what about what about Christianity in Russia?
I mean, is it real?
there is no christianity in russia that's really outside of the moscow patriarchy So that's why it's relevant.
I'm busting your stones, buddy.
Yeah.
Why I say there is no real break in communion between us is because, like, on the ground, there is no break.
I can go to a Russian church in the United States and get communion, and it's no problem.
It's only a political matter, and I don't consider it a legitimate schism.
Okay.
Pat, yeah, go ahead.
You know, I hate to butt in.
I apologize.
But with all the discussions, back off the mic a little bit, you overeager.
The spirit of Joseph Smith in his late tonight.
That's a modern.
I've had a few whiskeys.
All right.
I'm going to have some with you.
They keep.
I'm drinking Lafreyk, by the way, if you've got any we can drink together.
They keep bringing up Chechens and that Russia is building mosques and the largest mosque in Europe and whatever.
And then I keep seeing all this stuff about, oh, Christian lives are dying in Ukraine.
Can anyone, and I ask this genuinely, can anyone explain to me the importance of either religion in this discussion?
Because if we're talking about this from the perspective of ethno-nationalists, not to get too far derailed, but in the chat earlier today, there was some discussion about certain ethnicities not being white because they are majority Muslim or whatever.
Can anyone genuinely explain to me what the importance is of Christianity or Islam in any of these discussions about race?
Chechens are mostly white.
Just because they want to blow themselves up for a lot or whatever, they're mostly white.
I'll admit, see, I don't like seeing bearded Muslims praying before they go into Ukraine.
That is a negative react, fam.
Yeah, sure.
I don't like the idea of Muslims in Ukraine either, but like the Ukrainian, the ethnic Ukrainians aren't historically Muslim.
Islam specifically says that interracial marriage is okay as long as it's to another Muslim.
Now, Christianity today is like that, but in the past, Christianity was not like that.
So here's something that is interesting to me with this whole thing.
I don't really think religion plays a big part in the conflict that we're seeing unfolded before our eyes.
And to be honest, unless it is like Christian versus Muslim, Christian versus Jew, Muslim versus Jew, etc., like unless it is an entirely separate religion, I think religion is largely BS and it is like history, like W-H-I-G history.
It is applying something from the modern world, modern world time when this history was developed backwards to be a cope with ethnic conflict.
Even and I will use Ireland as an example.
So a lot of Irish for a long time, you know, a lot of the great Irish revolutionaries were actually Protestant.
And after the potato famine in the late 1840s, with the bring about the Irish Republican Brotherhood and stuff, a big criticism of Ireland at the time was essentially that the Catholic political establishment that ruled Ireland existed to serve Catholic interests rather than Irish national or civic interests.
And that was with whether you were Protestant or Catholic, a lot of people agreed with that.
And that is where a lot of the nationalist sentiment came from.
And all the way up into the troubles, you know, in the 60s and stuff, out of the Republic of Ireland, all the way up into Northern Ireland, restricted to six counties, is an ethnic conflict.
It is not a religious conflict.
Sure, they are two different religions.
You have Protestant versus Catholic, but fundamentally, even if they were the same religion, they wouldn't get along because there are two different ethnic groups of people that just can't agree on the most basic level, whether it's personality or the way that you go about your day-to-day life.
And it's completely separate from religion.
And the religion thing is entirely a cope.
I'm going to jump in here because I got to go at some point.
But Pat, born Catholic, I guess now I'm kind of like a Hitlerist, and I've produced White Life.
Based.
All right.
Welcome, welcome, Pat Little.
Thanks for your patience.
I had to stick to my guns and give the panel the priority at the top, but have that at whatever's on your mind, big guy.
Okay, so basically ethnicity, religion, which one are the Jews?
It's kind of the segue into, you know, the problem that's going on in Eastern Europe.
So I'd like to start off by saying the potential I see in the Eastern Europeans.
And I'm going to try and represent some of the summarizations from the deep dives from FTN here, but very, very, very concisely.
Basically, I read a book called Hitler's Revolution, and the Germans were excellent record keepers, and they had a major problem on the Eastern Front when they were dealing with Slavs.
They kept on running into piles of dead Jews in the center of every town and every city they liberated.
The European Liberation Forces led by Adolphos Christus, kept on finding piles of dead Jews.
And the radio back to Berlin kept on saying, it happened again.
I mean, we couldn't stop them.
They were already finishing by the time we got here.
And so we're talking about a people, these Eastern Europeans, these Slavs.
And you're talking about Slavs killing.
Sorry, Pat, you're talking about Slavs killing Jews before the Nazis even got there.
Yeah, and basically the Jews were largely put into camps in Eastern Europe before they were put into camps, other places, mostly to protect them, in my opinion, from the vengeful Eastern Europeans.
They were pissed.
So moving on here, we're talking about a people that had 40% of Ukraine starved to death, these Slavs, these cousins of the Russians, if not Russians themselves.
We're talking about people that were lined up and starved to death and made to load their brethren into mobile gassing vans in 1922 and 1923 during the White Sea Canal construction project.
We're talking about a people that has been brutalized by Jews.
I'm talking about Slavs in general here.
I'll take kind of the pan-Slavic perspective.
Just so much vengeance seeking an outlet.
And I have to agree with Jazzhands and Warren that I see Putin as kind of a pressure relief valve slash kind of like a carburetor redirecting all the dangerous stuff away from the Jews.
Basically start the FDN deep dives.
Summarized is, Putin was a KGB agent.
He was in uh East Germany.
Came back after Soviet Union collapsed, got hooked up with Jewish organized crime.
Jewish mayor or leader of Saint Petersburg after the fall of Soviet Union told him to make food fall off the back of trucks and then sell it on the black market.
He did.
When they got caught he was willing to take the fall for it.
But then they established, okay, we can trust this guy.
Yeltsin handpicked this guy with the oligarchs, all of them, which was a Jew to be the new guy to make it.
So there wasn't another tank attack on the uh uh, what are they?
The Kremlin or not?
No no, it was.
It was on the Presidential palace, I think the the their White House.
Yeah well uh, i'm sorry I mixed my terms up there, but what, that's all right.
What i'm saying here is, yeah, your argument is totally invalidated by that slight data.
Uh, error there, pat.
Yeah, I lied, I lied.
But so basically what i'm saying here is, there's so much potential there for just the justful seeking of justice itself against this evil bunch of villains, these Jews, that are freely being allowed to integrate into the orthodox church.
And sure they cited some very good examples of this on FTN.
Uh basically, the question was posed before, what's the difference between the United States and Russia in terms of how powerful the Jews are?
And so if Trump was a Chabad guy, which you had, the same people backing him as were packing you Putin?
Uh, the rush collaboration thing was real.
Zuckerberg was involved, Cambridge Analytica those were Russian Jews, not the you know, Jews with Russian passports.
Uh basically, what i'm saying here is how far could Putin have gone in the United States?
Well, I think about as far as a Chabad guy as Trump was allowed to go, and the Neolibs said, no, we're not using this strategy, we don't like some of the blowback we're getting.
Sure that is the main thing i'm saying here is that the Chabad Jews I believe from my understanding of FTN and I would love to hear a Jazz or Warren on here to represent their ideas better than trying to reproduce them.
In summary basically Jews, the Chabad Jews, believe that there is a massive blowback coming again back against jewelry, and I can testify to this.
I I, I was uh one of uh a guys in WE Searcher and I got invited over by a Russian Jew named Peter Billel, a Peter Teal front man under Pants Dickinson, and he tried to sell me on the whole Russian and Putin Based and orthodox Christianity and Pan-slavic.
Blah blah blah, blah.
So basically, what i'm seeing now in terms of what's being offered to dissidents here is the this hope of based Putin, and i'm sorry if i'm if that seems as a draw man.
It's the same thing I saw being presented to me when I was waking up to the JQ in the summer of 2016, and so it's legitimate concern.
I I, I don't, I don't like discard it out of hand.
I disagree with it.
My personal theory on Putin, which again is a theory, is that you're probably right.
He, I mean, you don't just like pick some obscure like assistant from St. Petersburg with a KGB background to all of a sudden take over the country.
My theories are two.
One, either Putin or Yeltsin on his way out, knowing he was alcoholic and that he had screwed over Russia so poorly through a Hail Mary to a guy who he thought might actually clean it up, or the powers that be in Russia, including wealthy oligarchic Jews, picked Putin thinking that he would be an easy one to handle.
Because back in those times, when you look at Putin, he looks like a demure, almost deer in the headlights, like poor suit-wearing apparatchik.
And I suspect that they underestimated him and that he took them all by force using or took them by surprise using his connections in the KGB to start to clean things up.
But that's, you know, that's that's a theory of mine that I can't.
But that's essentially the story.
That joke, you know, there was the existential kind of sword of Damocles that he was under, where, you know, oh my God, I'm about to be strung up by the Germans as they liberate my people from the Jews I'm a puppet of.
Well, less so than he than he was at the beginning of his brain.
But basically what I'm saying here is that Zuckerberg and CNN both worked with the Trump campaign directed by George Birnbaum and other Finkel apostles to trigger negative reactants in people to just get all of the wind in the sails that had been building up in the pressure cooker of white people just being dispossessed of their country and being fucked over and told literally the change is coming.
And that changes your genocide.
by the Obama administration and all supporters.
This was taken and redirected very much the same way as in Russia.
So I cannot disagree in a more, in a stronger fashion that Putin and Trump are not from the same Chabad cookie cutter.
And now what did they have to do in America TV land, you know, hyper-reality land?
Shout out to the third rail guy on here.
You guys were the third TRS station to interview me when I first announced I was running.
Oh, thank you.
Oh, thank you.
Basically what I'm saying here is what I already said.
I don't want to go in circles here because I just, I really want Jazz and Warren to hash this out with you guys, not because I want to see a debate that leads to division.
If anything, I think that Full House is one of the best candidates if I denominate someone for Project White Unity podcast.
Thanks, brother.
Hallelujah.
To take up the Jazz and Warren Mantle, you know, I do lean more towards their side of things, at least as far as the personal connections of Putin.
And my biggest issue is that, like, you're either anti-Semitic or you're not.
So he either kicked out a bunch of Jews because he understands the JQ, or he just kicked out some people that he thought were causing problems.
Bernie Madoff, regardless of the latter.
Yeah.
One of the things that we didn't address was Russian birth rates.
I'm not totally doing a segue or like, let's scramble away from this, but it's just in my notes.
We've been going for two and a half hours non-stop.
Yes, I peed a gigantic coffee mug.
So it's not to step over the computer.
And I got a cold.
Whenever I went to Cat and said I'd be right back, you said that as a flex.
I didn't go and pee.
I went and got more whiskey.
I got a cold too.
I was worried I was going to sound like Pikachu.
Ha!
I was wondering what real quick.
I was saying Pikachu sounds like that.
I've been coughing up a long, I'm like, oh, gosh, I'm going to say crap on the podcast tonight.
I got to admit, I played, I played with myself a little bit.
As I was taking a look at none of this degenerate camera turn on now.
All right.
End of the show.
Nobody's listening here at the end.
What's up, Jason?
You got to run?
Yeah, I got to.
I got to head out.
I want to, I want to scare them away.
Yeah, I.
Yeah, this was not what I was expecting.
I was expecting a lot of the things I had been seeing on Telegram the past few days of just ridiculous invasion cheerleading, making fun of or belittling the guys in Ukraine.
And that was the main thing they really wanted to do on here was to, yeah, counter that and just defend the honor and integrity of the guys over there.
I think that regardless of money, yeah, our government, Israel, whatever the fuck's being thrown at them, NATO, a lot of these, yeah, the vast majority of these people are doing what they think is right, standing up for what they believe in, we believe in.
And that's the main reason that I wanted to come on.
And also, too, man, that, yeah, I definitely was happy to hear, yeah, the FTN stuff.
I know it's not super popular with quite most of the people in the West, but that definitely aligned with what a lot of pretty serious, some of the more serious and more known nationalists that I met out there had to say.
And in summation of their thing is they're like, you know, when they were talking about their travels in Western Europe and some of them to the States, they're like, the only thing that Russia's really got going on that you guys don't is no gay parade.
So if you're a one issue person and you, you know, you like orthodoxy and you just don't want to see gay parades and you don't care about anything else, I think that it's fine to just be like, you know what, Russia's it.
That's it, you know, but if you care about more than that, if you care about the, you know, the white, you care about certain other types of politics, it's probably not the hot ticket.
But I really, really appreciate you guys having me on.
I appreciate you being fair to me, not really knowing how to do all the live stream stuff.
And thank you very much.
Good job, Jason.
Good job.
Just real, real quick, it was an honor having you on.
I'm so damn glad that you were on to give a perspective.
So this was not like a circle jerk or a one-sided thing.
And you did a fine job.
And yeah, the only thing I would say is that we are all, I hope, most of us, scrambling and doing our damn best to find out what is right and true and what is the best way to handle this.
We are all in this together, white people around the world, except for the traitors and the cucks and the morons, et cetera.
And it's tough.
It's tough because we have imperfect information and there are people, there are good, well-intentioned partisans and there are obviously massive disinformation, hostile negative factors.
Yeah, for sure.
Absolutely.
I really appreciate it.
Likewise.
Yep.
We'll catch you later.
All right.
Before I pee in my coffee mug again, yes, I'm doubling down on that.
I did want to talk on the birth rates real quick.
One of the things is that, you know, Russia is still dying.
It's still terrible over here.
I did look under the hood for Russian birth rates going all the way back into Soviet times, which, by the way, the most interesting thing was Soviet birth rates were way higher, like almost, I don't have the tab open, but they were significantly higher than everything that came after the Soviet Union, just to reflect the shock to society and how damaging that was to Russia in particular pre-Cold War or pre-Berlin wall falling, pre-collapse and after.
The birth rates started to increase when you could either credit Putin or you could credit the recovery from the ruble collapse right around 1999 2000, and they slowly but surely recovered all the way up through guess what year 2014, my don and that instability.
I looked at Ukraine to a lesser extent.
Ukraine has worse birth rates, lower birth rates than Russia did, and of course I don't know how many of those were ethnic Russians versus Tajiks and Uzbeks and Tatars and all the rest of it.
But Ukraine had basically the same numeric dynamic where it was slowly, slowly recovering a bit and then it dropped off in 2014 and then, of course, Covet scrambled everything toward the very end, including with life expectancy.
So that, if you really want to put on your tinfoil hat, would be a point for the.
This is a Jewish plot to destroy Slavs in Ukraine and Russia through conflict.
Um, not blaming either Russia or Ukraine for that.
Anyway, I wanted to coach.
I have to run.
I'm sorry, but thanks for having me on.
I I gotta run great show.
I'll listen to whatever's left of it.
Uh, when you post uh, the upload of the recording.
Thanks for I gotta run, thanks for everything you do.
Yep, appreciate it all.
Right?
Uh, so many guys.
In the last call for the audience I wanted to shout to Legionnaire.
I lost it up in the chain of comments.
Congratulations, Legionnaire.
I think you had one on the way in form something like that, Godspeed uh, I will do the.
I'll do the inbox when we do our next set piece uh, but last call from audience.
Oh, Greg is there with his hand.
All right, he finally found the stones to speak.
There you go Greg, you're in, and then we'll start to land this puppy.
Gregor Gregor yep, I think.
Oh sorry, I didn't click the right button.
There you go, Greg.
One's free, figuratively speaking, or not, I don't know, I hear, I hear silence in my uh headphones.
So uh, let's go to Yvon.
Last thoughts on this conversation or uh, anything else that you got in your copious notes?
Uh well, we missed the whole section.
I wanted to talk about the history of the Soviet Union uh, and the, the Warsaw Pact countries.
Uh, do it, do it.
I mean do it.
I mean the odds ain't keeping and uh, we're not getting paid by the hour.
So uh, keep it concise, if you could, to the best of your ability.
Well, I I feel at this point in the conversation it's a little bit derelible.
I think it was relevant at some point earlier.
Um basically, what I wanted to make is uh Ukrainian, Central European I hate to say the word central European but uh, these other Eastern European small countries, the the animosity towards Russia uh, you know, having been there and spoken to these people it's, it's really uh, most of it is uh Anti-soviet sentiment spilling over and uh,
I just wanted to explain why I believe that that's not a really good critique of Russia, other than the fact, obviously Russia now is not the Ussr, but uh, a lot of these uh, the uh supposed Soviet puppet governments in these countries were heavily infiltrated by western actors uh, Americans and and Jews, and they were intentionally sabotaging uh these countries economically,
uh and politically and a lot of the.
The strife that these governments experienced uh was not the fault of the actual Russians, but rather the Russians giving these countries too much autonomy, which allowed these western actors to slip in um And further, I wanted to say regarding the arguments, you know, like in favor of national sovereignty for these countries, that in order for them to have true national sovereignty and not choose the West over Russia,
they'd need to transition to more of an autocracy where they could be economically self-sufficient.
And that's what the Russians tried to give them during the Warsaw Pact governments.
And the people in these countries fought tooth and nail against that for partly because of Western bad actors sabotaging them.
But there was certainly a lot of popular resistance against this for, frankly, pretty retarded reasons, like they wanted to listen to the Beatles and other such things.
Some of that is Western propaganda.
But I just thought that was something that I wanted to mention.
I feel like a lot of the discussion about the politics in this area really glosses over, or rather, just is completely ignorant of the economic factors that are at play.
And I think, in particular, when we talk about global geopolitics today, there are, you know, maybe the only country where understanding the economics and discussing the economics is important to the discussion is China.
But Russia and the US are certainly up there.
And, you know, it's no secret that the substrate in which this war began was certainly highly economic.
And again, I think the economy of Russia, you know, more broadly during the time when Putin was taking power is another thing that is missing from the discussion about Jewish influence in the country and all these comparisons to the US.
I really feel like that's something that needs to be discussed.
And also when people talk about what's better for Ukraine or these other countries, you know, it's mentioned.
So I had written maybe a sort of a short dissertation on my brief thoughts on the economics there, which we're not going to have time to get into.
I'm sure people are not even particularly interested in that.
But one of the thingshaused.com and we'll publish it if it's not a pile of Scottish dog slop.
Sorry.
You know, I'll pick you up on that actually.
But another thing I wanted to mention regarding Jewish influence, I mentioned this on our cast briefly the other week, but I think it's important to also take into account the cultural differences between Russia and China and the West when we're talking about Jews.
Again, I'm not saying that Russia is not Jew to all shit.
I just want to point out that Jewish influence in the United States and Western Europe in particular, a lot of the political strategies they're using are really co-opting these sorts of Western values that come out of Christianity and out of the Enlightenment.
When you talk about countries like China, they are operating on completely different premises.
And I'm not saying there's no Jewish control in China, but I think at this moment, they don't have the proper tools to take complete societal control over China as they do in the West.
And to some extent, that applies to Russia also.
And what I mean is these sort of Enlightenment values, these Christian values, these ideas of martyrdom and tolerance and being peaceful towards your neighbor.
I mean, I wish I could just go into greater detail so I don't sound like I'm just pulling this out of my ass.
But I don't think it's much of a stretch to say that Basically, all political discourse in the West is built on this idea that the Holocaust is the ultimate evil, whether you're on the right or the left, whether you're libertarian or communist.
This is sort of the premise that everything is built on.
And this wasn't invented in 1945.
I mean, if you even read Mein Kampf, which was before the Second World War, Hitler talks about this in great length.
And even in that time, this idea of racism and national identity and whatnot, these were all important political and cultural factors in the West.
And Jews, even back then, were exploiting these.
And when you talk about someplace like China, where the Han Chinese have literally genocided nearly every other ethnicity and every other linguistic group that's existed in the area, you're just not, you know, the same sorts of strategies don't work because they just don't care.
So, and our pal Chuck bought or got an Encyclopedia Britannica from the 50s.
I want to say it was 54 or 55.
We say, go to the H volume, go to the H volume.
No Holocaust entry a decade after World War II, and with plenty of negative things to say about Hitler in his section, which is testament to that being a modern construct.
Of course, Chinese.
I frankly am skeptical that the Jews are going to be able to worm their way in and make China their new host.
God knows Mark Zuckerberg and his Asian wife are going to try their best.
And I did want to add on China one of those hanging Russia would be an easier target for sure.
China and Russia is to me a civil, a white civilizational tragedy that the West forced Russia into that marriage of security and arrangement.
We could have had northern alliance, if not northern white imperium, but we have Jews running the West who are absolutely hell-bent on destroying Russia, bending it to their will.
And Putin said, Good Lord, and you see it right now.
It's paying off that China has got his back and is going to buy grain from Russia and take more gas and more oil.
And that is all because we are ruled by Jews in Washington for sure.
And yeah, and I just want to say, I don't mean to throw shade at anyone, but sometimes I get the vibe in discussions.
It's almost like a Jew worship.
You know, literally everything that has ever happened ever is all a Jewish trick.
Nothing ever happened.
You know, it's at some point it's like, well, you know, all right.
Well, what's your real argument then?
How do we make progress?
You know, I'm the Übermensch.
Yes.
Check out everything is Jewish controlled, left, right, center.
Just go live in the woods.
Sorry, I cut you off.
Yeah, well, that's really my only point.
Is I just want to say, you know, if you really think it's impossible to make any ground against the Jews and that literally everything that has ever happened is just a Jewish trick, then, you know, what's even really the point?
You know, what are what, you know, what are you being an activist for?
You know, I just, I sort of don't get that attitude.
If we're all born with original sin, why are we even bothering being good people?
Well, see, that's a lie.
The Christians tell you the prophet Joseph Smith has answered that in the book of Mormon.
There it is.
There it is.
Now we see the true agenda between commentary.
All right, let's go to Nikkei.
Nikkei, final call for wrap it all up.
Put a bow tie before we go to Sam and Smasher to really deliver the knockout punch.
Okay, I wanted to give the opinions of my comrades in my pool party, both pro and anti-Russian.
One of which is that it doesn't matter who is our kikes and their kikes.
It doesn't really matter that the fact that one kite is losing and the other kite is losing or winning doesn't matter so much as that it comes at the price of white life and that a white life is not worth the defeat of you know one of our bad guys being the Jews in charge yeah let's say NATO.
NATO taking an L on this matter was not worth the price of white life involved.
I have also heard opinions from my pool party that this issue is not particularly relevant to our individual lives, that we should be focusing on what is relevant to our personal lives and growth in our position and thus expanding our power within our own positions in life.
I find both of these positions compelling and one not more compelling than the other.
And it remains a debate in my mind as to whether the situation has been a net benefit for us or a net negative.
Judging the situation on the whole, it looks like a net benefit for us, that the NATO powers have taken a massive L and are continuing to take an L in Ukraine.
I wait to see what happens further to European people on the continent following the majority of hot conflict.
But personally, I hope that from this point forward, minimal casualties are attained and hot conflict remains as short as possible.
And the only thing we have under control or our only ability here is to provide information.
I mean, aside from somebody who wants to go over there and get involved and really risk some skin in the game, is to try to make sense of this to the best of our ability for the greatest benefit of our people in Russia, in Europe, in the United States.
And that's frankly like tough.
We see Russia as glass darkly, as George Kennan said.
And he was literally working in Moscow and the author of The Long Telegram coming up with the containment thing.
So be humble.
Yeah.
All right.
Samurai, we'll go to Sam.
Sammy, baby, thank you.
I think we're landing this.
Glad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was a great show, great discussion with everybody.
White power, white unity, white life is all I got to say.
Hell yeah.
Thank you, Sam.
And Smasher.
Don't get faint.
I have to say that to upset the Jazzan's disrespecters.
But, you know, I do think it's a good term.
But seriously, like, think about everything that you're seeing.
Think about everything that you read, everything you watch, everything that you're told.
Think about the memes that are sent to you.
Because there's a bunch of memes going around about, you know, a bunch of like Putin.
I don't know what their proper positions are called, but basically cabinet members being Jews.
And they're not Jews.
They're actually Russians.
So fight the misinformation because the misinformation just Really should be worried about there are Jews that Putin's connected to without his cabinet being Jews, you know.
Uh, and I'm not saying that that again, not saying that Russia is a completely Jew-run nation.
You just got to think about these things, you got to do actual research, and hopefully, we can all become better for this.
Uh, we don't have to, you know, the NJP statement to shill uh, you know, money was great.
Organization statement is great, you know, it's the West's fault, white people are dying, and it is the fault of Jews in the West.
Yep, no, nobody pushed back on the idea that we forced Putin's hand to do this, whatever you think of Putin, right?
Brass.
Yep, I just want to say that like Finkel is a real phenomenon, and but not everything is a kosher sandwich or a puppeteered puppet show.
Sometimes things are just as they appear, which is why I was able to do it.
I don't think I don't think that this, right?
And I think that this is absolutely like a Jew puppet show.
Like, I don't think planned this, you know what I mean?
I think to a certain degree, Putin is allowed to get away with some stuff because Jews don't have as much power in Russia as they do here.
They have a lot of power, but not as much.
So, Putin is allowed to do things that you know an American president could never dream of.
Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
Freud said that.
Yeah, to see what is in front of one's own nose requires a constant struggle, George Orwell.
I want to give a special shout out to the savior of this show for all of our thousands of listeners who were not able to be on the live stream.
I forgot I didn't click record on Telegram to save this to the clown.
Darn it.
So, like, Rolo and two and a half hours in, I said, Rollo, tell me you're recording.
Of course, he was.
Rolo, my friend, thank you for being truly the savior of Full House just tonight, but in more ways than one.
I'm just mad to be on a show with Nikkei for once.
Wait, we haven't been on a show together?
No, never.
He's still waiting for his invitation to third rail there, Nikkei.
Or young White, you know, whatever.
Me too.
All right.
We'll talk more.
I'm young and white enough.
I'm young and white enough.
Sorry.
I don't doubt it.
And we'll be in touch.
All right.
Perfect.
Dio Vin De Luf111.
Shout outs to everybody who dressed for the live stream.
88 seemed to be the most consistent number that I saw there.
And what the hell else was I going to say?
Nikkei shows Rolo recording this.
It's been almost three hours.
God bless everybody.
We did our best.
Oh, I know exactly what I wanted to say.
I had legitimate concerns last night and going into this that this was going to turn into a shit show, either on air or in the comments.
I see people in the comments who were very heated and combative.
No criticism the other night to hot takes and trying to make sense of this stuff.
And what do you know?
Mission accomplished.
We actually got through three hours of content covering almost everything in my copious notes without a damn iota of ill will or ad hominem attacks or implying that someone was a Jewish shill or a Dugana shill or anything like that, even with the fire-breathing Pat Little coming in to drop some bombs in the end.
So I think we did a single-scale.
It was only one.
I wrote out the end tower.
Nothing brings the movement together like a good end tower.
I'm pretty sure I called you a show more than once.
I don't listen when you're talking, that's when I know it's.
Oh, it might have been a comment.
All right, here we go.
I'm going to the dad joke, Bible, dad joke, Bible.
My wife said I should do lunges to stay in shape.
That would be a big step forward.
Oh, God, that was terrible.
I got the greatest D's Nuts joke in Full House history.
Okay.
I actually saw it.
Nobody saw it coming the other day.
You say it now?
Yeah, I drove.
I was driving by a hardware store and there was a sign that said, please don't talk to us about air conditioning.
I'm not a fan church billboards have an element of dad humor, you know, and there are things here.
Uh, uh, What did dad say when the cat was sick on the mat?
It's not feeling.
Oh, these are terrible.
All right.
I got to do more research.
I can't just go to the dad joke Bible.
Some of them are truly even cringe by my standards.
Curse to the lowest levels of Jewish hell, both Ascot, bro, and Dad.
Yes.
Coach, coach, coach.
Yeah, Have you ever been going a couple times?
I'm not a huge fan.
Did you take an extra pair of socks?
No, of course not.
Although my feet did get wet in the shoes.
I'm dying to know where.
So what do you do if you get a hole in one?
That's what you do.
Cut the microphone, Mr. Producer.
All right.
We love you, fam.
Thank everyone.
All right.
Full house episode 120 was taped on February 25th.
Now, February 26th, 2022.
Follow us here on Telegram.
ProFam2 and check us out at full-house.com.
Give sendgo.com slash fullhouse to all our white brothers around the world and our white sisters and our white mothers, grandmas, grandpas, sisters, brothers, cousins, etc., including in Russia.
White Muslims.
Hold on.
Hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold on.
Hey, hold on.
It's pro-white fam 2 or pro-white fam on Telegram.
That did it wrong again.
Well, what else?
Antelope Hill, new release just dropped.
The Tyranny of Human Rights from Jacobus to the United Nations by Carrie R. Bolton.
Literally just got an email not more than ago for that.
So go buy books from Anelope Hill.
You're gay.
Yeah.
Right out.
Human rights are a false construct.
There is power, there are rules, and there are things in force.
The idea that you have these inherent rights is only a function of the society that you live in.
Anyway, everybody, we pray for everyone.
Maybe I'll even get down on my prayer bones and do it.
Whenever I pray, I'm like, I don't really think you're up there, God, but I'm give us a shot.
Anyway, we pray for the best outcome for all of our people out of this, regardless of our different perspectives.
I don't have a song, Teeta.
We'll pick it after the show.
I'll take recommendations from the birth panel.
We love you, fam, and we will talk to you next week.
Go ahead, Smasher.
Give it a good one.
See Heil.
See ya!
See you guys.
night, night, there it is, let it be Oh, every night, night, night there is mother And every night, night, night, there is bright and late if the youth of the haybrother must go Throw your glasses at the wall,
and the fortune to her soul Homo, hey, must go, must go Join us for a cow that jumps We were dancing round the top Ha Hey, musko, Musco, Bring you water all night long, Keeps you happy, makes you strong, Hey, for scold must go.
Come and have a drink and then you will never leave again.
Ha Hey Musko la la la la, Take
the sunshine, your hunger.
You'll be engaged by her child Hop hop hop Hey, for She will make you understand Russia is a wondrous man.
We'll be right back.
Oh, every night there is mine.
And every night night there is bright Hey, hey, hey, if you drugger, hey, drugger, hoo!
Hey, hey, hey, hey, must go, must go.
Sorry, dancing at the wall, and the fortune to her soul.
Hop, hey, must go, must go.
Time is all the cows that jump.
We were dancing round the jump.
Ha Hey, must go, must go.
Really white the horn that bed keeps your head and makes her stay.
Hump ho, hey, hop, hope, hey, must go, must go.
Come and ever drink and then, you will never leave again.