We round out and close out our springtime prepping and self-reliance series with a delightful guest to get you thinking about permaculture: growing lots of stuff in harmony with nature and in such a way that it doesn't attract attention. In the second half we take on a shameless black attack on a brave eighth grader in Northern Virginia, California's proposed bill to decriminalize "perinatal" death, and Boer Jack's rant about whether worse is actually better. We're back! Break: "Fashwave 1939" by Joseph Retrostein Close: "Wake Up" by Arkham Knights & Jam El Mar Check out PFAF for all your plant information needs. Candidate Criticized for Singling Out Student Please consider supporting Full Haus here or at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2 Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows Gab.com/Fullhaus DLive and Odysee for special occasion livestreams. Navigating the Collapse segments on Archive RSS: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/rss All shows since deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week! California Bill to Permit Infant Death by Neglect
Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more, or close the wall up with our European dead.
In peace, there's nothing so becomes a man as modest stillness and humility.
But when the blast of war blows in our ears, then imitate the action of the tiger.
Stiffen the sinews, summon up the blood, disguise fair nature with hard-favored rage.
Then lend the eye a terrible aspect.
Let pry through the portage of the head like the brass cannon.
Let the brow overwhelm it as fearfully as doth a galled rock overhang and juddy his confounded base, swilled with the wild and wasteful ocean.
Now set the teeth and stretch the nostril wide.
Hold hard the breath and bend up every spirit to his full height.
On, on, you noblest whites, whose blood is fet from fathers of warproof.
That was a very slightly modified Shakespeare and Henry V to open us up this week as we round out our self-reliant series and shift back to our bread and butter.
Mr. Producer, let's slip the dogs of war.
Welcome everyone to Full House episode 124, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am your wounded host, Coach Finstock.
That's right, I stepped right onto a nail, full force yesterday, like Daniel Stern in Home Alone went right through the sole of my shoe and into my foot.
But regardless, I can see my wife rolling her eyes at that one.
Oh, God, he's complaining about the nail on his foot.
Back with another two hours of the best that we can do.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Joe Boston, Iron Hoss, Zach, and Fritz for their kind support of the show this week.
Nice haul.
Thank you, laddies.
We see you listening there and your ladies too, and we truly appreciate it.
Also, if you missed my interview with John Friend of the Realist Report, we put it out on our feed a couple days ago.
It is sort of a condensed distillation of coach takes, but whatever you do, do subscribe, please, to John's fine show at theerealistreport.com, as he does a ton of great interviews with smart people across the spectrum.
And we will have him on sometime soon.
Really nice guy.
Just a casual, comfy conversation with a fellow traveler.
Great guy.
All right, let's get on to the birth panel and back in the saddle here.
First up, there was a little drama in white nationalism this week.
Wouldn't you know there he was, baying at the ramparts, hooting and hollering like a mad fool, calling everyone feds, Jews, and grifters.
Sam, shame on you.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Well, you know, things happen.
I try to be fair in my assessment of things, but yeah.
Man, hey, you know that you've never seen drama in your 30 years.
Oh, my gosh.
It's a replay at.
I could tell you three such exact duplicate stories of things happening like that.
Maybe sometime we can talk about that.
But uh, you know, I i'm thinking that nail mark in your feet there that could be like uh, like the beginning of a stigmata.
Have you considered this?
That uh, that big guys reaching out, big guys reaching out to you, they were trying to get your attention.
It was old screening like the uh, the trim that goes to like hide screens and there were some old nail gun braille nads brad brad nails brads yeah, and oh, man just went straight up and and pretty deep in there, it's like a cartoon.
That's why you got to wear boots all the time.
Uh, I know I, I think actually it was Potato who like handed me sneakers and I was like okay, he's giving me shoes, i'll put sneakers on.
Boots are so much work to put on.
Anyway, you got to lace them up.
I can't just slip them on.
Anyway sam, how are you good?
Good, you know, I wanted to mention uh, that i've been using this new program.
It's called X-tracks Stems and uh, that may not mean anything to you.
Maybe uh, Rollo mr Producer has uh heard of that, but uh, I mentioned, I think last week we were the whenever the last time we were talking we were chatting about off air, but uh, that we had uh, the drummer of our band had left the band, you know.
So that kind of left us without a drummer and I haven't been able to get Rollo to join the band yet.
I'm working on that.
But in the meantime we discovered this program that will take any track and strip out bass guitar drums, vocals and anything else that's in there into separate tracks, so you can take any track you want and make a in our case a drum track out of it and uh, you know, you can use it.
So to anybody out there that might benefit from that, you might look into this.
Uh x-tracks, like literally the letter x, t-r-a-x stems and it's pretty cool.
But uh, you know, this guy uh uh, that that he left the band, he's been, he's kind of a real study in, like a person living their life with an inadequate amount of ambition and and I hesitate to talk too much about it because one of our mutual friends listens to the show and so if you're listening you can't say anything to him.
But uh, but this guy, so you know I, I guess what i'm saying is you got to take chances in life or you have to be ambitious in life and you have to go after things, because otherwise you, you know you, you can only reinvent yourself so many times.
And when you start to get to a certain age, it's kind of like the die is cast and you're kind of stuck and um, you know so.
So he's kind of like that we could just blow the secret.
No, this guy's like closer to my age, but uh, you know so, and we were.
There was uh, this woman at a bar who was just who was meeting him, meeting the group of friends, and uh he's, he's such a sad sack.
And she says to him, Oh, you're a sad boy.
Apparently, this is like a sub-genre of emo sad boy.
What's a sad boy?
And so she explains it.
No, I don't want to be a sad boy.
So, if you Google an image, I posted one earlier.
It's like a funny thing, the sad boys.
It was just funny to me.
But, anyways, he left the band.
But that just gives us a chance to do something else.
And maybe we can get Rollo or somebody else in the band to hit the drums for us.
And that's it.
All right.
Yeah.
Esoteric knowledge this week, Sam.
Rare drum software.
And I had never seen Sad Boy be.
Sad boy.
For those looking it up, it's Sad B O I gotta spell the meme right.
That you're baby.
Glad to have you back.
And next up, back for the first time in, I don't know, three weeks.
Two of those are his fault.
One are arguably mine.
Amidst drama this week, you know what he was doing.
Stealthily soliciting information from anyone who would take his calls, spring a wisp campaign, dramatically exaggerating every aspect and all for his own personal enrichment.
Smasher.
Shame on you to come back to add to the drama.
Uh, you may have heard that my wife and I are not in a good spot.
She's mad at me about my sense of direction and how we get lost all the time.
And as a white nationalist, we do a lot of traveling.
And so I packed my bags and write packed bags and write.
Did that really fall flat?
I don't know.
Either I'm dumb.
We're fighting about my sense of direction.
So I packed my bags and write.
Oh, got it.
Oh, boy.
I was going to say, you got to get a GPS.
Yeah, three weeks.
Yeah.
I thought you were going to talk about your TikTok inspired fisticuffs.
I don't know if you want to talk about that one.
I don't get it.
What did I do?
Didn't you like a TikTok challenge to see if you can bury yourself?
Man.
You know, behind your back and see if you can still handle your wife coming at you.
Yeah.
Well, so there's a thing called marital fighting or marital dueling, something like that, that they used to do back in the day, like return to tradition, be a surf back in the day, where you would be buried or you would be play up to your waist, not literally buried.
They say buried in the text, but then the image is all depict just kind of being in a hole, right?
With one arm tied behind your back.
You get three clubs, and the woman is above ground, you know, just normal, and no, no, not being tied up or anything.
And her weapon is three rocks that range in weight between one and five pounds.
And she has a sheet or like a pillowcase or something that she can use to swing them with.
And so I asked a group of friends, and everybody, everybody was like, yeah, absolutely.
I could beat my wife.
And so my wife didn't believe me at all.
And so I sat down on the ground and put my arm behind me.
And she kept trying to come at me and she wouldn't get close and whatever.
And then eventually I, one time, I got her just onto the ground.
And then the other time, she kept, every time I'd reach for her, she'd throw her hips backward and bring her face forward.
And so I did that.
And she brought her face forward and I gave her a soft little backhand, no mark, like didn't even get red.
And it was really, really funny.
Really funny.
Did she laugh though?
Afterwards, yes, but she couldn't believe after it happened, she couldn't believe it.
She was like, You hit me.
I was like, You were trying to hit me, and I was just better at it.
There you go, I got you.
I got you to admit to a domestic on air.
Ha ha.
Oh, cool.
Let's see it.
I'm kidding.
Well, fellas, it's been a good run.
Welcome back, brother.
God, I can't believe that dad joke fell flat.
Oh, I just didn't get it, man.
It was deep.
I had to think once or twice about it.
Well, I still don't get it.
Do you want back?
I pack my bags and left.
I packed my bags and right.
Oh, sense of direction.
Oh, okay.
Now I get it.
I mean, I knew it was about sense of direction.
I just didn't, yeah, pack my bags and drama diagram smasher.
Do you want to hear a joke control paper for us tonight?
Go like show a diagram with arrows left and right.
Never mind.
It's terrible.
All right, good.
Back at the control panel for us.
Did you miss that one too?
Jesus.
Let's start over.
Back at the control panel for us tonight, only because he got tired of jumping on the trampoline with his pet goat, Rolo, as oblivious and gleeful as a schoolboy wandering in Sherwood Forest.
As always, welcome back, buddy.
It's my 20th episode.
Whoa, feel like an episode over 19.
Yeah, seems like a lot longer.
It seems like you've well, there was two like not episode episodes, but this is the official like full house with an episode.
Well, and you also figure that we do an episode a week, generally speaking.
So 20 episodes is like 20 weeks, which is pretty long.
And that there's also been a quit weekend.
Just give me a heads up.
It's like 24 weeks.
Yeah, I busted old producer's chops this week because he's not on air anymore, but he loves to share his opinion still.
I'm like, oh, you know, that was a good reason.
Yeah.
It would have been better if it was delivered to thousands of people, but no, he just wants to complain to us.
That's what happens.
That's what happens, old MP.
Well, you know what?
I'll be perfectly happy stealing his content moving forward and packaging it as my own if he really would like that.
There you go.
It's good content.
He thinks it's too negative.
I'm like, no, you're not wrong.
If it's too negative, I don't want to do that because I don't want to be the negative guy.
Are we approaching producer instrumentality?
He thinks he thinks this is all effed and we're all basically doomed.
And just, I think we just need to buckle up to ride the storm right out the storm.
Not entirely wrong.
Although we do have a rant for later in the second half, perhaps from Boer Jack.
Somebody people have sent me that like two or three times.
Like, Coach, you got to play this on the air.
He's so right about worse is better.
You've sent me a few things two or three times.
Worse is better.
Yeah, I know.
Well, I always want to have more for the show.
We're being really self-indulgent here at the top.
Our guest is like, what the hell am I doing here?
But we'll get to it in the second half.
I want to have more.
I hate this.
It is so self-indulgent.
I can see the audience tuning out right now.
Come on, guys, get to the prepping stuff.
All right, let's do it.
Our very special and more patient than usual guest this week.
He has been content to regale our network with awe-inspiring photos of his family homestead projects until now.
That's right.
He reached out to compliment us on our most recent, recent shows on growing potatoes, prepping principles, raising chickens, and more to whisper Steve Jobs style.
Oh, and one more thing: he is a master of permaculture prepping, whatever that means.
Sigist, welcome to Full House, my friend.
Thanks for having me.
You bet another special guest in his car to escape the horrors of domesticity in his home.
But in reality, just to get a little peace and quiet there.
Is it cold where you are?
It's a little chilly.
58 right now.
But it's better than changing the same diaper on a two-year-old baby doll over and over again.
Oh, there you go.
Shirking duty to hang out with the bros and share your wisdom.
I think you get away with this one with old wife.
I hope she'll understand.
Will she listen to this one for sure?
Oh, absolutely.
All right.
Well, thank you, ma'am, for letting hubby spend some time with us.
I know he's an early riser and we are late recorders.
So lay it on us here, Sigis.
What is your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please?
I am Anglo-Czech, Orthodox Christian, four kids, fifth one on the way, three boys, one girl.
Oh, boy.
Congratulations.
Way to go.
What flavor Orthodox Christian, if you don't mind me asking?
American Orthodox, but just because that's the closest Orthodox church to me, which is about an hour and a half away.
So I'm kind of a catacombing going through the process of joining church, but can't actually make it all the time.
Man, you make that haul every week with the family?
We do.
Good for you.
And real quick, what is American Orthodox?
I always just assumed that they were all Greek or Antiochian or Russian or whatnot.
It's the Orthodox church that kind of broke off once the Iron Curtain fell and they didn't have communication with Russia anymore.
So it kind of became its own type of Orthodox church, has its own patriarch, things like that.
All right, cool.
Well, Sigis, thank you very much for coming on.
You said, coach, great prepping shows, but you missed a big one on permaculture, which, I mean, I had heard it before.
I sort of just want permaculture to mean what we wanted the Third Reich's culture to be.
Ha ha.
But lay it on the audience.
What is this bigger picture?
Thank you for the chuckle there.
The rest of the guys are groaning.
But what does permaculture even mean in the context of, say, you know, somebody with an acre or more to work with?
Yeah.
So permaculture is essentially creating a natural habitat where your plants grow versus tilling up the soil and planting all your crops in a row and being able to just go through and harvest what you need when it's ready.
Permaculture is trying to mimic what nature would normally do with those plants, whether they grow underneath a little bit of shade of a shade tree or a fruit tree, mixed in with some berry bushes, maybe crawling along the ground underneath other plants, and generally just leaving the soil undisturbed rather than adding to it or tilling it up or anything like that.
It's basically a process to allow the natural environment to take care of the plants versus you constantly being out there watering, fertilizing, weeding, things like that.
Sounds like it requires a lot more planning and thought, right?
Where we've been talking about just, you know, build your raised bed, dump dirt in there, and then get your hands dirty.
But this, you have to account for shade and the tree type and all the rest of it.
So I guess walk us through.
Let's assume that, and I'll be honest here, I was like, oh man, that sounds, that sounds like a lot of work and more planning than perhaps I'm capable of.
But walk us through some basics, what it might look like for a beginner.
And I guess we'll get into your setup for people who are more advanced or less lazy than me, willing to put the work in.
Yeah, so I actually consider it a method that's a little less work for me.
There's only so much work that one man can do on a lot of land.
So it's a way for me to be able to utilize my full acre, still work a nine to five job and be able to get a harvest from it.
You're basically trying to mimic something you'd see in the wild.
Say you're out on a hike somewhere and you come across some kind of wild fruit tree, like a wild plum that grows throughout North America.
And underneath it might be some wild currants, maybe some wild blackberries or raspberries.
And then beneath that is probably some herbs like sorrel, dandelion, things that you could go out and pick in the wild and be able to eat.
You're trying to take that process and turn it into a method that you can actually harvest from that without actually having to care for it like you would if you were planting a row of berry bushes or an orchard or something like that.
Essentially, all those plants work together to mimic nature to maintain the soil moisture, the mycorrhizal fungus in the soil, and basically help everything work together.
All right.
So, but you have to, I mean, I guess that that is fine in nature, but on your own property, you have to start somewhere.
And I assume it's, you know, start with the tallest thing, the trees, the fruit trees, the most common apple, cherry, plum.
And then everybody can go and that's, that's a big one, just getting those, those wonderful blackberry bushes or whatever.
They propagate like crazy and give a ton of berries once they're going.
But I guess for a beginner who doesn't have this setup, would you just go and buy a fruit tree and then buy the bushes?
And I guess you'd have to on your own property.
What's a good permaculture starter set for somebody who's interested?
Yeah, well, that's more or less the process that I got into was, well, I like these plants.
I need to figure out how to make them grow.
And I have a lot of shade trees.
So, well, I guess we're going to have to just deal with that.
It does take a little bit of knowledge of learning what the needs are of those plants.
You're looking for basically my property.
I bought an acre that was completely overgrown.
It had been previously owned for a couple of years by some non-whites and they didn't take care of it.
So I moved in.
It was overgrown with trees.
I started clearing things out of it and bought a couple of fruit trees, planted them on the margins of the larger shade trees that had already been established here.
Decided, well, I want some berries to go with these as well.
And they needed a little bit more light.
So I planted them a little bit outside of the shade of those fruit trees.
And from there, just kind of started growing off of that.
I think essentially what you're going to want to do is take what you see in nature.
Say you're going to see taller trees on the north side and then progressively smaller trees and bushes once you get into more sun on the south side.
It's basically you can take pretty much any plant and stick it anywhere and determine whether or not it's going to grow based on its performance just by looking at the weeds that grow in your yard, what grows where.
Roger that.
And let's talk about the fruit trees first.
It sounds like you start with them, apple, cherry, plum.
Does it matter necessarily which ones are hardiest and most likely to give you fruit early?
I mean, I've in the past literally gone to Home Depot and got, they have these hybrids, right?
I guess they graft stems onto them that they pollinate themselves.
And to my shock, had like real pears growing one year later, real apples growing one year later.
Never got a damn plum or cherry for whatever reason.
But what do you like?
You know, even if people are like okay well, i'm not sure about uh putting all this, maybe i'm just projecting here.
But uh let's, we'll start with the trees and then and then go undergrowth or under canopy, what do you like?
Yeah, so it depends on what climate you're in.
Um here uh, i'm in zone five.
Um, we're actually high desert, so we don't get a lot of water, but we've got irrigation that comes from the mountains.
Generally, any kind of uh stone fruit cherries, um plums, things like that.
The the best thing to do is actually, uh the more the native varieties.
Uh, American wild plum is ridiculously easy to grow and produces tons and tons of fruit.
Um, you can get those actually pretty cheap, generally from an agricultural extension office in your state and then from there you're looking at what kind of berry bushes are native to your region.
Um, raspberries are spread throughout pretty much the entire U.s.
They need no maintenance and they'll generally take care of themselves.
You can plant those underneath there uh, and leave just enough room for you to get under there underneath the tree and harvest a little bit, and that's essentially all there is to a permaculture process, building, building what's called a guild.
Uh, basically those plants that work together and grow naturally like they would in the wild sure, and are how many fruit?
Because fruit trees need other similar or exact same species fruit trees to pollinate each other and grow fruit.
I mean the, the hybrid freaks at HOME Depot, don't?
So what I mean?
I, in when i've done the same thing gotten saplings from uh, what do they call it here?
The Conservation District or something for for dirt cheap, and just planted three, three of a kind in a row.
But I I assume that's best practice to have more than one, or can you get away with one?
You can get away with one?
Uh, there's actually a website called Pfaf.org uh Papafoxalphafox.org, that has you can look up pretty much any plant in the world and it will tell you all the information about it uh medicinal, edible uses for it and whether or not it actually needs a pollinator, um, variety for it.
One of the great things about having native varieties is if it's growing around you, you don't actually need another variety.
The bees are going to travel for miles around and they'll find another tree eventually and pollinate your tree from it.
Tell me you're moonshining, at least with the copious amounts of fruit you're getting from your trees?
Are you just chowing down on them every season?
No comment on that.
All right, I do grow a lot of wheat and rye as well.
Nice no, barley.
Yeah, the plot thickens maybe.
Yeah this, this might require an article.
Sigas is like, oh, I didn't know I was getting into this.
We might need a little permaculture.
Uh 101 up on full house, full hyphenhouse.com.
Uh bevy of uh writing coming out with fog of deceit on Russia.
Ukraine is up there, As well as the airline pilot who wrote it.
I got a bunch of comments on that.
A lot of people were negative, like, oh, yeah, sure, it's not paused now, but it will be in the future, or it's really expensive.
I'm like, yes, all those things are in the article, guys, but Permaculture 101 would be certainly welcome.
Now, tell me, tell me about this amazing, I don't even know.
It can't be secret.
I mean, it's not like you're hiding nukes down there, not with that attitude.
But what's this underground maze that looks like a World War I trench system that you and your boys and maybe your wife too have been working on?
Yeah, so this actually started out.
My boys wanted to build themselves a fort, and I didn't have any trees that were suitable to build them a treehouse or anything like that.
So I told them they could go dig a hole in the ground and turn that into a fort.
Well, they actually started digging a hole in the ground and kind of started turning into a World War II trench and just took off from there.
And I decided that I actually needed all the soil for some other areas of the garden.
And so I helped them expand it and threw some sandbags in there and then decided that, well, I need a root cellar because I had two tons of winter squash last year and no place to store it.
So I decided to build them a bunker as well.
So I dug a giant hole, had a bunch of scrap pallets.
And yeah, yeah, so it's, I mean, it holds everything that I produce.
So what are you going to put for a ceiling or a roof on that thing if you're using that as a root cellar?
I mean, because last I saw, it was just like a serpentine trench.
I mean, hats off for all the digging you guys did.
Oh, see, that's how well it's hidden.
It's actually in that picture covered up by dirt.
It's, I used some pallets, cut them apart, and some four by fours, put some OSB on top of that.
And then I covered the end thing, the entire thing with some leftover greenhouse plastic from my poly tunnel and waterproofed it, get about 68% humidity, and it stays right around 36 degrees inside of there.
Wow.
Hot damn.
Yeah, it'll be perfect in summer for it.
It's going to be all filled with your dad.
I want to go plan the fort.
No, it's filled with squash.
Two tons of squash down there.
No more fort for you.
They'll be rummaging around in the food stores.
All right.
So I like the idea about curing tobacco in there.
That was good.
Elaborate on that.
Yeah.
So I grow tobacco every year.
I'll generally grow between a dozen to two dozen plants.
It grows about eight feet tall.
You harvest it when the leaves start to turn yellow.
As they turn yellow, you pick them off, hang them up someplace that's humid, cool, and dark, and leave them there until it starts to smell like tobacco.
And then you can throw it in a bag and keep it in a humor.
Nice.
What do you do with it?
You make cigars or you sell it?
No, it basically just sits in that root cellar.
I don't smoke, but it's something that's actually really good to have on hand.
I'll tell you what, there's always, every time I go to the gas station, there's someone buying cigarettes.
But you're not selling the tobacco leaves.
You're just sort of doing it as a hobby?
Yeah, do it as a hobby.
As well as every now and then I will need a pesticide.
I generally grow most of my stuff organic.
Tobacco leaves soaked in some water are a fantastic pesticide.
Wow.
Throw them in some water.
You get aphids on your brassicas, like your cabbages or anything like that, and just sprinkle it with that and they're taken care of.
That was one wonderful surprise this winter.
We had no aphids on our plants for whatever reason.
You know, we bring in our uh, you know, our house plants before the first frost, and usually some aphids sneak in and uh looking for ladybugs, but only finding those fake Asian ladybugs.
I don't know if you guys have these where you are, but it's like the new stink bug.
It's these they look just like ladybugs to me.
And at first, there was an infestation in our shed.
My wife's like, Go, go, get rid of them.
I was like, No, they're ladybugs.
You can't kill ladybugs.
It's like a praying mantis.
And then, yeah, lo and behold, they are another Asian invasive species that requires utter extinction.
Yeah, they're called, they're actually called like Asian lady beetles or something like that.
Like, they even have a similar name, but they're uh, they're like an orange color, they're not like the nice red that a ladybug senator Lindsey Graham is calling.
I know, I'm not gonna say it on the air, but I never knew what he what the ladybugs reference was to.
And then somebody was like, You sure, you sure you want to know?
Yeah, uh, yep, they were right.
I didn't want to know, not appropriate for this show.
Uh, yes, you mentioned that you were uh lawfully growing essentially a full-service pharmacy on your property as well, uh, not uh opiate poppies.
But going to a little bit of that, I was like, Holy moly!
Uh, our pal Rusty mentioned he had a willow tree deliberately on his property so he could make aspirin in the dark days.
Uh, what are some good medicinal plants that people might actually use as opposed to just having as a uh a show-off piece?
Yeah, absolutely.
Um, medicinal plants are actually one of the most common things that I grow.
I essentially treat them like flowers.
Um, my neighbors constantly walk by, and when I'm out working in the yard, and tell me to compliment my wife about how beautiful my flower or her flowers are, and I just smile and nod and tell them I'll do that.
Um, that's that's one of the uh as far as the permaculture, the food force, the tree guilds.
Underneath the berry bushes, you'd have things like medicinal herbs growing underneath it.
A lot of the Europeans during the Middle Ages really knew what kind of plants would cure certain kinds of things, and I still find them very useful today.
Uh, things like comfrey, um, yarrow, um, sorrel, auric, uh, those kind of things can be easily turned into tinctures or ointments.
And comfrey can turn into an ointment with a little bit of beeswax in the oven for a couple of hours, and it's almost a cure-all for any kind of little cut, scrape, gouge, anything like that.
Kind of things that if you didn't have access to modern medicine, if you couldn't go to the hospital or go to Walmart and pick up some antibiotic ointment, it's it's the kind of thing that would eventually kill you.
And comfrey ointment can take care of that almost in a couple of days.
No kidding, comfy ointment.
God, I'll just look for the comfy plant next time I go out.
No, I may ask you for a uh a write-up of these going forward.
And you actually you use them at home, even though the system's still technically working.
I do, I do.
Uh, my wife was big into medicinal medicine, she was actually a registered nurse for a long time, but she always had a passion for this kind of thing.
And I have a massive passion for medieval history and especially like monastic cloisters, things like that, where they would grow these kind of plants.
And that's kind of what got me into gardening.
And it's just ballooned from there, where I've probably got around a thousand different European medicinal plants growing in my yard right now.
could be anything from like foxglove which is still currently used in modern medicine for treating heart conditions even though it's incredibly poisonous all the way down to something as simple as yarrow uh which virtually everyone across the entire u.s is has in a landscape somewhere around them in some kind of like commercial parking lot because it's so easy to grow the roman soldiers would use that on campaigns uh to treat wounds And it's still something that can be used very easily.
Awesome.
How about cattails?
Is it too dry where you are?
I saw guys talking about cattails the other day as a good like backup calorie source.
Oh, no, I've got lots of cattails here.
I actually put in a pond last year, threw some cattails in there, and my kids have been eating them.
They think it's fun to go out and chew on them.
No kidding.
So you can eat.
All right.
So I happen to have a lot here too.
And for those not in the know, they basically, once they're developed, they look like corndogs growing on a stalk.
But it's the root that we want, right?
Not the actual corn dog.
Yes.
Yeah.
All right.
Corn dog is going to eat it.
It's filled with like a cotton-like seed thing.
It looks like you ate a bird if you munch on that.
Yeah.
So what do you do with cattails?
And I guess you can eat them raw or you put them in a stew?
Generally roast them over a fire.
We've got a big fire pit in the backyard and the kids will walk around the yard and find something that they want to eat and start a fire and start cooking it.
So they're mostly self-sufficient that way.
Well, the cattails can also be used to drive off insects if you burn them.
We would light them and stick them in the ground and let them burn and it kind of puts out a little bit of a smoke and chases away insects.
Who needs tiki torches?
Cattails.
There you go.
Awesome.
I got to ask Sigid, how the heck did you end up this way?
Did you grow up on a farm or your old man teach you this stuff or self-taught?
Late in life passion?
For the most part, I'm self-taught.
When I was really young, I had a great grandmother that had, it was probably no more than a little 10th acre lot.
And going over to her house was just like walking into a botanical garden.
I mean, there were plants growing everywhere.
You could walk out and pick some loquats or tomatoes or something like that.
And I just fell in love with it.
So I never really got a chance to garden.
It was only in the last 10 years that I managed to get property to grow on.
But once I started, it was just a world of opportunities open for me.
I mean, it's become a true passion for me.
I think I'm a little bit older and grew up, Lyab was in high school during the whole Y2K2K scare thing.
And I've always wondered how I was going to feed my kids because I remember being a kid and watching the news all the time.
There's not going to be food.
There's not going to be gas.
The world is going to come to an end and stuff.
And we were not very well off at the time.
And I remember me and my brothers hoarding tuna fish cans to make sure that we could eat.
And it's funny looking back on it now, but I want to make sure that my kids never have to worry about that kind of thing.
That my kids will always have a future.
Amen, brother.
And what do you think about things these days?
I mean, obviously the clock is ticking.
Are you accelerating your planning or you think it's, I mean, you know, a lot of people, I've seen pushback on prepping or even gardening as this sort of bourgeois cope almost that, you know, if the bad times come, like somebody's going to come and steal your stuff or yeah, it'll buy you some time, but that it's not that important.
Or the flip side, and I think about this sometimes too.
Like, I've tried to get my old man into prepping because when I go to visit them in the suburbs, it's like, do you guys have a pantry stock full of stuff?
What happens?
And he always just rolls his eyes.
You know, he's been around for a lot longer than me.
And they're like, you know, they're always calling for the end times, and the end times never come, Junior.
Little pat on the head.
But yeah, what's your forecast?
You're more worried now than you were when you were a kid.
You know, I have mixed feelings on it.
On one hand, I'm more worried about the outcome of it, but I'm less worried about my immediate prospects for it.
I think there's some truth to both arguments of prepping versus bugging out and the whole becoming a raider mentality.
But you've got to have some kind of foundation, something to fall back on.
And what I've done with permaculture and still having a smaller standard garden and having a lot of medicinal herbs and flowers and everything mixed in, where you can't really tell that I'm not making myself a target.
Everyone around me thinks that I'm growing a lot of flowers and they might be able to get some tomatoes or some lettuce or something from me, but it's not, oh, this guy's got a whole farm.
We can go over there and raid him.
I could walk away right now with my family if I had to go up into the mountains for a while and I know what's going to be ready when it's going to take care of itself while I'm gone.
And I can come back if I need to and gather what I need as it becomes available.
So I think in my situation, that's the best outcome I can hope for.
Other people, depending on where they live and the communities that they have around them, may be able to go either way as far as going off into the woods or sticking around where they're at.
Amen.
How about nut trees and harvesting those?
Obviously, that's a forager's find and feast if you come upon that in the wild.
But obviously, your own property is a source for that too.
Now, the black walnut, the dreaded black walnut, puts out these giant balls that don't yield that much.
And they're real insecticide or pesticide.
Well, they're dreaded because they are very hostile to anything that grows around them.
Because I made my finally finished off my raised beds.
I asked our pal Mitt Gartner, I was like, I don't want to spend, you know, a couple hundred bucks on lumber to make custom raised beds.
So he was like, let's put the trees on your property, dumbass.
Yeah.
You know, the lumber yard wasn't giving pallets away the other day.
I asked Smash and they were like, nope, they're coming to collect them now.
So another, another sign, you know, old timer at the lumber yard just sort of looked at me like, oh no, they're coming to collect the bed.
First, they came from else.
But bring your truck up here.
I still have a hookup for free pallets.
Well, it's all right.
I use the trees on my property and some semi-rotted lumber, but everybody was like, don't use black walnut for your raised beds because it leaks stuff.
So I think I got some ash and some black walnut is beautiful.
It is.
Yeah.
Really, really nice nuts.
But anyway, Sigis, any do you have nut trees on your property?
Oh, somebody else wrote in and was like, don't, don't discount those acorns, coach, from oaks.
You can mash those up and make them into a meal of sorts.
But little tree knowledge trees, if you could say trees, nuts.
Beat me to it.
Yeah, so I've got a couple of nut trees on my property.
I've got a couple of hazelnuts.
My neighbors have black walnuts that overhang my property, and I actually really enjoy them.
I haven't noticed any issues growing underneath them unless it's unless I take like a small plant that I've just germinated and planted out there.
I've got plants growing underneath them, berry bushes like currants and gooseberries, raspberries, and it may diminish the growth a little bit, but not enough to be an issue.
One of the things with permaculture is that you want to essentially have that full cycle of growth.
You want mature trees underneath it.
You want semi-mature trees that have kind of grown on the margin.
And then eventually those taller shade trees are going to have to go away.
They're either going to outlive their life and be cut down for firewood, or you're just going to get rid of them because they're not helping you produce anything anymore.
So you want smaller trees growing underneath that.
I've got a lot of Turkish hazelnuts, which are pretty hardy, growing underneath them.
They're not going to get big while those shade trees are there, but they'll slowly grow.
And when the shade trees have to go, then they'll be able to take those places.
Sigas, you mentioned your childhood there, growing up not wealthy with your brothers thinking about, you know, storing tuna.
What's your favorite childhood memory, brother?
Whatever comes to mind first.
It goes back to building that trench for my boys.
My parents moved us out to the middle of the country because our house got mistaken for the wrong house during a drive-by.
So we moved out to the country and put in a septic system.
And it was about three months while we were getting everything set up out there, playing trench warfare with my brothers in the septic lines before they were filled in.
Oh, man.
Got to ask about the mistaken drive-by.
Did your house literally get shot up?
Oh, absolutely.
Absolutely.
Jesus.
Just no, no wounds, I assume, just broken windows and whatnot.
No, no, we weren't home.
We weren't home.
It was actually my mom's granddad's house.
He bought it when it was first built in the 60s.
And it was a beautiful neighborhood.
A whole bunch of Czech families that lived there.
And slowly over time, demographics changed and we were the last ones out.
Well, you know, Sam would say there, you just got to tough it out.
Drive-by or no drive-by.
You're not abandoning that city.
Wow.
Hey, bunch of softies.
Does that criteria act?
There you go.
Bunch of softies fleeing a drive-by.
Another move down the interstate.
And I guess, was that formative, Ziggus, in your red pill journey?
I imagine getting your house shot up would do the trick, but how'd you end up in the situation where you're not afraid to come on a podcast with a bunch of pro-whites and Jewish power questioners?
You know, it wasn't actually very formative for me.
Growing up, I was one of like maybe three white kids in my school.
It was very much inner city.
And I guess I kind of swallowed the disinformation for a long time growing up, just wanted to fit in with normal society.
And it wasn't until I started having kids and thought about their prospects for the future and seeing what they were taught in school and the demographic graphic changes, even in the tiny little mountain town that we live in.
It's like, you know what?
I'd always been upset with my parents and my grandparents for never taking a stand.
And I wasn't going to, I didn't want my kids to curse me for never taking a stand once they grew up.
Amen.
Yep.
Had a lot of questions recently.
Guys, a couple guys coming out of the woodwork saying, I need to talk to my wife and I need to talk to my kids about these things.
So, the best I could do on relatively short attention span was point them back to vaccinate your kids against pause.
It's like episode five or six, I don't know, with the epic whaler back in the early days.
We are coming up on three years, but uh, the idea, yeah, what constitutes taking a stand?
Um, moving and uh, talking to your kids is one thing it's necessary, but arguably inadequate.
We might get into that in the second half.
I uh I took potato to the dump the other day, uh, just you know, had a bunch of crap that needed to go, and he's always like his old man, very excited to go to the dump.
So, got him, got him in the truck, loaded up the back, and uh, he had fallen asleep by the time we got there.
And I was like, All right, so then I for sure he'd wake up with the you know, the bulldozer moving trash around, the stench, me getting in out of the car, got these old steel trash cans in the back, you know, just dumping stuff out.
And I was being very, it was funny, I was being really like careful to like sort things.
And this, this nice guy just like poked his head out around the corner, he was like, Mister, you can just throw it all in there, I'll take it from there.
I was like, Okay, sir.
So, off it all went.
But uh, anyway, I you know, finished up and paid at the way station.
And the uh, the nice lady that works there, uh, she saw that he was asleep.
She was, she gave me a lollipop for him for later.
She remembers him from previous trips.
So, he woke up, and uh, after we were gone, he's like, Dad, dad, we gotta go.
This is sort of a tangent, but it just came to mind, Dad, we gotta go to the dump.
I said, Buddy, we've we've already been to the dump, and he started crying.
He was so upset that he missed the dump.
Uh, well, I said, Well, our nice lady friend did give me this, and I pulled the sucker out from the cup holder, and then the tears went away.
He had forgotten about missing the trip to the dump, but just a little uh local local flavor made it all made it all better.
Um, Sigas, did we miss anything from our previous prepping episodes?
Open, open mic here if there's any other.
You got your stuff figured out.
I want to ask where do you order your medicinal plants online?
There's a there's a great site called Bluestone Perennials that I've shopped at usually for my mom, but occasionally for myself.
I don't know how much medicinal stuff they have, but where do you do you just go to your garden center or where are you getting all your goodies from?
Not specific.
So, the best place to find what I mean.
Yeah, no, the best place to find medicinal plants, uh, at least for seeds, is strictly medicinal.
They sell a wide variety of uh medicinal plants, especially a whole lot of Native European wildflowers and medicinal plants that would have been used by whites for centuries and centuries.
Um, that that's that's my go-to for medicinal plants.
Generally, I don't buy any live plants just because it's cost-prohibitive.
Um, but you can actually find a lot of medicinal plants just on like your local Ace Hardware or Home Depot or something like that.
A lot of those plants have medicinal qualities to them.
As far as anything you guys missed, um, I think the other guys did a fantastic job.
Uh, I wish I had more space to do livestock like the last episode.
Um, that was actually really informative for me.
One of the biggest things for me is it doesn't matter whether the average person in our movement is growing a farm or lives in an apartment and is just trying to grow something on their balcony.
Having that basic knowledge of how to grow a plant, how to check the soil moisture, how to know whether it's getting enough light, just the general basics is a massive skill set that most people don't have.
Even if you're just going to grow something under a tiny little grow light on your kitchen counter, that's going to teach you a massive amount of information that can be used in the future if you ever needed it.
So I encourage everyone to just give it a shot.
That's something that I'd like to just do a big, big agree with.
Because I mean, for years, we've seen people talking about, oh, return to tradition, buy land, move to the middle of nowhere.
But like, that's not really a solution.
You know, completely withdrawing isn't a solution.
It's a survival strategy, but it's not going to, right.
Well, and I mean, it's just, it's a survival strategy.
It's not a solution.
It doesn't solve anything except for like, I guess, the question of your survival.
But even that, like, that's not guaranteed if you have the last white dude left.
Like, we all know what's going to happen, right?
We know what happens to the farmers in South Africa and Rhodesia.
But you see these people talking about stuff all the time.
And it's like, you know, how many of these guys actually have a garden?
How many of them actually know how to do any of this stuff?
You know, people, and everybody's guilty of this.
I mean, it's like Redditors going to Ukraine and getting absolutely demolished by the Russians, right?
It was like a video game where they could go there and be the hero.
And it's like, this is real life.
You have to think about this like real life.
It's like you can't wait for the world to collapse.
And then all of a sudden, you're going to like burn down all your neighbors' houses and have all this land that you control that you can now grow food on.
Because like, have you ever grown anything in your entire life?
Do you, have you ever taken care of an animal that isn't a cat that doesn't need you because it goes and catches mice in your apartment?
And so doing, like doing these, do these things.
Do these things at the most basic level.
Get a dog and like train it and take care of it instead of a cat that doesn't need you.
Grow something in your window.
I did spill the beans just very vaguely that you were out homestead shopping the other weekend without probing for details.
You still considering it or off the off the table for now?
No, we so we started negotiating with this guy this weekend.
We went down there to show that I just missed that y'all did.
I was down.
We were down there actually like negotiating actively with him trying to come to an agreement.
So negotiations ongoing, but they have started excuse me for Sirius.
Good stuff.
Yeah, I just, you know, you had the perfect alibi for that show that you were actually out doing the bit and shopping.
And as I mentioned with John Friend, 30-year mortgage rates are now at 5% and higher, fam.
So, you know, are prices too high and you don't want to pull the trigger now?
Or are we looking at a serious Fed effort to just raise, raise, raise rates to choke off inflation?
I don't know.
Just take the 30-year mortgage because you're not going to have to pay off anyways.
That's what a wise man told me.
He said, don't pay your mortgage off early.
Just let inflation eat it up.
And that was before inflation started raging.
Use, come on, we're in a debt society.
Your government doesn't care about debt.
Uh, don't go bankrupt, don't you know, rack up your credit card debt.
Uh, but I think the allergy or the absolute opposition to using debt for your purposes now as things are really starting.
I don't, I don't think we're like doing we're not buying into collapsitarianism here to say that things have really accelerated in the past three years.
I think it's undeniable: violence, pandemics, stolen elections, inflation, uh, a massive geopolitical challenge to the system.
Uh, I'm so, you know, I actually gave a speech last summer, late summer, which maybe I was bullshitting it at the time, but I said, Look, one of the few advantages we have is to know which way the winds are blowing and to get a little bit of a head start on the sheep and on the cattle and on the herd out there that is still mind screwed by the mainstream media and people whispering sweet nothings into their ear.
And that's part of the reason why we're doing prepping again.
It's because, like Smasher said, you have to go out there and do it.
The knowledge that comes from doing things is invaluable.
Even if you fail at first, you learn, have done that in spades, and uh, it's just rewarding.
Like it keeps the black pills away.
You're literally just creating virtuous purpose for yourselves and your families, or even if you're a bachelor.
Uh, look at Rollo, he's got goats and he's growing tomatoes and stuff like that.
Rollo, am I wrong?
He's been too quiet this show, he's brooding.
Well, I don't even know if you have tomatoes.
Yes, okay.
Do they do they give you purpose in life?
Do they give you uh a deep-seated satisfaction, at least on those days?
They haven't totaled your car yet, yeah.
Anyway, all right, well, get out there and do it, fam.
I think this will be our last prepping show of the season.
Take everything to heart from the taters from Mitt Bartner to the uh urban know your neighbor and be prepared to tribe up instead of fleeing from rusty to the wealth of animal knowledge from our pal last week, uh, Rory.
And of course, from the advanced course here delivered by our pal Sigis.
Uh, Sigis, anything else?
I know you're in the car and you're an early riser because you wake like a like a priest or like a monk.
You wake early before work to go tend to your animals and your crops.
Uh, last call before we go to the break.
Yeah, get to know your neighbors, absolutely get to know your neighbors.
It doesn't matter how normal you believe that they are.
I have been unbelievably surprised by not my neighbors.
They are, if not on our page, close enough to it that I know that I can depend on them.
Don't flee to the woods, don't live in the city, but find a good town and get to know your neighbors.
You may need them in the future.
Amen, brother.
A firm look in the eye and a solid handshake, and a couple dog whistles.
Be surprised how far that goes.
They don't have to be our guy, 1488 third-right enthusiasts, they just need to know the score and to be honest and on your side.
Unlike at the very least, they need to look like they probably taste good.
Thanks, Sammy Baby.
Anything before?
Don't try to get to know your neighbors if they're black.
Know your neighbors, even if you're in a ride-by susceptible region.
Could save your life for sure.
All right, Sigis, you got to run or you stick around to play two.
I'm going to go ahead and run.
I got to get up at 4:30 and let the chickens out.
Oof, all right.
Good man.
Yes, I haven't gotten the chickens yet only because we had some severely cold weather here and might be taking the kids on a little trip here in the next couple of weeks.
But after that, it's on.
Otherwise, the show is over.
All right.
Bless you, sis.
Thank you so much.
I've been trying to buy chickens for like a month now, but the weather has just been terrible.
We got more snow in March than I think we got in February.
Yeah.
It's been just absolutely terrible.
So all the coop that I'm building has been buried under snow.
Like we got almost nine inches of snow in like three days earlier this month.
I'm just like, what is going on?
And so I've not been able to work on anything.
It's been terrible.
Yep.
And I ran into a local friend today who is big on gardening.
And I said, oh, I think we're in the clear now.
We passed through the nastiest.
And she said, uh-uh-uh, not until mid-May, which is Mother's Day.
Yeah.
Hold your horses there, eager ones.
I'm looking at the seeds behind the seedlings literally behind me in the kitchen in the window.
And they're starting to, you know, you got to like rotate them so they don't all lean to one side.
I'm like, oh, I got to get these puppies in the ground, but be patient.
Be patient.
All right.
In honor of our friend Sigas and also our pal Strom, who has been spamming me with music for months.
This one's a banger.
I'm thinking of our other pal, Rusty, who always needs more fash wave for the gym.
We're going to the break with Fashwave 1939.
And this is by someone named, where do I have it here?
Joseph.
It's like a Jewish name.
It's very ironic.
Anyway, Joseph Retrostein.
Hope you enjoy this, fam.
We'll be right back.
welcome back to Full House episode 124, the fiend of our prepping series.
And hope that that last aspect wasn't too much to put on your plate on top of all the rest of the stuff that we gave to you.
Big props to Sigas for filling us in on the very fascinated, fascinating aspect of permaculture.
Hadn't given it too much thought.
We mold the environment to what we want it to be, not working with it as it is.
But a lot of common sense there.
Also, full disclosure: good God, the birth panel spoke for over an hour or close to an hour at least at the break.
So we're fatigued and salty, and we were casting aspersions.
Sam was yelling at us and dropping hard R's.
Smasher was scooping it all up for all of his information gathering.
Rolo was just wondering what the hell was happening.
So here we are having fun in the second half.
And we are overdue on new white life.
Good Lord.
We haven't had a good crop in a while.
And we got it this week by three lovely announcements that I am very genuinely excited to announce.
First up, in chronological order here, our pal from down under Evo, we see you down there, was kind enough to let us know that he had a healthy, big baby boy.
And his big brother was wearing dad's Thor necklace in a photo just right next to him.
And couldn't be happier for you, buddy.
We love our Aussies, don't we, fam?
Yes, they have the best Nazis and the worst totalitarianism down there.
And congratulations, Evo.
And I don't think I'm not even sure that Evo is in with a crew or in a squad yet.
He's sort of, he's lurking down there in the bush in the outback.
So I'm just trying to make Evo smile here.
And hopefully his wife misses too.
Congratulations, buddy.
Don't be a pussy or whatever they call it.
Don't be a cunt.
Go get bullied.
What's that, Rolo?
Did I censor that word?
Nah, leave it.
It's not a swear word in Australia.
Yeah, that's like just calling somebody a guy or something.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay.
It's a four-letter word, but it's not on the list.
Next up this week is Marty.
Yes, Marty, the man who I mocked for finally being able to con a woman into adult relations with him late in his life.
Old Silver Fox Marty, long in the tooth.
Yep, came to term miraculously.
Marty, I'm joking.
Marty is a total handsome, brilliant Chad.
I don't know if he's hardworking or not, but we'll give him credit for that too.
And Marty's first came and we're over the moon for you.
Way to go, Marty.
Don't let us give you any guff or at least laugh it off when we do.
And finally, our trifecta this week, Kirk Diesel.
I think we announced Kirk's conception just like we did Marty.
Evo kept it secret from us, but Kirk and Wifey were a little bit concerned.
Baby girl came a little bit early.
I remember seeing the messages.
Oh boy, it's happening.
Pray for us, fam.
Prayers were delivered.
And lo and behold, there we go.
Beautiful photo of a perfect baby girl in the hospital.
And she may, she's probably home by now.
Don't worry.
He did tell his wife to calm down.
He said that.
So to Evo, Marty, Kirk, and I guess your wives too.
We salute you.
I figured this would be a good time to inform the audience.
It's episode 124, time to put cards on the table that I, Coach Finstock, host of Full House, am uh Jewish, gay, and Fed.
Yes, it's black.
Do you know now?
We have Smasher's sharp enough to see why I said that right now.
Smasher, do you know why I said that right now?
That you're gay, Jewish Fed.
I'm a gay, Jewish Fed.
Why would I say that right now?
Look at the little bottom right of your lap or your desktop, whatever.
Is it April 1st?
Oh, Sam.
Age over youth.
Sam knows the score.
Well, it's not care, but I saw where you were going.
I saw where you were going with it.
My problem is that I never do anything fun for what's it called?
So April Fool's Day.
Yeah, just another day.
Somebody for our country.
It's like every day of our life is April Fool's Day.
Right.
Like my entire life is a joke.
Like, come on.
Well, you can have some fun with it, especially maybe somebody who knows you.
And then you say something like.
you know, I'm thinking I'm going to buy a Subaru.
Or I think I'm thinking about going vegan, you know, and see, you know, if you could say it very seriously.
I'm going to go to Lilith Fair this year.
Yeah, there you go.
Something like that.
You know, I just bought some Lilith Fair tickets.
I'm really excited.
What do you think?
Am I going to enjoy it?
I never would have thought about April 1st if it weren't for somebody posting a photo of a decrepit, aged old black lady twerking.
This is so dead classic.
Very nice.
It was funny.
And full disclosure, I am not homosexual.
I have never done anything of that sort.
I was a fed for a certain period of time and sort of in purgatory on that front.
And when I got my DNA test from 23andMe, it showed 0.2% Ashkenazi Jewish, which really consumed my intellect.
Yep, 0.0% gang.
Vito's coach, but ancestry saved my bacon.
No, no Jewish blood.
Yeah, isn't that within if you have less than 1%, I think that's well within like the error of the test, right?
Oh, totally.
Yeah.
I mean, whether it's 23andMe Jewish tricks or it's trace speculation, even in good faith, I just, I laughed at it.
It was a, it was a curio, a curiosity.
But yeah, April 1st.
I bet you Junior is going to have something cooked up because he was the one who said, you know what, tomorrow is dead.
I was like, no, April Fool's Day.
So see.
I am going straight edge.
No more alcohol.
Wow.
Are you sure you want to do this?
Forever?
No, I'm April Fool's Day.
See, that's what I'm saying.
You got to do that.
You know, somebody who knows you say something totally contrary.
Oh, my God.
I'm losing my edge.
Literally.
Got me with it.
Did he get you two, Sam?
I saw where he was going.
I saw where he was going.
I have cut back quite a bit.
Yeah.
But April Fools, you got us again.
Good one, Smash.
I was cutting back until the second half.
I don't drink anymore, but I don't drink any less.
You know what I'm saying?
Driving me to drink here.
Yeah.
All right.
We have serious content here in the second half.
I promised we were transitioning to our bread and butter.
We've been riding or milking the prepping hog for far too long.
And it's no secret that I still maintain a network, an extensive network of Northern Virginian friends, compatriots, spies, agents, etc.
And one of them let me know actually like two or three weeks ago that this happened.
I guess he either found it on YouTube or in the local press, but TLDR, I'll just do a quick summation here so the audience knows what's coming.
Some eighth grade white girl got up in front of a school board in Northern Virginia.
I don't know if it was Fairfax or Prince William.
It just gave a very brave and honest testimonial of sorts to the school board about this was sort of when masks were like borderline mandatory.
Maybe they were lifting the restrictions on some kids, but if you didn't wear a mask, you were basically cast out as some sort of freak or threat to public safety.
So this lovely eighth-grade white girl gets up in front of the school board and just tells her side of the story.
And that could have been it.
Way to go.
You know, proud of you.
You told the truth.
But no, who gets up the following week, but this sideshow bob in black face, CIA, or FBI black woman, I'll phrase it carefully, who's also running for Virginia House of Delegates, to do nothing more than to attack an underage, brave truth teller to the school board.
So we pulled this one.
It's a little bit of a mashup of the Cretan and the angel.
And Rolo, if you're not half in the bag already, like the rest of us, press play.
Last week, immediately after I spoke, an eighth grader facetiously and disrespectfully questioned the motives of this school board's efforts to protect students.
Facetiously and disrespectfully.
Some of the teachers have been really rude to us too.
One of my teachers repeatedly tells kids whose masks have slipped down: no one wants to see your ugly nose.
The idea that adults tell rooms full of teens that they are ugly is more harmful to us than COVID.
I wasn't even able to hear her disrespectful comments until days later.
We don't have to wear masks during PE, ban, breakfast, and lunch, but for some reason, teachers and students think that when I go to school not wearing a mask because of a religious exemption, I'm killing others.
Now I feel like I'm the virus harming everyone because they separate me from all other kids and put a shield on my desk.
And this discovery seems to have awakened a sleeping dragon who was absolutely content with the system operating as intended until it was called out.
And now that dragon has responded with anti-CRT, anti-masks, anti-bax, anti-books, anti-everything that seeks to create citizens who can critically examine that structures of our government and policies that maintain and equitable outcomes for the haves and the have-nots.
According to the Virginia Department of Health, zero people under the age of 18 have died of COVID in Prince William County.
Yet in 2020, suicide was the second leading cause of death for people ages to 10 through 34.
Even though more kids die from suicide than COVID since COVID began, the school board isn't mandating that we wear straight jackets because that would be crazy, right?
If my son had registered to speak and spoke to the members of this board with the same level of disrespect and facetiousness as one of your daughters did last week, would you have cheered him on?
Maybe the school board should look into the mental damage that masks, shields, and other COVID restrictions are doing to us.
You're worried about social and emotional learning, right?
You talk all the time about the importance of that in school.
What you've done to us has greatly affected everyone's social and emotional interactions.
If you cared, you would remove the masks and stupid made-up six-foot distances and you would let us be kids.
I'll pose this overarching question for the good of the order.
What kind of citizens are we, Prince William County Public Schools, and that includes students and parents trying to create?
Thank you.
Many Northeastern states announced that mask mandates at schools were ending.
All of those governors are Democrats.
A month ago, our governor signed an order that gave parents the rights to choose if their kids should wear masks at public schools, and you all chose to ignore it.
Today, our governor turned that executive order into law.
The superintendent's response is that the school board is revising their mitigation strategies to be consistent with the new legislation.
My friends in Falk, you're 10 minutes down the road or maskless.
We don't need mitigation strategies.
You need to stop the masks, stop the distancing, and stop trying to use your powers to control us.
If you choose to follow a Democrat's executive order, but not a Republicans, then maybe I should follow your lead and tell my friends that rules are optional if you don't like the people that wrote them.
Instead of leading, we are falling behind.
Let us breathe and learn.
We deserve better.
I'll pray for you.
What kind of citizens are we trying to create?
Thank you.
I'll pray for you.
I would laugh if it weren't so maddening.
The juxtaposition of the very concerned aspiring.
I wouldn't waste my time praying for that soulless bastard.
What is a woman?
Gosh, respect gender pronouns.
Jeez.
Macia, Machia Little.
She looks every ounce the Machia Little, spewing her pretty lies on her little campaign to curry favor with the powers that have already endowed her with power.
Hats off to that young lady and curse on sideshow Bob in a pantsuit.
And this is not to dredge.
This is not to dredge up COVID stuff again because it really is finally in the rearview mirror.
But yeah, tons of hypocrisy.
The mask stuff was always insane.
The idea that, oh yeah, you don't have to wear a mask at lunch and you don't have to wear it at recess and here and there, but you have to wear it in class in all these places.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Black entitlement.
And imagine if the roles were reversed and a white politician.
That old shit.
I cream my pants, bro.
God.
Yeah, little black Sally gets up to talk about it.
Talk about it.
I want nothing more than for a white politician to talk to a black, how this Cretan talks to this girl with a genuine concern.
Like a black would come up and be like, why y'all stopping us from killing each other?
Let's do we how we do.
And then to be a politician, shut up, you ape.
Gosh, that's what I want more than anything.
Yep.
Sanctimonious.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm just going to scream.
Like this disgusting pavement ape that is literally an asset of the United States government.
CIA or FBI.
Just, you know, scolding and, oh, gosh, just being very disrespectful to a little, you know, eighth grade white girl.
Like, like, like I said, before we actually started recording, like, I wouldn't go up to some like eighth grade black kid, like a normal aged eighth grade black kid, not Dantell, who's in eighth grade for the 14th time.
I wouldn't go up to one and just be like, you're a disgusting, stupid nigger that's going to like rape my daughter.
Like he's just an eighth grader.
Like, who?
Right.
Why are you so pressed about an eighth grader?
Okay, so like mask stuff, like COVID politics is like kind of dumb, but I understand that this is getting shit on at school.
That's what I was going to say.
The mask politics is dumb, but this goes beyond mask politics, right?
Like she, it's not just mask politics.
Like these people are being like demeaning to these children.
And if it wasn't mask politics, it'd be something else.
And even without the masks, they're still going to make them feel like second-class citizens because they're white, right?
So like this is this is much more than just a mask issue.
And this little girl's not wrong.
Like she isn't wrong.
They shouldn't be treating her like that over a mask.
Like it's retarded.
And I support that girl to not wear a mask.
I commend her for her bravery to stand up.
And I understand why for an eighth grade girl, mask politics is significantly more important than for me, like the big-brained white nationalists talking from like a political perspective, right?
So like, hell yeah.
No.
I totally grant that she's valid to do so, you know.
I'm just speaking like generally, but so for somebody, like, for somebody at that like level of power in the United States to attack an eighth grade girl for being upset that she's treated like a second class citizen is so like beyond the pale for me.
Like I, I hate to, I hate to admit that I've been like shocked or thunderstruck, but it's like, it's like, dude.
And it was for her political purposes too.
It wasn't even like she got a B in her bonnet, right?
She's using that to appeal to the shitlit masses.
She's attacking.
And let me also say, eighth grade Northern Virginia cameras on amidst a media firestorm.
I mean, Northern Virginia has been ground zero in the culture wars for like the past year over masks and the tranny rapist or the tranny toucher in the bathroom.
Remember that?
You know, it got kicked out of school and then got assigned to another one and committed the crime again.
I was nervous.
Hell, as a junior in high school, I had to give a presentation to the school board about my experience in Ukraine.
And I was like, oh, this will be easy.
I'll just get up and talk about all the nice things that we did and how much we learned to never go to war with Ukraine.
Interestingly, that didn't stick.
And I was nervous as hell as I got up there with no cameras and no microphone.
And that girl brought it.
And then it's not even Makia.
It's Makia.
I'm looking at her biography.
Makia Renee Little, parentheses, she, her, is a creative professional, diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioner and domestic violence survivor.
And there's plenty more.
I'll put it.
Ah, so she dates within her own race, I see.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Previously, she served as group chief within the CIA's diversity and inclusion office with a focus on reasonable accommodations.
You disgusting nigger, dude.
Oh my God.
Like I, I thought I got all my swearing out, but like you reading that just reactivated like the angry grog part of my brain.
Like, oh my freaking crap.
Well, we, so that makes you pro-Russian now, right?
Right, Smasher?
You're, you're all on board the Russian trans Siberian Railroad now.
I maintain that while I have always, yeah, while I've always agreed with you that like it makes sense geopolitically and like if I was Putin, I would probably do the same thing, but he's not doing it for us.
He's not doing it for white people and he's not anti-Semitic.
So he cannot be based.
I didn't mean to do death to America also.
I know.
Well, America gives Makia little power.
So how can, how could anyone stand for America?
It's literally a hostile invader lecturing people on a 13 year old, pleading for her own sanity, right.
Like literally her mental health.
Imagine like i'm i'm a Cia, i'm assuming in in her mid-30s right, some disgusting that at a minimum is probably 30 years old, but could be 50, could be 40 whatever, who cares?
She's dunking on a 13 year old like congratulations, you're so smart.
Like like this.
This nigger is dunking on this 13 year old girl because 13 year olds are some of the only people that can actually dunk on, because niggers are retarded.
Yeah, we should never have our children under the system or under the authority of these aliens.
We can never expect that they would ever have sympathy or listen to our concerns or anything like that.
If this doesn't, they have censorship for you.
Yeah, not just they don't have sympathy, they actively hate it.
Like this is a girl that's like I have a like an actual problem like this is affecting my mental health and that of my peers.
And then this, this thing she boon, this Hooting Mandrel is cry while people cry.
Well, she's saying, how dare, can you believe?
Can you believe the hubris?
It's the most insulting thing because it like this little girl could have been up and be like, uh yeah, haven't you had enough masks for one year?
But no no, it's like literally a heartfelt plea.
And then this this this, i'm running out of the spider.
Final storm, this is final storm.
Hours see see, roll over doing current events, thank you.
Well, it's not current events, this is evergreen content.
And this thing is like, can you believe the gall of some of the student body?
I need the sarcasm and tone and it's like literally a frizzy haired mulatto.
Right, it's CIA.
Yeah previously, it's.
It's interesting.
I wonder if she got fired.
Who who leaves the CIA?
Yeah, she has.
You can't fire one, you can't fire a nigger.
And two, nobody leaves the CIA yeah, so she, both of these things.
Yeah, she's, she's a, she's a glow nigger.
Hard r alumnus.
Uh, Merita creations, a communications and design companies that engages youth and organizations within her community as a motivational speaker and continues to be a diversity and advocate for the state federal government.
I hope she gets cancer and dies.
Most recently, she served as a Party AND You're Invited.
Alumni action group incorporated a 501c4 focused on enhancing accessibility, inclusion and innovation within stem education as a charter member of the Virginia African American Superintendents Advisory Council, previously served on the board of directors of the Northern Virginia Delta Education AND Community Service Foundation and as a director of the TJ Partnership FUND.
She's a member of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority incorporated.
That is, of course, a historically African-american sorority and serves as co-chair of the Lewis Academy Now See It Be It speaker series.
She currently resides in northern Virginia with her three children no husband assuming can I say something nice about a black person right now?
No, I Well, too bad.
I'm going to exercise my preview.
Oh, yeah, I'm proud of the black man that beat this woman.
Yeah, can you blame it?
No.
No, she had it.
That's like the one time a black man was justified in beating a woman.
Say diversity, equity, and inclusion one more time, bitch.
I can't take it no more.
I get it.
I get it.
We're fisted.
You don't need to tell me every goddamn minute.
Yeah.
Well, these are the people who are educating and regulating people.
People is such a strong word.
Devil, I say.
There you go.
Sam has been very consistent on that.
Devils.
Speaking of devils, I just thanks to the pal who tipped us off about this story.
I'll put the, there was a local media story about it too.
I'll put that in the show notes about Makia and whatever that girl's name was.
Like, I'm not a fan of the African continent, if I may say.
Hey, finally timed one right, Prolo.
There you go.
20 shows in.
Finally got it going.
The other talk of the town this week has been, I guess this has been on the books or proposed to be on the books for a while, but California is taking Maryland's lead and pushing it up another notch and proposing what certainly appears on the surface to be a lawful excuse and cover for infanticide,
I guess, basically death or if you interpret it a certain way, killing a baby after birth.
This is from nationalreview.com.
Take it for the grain of salt, but it's basically breaking down this law that's been proposed in the California legislature and which actually kicked off a good amount of debate in our circles.
Key passage.
Notwithstanding any other law, a person shall not be subject to civil or criminal liability or penalty or otherwise deprived of their rights based on their actions or omissions with respect to their pregnancy or actual potential or alleged pregnancy outcome,
including miscarriage, stillbirth, or abortion or paranatal death, paranatal, something that most of us probably, I'm sure Sam knew exactly the definition in the law, but it yeah, it means a ton of wiggle room after birth.
And the common interpretation of this is to provide legal means to perhaps snuff out your kid with or without the help of a doctor or someone else after he or she is born.
Now, we're not going to do wow, just wow.
Oh my God, look, this is the new front in the left's campaign to kill all babies to the service of feeding Moloch, but that certainly wouldn't be an unreasonable interpretation here.
We talked a little bit about this at the break, and it looks to me, Sam, and it seems like you agree that this is an intent to cover the asses of grossly irresponsible, quote-unquote, parents for the mistreatment and untimely death of their newborns and early infants, depending on the definition of parental.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, I'm wondering, too, what if you kill somebody else's 29-year-old baby?
I mean, 29, 28.
Day old baby sorry what, what?
Uh, what happens then?
I mean, if it's not your own child, is that still uh covered under this?
Just part and parcel.
Yeah, you got a Mexican nanny boom sorry hey no yeah, so if you're, if you're white and you accidentally leave a pillow, uh in the crib with a black baby that, for some god unforeseen reason, you're caring for, i'm sure that you'll get the death penalty.
But uh, if Conchita or Lolita or Laquanda, uh happen to do the same, they have nothing to worry about.
Um, I mean and that's actually that's already the case anyways like, if some pavement ape kills a white kid, like nothing's gonna happen, they might have to go through court disparity.
I've noticed that a lot that they've passed a number of like new civil rights acts for uh, or added like civil rights legislation, and it's all been passed, but it's all for stuff that's like already illegal, like an anti-lynching, like lynching is now illegal in the United States uh federally well, federally so, but like aren't, aren't hate crimes and murder illegal?
So like, what did we accomplish here?
Both of those things are not illegal for blacks right correct, like we have seen that that's not just you can't commit hate crimes against white people.
Right yes right, and and uh, and three blacks can, can rape a 14 year old girl and just get probation, right.
So yeah though, like they do not enforce those laws, so I have no reason to believe.
You got a Mexican nanny, killed your kid.
She's white, she deserved it right right not, I mean not my words, obviously right, but yeah, rabbi's words.
Yeah, my rabbi said that.
It just seems like it's.
It seems like uh, this you know, think of how the legal system is is overburdened with with managing non-white crime and things like this, family things, killing the babies uh, all that type of thing, or neglecting them and all that.
This is uh, this is the legal system like trying to force them to act white and uh, even the thing of them having the children and then and then requiring them to take care of the children, and things like that.
This is, this is just unburdening these non-white uh classes of people to be what they truly are to.
You know, to go do the evil things that they're naturally inclined to do, and and just sort of uh unburdens the legal system with a whole layer of uh crime and and family situations and all kind of things and uh.
So that's the way I see this.
Yep excuse, excuse their uh, inexcusable behavior.
Sweep it under the rug and chalk it all up to socioeconomic status.
Now, to throw a monkey wrench into this, a couple of the more Machiavellian WNs observing this news said, huh, what do you guys have your panties in the bunch about?
This is all about blacks and other non-whites not caring for their children.
Nothing to see here.
Now, that's ghoulish, as some called it.
Others would say, you know, white, you know, this is not, this is not an anti-white bill.
This is a black crime with no white victim exclusion bill, which is a pretty narrow reading of it, too.
And a couple guys actually got really upset about the commentary.
They were like, we are better than this.
We are not ghouls.
We don't want any children to die for any reason of any race.
And we should oppose this on principle, which I think.
Well, yeah, it's just the type of society you can expect to have, the more non-white the society would become.
And you could expect it to be more barbaric and unfeeling and evil like this.
Well, it's like this is your nation on the Civil Rights Act five decades later.
Yeah, I'm opposed to it in principle, right?
But I do understand that like the material reality is that like white kids aren't going to be the ones dying.
Right.
It's just, it's like abortion.
White parents will be prosecuted.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah, of course.
As well, they should be for any mistreatment of their newborns.
Well, the thing with abortion, if we didn't have abortion, we'd have niggers would probably be 30% of the country at least if it wasn't for abortion.
Abortion is like an evil thing.
Well, that is part of it.
Yeah.
No, no, no.
Their extreme rate of violence does help keep their numbers down.
But without abortion, just without abortion, man, I just can't imagine the amount of niggers that we would have to deal with.
And like, I think abortion is evil.
It's evil.
But the material reality is that like, I mean, it hurts them more than it hurts.
But at the same time, look at it this way.
The enemy looks at this like, oh, you mean, you mean to say it's going to cost me 10 black babies to kill one white baby?
Okay, then that's just the price of killing one.
Absolutely.
So they can.
Jews will throw niggers into the meat grinder.
No question.
They won't.
Their lives are worthless to them and to us.
And that's just like the cost of it.
So, I mean, we should oppose abortion simply because it does hurt our people at all, even though it hurts the other side worse in a sense.
But, you know, there's plenty of devils in hell that they could keep sending.
So separate from them and then we can remove ourselves from whatever I laugh just saying moral considerations they have.
We can impose what is actually right and pure and moral upon our own people.
Yeah.
And I know we did this in the abortion episode way back when, but at the time, I think our, because this was the other thing that came up was Down syndrome babies.
At the time when we did that show, two years ago, two years plus, JO was on.
We talked about this and functional Down syndrome kids.
This is somewhat related to the issue.
I believe that our consensus was it should be up to what we're talking about, white parents.
It should be up to the parents whether to keep it or not.
But well, I would say that they should keep such a baby anyways.
And because even a handicapped child could be a great blessing to a family.
And is that not a contradiction of healthy?
I mean, how much more time, effort future white kids, they don't.
I'm playing devil's advocate a little bit here, Sam.
But I mean, there's struggle.
No, that's that's like the argument of saying why I have so many kids.
You're dividing your love between six kids instead of two kids or something.
No, that's not how it works.
Love is not a finite resource, though.
Yeah.
Well, I don't think money's a finite resource either.
It's, you know, things you can rise to the occasion to disagree.
You rise to the occasion.
The monopoly guy is based on Sam.
Okay.
So he doesn't understand currency to us.
It's not a finite resource for Jews, but it is for the quayam for sure.
Well, it all comes down to dollars in your pocket.
It also comes down to making decisions about how you run the household, what you really need, what you really don't need, how many clothes and shoes and extra things and computers you need and all those types of things.
So not much of a eugenicist then, Sam, huh?
You would not allow abortion of Down syndrome babies for white couples?
No, no.
All right.
I do think that sterilization is better than abortion, right?
Like, I think if you, if you want, oh, yes.
Yeah, sterilize everybody, right?
Yeah, sterilize everybody.
Now I sound like some crazy like doomsday.
Cut your balls off.
I don't know why that came out.
But stare, like people, people that want abortions, like, okay, that should be the contingency.
Like, okay, you want to get an abortion?
Okay, well, you have to get sterilized.
Yeah.
After the fact.
I'm fine with that.
Yeah, but you wouldn't sterilize.
What if a white, loving white, you know, father and mother, husband and wife had a Down syndrome baby, decided to keep it and then keep trying?
Should they be sterilized because another one might come down the plane?
No, because they decided to keep it.
Well, yeah, if they decided to keep it, then no.
That's what you just said.
I said if they want to get an abortion, that's not like a real problem.
I'm usually like a really big problem, anyways.
I mean, it's some kind of small percentage and a lot of modern vitamins and things that are known now are preventing those types of things.
I don't think that we should be, you know, agreeing to some horrible, ghoulish murder based on this, you know, tiny percentage.
And look, I'm not saying Down syndrome necessarily, but I, it's a eugenics hypothetical, you know, useful thought exercise.
I think that there are legitimate cases in which abortion should be acceptable.
They, I admit, are they're Naxalt.
They're absolutely like Naxalt because most abortions that happen are people that just want to get an abortion, right?
Like a kid is the kids are probably healthy in 95 or higher percent of abortions, I would assume.
So, but in these Naxalt cases, like you see, these children that are born as vegetables are like they don't have a brain or like their brain is like literally a peanut, you know, things like that.
It's like this person barely even is like a person from like the human experience.
Like they, they don't have any kind of self-awareness.
They can't walk.
They can't talk.
They can't function.
Like they're, they're literally just like drooling retards that are like wheel, wheelchair bound or bedbound or whatever it may be.
You know, they're, they're like next step up from vegetable, like that type of stuff.
Like why, why, like that person is just, I mean, maybe they're not literally suffering because like they don't have the brain function to suffer.
But like, why?
Why?
Well, we have them for the same reason that we have extremely elderly people that we have to take care of a great grandma or a grandma or something like that.
And having those types of people enables us to learn compassion or to exercise compassion or to get better at compassion and things like that.
It takes us out of, you know, everybody just having fun or doing things like that into caring for one another and being selfless.
So, you know, the world is not going to be this perfect thing where everybody's just full of health and vigor and everybody has enough money and everything like that.
You know, there's compassion and faith and things like that in your life.
And that's, I think people that live with that are also the people that are truly happy or joyful, more importantly, joyful.
Sammy, baby, you are a hardcore Christian life respecter on this one.
I'm actually a little bit surprised.
I'm slightly surprised.
Well, okay.
If you want to attack the Achilles heel here, if you want to try to put me in a tough spot, I would say, then you say, what about when a nigger rapes a white woman and she gets pregnant?
Now what do you do?
You know, that's right.
Now that's a demon.
It's not a human.
Yeah, that gets to be a tougher question.
Oh, oh, it's a tougher question, Sam.
I thought for sure that was a softball for yourself to knock out of the bark to make up for your softiness on the retard question.
Yeah, it's well, and in that case, I could, I could come to.
Hey, man, retards got used.
They can push carts at the Walmart.
Oh, yeah.
A lot of retarded people are fine people.
I mean, absolutely.
That was the point at the time.
Yeah, that they can and often do end up leading meaningful, fulfilling lives after you get through those early, hard days.
A lot of them do end up dying early, but some of them go on to be fine people.
One of our, one of our good friends of the show said, oh, yeah, my, my uncle or my great uncle was, had Down syndrome and I have nothing but fond memories of him.
Yeah, but Down syndrome is actually like one of the least concerning things.
Like it's concerning from like a developmental standpoint, generally speaking, but it's not like, I mean, they might have other health issues that like I'm not familiar with because like I don't know anybody that has Down syndrome like personally.
But, you know, I think back to like the kids with Down syndrome and stuff.
I didn't want to dime them out.
And you know, you've met James Alsup.
But you see, you see, like, I never met Patrick Casey, but that I never connected that one.
That's good.
But like, you see people with Down syndrome and like they, they get to exist fairly regularly in the world, right?
Like Down syndrome is actually like the least of my concerns when it comes to like medical reasons for abortion.
My thing is mostly just like these extreme cases of retardation where it's like they might have hyper drilling.
Yeah, no, right.
Like especially where they have like that level of vegetable of a child.
And the dilemma they're facing is, do we put this person on puberty blockers?
Because we don't want like a 20, 30, 40 year old who's like completely retarded and has no skills at all.
I think part of the thing that you're wrong pretty much Again, those people are really relatively rare in my understanding.
And I think, especially if we had a white society, that our society is big enough and generous enough to take care of those people and did in the past.
Yeah, I watch life goes on, quirky.
I mean, in the past, a lot of these people just didn't survive.
Oh, yeah, sure.
A lot of these people, like you said, even today, somebody born with a lot of health problems, they end up dying young.
But, you know, I don't know like we could say what a human life is supposed to be.
You know, human life is what it is.
You know, some people come out tall.
Some people are short.
Some people are blind.
Some people are deaf.
Some people live to an old age.
Some don't live so old.
Yeah, but I think we generally have an idea of like what a human life is.
It's like you are physically normal, whether you're tall or short or whatever, like you're physically normal.
You don't, you know, you're whatever is going on mentally is what you have going on mentally.
That may include things like autism or whatever.
But like generally speaking, we know what a normal human is.
So like.
Yeah, I know, but just because somebody is, somebody is ill or handicapped or something like that doesn't mean that they aren't aren't that they don't have the dignity of life of being treated like a human being.
And like I said, anyways, that's really relatively small percentage of people.
And, you know, I think that's a hallmark of white people is that we do take care of each other and we are compassionate compared to the other races.
There was a people who did a very Germanic act of analyzing these issues and developing a process by which they could be decided humanely and rationally.
And that was, of course, the Germans of the Third Reich.
And contrary to popular belief, they did not just go around sterilizing everyone and aborting every fetus with the first sign of problems, but had a whole like Jewish jurisprudential process by which they had appeals processes and only sterilized in the cases of,
you know, really proven evidence of criminal intent or severe genetic defects.
Right.
They did it where it was necessary.
And this country and this society is far more barbaric than what they accuse them of being.
Absolutely.
Yep.
Just by its existence.
Rolo, if you could, so many people have, well, I don't know, so many, a couple have forwarded me this Bohr Jack.
I couldn't have told you who Bohr Jack was before.
Southern Southern AF podcast.
There you go.
Southern Dingo and Bohr Jack here.
And Board Jack went on one of his rants.
It's somewhat tied into this.
And it's another one of these like classic WN head scratchers about worse is better versus no, you dumbass.
It just keeps getting worse.
So this is food for thought on worse is better, or we just need more people to wake up as things get worse.
Courtesy of Bohr Jack.
And you're right.
It is going to get a lot worse.
However, and I said this a couple of times during this get that white people have to put this myth to bed that we will react when we are attacked because we have been under attack for decades now.
For I mean, how long?
The only time that this will sorry, what did you want to say?
No, I just said, yeah, long ass time.
The only time that this, the only moment that this changes is when we decide that we have had enough of this and that we want something different, right?
That is the only conceivable way.
So anybody, if anybody tells you that in order for us to stand up, things need to get worse.
Then you know that this person is either willfully misleading you or has been misled and is repeating the narrative of our enemies.
It is bad beyond, and only to reiterate what you're saying, it is bad beyond even fathomability.
It is bad beyond measure, what is happening in each and every one of our countries right now.
It is extremely bad.
It is heart-wrecking how bad it is.
What you're telling me is if one of these Spurs went to Jared Taylor in 1998 in his speech at American Renaissance and said, look, look, you're not going to be able to do anything about this right now.
Things just have to get a lot worse.
And then we could do something about it.
Say, you know, I don't know, another 15 years or so, they would have been wrong because things got worse.
And then, you know, we're still like getting worse is the cure or something.
You remember like accelerationism?
Oh, support the decline, blah, blah, blah.
The decline brings about the resistance.
You know how many times we've talked about this on shows, Jeff, but we will re-editate it until people understand it.
I will continue saying it.
I know you will continue saying it, that the only time that white people unite is when there is a hope in the future.
White people do not rally behind chaos.
White people do not rally behind disorder.
That is something that a looter does and a jogger.
They rally like flies and ticks and all different manners of parasites around chaos and decay.
But a white man rallies behind order and a white man rallies behind discipline.
So therefore, the only hope that we have in securing an existence for our people is when we start in our personal capacities, reaching out to the people that we know and trust and saying, brother, we've got to do something because there is no way that I'm going to look my child in the eye as an old man and tell him that, hang in there, buddy, one day this is going to change.
You just got to give it a little bit more time because things are going to good with the white man.
Things are shit with the white man as it is in every country, in every way.
And it is time that we acknowledge that.
And it is time that whenever somebody tells you things aren't bad enough, you say, think about Brendan Orner.
Think about Canon Hennett.
Shut your mouth.
You don't know what you're talking about.
Things are the worst.
And it is time that we start working towards a future that we actually want to live in.
Things are so bad.
Like this opium, this heroin crisis or this drug crisis that your friend Spectre just talked about.
Why the hell do you think it exists?
Because white people cannot bear the reality that they are living in as we speak.
It is unbearable.
And people want to tell us that it is not bad enough.
If it was good, people wouldn't be addicted to all this substance abuse.
Pornography isn't something seated in reality.
Heroin, drugs, opioids, all of these things.
All manner of escapism isn't settled in reality, and you want to tell me that it isn't bad enough.
It is time that we understand that it is way beyond bad enough, and that if we want a future, if we want change, then it will only come by our hands.
Amen.
Well, I mean, isn't that what we're doing?
Like, aren't we working towards it actively?
That's what aren't you on a podcast, like, promoting people to do stuff to save the future or the white race?
Sure, that was that was my uh, like I love the spirit smasher, but it's like, uh, okay, so uh, Boer, what are you saying?
We should uh push the button, the big button, and do the bit.
No, I mean, like, I don't disagree with anything he's saying, like, you know, don't I don't want people to think that.
Uh, it's just like, I mean, look around you, man, like we're doing it.
And, like, short, short of like suggesting other questionable things, like, what else should we be doing?
Like, there are new organizations popping up all the time when where people have ideas.
Like, I mean, this the Evergreen, the women's organization, right?
Like, how long I was involved with white nationalism in America for six years before a woman's organization popped up, right?
So, like, you know, people are coming up with new ideas and new ways to do things.
And I think part of it is that, like, we all came into this, generally speaking, between like 2012 and 2016 is when a large bulk of us came in.
And there are more people coming in, thousands of people coming in, probably every day, right?
Because, like, we all know the numbers of the podcast, like they're all getting out there.
Uh, national justice gets you know, thousands and thousands of views every day.
Um, you know, so we know that the message is you know, spreading and more people are coming in.
Uh, and as more people come in, we start to see new things.
But we kind of all got sucked up into like the alt-right thing, and we were all hyper-political because it was you know, basically election season with Trump.
And now that, like, we kind of understand that politics is not a game that we can play in unless we do it like ourselves through something like the National Justice Party, you know.
So, support the NJP, and that's really the only politics that you have to concern yourself with.
And so, now we start to see cultural things happening.
You see the White Art Collective becoming a lot more popular.
You see Evergreen hosting white cultural events like Oktoberfest and St. Patrick's Day.
You see the skinhead bands having huge, huge concerts, you know, stuff like that, like creating a culture, creating things that will help transcend as like a race and people instead of just like political trolling stuck between the Democrats and the Republicans and just being impotent.
So, it's like, you know, we're doing all this stuff, and every single day we get bigger and new things happen all the time, and it's awesome.
Think about people that you hear will say things like, I might not even be alive today, except that I found this movement.
Some of the best people in this are like drug addicts.
Well, they're not drug addicts anymore, but yeah, people who just didn't have any point in life, they were discouraged, they were demoralized by this immoral society, and then they found their white nationalist racial identity.
And you hear it all the time.
People say, I was lost.
I was, I was considering killing myself.
Or like you say, somebody who was into drugs or this and that.
I mean, it's, we certainly have an ascendant movement here.
Yeah.
And I don't want to be big brain split the baby here, but Boer Jack can be right in spirit.
And we can also say that, well, actually, I mean, the worse things get, the more people come our way.
It can certainly be a cope for a little bit of a drug our way for sure.
Yeah.
And if it is collapsing, which it certainly is, then I'm still, I mean, you know, it's very difficult as a father to say worse is better, but I genuinely believe that's the case at this point.
Like, I don't, there is no turning the ship around absent a political revolution on par with 1933.
So if that's not in the cards, and I don't think it is, perhaps I'm wrong.
Then, yeah, what do you do?
You keep doing good deeds and keep working.
You know, just throw your hands up and hope for the collapse.
I think that's what he's aiming at with his remarks is to say, you know, if somebody's saying, well, what, you know, when do we do something or what are we waiting for?
Oh, we're waiting for it to collapse.
No, we're building our different expressions of our efforts in different ways every day.
And we're gaining new people every day.
And people are having hope.
It's like building a fort at sunset or something.
America, the light is dying and you're still like, you know, hacking away.
Not that I know how to make it make a fort, but you know what I mean.
That's what I'm here for.
But America, like America is dying.
America is dying.
America will fall apart.
The West is dying and America will fall apart.
How it's going to fall apart, you know, who's to say?
We can't predict these things, but it's happening now, right?
The writing is on the wall.
We are collapsing in the same way many other empires have collapsed.
There's no reason to think that like America is special in that regard.
And you're right, it is.
There are areas in this country where there is no rule of law, right?
And that's essentially the collapse of rule of law is what would be considered collapse because if there is no way to enforce laws, you don't have a country.
Just like Coach's article he passed on here, this California bill.
Okay, so we changed law 30 days.
You could let the baby die or whatever.
You know, that's just, that's the collapse right there.
Right.
So you can either be Connor and Gordon, just real quick.
They literally, MerrickConnor.org just did a show on, you know, a very historically relevant essay about the collapse of civilizations throughout world history.
That was, I was listening to that when Potato fell asleep on the way to the dump.
And when he woke up crying, I had to pause it, didn't finish it.
But yes, this is, this is all, it's not proceeding.
Well, perhaps it's proceeding according to Jewish plan, but it's also proceeding according to the lessons of history.
You know, sorry, fam, which is also why we're teaching you how to plant potatoes and kill chickens.
Yeah.
I mean, I've been telling people, I've been telling people that like the wheels have fallen off for years now.
I mean, longer than I've been a white nationalist.
And, you know, I remember in 2016, like Trump was elected and everybody was like, dude, what are you talking about?
Like, Trump just, you know, Trump's in office.
Like, he's going to fix things.
Morning in America again.
You know, like, and, and I even fell into it a little bit.
I was like, man, maybe, like, maybe there is some hope for something, right?
But then, like, very shortly thereafter, I was like, nah.
like even if trump does and i wasn't completely blackpilled on trump yet but i was like even if trump does some good that's just going to extend it a couple of years he's not it's not it's not getting turned around and then obviously we know how the rest of trump ended right society's wheels are coming off but our wheels are getting put on well right and that's that's my point is that you when when america falls apart you can be in a good place or you can be in a bad place What one do you want to be in?
Right?
You want to be in a good place?
Okay, well, then you have to put in the work.
You have to network.
You have to earn people's trust.
You have to be, you know, honest.
You have to do your duty.
You have to learn and gain skills and get good at things and have people that are of the same mind as you that also are learning these skills.
Guns, germs, and steel?
No.
Potatoes, chickens, and racist friends.
That's right.
Rolo's never had any optimism in his life, you know, at all.
So this, this is all just second nature to him.
I thought you were going to say Rollo has never had any friends in his life.
No, I'm not.
No, I'm honest.
No, you have.
I'm his friend.
I'm his friend.
Sam, you are my friend.
Well, Sam, you're my new grandpa.
Sam just admitted to being a loser.
I've been listening to Russians with attitude and they paywall their second half.
I haven't paid up for their second half.
Hint, hint.
Yeah, all these shirkers.
If only I had an entrepreneurial or a, if I had more than 0.2% shekel making gene code, perhaps we'll pull something like that.
You can just have like 25 guys and start a club where you can grift.
I'm sorry.
I haven't seen already.
Full house has been a grift from the get-go.
Well, it depends on where the fatherland left off.
That's only if you gauge it by what guests have been on certain episodes.
We had no white guilt on.
That was all part of the plan.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Some other guests too, but you know, we don't need to get too specific.
Telling everyone to go listen to all the episodes of Full House that they haven't listened to.
There you talk about that.
T.m. Full House shows.
Haven't taken a single one down.
They're all there.
Stand by everything, except for this one.
Worst mistake I made was posting the twerking granny in the show chat because it's in there.
Yeah, we had to move the chat window.
Yeah, good idea.
More and I missed a few of the updates on the time.
It was funny when she was moving.
It's not so funny when you got granny ass.
It was never funny.
Come on.
No, I laughed.
I'm sorry.
That was funny.
Yeah.
They don't get better at anything.
They're disgusting creatures, man.
Sam wants to save every single creature that comes out of any mother's womb.
Smasher and Rolo can't laugh at a twerking granny.
I'm just trying to be the big brain diplomat and host of the show.
Keep the keep the wheels.
Coach is half in the bag.
Yes.
No, I know.
No, we talk for so.
I literally didn't think we were going to do a second half.
We went on so long at the break talking about inside baseball.
Very dramatic stuff.
Regardless, let's bring this puppy home before the audience revolts any further.
Samuel, you first.
Thank you, sir, for putting up all of us.
Yeah, I really got out a lot out of that.
Our guests and what he had to say.
Sigas did a great job.
You know, even those of us in more urban areas, you know, hearing about all these things.
It's because of this show, actually, that we started some gardening this last couple of years ago.
I'll never forget the first year we had our gardening show.
And it was then that we got some pots out there and we grow a few things, lettuce and a few things every year.
And we got a few things, not on the scale, what Sigas describes, but I think if everybody hears these messages, we've had a number of these prepping shows and try to take some ideas and act on one thing.
At least take one thing and do something with it.
That's right.
Even if you spend more money on your silly lettuce than you would have if you went to the grocery store, it's worth it.
You learn, you get your fingers dirty, the kids have fun.
Exactly.
I want to address the meme of like your garden vegetables being expensive compared to store-bought vegetables.
That's really only true like the first time around.
Because if you collect all of your seeds and you take care of everything, then like now you just have infinite food forever.
Like you could just keep collecting seeds.
You can put them in little envelopes and stick them in a dark, cool, dry spot for years.
Right.
And then, and then next year you plant them again.
And then you just take the seeds from next year's harvest and then, you know, continue.
So it's like, okay, sure.
You might have spent a couple hundred bucks on getting your garden all put up or maybe even a couple thousand dollars getting here, but now it's like you just never have to buy another jalapeno ever.
The curtains are falling and you'd be a fool to not at least be practicing right now.
It's good to have you back, Smasher.
You're like our board, Jack.
You, you are, I don't know, you're quiet for a lot of the show and then you go on these stem winders that are quite pleasing.
Dude, I don't have to.
I was at Walmart, which I know, like meme error, like going to Walmart, I know, but I was at Walmart and there was no pasta, no pasta, except for lasagna.
There was lasagna, which I think is funny that lasagna is such a pain in the ass.
Even when food supply is low, people aren't buying it.
Lasagna master race.
We're going to be cutting it up.
I couldn't believe it.
I was like, how is there no pasta at Walmart?
That's insane to me.
A lot of this stuff is me.
I mean, I've been to Walmarts and Food Lions and Costco's and I haven't seen anything in multiple states too.
Well, it's creeping in.
What I've seen is that there is, it's never, it's not consistent.
New.
Something different is missing.
For sure.
Yes.
Well, this, this started in COVID, like during COVID times is when this started.
Specifically at like my Walmart and John Eagle and Sam's Club and stuff.
John Eagle, for those not in the area, is just a grocery store.
So my grocery, the grocery stores that we go to have all been missing stuff since COVID started.
And it's repeated, you know, sometimes it's beef, sometimes it's chicken, sometimes it's this, sometimes it's that.
It's repeated, but it's like, it's not consistent in any repetition.
You know, there's, there's no pattern to it, but things have repeatedly been missing.
But there's always something.
There is always something that is missing at this point.
Sometimes it's more than one thing, but there's always at least one like category of food that's missing that normally isn't.
And like that's hello, Mick.
It's right.
Like that's that, like, it's shocking.
I mean, it's not really shocking when like you're me, and I'm like, this is, you know, we all see the writing on the wall here.
Uh, so, like, the fact that Walmart didn't have any pasta, it was like thunderstriking, but I wasn't quite surprised either.
Yep, yeah, no, and I have this perennial need to counter signal doomsday saying as much as I believe in it too.
It's like, relax, like somehow the system is going to creep along.
It's, it's some middle ground between collapsitarianism and all is well here, which has served me pretty well to date.
Well, and I think a lot of people like they get into collapsitarianism and like they stop having fun and like enjoying things.
And it's like, you should still have fun and enjoy things.
Well, you gotta have in the oh god, Miller Light.
I used to hate it.
I'm back on the light train.
It's late.
Dude, it gives me heartburn.
So I don't shotgun anymore.
I still shotgun.
Mick Ultra is the best beer to shotgun.
Hands down.
Rollo's never shotgun a beer in his life.
Rollo, thank you, my friend.
PBR.
And not because I was ever a hipster.
No, no.
Did you even go to college?
Have you ever done a?
Yeah.
I went to college.
I went to art school.
Oh.
Plenty of keg stands?
I don't know.
Probably not.
I did a keg stand at an NJ.
What were parties like at art school?
Was it was everyone standing around like the meme dude in the corner?
Do you think I got invited to parties?
Are you kidding me?
No, everybody at a party in art school is either high on acid, high on shrooms, high ones.
No, dude, they were high on themselves.
No, they were high on themselves.
They were the most pretentious, self-absorbed, bizarre people I've ever met.
Well, that, I mean, that's just always true.
Check out specifically at the parties, well, just have extra, or they like are listening to some like weird nihilistic poetry and overdosing on heroin.
It's most likely that Rolo doing stand-up in the corner while a trip down on acid rapper is selling mixtapes to people who don't exist.
Purple-haired artists painting on the walls.
I started watching stand-up again.
Only the one guy, but he's funny.
All right.
It's my one guilty pleasure.
Let's wrap this before Sam gets fired tomorrow for showing us.
All right, Full House 124 was recorded on a peeper-filled March 31st.
I had the window open so that we could get a little bit of local flavor, a little local content in the background noise, but then it got a little chilly and Softy Coach closed the window.
It's getting drafty in here.
It is now April Fool's Day, April 1st, 2022.
Follow us on Telegram.
I'm Gab.
And more importantly, drop us an email at a fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
Or if you happen to like what you heard this show, especially in the second half, givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
So to all of our listeners out there, fathers, mothers, eligible bros and eligible babes, get out there, get your hands dirty, do something this spring.
The spring to harden yourselves, learn some stuff, have some fun in preparation for the harder times to come.
And to take us out this week, I was shopping while someone was speaking.
I won't say who.
And we have plenty of good R guy content in the mix, but we're going with the gut here.
This is Wake Up by well, it's Marcus Schultz.
We were due for a banger.
We love you, fam.
We will talk to you next week with all fresh content.