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July 9, 2022 - Full Haus
02:20:09
Guns, Germs, & Gays

You'll just have to listen to this one to understand. Break: "Some Heads are Gonna Roll" by Judas Priest Close: "The Sentinel" by Judas Priest (DJ Rolo) "The Gift" documentary "In a Eugenics Court" by Lothrop Stoddard "A New Nobility of Blood and Soil" by Richard W. Darre Support 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 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!

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Time Text
How we burned in the prison camps later, thinking, what would things have been like if every police operative, when he went out at night to make an arrest, had been uncertain whether he would return alive.
If during periods of mass arrests, people had not simply sat there in their lairs, paling with terror at every bang of the downstairs door and at every step on the staircase, but had understood they had nothing to lose.
and had boldly set up in the downstairs hall an ambush of half a dozen people with axes, hammers, pokers, or whatever was at hand.
The organs would very quickly have suffered a shortage of officers.
And notwithstanding all of Stalin's thirst, the cursed machine would have ground to a halt.
That was the infamous ex-post facto Fed poster Alexander Solzhenitsyn lamenting about what could have been from a beaten down but still great people living under total system tyranny.
Now, we're not quite at red terror levels yet here, fam, so don't get any crazy ideas, but you might want to sock that quote away in the back of your mind, depending on how things go here.
mr producer let's go
welcome everyone to full house episode 133 the world's most comradely show for white fathers aspiring ones and the whole bio fam And I am your usually good-natured host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours.
And no, there's no connection between that quote necessarily and the content of our show tonight, but I did get to thinking about that after shootings across the country on the 4th of July, Bloody Monday, perhaps we'll call it.
And of course, just the sight of the system hauling formerly very senior important people out of their houses in their underwear.
That happened today.
One of Trump's lawyers, his former trade head, Peter Navarro, getting shackled and arrested at the airport.
So, you know, those red guards are out there and sort of pushing the limits of what they can get away with.
Anyway, just some thoughts at the top there.
All right.
Before we meet the birth panel this week, though, big thanks to John, the Greek, and Kat, an anonymous donor for their kind support of the show this week.
If you'd like to be like these fine folks, and you should, please consider checking us out at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab, and we would be most appreciative.
And all right, let's get cracking.
First up, a significant entry on my racist bucket list was checked off in full force this past week as I got the honor to not just listen to Sam strum the guitar around a campfire with the family, but sing along too.
Sammy Baby, in all seriousness, that was very, very nice memory for all time.
Well, thank you.
Yeah, it was certainly a treat to be together.
And I'm serious when I say that.
It's uplifted me in the intervening days tremendously.
And it sure says something for the IRL meetups with people.
And it was just special just to all be together.
I'll leave it at that.
And you're a good player, too, even in the dark.
It crossed my mind.
I was like, he can't see those strings.
He's just playing from memory.
Certain things get a little tricky in the twilight.
But yeah, it was fun to play.
And especially the sing-alongs.
I like to get people singing along.
And especially that last song, I wondered if people would just pick it right up.
I didn't announce what the song was.
I just started it, if you'll remember, and everybody started joining in.
So that was exciting with the Manor Bun song there.
Absolutely.
But boy, what audio.
Yeah, we had a little full house plus special friends rendezvous out in nature this past weekend.
It was delightful.
But like you say, what a weekend.
Oh my God.
I mean, in the big cities, take Chicago, for example.
I mean, there's like over 60 people shot at 20-something people dead.
And it's like, yeah, it's like they're giving out the sports scores, you know, 60, 60 shot, 20 dead.
And then, of course, the July 4th event in a suburb of Chicago was quite a horrific thing.
And it was coming through my mind as the pictures of that guy came out.
You know, people were observing right away in the comments about physiognomy, physiognomy being real.
And you look at a guy like that, and if you open it a little wider and just thinking about society in general, and you see all the freaks and rejects and defective, deformed people in this society, I think about this too.
We might be thinking about some theoretical individual out there, somebody not too different from any of ourselves who maybe just needs a little bit of a push in the right direction, who needs a little bit better information to come around to a more enlightened way of thinking and living and all that.
But I think that while there may be some people like that, I think that the bulk of what you're dealing with are these irredeemable, defective rejects.
You know what I'm saying?
When you see the neckbeard guys with the noodle arms and these weirdo guys with the two-tone, you know, the pink and lime green hair and the dead eyes.
Yeah, the underformed facial features or the whatever, all the different, there's no saving these people.
These people go right into the oven.
Yeah.
When somebody like Cremo shows up to a vetting, you suddenly discover you have to go to the bathroom and you run out the back door.
Yeah.
On one hand, I mean, when I looked at that clearly disturbed, sick creature, I don't know, like I felt pity for his parents or maybe I felt hatred for them because it looked partially genetic too.
It didn't look entirely like he was a healthy boy one day and just turned into a scrimmage.
No, I don't know.
Yeah, we might.
No, and that's, I suppose that's what the point I'm even trying to make is we think that somehow we can point people in the right direction and things like that.
People like this, no.
I don't, you know, when you just imagine any picture you've seen of an antifa or something like that or these feminists or whatever, almost none of them are salvageable.
Is this becoming an argument in favor of abortion?
Oh, boy.
Well, I think it's an argument in favor of the lake of fire where all these people are going to get thrown into.
A two-state solution.
How about it?
Yeah.
The freaks can go to liberal blue America.
A more pro-life, uh, pro-sanity, uh, anti-violence uh option.
All right, we'll get into more of that stuff.
All right, we're all eager to go.
Oh, yeah, and the other thing we were going to record a show when we were sitting or you know, when we were all hanging out and partying or whatever, but it was just like it would have stopped the fun and it would have been like focusing on us.
So, in all sincerity, I was like, Well, we can record a show or we can listen to Sam play the guitar and everybody can sing along.
And we went with the latter.
So, apologies, fam.
I didn't, you know, sometimes you just can't make Full House the center of the universe, much as it may be.
Anyway, all right, moving on.
Next up, he's still got his monkey strength after all these years.
As I had the non-gay pleasure of witnessing him transfer a deadlift into an overhead press at the same gathering, and I think I got the nomenclature right there, Smasher.
You still got it, brother.
I do still got it.
Thank you.
I have uh, I don't know, casual strength, you know, just strong strength.
Some might call it retard strength.
Monkey, I like monkey strength, but you know, my wife was like, Yeah, good job, baby.
You have retard strength.
Everybody's got to be good at something, Smasher.
I, uh, but yeah, no, it was great.
I love, you know, if I had a group of guys that I could just like work out shirtless with every day for like four hours, I'd be the strongest man in the world.
Yeah, it was great.
Yeah, you talked about there, yeah.
And the kids, it seemed like the kids were easier to manage uh in the sort of uh campground environment as opposed to uh like house.
I don't know, but yeah, no, for sure.
Maybe I was just too distracted anyway.
I uh, whenever I played the guitar and I yelled for uh a beer, I guess everybody there were like six people that were all up, and every single one of them brought me a beer.
And so, I only did like what three or four songs, and I slammed all of those beers during the performance.
And I was pretty good whenever I sat down, and when I stood up, I was just toasted.
It's a good job, yeah.
Well, yeah, I want to give Sam the musical kudos and you the uh the lifting kudos.
Yep, and then I um I didn't get a chance to ask you.
Oh, go ahead, sir.
Yeah, oh no, I was just gonna say, I am mediocre compared to Sam, so of course you get the kudos.
Oh, come on, sincerely impressed.
That's all right.
All right, enough fluffing, you fellas.
Uh, I meant to ask about uh, Akron.
You got in the uh, you got behind the megaphone again and did a little action out there.
I know most people saw it and know the deal.
A couple naysayers, oh, we're the naysayers going, oh, yeah, more crying victim or whatever.
And they uh tried to poke fun of the uh little NJP flyers that look like a fan-made, but anything you want to share from that, or um, yeah, there's been a lot of good NJP news by what do you know, what do you know?
You go out to hit the streets and make a scene, and then people are talking about you.
Well done, yeah, it's uh that's something that we're trying to do like as often as we can.
I mean, these types of like anti-light hate crimes happen at an extremely alarming rate, so we can't be everywhere all the time, but that's also why we need more people.
Because imagine if there were 30 people in every city every weekend doing this, you know, that'd be incredible.
They wouldn't be able to say no, they wouldn't be able to ignore us, and that's kind of the whole point.
You know, we're the ones that are willing to get out there, and it wouldn't matter if just the seven of us were the only ones available.
Like, we'd we'd go out there and we'd do it, um, but we're not, and our numbers are gonna continue to grow because of things like this because people see this And specifically like Normies, they see this and they see these crimes happening and they're scared.
They know that if they're like, oh, this disgusting monkey shot the white kid that, you know, went to prom with my daughter or something, you know, that they're going to get in trouble.
But they know, they know.
And we know that they know because we always get feedback from local communities after we do this.
We got tons and tons of emails from people in Waukesha after we were out there.
Even with the Rittenhouse thing, we got a bunch of emails from the local community up there.
And we didn't even go there for anything for Rittenhouse.
We just wrote an article and it got shared around up there.
So people are emboldened by it.
Good people can see that you're not just being opportunistic and just trying to draw attention to yourself.
It's something that needs to be done and hasn't been done for decades.
How much money have we made off of any of these things?
Zero dollars.
We've not made any money off of this.
It's not like we're, what are those blacks that do this?
Whatever.
I can't remember.
The one Reverend Jesse Jackson.
Jesse Jackson.
Like, how much money do you think?
Yeah.
How much money did Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton get paid to go do this?
Or, oh, you want us to come make a scene for like your son that was shot by the police?
Well, when the city gives you that $10 million payout, we want three.
Yep.
And it's never shamed.
And these guys are paid to do that.
Right.
Yep.
And they're never shamed for being opportunistic in the face of tragedy.
They're honoring the dead, even when they're obviously violent criminals.
Right.
Well, and it's like we were invited out to Fargo.
It's not, we didn't even call and say like, hey, we're going to do this.
Like we, you know what I mean?
So like people see that and they want us to be there.
I mean, I'm sure Mr. Paulson would rather not have to do anything at all because he'd rather just have no niggers and his daughter be alive.
But, you know.
Amen.
Well, good job.
So yeah, that's great.
And it was exciting to get on the microphone.
My big problem is that like I start to get angry.
Either, well, two things happen.
Either all the points that I'm going to make get made by somebody else or I get myself all worked up and angry and then I'm just like, I can't say anything.
Like whatever.
But that's why I, both times I got up there on the microphone.
It was relatively short.
And then at the end, though, I was just bullying cops.
So it was okay.
Hell yeah.
I saw some good footage from Sam Melia and his patriotic alternative comrades up there in England, Yorkshire, Lancashire, whatever the hell it was, getting out in the streets and making a ruckus.
I'd love to see it.
My little.
Yeah, I know.
It's impressive stuff.
I like the meme he shared of, I forget the movie, but Sam is the big oaf and Mark Collett is the little guy on his shoulders.
I don't know what that's from.
Oh, it was master blaster.
Nice humility for Sam to do that.
And my little, my Picayune minuscule contribution to pushing back, I wasn't going to talk about this.
I just remembered it.
But I got an invitation to a local thing from a civic slash religious group recently.
I couldn't go, but the flyer in this part of the country had like a clearly either Indian or Middle Eastern family.
Couldn't tell.
Some sort of vague, you know, smiling Asian thing.
I said, hey, I can't make it.
You know, thanks very much for the invite.
By the way, did you ever think about making your flyers more representative of this area and not bought into the anti-white diversity cult?
Now, I was feeling my oats.
I thought, oh boy, you're going to get in trouble there, coach, out and yourself.
And the nice person said, you know what?
That's a really good point.
I didn't even think about it.
It's a stock photo.
I'll try better next time.
So I said, all right, hey, gave a little bit of permission and got a positive response.
So that was one of those times where I second-guess myself.
I know, believe me, it's like a tiny little thing, but I did stop for a second.
I was like, is it worth it for me to say something?
Screw it.
I'm saying something.
And I was glad I did.
One thing I would say, because that's a question that I have to ask myself all the time, you know, is it worth, is this interaction worth, you know, pushing the envelope with?
Yeah.
And, you know, I mean, there's a lot of things to balance.
Like, you know, is this a business contact?
Is this somebody I'm ever going to see again?
Is this a friend of a friend?
Does that friend know about my politics?
Like, what am I opening, you know?
But if it's like that type of thing where it's kind of like a single serving person, good chance you never talk to this person again.
Like, absolutely just do it.
Yeah.
And phrase it carefully, right?
No need to fly off the handle.
Cool, calm, and collected, as my mama used to say, not in the context of organized racism, but good life lesson.
I had a National Guard recruiter contact me a couple weeks ago.
And he was just chatting me up and whatever because I was going to join the National Guard whenever I got out of active.
But that fell through because the recruiter was just like a total POS.
But so he was just like, yeah, is there any chance that you'd still be interested or, you know, interested in again or whatever?
And I was like, I just, you know, I don't think that would be good for your career or for mine.
And he was like, what do you mean?
And I was like, well, the army doesn't want me back.
And he's like, I mean, there's nothing here, you know, in your record that says that you're barred from service or anything like that.
I was like, I'm a white nationalist.
And he was like, oh, okay.
I appreciate you being upfront about it.
There you go.
Yeah, I know, right?
That would be when the army's recruitment gets so bad.
I mean, right now, of course, they're dipping into the fatties and the drug users and the criminals.
You know, things are really bad when they start accepting McKevin's.
They'll get so desperate, they'll just start trying to recruit white people.
Yeah.
Is that horseshoe theory or coming full circle?
I don't know.
I uh, right.
Hey, look how, look how desperate Ukraine was.
They're like, all right, we'll take the Nazis.
Yeah.
When I was in, they put in a bunch of really bad tattoo restrictions, and we all had to get, I mean, anybody with tattoos had to get like butt-ass naked and photos taken of you and stuff.
And I'm sure that's probably on some like FBI agent's hard drive now or something.
But they documented all these things and it was like such a big deal.
And I think it was the sergeant major of the army at the time.
He was like real worried about it.
I can't remember.
It was stupid.
But they just relaxed all of that to the point now where it's like, they're even letting neck tattoos back in the army and stuff.
And it's like, damn, dude, y'all really can't get anybody if you are if like, because imagine the amount of people in the country that have neck tattoos.
It can't be very many.
It's probably ever ever increasing, ever increasing number.
But overall, like there's not that many people.
Most people don't have neck tattoos.
Yeah.
And yet, but most people I see don't don't have neck tattoos.
And the army's like, you got a neck tattoo?
Come on in, baby.
Like there's so they're hurting so badly that they're like, probably one to two percent of the population.
Yeah, we feel like we need to change everything that we've been doing for the last 30 years for you.
Travis Barker is going to be doing the tomb of the unknown soldier at this rate.
Yeah.
I don't know if it's a real, I don't know if it's a spoof account or if it's an actual recruiter who's doing like a shitlord thing, but some great posts for, you know, U.S. Army recruiting.
Clearly not the official one.
It was like we drove by a young fit man spinning a sign for a car wash, offered him 50K to sign up and a job for life, and he told us to F off.
Sorry, the wages of wokedom.
All right.
Before he quits the show again, finally, he is now my youngest son's new best friend, dethroning yours truly.
That's right.
Despite my deep trepidation at meeting our pal Rolo for the first time, he was in quite, in fact, quite the scholar and the gentleman.
And yes, my kids loved him too.
And in fact, one of the kids who was there at the party thought that it was Rolo's birthday party.
I guess he was such a guest of honor.
So welcome back, buddy.
All true.
Well, I just play a retard on the internet to give you someone to punch down on.
Yep.
And my youngest wanted to get on the plane with you as well.
So, well, you know, you know, you're good.
Yeah, next, next time you take a around the world trip with Rolo.
But that's a good sign.
There you go, ladies.
The kids even love Rolo.
No homo.
He is, in fact, he's cut.
He's cut.
We'll say that, but not in like a sickly concentration camp way.
And I am faster than him.
Rolo was gassed.
We went out and did a little 5K and he was huffing and puffing despite my dad bought.
So just cardio.
I'm built for aesthetics.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So any thoughts about our little get together, Rolo, or sick of it and putting it in the rearview mirror?
No, no, I couldn't imagine a better possible string of days.
It was great meeting everybody, everyone here, people that aren't here.
The kids were fun.
The weather was nice.
The drinks did not get as invasive as I was fearing.
Everyone was very responsible.
He's like, good times had for all.
Yeah, nobody got bombed.
We almost exploded all the fireworks and we exploded one section of them, like that video of the family out of the cul-de-sac having to run for their lives, but it wasn't that bad.
I don't know.
I got pretty bombed on Saturday, but I'm very good.
But you were responsible about it.
Yeah.
I don't think I can, I think I can say nobody in white nationalism, since I've been involved, has seen me like retard vomiting can't function.
Despite my best efforts, is that a challenge?
Write into the show if you have.
It is.
With proof.
No, I'm sure.
It's there next to proof of Bigfoot.
No, it's not.
It's not a challenge to prove.
It's a challenge to make it happen.
Yeah.
Anyway, Rolo, I don't want to get what.
Yeah, we're already.
Oh, God.
We're turning into the chatty Kathys at the top here.
That's what happens when we don't do shows.
No, I know.
Well, we just, we were spending time together.
What the hell are we running or flapping our gums about here?
But it was wonderful seeing you, gentlemen.
First time we had, was it the first time we had Bunta?
Yeah, I think it was the first time we had the birth panel plus producer all at the same event, even though we didn't do a show.
Anyway, I did get to thinking, you know, whoa, you know, we were having this nice, safe, normal event where you could not think about the state of the world.
In contrast to, in particular for me, seeing that there was a shooting at the Philly fireworks extravaganza over the art museum there, the Rocky Steps and the JFK Boulevard, you know, the footage of, because, and I literally remember my parents taking me there.
a couple times at least and thinking how big and scary the city was, but also how cool and exciting it was.
So seeing family that could have could have been me or it could have been my kids if I had stayed in that area and then we're off, you know, feeling pretty good and comfortable and confident.
I certainly didn't gloat like, haha, we didn't go to a big city because I did go see fireworks somewhere else, you know, in the past two weeks and that could have gotten shot up.
But it got me thinking, I mean, from Cremo the freak to they still haven't caught who shot in Philly.
Apparently it was 40 caliber and the cops, it like hit one cop in the in the cap and didn't hurt him.
So I don't know if that was perhaps gunfire that went off from a mile away and landed there by accident or inadvertently, or if that really was like some long-range cop killer shooter.
And then of course they had two illegals or at least one illegal that they busted trying to or planning to shoot up something in Richmond, Virginia.
And they were not sympathetic characters.
Yeah.
Coach, did you see the video from Philadelphia?
It looked like something out of a Cecil B. DeMille movie.
I'm thinking like, you know, Spartacus or something, you know, when you see just waves of people pouring over the features of the coming down the terrace or whatever it is.
It was it was incredible.
I can only imagine being there how terrifying that would be to just be caught in this crush of people.
I guess that's where some people get hurt, you know, just in that part of it.
Yeah.
But yeah, this is just like normal America now.
And I didn't see too many of our guys claiming that these were all glow up things.
Maybe I wasn't paying attention or tuning them out, but I think now that, you know, I don't know if the Pandora's box is open and like freaks are inspiring more freaks or we just have more freaks and it's going to, we're going to have waxing and waning of insane gunplay at these sort of mass public events.
Well, there's no cohesion of having a common people in this country.
You know, that's the way they want it.
It's all diversity.
So nobody feels that they have a stake in anything.
Yeah.
And McNabb easier for this type of thing to happen.
McNabb nailed it too.
He was like, are you kidding me?
This country breeds crazy.
In a sense, that's a paraphrase.
I forget exactly, but he was like, not every time a wacko pops off is he an MK Ultra victim or a glow op.
We've got tons of loonies and tons of guns.
This is going to happen, right?
I mean, let's be honest.
And it got me thinking about, obviously, we are all pro-gun ownership, gun rights, and certainly anti-confiscation and anti-moor gun control and red flag laws and stuff like that.
But if in a crazy, doped up, racially mixed together, medicated, trash culture, transcontinental train wreck with a ton of guns from little baby revolvers to heavy duty stuff.
What actually is common sense gun control?
I guess in this country, let's not say in the ethnostate.
What are the reasonable restrictions?
I'll go to Smasher first.
He's probably more about this stuff than the rest of us.
I'll leave it at that rather than my long wind-ups.
If you were dictator tomorrow, what are your gun laws?
None.
For real.
So in the ethno-state, right, we achieve white utopia.
We could, in theory, place certain restrictions based on criminal status, things like mental health, things like that, right?
Because we would live in a country with people that actually can be ruled and follow and understand the reasonings for enforcement and stuff like that.
A relatively safe place, right?
We could have actual good gun training and everybody would be familiar and it would be, you know, great.
America, as it stands today, we don't have that.
What we do have is criminal niggers that will not ever listen to the authorities.
Most of them are felons anyways, or they have domestic violence records, even if they don't have a felony, but they have like misdemeanor domestic assault or something, which will still disqualify you from owning a firearm.
They still get guns, whether they have their girlfriends buy them or their homies buy them or their mama buy them or they buy them, they buy illegal firearms from a dealer or cops give the feds give it to them or whatever.
Like they're getting guns, right?
Like Democrat cities have all these shootings and Democrat cities are filled with felonious niggers.
So I want less and the strongest gun control.
So I want less gun control in America because I feel like it's my right to own a crew-served, fully automatic, you know, heavier caliber firearm to protect my house from the coming dark hordes.
Now, well, your question that you asked, Coach, it's just like almost a ridiculous question because how do we maintain some kind of steady state in this shithole of diversity?
You know, there's no keeping this safe.
There's no amount of laws that will make this better.
I can't take my family to a Fourth of July parade without some weird, ironic, maybe tranny or black or whatever, antifa shooting up regular good Americans.
So, no, like we need less gun control because those people are going to get guns no matter what.
Yeah, we got to make it so that we can get them too.
That's it.
It's kind of, you know, it is kind of like a basic 2A style argument, but gun control actually only hurts gun owners, like legal gun owners, right?
Right.
The one thing that they do, they always talk about like, oh, we need to ban AR-15s and high-capacity magazines and this, that, the other.
It's something like 88% of all gun crime is committed with handguns.
So, you know, what's the deal with that?
Well, also, again, who cares what the percentage breakdown is on what like guns don't do crime, you know, and that's one thing that every, that's a kind of a classic argument of like guns don't do crime.
It's like, yeah, well, niggers do crime.
So we don't need common sense gun control.
We need common sense Negro control.
That's something that I've been saying for a long time.
It's like, I want, I want less gun restrictions.
I want more restrictions on blacks.
Guns don't kill people.
Black people kill people.
Right.
No, I was just thinking like they're like, if somebody like Cremo walked into a gun store, I mean, certainly I'm pretty sure a gun owner or a gun seller can just be like, F off, I'm not selling to you.
But again, yeah, it's like who could trust the system with so many Jewish psychologists to like evaluate somebody and be like, he's clearly messed up.
And you, Mr. Finstock, are also equally messed up.
You can't own them either.
But I mean, do you really want like, I guess, gun shops in the hood selling to felonious blacks?
I mean, right?
I mean, you really want to make it easier for felons to get they have all those guns already.
They already have military integrated guns that we can't get.
All right.
I'm not jaded enough.
Yeah.
All right.
You guys are smacking some sense into me.
I'm still thinking within the system.
And like most of them.
I would, I don't have the stats on it, but I'd wager that most of the guns that blacks get are acquired illegally.
Yeah.
So it literally doesn't matter.
They're getting them anyways.
And I know that's like the argument that people use for weed or for like drugs.
The difference is that like blacks, for the most part, aren't like smoking weed and killing people.
They're like doing eight balls and then killing people.
Right.
All right.
And blacks are going to attack you with or without guns.
I'd rather have the gun than not.
No age limits.
I mean, I always thought that like whatever the age you could get enlisted into the army was the age that you should become fully capable to vote, drink, you know, do all of the adult things.
Yeah.
Own a gun.
But, you know, I don't think little kids going into a gun store is kind of ridiculous.
Right.
Like a 14-year-old shouldn't be able to like walk in and purchase a firearm.
Oh, gotcha.
You are anti-Second Amendment smasher.
There you do believe in some reasonable guns.
No, they should like be given almost unlimited access to them.
They just can't own them the same way that like they can't own a car because they don't have a driver's license.
There you go.
All right.
So that's what one thing we've got.
Now, Rolo was, in fact, an international gun trafficker for several decades from Columbia to Iran.
Oh, yeah.
We'll see if he has the stones to leave that on there.
Clearly, satire.
Rollo, any contribution here is just like, we live in the jungle.
Welcome to jungle.
Arm yourself for jungle.
I've been saying this for years.
I actually think most of the laws this country has are fine.
The problem is just laws are selectively enforced.
How often do we find out mass shooter?
Oh, he was known by the FBI.
Okay, that just seems like a warrant to investigate and possibly remove firearms from that home or all these blacks that they're removing literal gang database from certain cities because it's racist.
So there's certainly blacks that are known to the authorities.
So there's no reason that they cannot be investigated for having guns.
But, you know, some guy, he recites a Bible verse to some homosexuals, and then he gets a SWAT team kicking his door down and gets a shotgun pointed at his face.
That's the actual problem.
So any more laws is just going to affect good people.
Like you can have all the gun control in the world.
They're not going to apply it to blacks.
Gun control only exists to take rights away from white people.
That's the point of all restrictions that are put on us.
That's basically why all laws exist.
Well, we're the only people that follow laws.
That's my point.
Like all of the laws come from a time when the United States was white.
So, of course, like now that just exists to hurt us while everybody goes hog wild.
Yeah.
The only thing, yeah, the thing I was thinking about was criminal past too.
Like if somebody, you know, I would guess that the large majority of the American population, whatever that means, I know many of them are stupid and brainwashed by media, but you can't get a gun if you have felons.
Right, right, right.
But I'm, but I'm even thinking like, okay, so what if I like got convicted of a violent felony for like a fist fight outside of a bar one night, right?
Should I not be allowed to own a gun for the rest of my life?
No, that's, of course, ridiculous.
But here's the thing, though, I do want to interrupt you quickly on that.
A fair and impartial jury and a fair judge would be able to determine if that is felonious or not.
Like if you went on some kind of rampage and just picked the fight with everyone in the bar, like, okay, you probably shouldn't have access to weapons.
But if some guy who's drunk is a lot of people.
Rolo is anti-2-A too.
Just because you go around throwing meat hooks left and right doesn't mean you should not be able to own a gun for the rest of your life.
Maybe it means you shouldn't have access to alcohol.
You can own a gun as long as you're sober.
Sure.
A lot of factors.
But the problem is these little things like this hang people up where it's clearly not someone's fault, where the system, the Jewish system that we're under just finds a way to just destroy someone.
Like say some guy's car comes near a 752 pound coal-burning meth addict, and then now he gets 400 years in prison because he had a picture on his phone.
There is a wonderful section in Lothrop Stoddard's Into Darkness, which was his time in the Third Reich in the beginning sort of quote unquote easy years of World War II before the Eastern Front opened, where he talks about the, he goes into and observes the sterilization courts.
And that was to me, I'll have to go back and find if I can get the excerpt and post it as a link.
But it was an amazing example of a responsible, virtuous, quote unquote conservative system that was not just like, you are sterilized, you are sterilized left and right at the slightest offense, but it was all this like very caring doctors and like history and background making an informed judgment and then with an appeals process too.
So I said we were going to talk about the ethno-state, but for the for the rare berserkers who would be menaces to society, likely with a handgun.
Anyway, I don't want to go too deep into that, but it was just me thinking like what actually in a country gone mad makes the most sense.
And Smash are pretty persuasive on, no, we just need that.
They're going to get them anyway.
We need to be able to have whatever we want.
But at the same time, that means that public fireworks displays in major American cities are going to be a risky endeavor going forward at the same time.
They're already risky.
Yeah.
Risky year.
I would also, I don't remember a July 4th as bad as this past one in terms of like three major shooting threats or incidents, but.
Well, yeah, but they're just always going to get worse until we make it better.
The fireworks or the 4th of July parade is such a piece of Americana that, you know, even today it does feel like it was defiled.
Constitutionalist argument.
People will say that, you know, when it was written, they only had like muskets and that didn't include military weaponry.
Well, most of the weapons at the time that the military used were like personally owned weapons to include the cannons and even ships and stuff like that, privateers, etc.
Like, you know, the English Navy dominated the world with privateers, you know, so like, no, I should be, if the army can own a cannon, I can own a cannon.
I should be able to buy a 105 millimeter howitzer from a dude and some parking lot wherever I want in a private sale.
Worzel Roots or Worzel Root had a pretty good very short breakdown of what the 2A actually meant and like well-regulated militia to not mean like the government coming in and making sure if you owned a handgun, you were in a unit basically competent with a firearm and able to shoot.
If we're going to restrict the 2A to muskets that were the technology of the time, then that means the First Amendment only applies to like the printing press and handwritten notes with a quill and Christianity and straight people and black people don't have any rights at all.
Constitution.
Yeah, well, First Amendment does not apply like that.
Yep.
In the parental category.
And I know, I know all of our guys like to joke, oh, I sure wish I had some firearms, but you know, that trip out on the Lake Wobegon is just a big, take a metal detector out on that lake and it's just bing, bing, bing.
But if you do not know how to use one safely and effectively, and if you do not own one, Coach here posits that you are painfully vulnerable and doing yourself and your family a disservice.
I suspect like 90, 90% of our audience probably owns responsibly and legally, but I don't know, maybe more.
There's a lot of guys that just didn't have it and they put it off or whatever.
I never regret.
I did not grow up in a gun house.
I was in an office between two gun guys who would always, they would talk to each other about guns and go into the range and I said, finally, will you guys shut up and take me to the range this weekend?
Because I own nothing and I don't think I had ever fired anything either.
And nothing makes a gun guy more excited than a gun virgin.
So that was that.
And find yourself a gun guy if you're a virgin out there.
Yep.
For our felons listening, it is legal for you to own crossbows.
Hey, there you go.
They are not considered firearms.
Well, there's tasers and mace too.
There's something about getting a gun in your hand, especially for the first time that does kind of change your way of looking at the world, I think, to a certain extent.
And I'll just use as an example, if you remember the letter we got from that young lady who she's married and her husband and herself, they decided they were not going to have kids and all those types of things.
And they had all that type of friends, circle of friends.
And for some reason, she went to the gun range and shot a gun.
And with that, her life started to change.
And she posted about it on Facebook, how thrilling it was and how fun it was and how much she liked guns.
And then her friends started to turn on her.
And you remember that letter?
And then her husband started showing her the Holocaust videos, you know, debunking the Holocaust.
And then it led to full house, you know, and then she was writing us to say that she was that she was going to have children.
So you see that just putting that gun in your hand, whatever it is, that visceral feeling of cranking off some rounds, you know, just sort of makes you come alive.
There you go.
Forget Sam's advice to put baby in single woman's arms.
Just get a 45 magnum and put it in the In our hand, no, yeah, that used to be my go-to first date, very successful.
And then they would take it and point it at you and say, Get the hell out of this restaurant, and that's when I stopped dating Auntie.
Yeah, Rolo handing a woman a fire rhyme on their first date and then diving out of her bedroom window when she screams, get out of my bedroom.
It's insane.
Blazing saddles.
Yeah, three in the morning.
What are you doing here?
Very good.
All right, enough gun stuff out of us.
Sorry, I we kind of indulged in that, but uh, serious, yeah, serious times.
We got uh, we'll shift into friendlier gear here to close out the first half.
Uh, and we got a I just want a 240 Bravo, whatever that is.
Actually, I prefer the hotel, that's the one that we have on the Blackhawks.
Yeah, just everybody deserves a machine gun.
It's it's crazy too, how so many of our guys are like, you know, like, whatever you do, just like, don't talk about guns.
Like, not even like theoretically, it's like, nigga, are you crazy?
Like, come on, that's just, dude, people get so worked up about stuff.
It's like, dude, are you a criminal?
Are you going to talk about anything illegal?
No, okay, then shut up.
Like, bitch.
Yeah.
Yep.
Stop being a bitch.
Yeah.
After it's real, real quick, funny when I never told this story on the air, but when I, after I got doxed, this is just a personal story.
I'm not going to talk about the details or whatever.
But, you know, I was like looking out the front window and I see this strange car at the end of the lot.
And my cat is out there.
And this old, like, decrepit, disgusting looking woman gets out and puts something on the ground for my cat, which at the time I was thinking, is she trying to poison my damn cat?
Like, who does that?
Nobody just pulls up to a house, especially my house, and starts messing with the cat.
So I immediately go to activism mode and I march out of the front of the house.
And I happen to have my sidearm on my hip.
And I went out there.
I was like, get off my property.
What the hell are you doing to my cat?
She's like, your cat looks thirsty.
I was like, my cat's fine.
Get off my property.
And then she saw that I had the Glock on my hip and she literally like jumped back and then thought that she was in mortal danger.
She was like, oh my God, he's got a gun.
So I don't know if she was trying to trigger a scene or whatever.
And she snapped a photo of me.
And that photo was referenced, but strangely never appeared because I had the cat in my arm and with the sidearm on my hip.
I suspect it was a very sympathetic photo that they didn't want to put out.
But anyway, yeah, open carry or concealed carry legally.
And you could just trigger a cat lady one day or an anti-cat lady.
Who knows what the hell she was trying to do?
All right.
Regardless, we got a nice.
Oh, go ahead, Patrick.
Please.
Oh, I just want to take the opportunity to do one more bit of bullying.
I don't remember exactly what it was, but somebody was worried about like, oh, well, I don't want to do this because like I'm a Nazi, you know, what if this or that?
And it was something to do with the government, like some application or form or whatever.
I can't remember what it was.
That's not important.
But it really at the time triggered me.
And because this person isn't doxxed or anything like that.
And I was like, nigga, you're not doxed.
Like, what are you worried about?
And conversation went on and whatever.
And I was like, dude, so I own a suppressor legally, of course.
Filed for it after I had been doxxed.
The NJP was actually already founded at this time and came back, no problems.
So like, if I can purchase a suppressor with the sanctioning of the United States government, you can just go purchase a gun.
Like, if you don't have a gun and you have wanted one, but you're afraid because you're a Nazi on the internet or whatever on secure messaging apps or something, like stop being made, dude.
Just go do it.
Your family's going to get hurt if you don't.
If you joke about shooting someone, you will get kicked out.
Uh, and if you actually do or have illegal mods or whatever, you will be kicked out.
Uh, but by all do not do crimes, it's not worth it, Lily.
Yeah, I know, and don't drink and drive.
Uh, wow, former, uh, thank you, Rolo, former Japanese prime minister Abe feared dead after shooting in Japan.
That is incredible.
That uh, he collapsed near Yamato Sadajashi station in Nara City.
So, there you go.
Uh, I imagine they have extraordinarily strict gun control in Japan, but I never actually looked into it anyway.
Uh, Sheldon also got his federal sentencing today.
That's right, his first federal sentencing, yep, and he kneeled on a knee.
Whereas the Somali who shot that white woman trying to make a report to death, he's out already.
He served the sentence.
Well, didn't they like even apologize to him and basically have this like fit where they're like, Oh, we can't really like convict him?
I remember something about that.
Or there was another, there was another similar situation where some like bulbhead cop shot a white person, and they're like, Uh, you're just Muhammad from your I think his name shot a pregnant woman.
Yeah, I don't know, probably can't even find details because it probably just happens all the time, and you never hear about it.
Yeah, right, but that was that was a huge anarcho-tyranny/slash racial tyranny.
That, of course, Chauvin kneels on black man who was already dying from drug ingestion.
He gets he's gonna have it's 20, he's got 22 years, and I think the hate crimes was almost equivalent to his regular sentence, and he's gonna be allowed to do them consequently, you know, concurrently.
So, he may actually get out before he's dead.
But yeah, that uh bulb head that shot the white woman trying to flag the police down, he's out already.
Go figure.
Oh, and we got a question about the gays that we'll handle in the second half.
We won't get too explicit, it's not like it's uh not safe for work.
Second hour, uh, I just saw in Washington.
I had to add this because we're talking about guns and cops.
Uh, this uh somewhat famous gay cop in Washington, D.C., 20-year veteran of the force.
All cops are gay, which one?
Oh, no, no, no, I don't hate all cops, uh, but uh, so this gay cop was kind of like a local uh celebrity.
Uh, he was the liaison to the gay community, he worked a lot in DuPont Circle, the gayborhood, and it just, you know, he retired.
He did his 20-year-old so he's down in Florida visiting his mother, and he gets arrested for soliciting uh activities with a 16-year-old boy.
Uh, he denied it at the time, uh, so he got he got arrested.
This, you know, noble gay cop, right?
The archetypal gay cop.
Yeah, he was on something called, I had never even heard of this.
No jokes, please.
Growler with grinder is just not enough.
They've got a growler out there.
So look him up.
Brett Parson.
I think.
Did he wear the short shirts like in Reno 911?
The guy on there.
I'm sure he should have moke.
Maybe he was a Jew, too.
Yep.
20-year veteran Brett Parson, liaison officer to the LGBTQ community, soliciting you know what with a 16-year-old boy.
And at least that kid's parents' credits, they said, oh, no, we're pressing charges.
And remember, all cops are fags and all fags are pedophiles.
Yeah.
There's much, much hemming and hawing about what this means to the gay community.
Anyway, we got some time.
I mean, if you, if you're a cop, if you're a cop with any self-respect, anything beyond like, I exist to serve the system, like, if that's your ideology, or that that has to be your ideology if you're still a cop.
Like, you have been drug through the mud, forced to kneel for blacks, forced to arrest people for protesting gays and drag queen demons.
Imagine being the sniper cops protecting freaking drag queen story hour from protesters.
Like, I will.
You are gay.
You are gay.
You are like broke law enforcement officer, woke fag enforcement officer.
Like, we live in state-enforced homosexuality world that Sam Hyde so eloquently told us about in his TED Talk.
That's right.
Absolutely.
And then, of course, today, if you didn't miss it, fam, we won't do a thing on it.
But the blacks going around searching for the woman who was involved in Emmett Till could come.
Save her for the summer.
No, we can't talk about that.
We can talk about guns responsibly, but not blacks.
It reminded me, of course, of the Germans going after like 90-year-old, you know, Auschwitz secretaries, who, by the way, they did excellent work.
Very accurate notes.
No evidence or proof whatsoever of mass killings.
That's why they're going after them, right?
Because it's a guy.
You didn't write anything about cycling.
Yeah.
I know.
You didn't help us.
So here we go.
This is from Bryce.
And thank you for the content suggestion.
We people, sorry, helping your kids to make friends.
He said, basically, like, I feel like a lot of our kids are either isolated because of distance or they're, you know, all the kids are on screens or whatever.
It can be tough to make kids or you're in a super diverse neighborhood and you don't want to make friends for your kids with the kids that are around.
Give us some ideas.
Give us some tips.
I'll go first with the easy one while you guys think of more.
Well, tell you what, I won't go with the easy one.
I'll give you this one.
You can, obviously, kids engage in some activities, hopefully.
If you're listening to the show, you got young kids.
They're either doing piano, musical lessons, if they're nerds, or they're Chads and they're out there playing soccer or baseball or hockey or football or whatever.
Even if they're just say that Chads are fans.
Yes, they are.
Soccer players can be Chads too.
It's true.
All right.
We'll save that for the second half.
Anyway, long story short, talk to your kids.
They know who they like, whether it's on the sports team or at school.
And you can do a cold approach to the parents.
There's two ways.
One, I know it's kind of like uncomfortable to probably think about.
You'd be like, if a parent came up and was like, hey, maybe do a play date or whatever.
Maybe, maybe not that bad.
Just go up to them and be like, hey, I'm so-and-so's dad or so-and-so's mom.
It certainly looks like Jack and Jim get along and they like each other.
I'd be happy to host your son for a play date sometime, or if you'd be more comfortable with it, I could bring my son over to your house or my daughter, whatever the variable is.
And we've done that a couple times.
And we've actually been very sad at first because they'd be like, okay, I'll think about it.
Or here's another thing, sent one of our kids to school with a little note for the parent.
Like, hi, I am so-and-so's dad.
Uh, my son asked if we could do a play date.
Here's my number if you're interested.
Blah blah, blah.
Got no response for several weeks, or even several months, and then, oh lo and behold, out of the blue, the parents like, hey, i'm so sorry uh, took me a while to get back to you.
Yes, sounds lovely, let's do it and you can make it happen.
So just something to think about the direct parent involvement for the friendships that seem promising and worthwhile.
I'll stop there.
I just I want to get in real quick before Sam kicks over, because he has the most experience, probably.
Because I don't have a lot of experience with this.
Yeah, yeah.
Your kids don't need friends.
They've got their own family.
My advice as a parent of like young kids where it's not as big of a deal is like, just make sure you raise your kids right to not be weird retards.
And friends will come naturally.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, my children are the ones that are all adults already.
They were all close in age.
And like you implied there, they were friends with each other mostly.
And they were all very introverted as well, for whatever reason.
So it wasn't that that didn't come up.
I mean, they tended to be friends with each other.
And especially my sons are friends with each other.
My daughters are friends with each other.
But my youngest son, who has some years of separation from the other children, in a way, sort of like he was almost like an only child in a certain sense, because of the difference in age between himself and the next youngest.
But he is very gregarious.
So even from a young age, we would be just anywhere and he would strike up conversation or attempt to start joining in a game with other children or things like that.
The opposite of Rolo, basically.
Yeah, it's, I think, I think it's inborn in a little bit.
And also, it's this video game and screen time, like you say, that kind of aggravates things too.
Let's say somebody has a little bit of a, is not quite so gregarious.
If they're all wrapped up in online things and screen time and video games, that certainly hurts you.
But already, my son, even in the last couple of years, he's very savvy about who to talk to.
For instance, he's been in scouting these so many years.
He was in Boy Scouting for several years.
We quit that, of course, to join the troops of St. George.
But while he was in the scouts, he was able to detect boys that were maybe on the path that we're on, you know, with the racial outlook and things like that.
And there were a few boys that he made friends with that he remains friends with to this day.
And that is their point of commonality.
They talk about that.
This using the word nigger and all this stuff is very, very much the style of today's teenager.
And so I don't know if I'm answering the question, but I think a certain amount of the things are innate in the person's personality if they are gregarious.
And being around people, as you say, when you're tied up with screen time, you're not around real people.
Just being around other people, I think you go to the playground.
That's something we always would do.
We go to the park.
Kids are playing.
It's just sort of natural for kids to play with other kids.
And if you could be in some kind of group, even like when we were all together with people with families and things like that, all the kids, they play together.
That's very healthy.
And that was actually a very good example because look how many kids there were.
There was almost as many kids as adults, if not more.
Of all ages too.
And they all figure out a way.
Yep.
Yeah.
And that's really the best thing.
You know, that has always been one of my criticisms of public school, let's say, or any kind of organized school is you are sitting in a room of 30 other kids your age, or even if you go to recess, you're pretty much with people in your own grade and things.
It's just a very unnatural circumstance.
You know, when, when in life do you have to deal with 30 other people your age?
If you take our recent gathering just as an example, I mean, you got people of all ages, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s.
You know, so first the arranged friendships, then the arranged marriages.
Yep.
Right.
Yeah.
But I think that's, that's part of the key too is being acclimated to dealing with people of all different ages.
My, all of my kids have had that experience of they have to deal with adults.
They have to deal with children much younger than them.
They have to deal with other children older than them.
And that's something that the like a public school or even a private school experience, it kind of retards that that ability to be able to relate to people of different ages.
Yeah.
It depends on where you live, too.
I mean, the suburbs are, I think, still the king of youthful friendships, just by virtue of generally safer and easy to ride your bike over or walk over.
There's a greater likelihood in the city.
You're probably too wary of the kids going out to play.
And in the country, everybody's spread out, stuff like that.
But get your kids.
You have to get them involved in activities, not just going to school or homeschool.
Sports, music, whatever kids do these days.
I don't know.
We're big on sports here, of course.
And of course, as Sam referenced, getting involved in the cause means now we've got like tons of family events interspersed throughout the year, spring, summer, fall, where our people to get together either locally or from across the country.
And there's all sorts of kids and generally not a cell phone in sight.
What we just did last weekend, the only time was like when we popped on a movie in the little thing toward the end when everybody was like pooped and the kids were clearly like itching toward bed.
And then at an evergreen, I did see some cell phones when the weather was just too terrible outside for the kids to go out and run around.
It would have been perfect.
So anyway, hit us up if you need more help.
But yeah.
And so get your kids involved in stuff.
Get networked with the cause.
And when in doubt, don't be afraid to make a cold approach to a parent and just be like, hey, I know this might seem weird, but how about we get the kids together at play sometime?
I think you'd be surprised.
Even if you are doing races, your kid doesn't look like a retard.
Do you want to hang out?
And if you are homeschooling, you know, there's a lot of homeschooling co-ops where you get together with other homeschooling families to do something.
And there you'll see kids of all different ages and parents and everything.
And that's also a great thing to be involved in.
Yep, that too.
Homeschool co-ops for sure.
We have not done that yet.
All right, fam, let's take this puppy into the break.
And for our musical selection this week, big props to Rolo for introducing me to the wild world of Judas Priest.
Yes, it's true.
I thought that they only had a couple good songs, Breaking the Law.
And what was the other one?
You got another thing coming.
Regardless, Rolo popped on this puppy got the bride of the air.
Immediately blew my hair back.
And who knows?
Perhaps this is what the Shinzo Abe's assassin was blasting into his skull before he went and did the deed.
So, this is Some Heads Are Gonna Roll by Judas Priest.
We'll be right back.
But you will live in danger tonight.
When the enemy comes, he will never be heard.
He'll blow your mind and not say a word.
Sleep in the night.
There's a man with a power gotta keep it under control.
Some heads are gonna roll.
Some heads are gonna roll.
Powerman freaks for ruling the earth.
Somehow, animal fake nature.
Animals living for your life.
Spice your work to fits like a night.
Body with a power.
Gotta keep it under control.
Some heads are gonna roll.
Some heads are gonna roll.
You know what it's like when you take it for that dead.
Ten thousand life.
Gotta keep it on at the time.
Some heads are gonna roll.
Welcome back to Full House, episode 133, hour two Allah help me.
My family ordered Chinese takeout for dinner tonight.
It's the first time in perhaps a decade that we did that.
I know my wife was like, we have to do the Chinese restaurant place.
I was like, whatever.
That's fine by me.
I'm trying to think.
There's a Chinese restaurant that I pass, I think, on the way down there.
If I come a specific way, I always think, man, I should stop there.
Yeah.
It's like an hour away still.
No, no, we went with a closer one.
And she said it was classic hole in the wall joint with the old lady with the Chinese accent behind the counter.
And it was just okay.
You know, it wasn't gross.
It wasn't exactly fine cuisine, but oh man.
All things considered, you know, that's probably the best you're going to get out there.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
There's a Mexican restaurant out here that wasn't bad either.
And when we first moved here, I was like, I'm not patronizing those establishments.
You know, I didn't come out here for Mexican food and Chinese food.
And, you know, now it's been a couple of years.
It's like, it'll branch out just a little bit.
Anyway, I wanted to draw the audience.
I should have mentioned this in the first half.
But what do you know?
A full house interview was referenced, however, obliquely on the front page of The Gray Lady, the New York Times, or as Mark Levin calls it, the New York slime.
That's right.
So they did a little hit piece on, it was, I don't know if it was a hit piece or whatever.
It was sort of an attempt to, on our old pal, Charles Balsman.
And they referenced his comments on a white nationalist podcast, but of course, did not give me or the show any credit.
And it crossed my mind.
I was like, I know that like they do the bit where they don't mention the show so as not to give it more oxygen or more attention or more ears and stuff like that.
But I was like, I'm pretty sure given my background, they would have raised that to make the story more salacious.
So a little bit of a head scratcher.
I did post it on Telegram.
I actually just sent a little note to Charles.
I was like, did you see this?
Do you mind if I like, you know, draw attention to this and Charles DGAF?
He's like, yeah, fine.
Go ahead.
So anyway, as featured in the New York Times, non-specifically, you are listening to the second hour of Full House.
And we're going to go, oh, one other thing real quick before we do New White Life is that over the past week, I've had conversations with two separate listeners who I have never met IRL, but I was familiar with online more or less to give advice.
Now, I don't know how good my advice was or if it helped or anything like that, but I was happy to talk to those guys and they seem to appreciate it.
No details.
So, and especially in these crazy times, mood swings, depression, all the rest of it, woman issues.
If you need to talk to somebody, whether it's me for generic, bland advice or Sam for spicier specific advice or Smasher Arolo for their individual expertise, drop us a line.
Happy to do it.
In all sincerity, they said that it helped and I was happy to do it.
So in addition to all of our services that we provide through the show, through the website and other stuff, IRL that we don't talk about it, yeah, we'll do that as long as you're not a BSer and you better have a good reason to call.
All right.
That Sam is going to kick us off new white life this week of our lord, july 8th.
Yes well um, I was talking to uh, one of our guys.
Uh, I I mentioned to you guys off uh air who it was and you all know who he is.
Um, I won't mention who he is but uh, a good comrade and a fine, fine person.
Uh, he and his wife just welcomed a baby daughter into the world uh, very recently, and uh, I put a picture for you guys to see anyways, there in our private chat and uh, she's doing great and this, this makes a string of daughters for our friend and uh, I just couldn't be happier for for him and uh, warm congratulations to him.
But I know that there's uh, I probably not uh, it's not any of us, but maybe there's some guy out there who would say, after having that many daughters hey, where's my son already, you know, and uh, but you know don't, i'd say don't, be a fool, don't think like that.
Um, certainly you know, we've said it on this show before, our, our sons are our strength, you know, and our pride and our name, and uh, so we we, we take a lot of pride in that.
But the daughters.
The daughters can make you feel invincible and in a private moment they could even make you feel helpless.
So, you know, congratulations to our friend with his daughters and and it's it's um, my youngest daughter's birthday today, actually.
So it just got me thinking about all that and um oh, choked up thinking about your daughter.
I, I hear it.
I hear it.
It's a beautiful certainly.
So yeah, my daughter gave me a gigantic hug before I went down to the show.
She was like dad, I might not see you before bed because I, you know, go down a little bit early to do the show.
So she wanted to make sure she got that pre-bed hug even.
You know, it's a total routine.
Uh, heaven forbid.
So there's nothing that makes you feel better than that.
For sure, go ahead sorry yeah no, that's that's all I had on that, all right, all right, congratulations.
I know who you're talking about.
See the picture of the beautiful baby girl and it says baby bird on her shirt.
Very cute, all right, we got a couple of correspondents here.
Hello, full house crew.
I've been a long time listener and I had my first son late last year.
I didn't think to send in a new white life then, but my wife and I are now expecting number two already.
Another boy will be coming later this year, giving me two wonderful sons that are just 10 months apart.
For me, being a man in my early 20s, this has been an easy journey, and it's about to get a lot more difficult.
One thing I can say though, is that there's no way I would be here today if I hadn't found this movement.
People in this thing inspire me every day to have the confidence and motivation needed to achieve anything.
Thank you guys, for having a great show and for all the advice you have given me and our people.
Get vetted and get active.
Hail Full House.
Hail our people.
Hail victory.
And that was from Biggs.
I don't think that was Joe Biggs writing in from prison and lying about his name.
Different Biggs.
Anyway, congratulations.
Good work, buddy.
So young getting started so soon.
We should be getting advice on you.
Yeah.
Be like Biggs.
That's going to be a new tagline, presuming that Biggs is a good guy.
I'm sure he is.
All right.
I wanted to let you know that Trokar and Kat, who are, you know, they're inching up there in the full house couple ranks, are expecting a boy.
And Kat sent a very revealing and embarrassing in utero shot of their sons developing manhood.
So I deleted that off my phone right away.
You don't want to have that stuff on your phone.
But it looked like everything was in place.
And they were clearly very excited to be having a firstborn boy.
Congratulations, Trokar and Kat.
Got another one here that I may have skipped.
I went back through the inbox very dutifully today to see if I had missed anybody.
And this guy got a congratulations for conception for sure.
Went back to the show notes to make sure, but I don't know if he got a congratulations on the birth.
Anyway, Graftschaft Volk says, I want to let you guys know our first child arrived on Sunday.
She arrived in perfect health and a full head of hair.
Mother is recovering rapidly.
Looking into my daughter's eyes and seeing my own reflection was a surreal experience.
My ancestors lived through me as I will live through her.
Looking forward to watching her grow and our family as well.
Thanks for all you guys.
Thanks for all that you guys do.
Hail our folk.
Again, congratulations, Graftchaft Volk.
I hope I didn't double up on that one and like cheapen the congratulations from the first time, but I fear that I had missed that one.
Besat Kampf in the comment zone says, I delivered my daughter the other night very matter of factly here.
He's like, Alex McNabtite, homebirth is the way to go.
We were both incredibly happy that we went the natural route.
Make more white babies.
Very true.
Besatkampf.
I'm not sure.
He's besotted with struggle.
Whatever.
All right.
And one quick update from, we talked a little bit about adoption last show.
I shared some vague details from our correspondent who tried to adopt a white child and got foiled by the system and its inadequacies and inefficiencies toward the very end, chewed up a ton of time, heartbreak for the girl or for the boy, whichever it was, and for the couple.
Regardless, he wrote in and said, regarding interracial adoptions, you guys were a bit off.
Someone said something like, white kids aren't getting adopted and black kids get adopted by shitlib white couples.
Although the system is garbage, white kids do still fare the best.
Black kids take about twice as long to get adopted as white kids.
And you can also express a racial preference.
In fact, it's pretty normal.
Only about a quarter of adoptions are transracial, and those are 90% white parent, black kid.
So black parent, white adopted kid is a thing, but it's not really to the detriment of a lot of white kids.
White kids are in demand.
White girls are the quickest to be adopted.
And black boys are the slowest.
No surprise there.
People's preferences showing when life and at least several years of suffering are on the line.
So thank you for that.
And we don't have to do a huge gay thing here on the show.
Before you guys do a big gay thing every week, uh, but we got this we got this question from a listener, and I thought, uh, I don't know if we're the right ones to do it, uh, but I think we got the tools and we got the talent to help this guy out at least.
You know, what if we take five or ten minutes most here to talk about this?
So he says, Hey, guys, I've been looking around for some uh of our guy podcast diving deep into the arguments against all the gay stuff.
Obviously, it's pure evil, but I'd like to hear from folks with a little more sophisticated philosophical takes that go through it.
For example, what are the best counters to the libertarian who cares what they do in the privacy of their own bedroom?
So, take notes, first panel.
So, I don't, all right, so that there's number one: who cares what they do in the world?
What these faggots do certainly does affect society.
I mean, my God, do you not have a computer or a TV?
You know, yeah, that's obviously that we cannot tolerate this in our society.
The problem is they have a TV and the TV shows them that homos are virtuous and supermen, right?
Yeah, not, I mean, it shows the good, the bad, and the ugly, too.
I would argue from nature, you know, nature or God, whatever you want to believe in, has provided two sexes.
You know, if there were three necessary, there would be three.
If there was only one necessary, there'd be one.
As it is, there's two necessary.
We have men and we have women in this world.
That shows that that's the model that we're supposed to follow.
Yeah, and to the libertarian who cares what they do in the privacy of their own bedroom, that would possibly be a problem.
No, they don't keep it right.
So, I wrote a paper on this actually for college.
It was, but it was just what should be made illegal that's currently legal now.
And I was like, gay sex should be illegal.
I got an A. Very surprising.
Black teacher or professor, whatever.
There you go.
But basically, Lee Peterson School of Hello Play Gays, gays or HIV AIDS is a gay problem.
Also, a black gay.
Blacks are also overwhelmingly gay.
Right.
That's why it was called grids.
But the shit, it's been, I wrote this paper in 2016.
So I don't have the current stats.
Evidence is more copious.
Oh, I'm sure it's probably gotten worse, right?
But it was somewhere between like a third to half of all gays still have sex with women at least once a month on average.
I think was the question.
It was like, how often do you engage?
You know, and it was like, so many would say this often.
So many would say blacks are bisexual at such a high rate.
Right.
Right.
So you have these fags giving each other all of these crazy diseases and then going out and having sex with women.
And the women might not know any better that they're out there having sex with dudes and stuff, obviously.
And then, oh, I got AIDS from sleeping with, you know, this dude.
And I mean, to be honest, like, how do you think AIDS got to non-gays, right?
Gays being predators and just sleeping with whoever they can sleep with because they're sexual deviants, giving regular people AIDS.
And now regular people have AIDS.
Not yet.
He used to be shamed and cowed and in the closet.
And the second that those strictures went away, boom, especially with the male unbridled sexual id, not just unchained, but celebrated and faded and marching down the street.
It's basically like a license to jizz and whatever.
Sorry.
What do you care about?
Why do you care about what people do now in their own bed?
No, you keep it in.
Why do you care about what people do in their own bedroom?
Well, do you care if they're having sex with 13-year-olds in their bedroom?
That's their bedroom.
Yep.
Oh, okay.
So now that it's a 13-year-old, like it's not okay.
Well, guess what?
All homosexuals are grooming and raping 13-year-olds.
So you can't just let two 40-year-old dudes have sex in their bedroom because inevitably that's going to lead to two 40-year-old dudes raping 13-year-olds.
Oh, yeah.
This guy did say, real quick, Rolla, he did say that he's a bit of a grug.
I don't have the email.
I think he says, no offense to the questioner.
So we're just going to, I mean, you know, if you want deep philosophical takes, we could possibly provide that, but we're just arming you because the situations he's talking about here are ones where I feel like it's like, just get me, get me the soapbox, please, and get comfortable because it's going to take a while.
Go ahead, Rolla.
A few years back, there was some adult actress who had to do a scene with some guy who had done gay porn and she freaked out because she didn't want to get AIDS because AIDS is actually a serious thing among dudes who do gay porn.
And the fag community bullied her so bad, she killed herself because she remember this.
And she explicitly said, I do not want to get AIDS and there's a high risk of contracting AIDS from working with men who have done gay porn.
And then they just all night long, they just, Homo has just bullied her.
And then she just killed herself that night.
Like if you really want to arm yourself to argue against gay stuff, like watch the documentary called The Gift.
The gift.
Watch the gift.
Classic.
Brutal.
There's a brutal.
Well, that article.
The guy's like a monk now or something.
It's called, I think it's called Surviving Gay.
It was, it's an anti-gay article.
The dude's no longer gay.
He's just like celibate, but like literally his insides are falling out from getting, you know, just writing family show.
No, no, no, no.
Yeah, we cannot have these people in our society, period.
The gift.
Yep.
So he goes on and he says, when the topic comes up at church, how can you be the biggest brain argument winner on why the church shouldn't accept it in these churches?
They're voting and stuff like this.
I guess because sodomites go to hell.
Right.
Exactly.
It says it in the book that you claim is your entire, is the basis for your entire religion.
It's not too hard to just stand up and say, when did the church start celebrating sin?
It's not too hard to just stand up and say that.
Remember when like whole cities were burned to the ground because dudes were having gay sex?
Television Jerusalem, right?
No, Sodom and Gomorrah.
Yeah, the Bible is to certain Christian churches what the Constitution is to American government sometimes, tragically.
It's just another example of like, here it is in writing.
What else do you want?
Oh, you know, just a total watering down.
It's in the law, but it's also in the New Testament.
St. Paul listed off a whole bunch of things, effeminate, homosexual, rebellious to parents, this, that, the other thing.
All these things, which are worthy of death.
So these things are death penalty cases, every single one.
And the difference between standing up to the church and standing up to the U.S. government is they're not going to throw you in jail and solitary confinement, have you beaten by blacks from Africa for standing up to it?
Like you have power in your church because there are plenty of people that are uncomfortable with homosexuality in the church.
So actually standing up and saying something about it, you know, don't make a big scene.
That's crazy, but it go ahead, ask to read a sermon.
Well, you can make a scene.
I don't know how good your church doesn't get this thing right.
You're in the wrong church.
You are a disgusting sodomite lover and betraying Jesus Christ.
You can stand up and say like, you're just celebrating sin.
That's all you're doing.
You're not trying to be understanding of people.
And you could say, well, who am I to judge?
Well, you're following the book.
So you should be judging.
Yeah.
The fruits of the judge with righteous judgment.
Tell them people.
Perhaps the judge.
People aren't punished for their sins.
They're punished by their sins.
And that's why they have AIDS.
And perhaps the judge, judge not lest ye be judged.
Well, that means it's not on you to execute them, but you can actually have an unfavorable opinion and acknowledge that the book says this is a serious thing to not do.
And what's next?
Is it okay to murder?
Is it okay to lie?
Is it okay to try and get with your neighbor's wife?
Like, where do you draw the line?
Like, what, what sins are okay and which ones aren't okay?
If you get up and say this, people will be with you.
I'm comfortable making a judgment if the person that I'm judging were to judge me back and they're a disgusting faggot.
Like, I'm pretty comfortable with that.
Like, go ahead, judge me.
Get up in the altar and say, you know, I know you're gay.
You're defending gays.
That'll really go over the whole congregation.
He says, what are the we're all gay?
Yeah, we like talking about gays here on the show, apparently, too.
We're all hopped up.
What are specific pro-white takes on it?
How do we like blacks and Jews?
We believe in virtue.
We hate STDs and we want large nuclear white families.
Homosexuality is antithetical to that.
Do you want your daughter to be a box muncher?
Do you want your son to be a sodomite?
Of course not.
And this is creeped.
This has crept into conservatism, Republicanism, and Christianity.
I got an argument.
I don't know if I mentioned this ever on the show.
I got an argument with a close family member, not my immediate family, but extended about homosexuality.
And this kid was a Republican, a conservative, and a Catholic.
And I said, we are arguing about the sins and the evils of homosexuality.
And he was defending them.
And I said, good God, would you want your own son?
He was too young to have kids at the time to be straight or gay.
And he wouldn't even answer that.
That is the extent of the mind effing that even ostensible right-wing people have had to, you know, it's like they just took blacks.
Yeah, I know, right?
No, he said at the time, he said, yeah, well, you spent too much time on poll.
I was like, I'm not a poll guy.
But good God, it's the, it's the mission creep from blacks are the angels of our society in the 50s and the 60s to all these wonderful anti-war protesters.
And now, of course, the trannies are the apotheosis of this.
And, you know, after trannies, then it's, you know, kid worshipers.
Yeah.
Do you want your do you want your kid to get uh raped?
Like, oh, you don't.
Okay, well, then uh, let's not have homos.
Unfortunately, the FU Faggots website is down.
I heard that was a good resource for many years for hate text about that.
You know, I think a lot of a lot of maybe more normies or especially women, they they have some kind of different experience of dealing with homos, like they're just some kind of fruity, fruity, funny guy they know at work or something like that.
Yeah, but I think if anyone has ever come across the explicit details of what it's about, that really puts it in perspective.
And we don't need to know about that or see that, but some of these show them the gay porn on your cell phone.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, if these normies were to seize the more ugly side of it, like maybe the like you said, the gif that that documentary or something, something where they see the reality of it, that I think could be more effective at waking people up, you know, to a regular red-blooded man that's, you know, sure, the other arguments are more good, good ways to build up an argument against this, but but uh,
there's something like you have to emotionally break through to the normie or to a woman of what this ugly thing is all about.
I've known many gays throughout my life, not correctly, but you know, you know, no, you know, I mean, college, guys, guys who came out in college, yes, yeah, real quick, real quick.
Uh, I'm just trying to find this article so that we can link it, but uh, it just said one of the articles that came up, gay victims and survivor, survivors of the Holocaust are often forgotten.
That's all.
It's just funny.
Doubling up always got to get the Holocaust in there, right?
Yeah, or how about like uh, I'm thinking of a specific example here, uh, the good gay, quote unquote, right?
And I can think of one in particular.
He was a middle-aged guy who was a neighbor.
Uh, he was competent, he had no gay mannerisms.
Uh, he didn't appear to be a bear or a twink or a butcher and bottom.
Sorry, if I know like glossary, it's tragic.
Yeah, I prefer racist glossary to homo glossary glossary, but anyway, he was a nice guy, he was competent, he was inflaming, still a fan trouser pilot.
And when we eventually went and met his partner, uh, his partner was a basically a flaming queer liptard, you know, uh, ideologically opposed to anything.
So, this seeming good gay basically married your, or I don't know if they were married or whatever, but he had the classic, like for some reason, this good gay was attracted to this like flabby, you know, flamboyant freak, more or less.
Well, just like the cop story you told about, you know, here, oh, he's the good one, and then there he is molesting children or whatever.
And then that's always how it works out.
I mean, George Takai or Take or whatever, George Tage, you know, he, yeah, Sulu, he is like famous for being like gay.
Um, yeah, yeah, but he seems like a relatively likable, normal person.
I always thought he was kind of like creepy and whatever, but generally speaking, he doesn't give off like major fag vibes, right?
Well, lately, lately, maybe in the Star Trek in Star Trek, he didn't actually, but you know, over the over the years, you know, I'm thinking back to like when I was younger and stuff, and it wasn't so bad.
And he's, he's come out more.
Of course, everybody comes out more as like gays are less and less vilified, right?
But then it turns out during like an interview or something, it comes out that he was like sleeping with like 14-year-olds and stuff and acting like it was normal.
Like, bro.
Yeah.
Gays only convert through rape.
So even the good gay was raped when he was young and raped somebody else.
That's just how it works.
Well, another good example of the good gay is Greg Johnson.
Yeah.
What happened there?
Yep.
Woo, lad.
The only thing, the only good gay is a gay that has finally succumbed to his disgusting diseases.
And it's always nice of them when they do that.
I always appreciate them.
Yeah.
I feel like they're doing it for me, really.
I did too.
I get them a card every single time.
I appreciate their sacrifice.
Thank you for dying.
That's what it says.
I get it a hard mark.
Don't get well soon.
Yep.
Greg Johnson was kicked out of the at some element of TRS comms after it certainly appeared, if I have this correctly, that he was trying to chat up a younger male in a group inappropriately.
Well, he was also banging some Swedish journalist that pretended he wasn't antifa, invited him to a major gathering, and then a bunch of people got doxxed for it.
Yep.
Yep.
Concrete evidence.
And then it gets butthurt when you bring it up.
Well, he was already here.
I probably already had that.
Family show.
Yeah.
No, no gratuitous rollo.
It's up to you.
Dude, all fags must.
All right.
Now, here's a tough one, guys.
Once or twice, I have met a guy in this cause who set off my Gaydar a little bit.
And it didn't say anything or do anything, but I thought, huh, I wonder if he's gay.
So this goes back to the serious question.
You just, you know, do you just ignore that?
Because you know what I'm talking about.
Sometimes you're just like, Gaydar went off, but there's, you can't like say, ha, got him.
Or you don't be like, are you a fag?
I guess.
Although, no, just ask her if they're a fag.
Are you a fag?
They're going to say no.
Yeah.
Tell me straight up.
Are you a fag?
I can help you.
Sure.
I'm not a fag.
I'll help you, though.
But so long as you have to tell you a fag.
It's in the Constitution.
It's in the racist Constitution.
Anyway, do you just let that slide unless they so they're going to say no, of course, I'm not a fag.
And as long as it's just like a radar ping and not like saying or doing anything like that, you just let that lie.
Cause because we know, right?
We know that there are probably guys who may in their dark recesses or in the front of their recesses have that inclination, but don't act on it and are ashamed of it and hate it.
Or is even having those inclinations or those thoughts caused to just be like, nah, I think you're a fag.
Get out of here.
Uncomfortable conversation.
It's hard to say because it's like there are some people that are that appear totally normal and then like are laying on their back on their friend's bed blowing on their face, right?
Like, or they're totally masculine and normal when sober.
And then if they get a little intoxicated at a party, then a little bit of fruit loop shows.
Hey, you said you wouldn't tell people.
Well, you know, a lot of times women have that good intuition about people, the gaydar as they call it or whatever.
The bloodhounds yeah, women's gate are definitely more accurate.
Women always, always uh, I shouldn't say that always they, they often have a good intuition about somebody who's not right, or or the other way, you know somebody who's a really good person and all that um my, my own sense is, is out of charity, I want to give the benefit of the doubt, you know, so I, I tend to give more latitude towards somebody than to uh draw a judgment like that.
But if you are somebody who does have a strong sense of that, then then sure yeah, you got to go with that.
You might be saving uh yourself from some kind of horrible situation and all that.
Um, I just don't feel confident enough to to just go with.
Oh, I have a little feeling about this person, might be like this or that.
I'm gonna, i'm going to render judgment on them.
I don't, I don't feel I can do that.
I don't, i'm not good enough, but but it, some people do have that sense and I don't want to discount that.
Okay, I mean yeah, just either family events just only invite them, like out drinking, get.
I mean, you can judge a man.
When I knew, I knew a guy that was that he, the way he talked was, it was very effeminate, and then he dressed like a homo.
And I didn't ask him about it, I asked someone that knew him.
I said that guy, he's a homo right, and like, oh my no, you should see his wife, his beautiful wife, and he was just for some reason, he just talked like fag and then dressed.
I i've known some guys like that where i'm like this dude's totally a fag and then it's like actually uh, not where he still could be uh deep down and just have it under control.
And I mean I think I think most people out there yeah, I mean he's, probably he's, maybe he's got a bunch of dead kids in his yard or something, who knows what what percentage of homosexuals have been able to repress that uh, dark urge or not enough?
I think it's tough for them.
I I, I think that that comes out eventually.
I don't know that you can really suppress that over a lifetime or over a long period, even over, you know, years.
I don't think you can.
It's, it's not even about suppression, it's about convenience.
It's so much easier for them to go to some gay hangout and then just oh, I have these, these demons in my brain telling me to do this.
I'll just act on it, it's just, it's just easier because these are people that have a broken brain anyway.
Yeah like like, would you put your thing in a septic tank?
Well, these people like yeah, do it four or five times a night, different tank each time.
Like this, it is like the grossest possible thing that someone could do.
So it's not like oh, I gotta suppress these urges.
It's just no no, I can easily answer this demon's call good point um, and then I have to.
I, I still, I still do believe, and I know uh, I can see Sam's rejoinder, like before it even happens.
But I, I can't believe that the faggy mannerisms that often manifest, you know, in childhood, even before our culture was completely flooded with gay propaganda, I do strongly believe that there is some either gay gene or gay in utero effect that does impact men in that way.
It's just impossible for me to believe that the characteristics, one second, the characteristics that are so manifest, the hand, the vocal intonation, the way they walk, that that can all be uniformly created via abuse at a young age or at a teenage age or whatever it is.
It just doesn't make sense to me.
That looks genetic to me.
It's almost like a genetic defect, the way that Down syndrome kids have very similar features and gays have very similar features.
Okay, well, bipolar disorder.
That's that's I suppose that is possible, but there's also people who are, we have a term, a born liar.
You ever hear that term?
We also have this way.
Yeah.
So you could be born with all kinds of bad tendencies.
That doesn't excuse you from them.
We all have something we have to get over, right?
Maybe for us, it's not like so bad of things.
Maybe we need to drink less or we need to eat better and be less gluttonous or be less lazy or things that maybe are, you know, not as serious, but other people have other crosses to bear.
Maybe somebody's a kleptomaniac.
Maybe somebody's a homosexual or some other thing.
You know, those inclinations, you could be born with certain things or anger.
You know, some people are very wrathful people, it seems inborn in them.
That does not in any way excuse you to do those things.
Those things are wrong.
And if you have that tendency, it is your duty to correct it.
Yeah, I do certainly think that there's a very small percentage of people that have a predisposition to it.
Sure.
Whether it's chemical imbalances or some type of gene or whatever.
I actually, I don't think it's a gene.
I think it is more likely some type of like chemical hormonal imbalance in the body that just like goes unaddressed.
Yeah.
Whether it's in utero or during development or post or whatever, you know, I think that's it.
And then those people end up probably not being gay if they don't get raped.
But then if, you know, they're molested or groomed, of course, they become gay, right?
Like a trigger.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But then the majority do come from grooming and stuff like that.
Like they're you could say that they're not predisposed to being gay, but they were, you know, raped into it or whatever.
And the idea, the numbers are so out of control now of what, you know, Gen Z, 20 to 30% of them saying that they identify with it is obviously culture too.
They're not all getting it.
Well, yeah, that's what I was going to say is that like, you know, there was a time in this country where gays were like 1% or less of the population, you know, and now that has just blown up.
Part of it will be people would say no because of risk of persecution or it was still illegal or whatever the case may be.
But for it to go from like one, maybe two percent of the population to like 30 to 40 percent of the population in like 50 years is absurd.
So it's obviously not genetic.
Like when I say or or natural, right?
Like even if something is happening that is out of our control, you know, it kind of happens, quote, naturally, unquote.
It's not natural because why would you?
Why would you do that?
There's no evolutionary nature.
Right.
There's no evolutionary advantage to homosexuality.
Even when you see most other animals, like there are some animals that are just like rape machines that will have like they good nature.
Those are just yeah.
They're called African Americans.
Well, that too.
Just Africans.
But there are animals that like are unthinking rape machines that will like male on male rape happens, but they also still like reproduce with the females.
So they're not really gay.
Like they're just an animal that does that for whatever reason, right?
Like they're just sexual opportunists for whatever reason.
But they're also animals.
Like they're animals.
They're not humans.
Well, the way I understand about blanks, the brain, the way the brain works is there's these neural pathways that become strengthened when you repeat the activity.
So, you know, let's say something like somebody's like a fearful person.
So the more courageous that they force themselves to act, the more courageous they will be and the easier it will be for them to be courageous, just using that as an example.
So somebody may start life with some kind of disposition like we're thinking about here, but by acting in the right way, you strengthen the tendency to be that way.
And it doesn't have to be just about the gay thing.
Like I said, it could be about some people have light fingers.
You know, they're always stealing things or a born liar or somebody who's just a violent tendency or anything.
You know, the good person will strengthen their capacity to act in the right way.
And the flip side of that, of course, Sam, too.
What if you were born with the alcoholism gene, but you grew up and in a remote Mormon village where there was no booze, you wouldn't be an alcoholic.
You know, cocaine at one point in their life never would have thought in a million years of like a white powder or whatever, but they try it and then it triggers something.
So maybe that's the same for homos that it can be latent or suppressed or whatever.
But once they do that deed, it releases the beast and the beast is all around us.
All of these things are somehow inherent in mankind in some way, right?
I mean, it's just that something activates it or that there's a tendency toward it or a weakness that's formed either by a by a biological thing or experience in life.
And then we have that thing.
Yep.
We got about 20 minutes left here.
I have one more question from the audience or we can go to Sam and Smasher who have content on tap.
Whatever you guys I'd say go to the question and then I do have things on my list I could say and Smasher's certainly welcome to go in front of me.
This is one we've talked about before, but let's do it real quickly, but it's important.
Hey guys, I just started listening to the podcast and I love it.
A friend of mine mentioned that you have a way of introducing men and women of our ideology to one another.
Now, that is, yes, we have feds meeting feds, full house love connection, but it's very difficult to.
It was like kind of a hit early on, and then it's kind of petered out.
So, hold your horses on that one, buddy.
I'm a single guy, and I often worry that I will meet a great conservative lady only to have things fall apart when we have the talk.
It would be nice to know what we share.
It would be nice to know that we share a common set of ideals from the start.
How might I go about meeting this kind of person?
Easy one: go to the bowling alley.
Uh, that is where you meet all the finest ladies.
Rolo uh is proof and spades.
But, Rolo, uh, knock this one out.
We've talked about it in the past, but you are in the dating pool yourself.
Um, do you have a rule for when you broach our issues or how long you take?
And uh, yeah, I mean, I'm happy to give this guy more advice, but generally, what I have done is uh wait until they every every conservative, like if you're dating like an unironic neocon, it's never going to work, but it's very unlikely that you are.
But almost every conservative is going to have one or more ideas that are either in line or at least sympathetic with ours.
Yeah, so all you need to do is just give them the permission, and then that's when you can get your foot in the door.
Like, I was seeing one girl, and then she was like, Yeah, I work for this Indian, and uh, well, I don't really like dealing with them.
And I said, I just hate Indians, and then she said, Really?
Oh, me too.
And it's so nice to hear someone say that for once.
Not saying that that's going to happen with you, but you give them the permission, and then you can start-you know, you can get your foot in the door, and then you can do the old table 43.
You can show them the gift, and then once they're mostly there, and if you're like in a solid relationship, box of franzia, and you're open the last battle, right?
Yeah, yeah, because the thing is, if you're if you're trying to red pill your neighbor or um, the guy that you um that you're bowling with, it's or the guy that you're hooking up with, it's gonna be a little harder.
But if if you're with a woman and you've been with her for months and she's already like you've pretty much got her, you know, into race realism and anti-gay, it's not going to be hard to just say, like, okay, let me show you how these things are connected and what the route is.
What if our guys don't freaking gay niggers JQ on the second date or else like it's just it's a rule you have to drop the JQ on the second date anyone that anyone that does that, like you know, maybe if you're like 47 and like the doctor said, you have like a month to like get pregnant or to before your sperm goes bad, like maybe then you do it on the second date and just only do speed dating.
Like that, that's the thing.
Unless, unless that's the case, you can wait a little bit, you know.
The Jews aren't going anywhere, so you can talk about it at a later date.
You got to listen for what's important to her, you know, and then you can key on that thing.
She will hate if she is if she is conservative.
There will be something that she hates that you can exploit to get her to on the road to your ideas.
Funding cuts to Israel.
That'll be one that she hates for sure.
Well, I mean, okay, yeah, if she's like right there where you are, then like stop complaining.
Yeah, but uh, to our correspondent, you know, feel free to drop us a line.
We could do a feds meeting feds advertisement for you if you'd like.
You give it, you know, vague area of the country.
Um, but you know, it's it's tough doing completely remote matchmaking, but we're still willing to do it.
So, thank you for the question.
Uh, yeah, I think Rolo's right.
You know, she's a total shitlib.
Just like, I mean, maybe you can have some fun and get her to buy the drinks or something or infiltrate her local antifacile.
Uh, but yeah, there you go.
The nice, uh, nice Christian or right-ish-leaning women, they do exist.
Uh, just yeah, utilize whatever openings you get.
Good stuff, Rolo.
All right, Sammy Baby, what do you got for us?
I know you're constipated.
Yeah, well, um, well, I thought I'd start it off with a dad joke just because it's sort of related.
But uh, sure, the dad joke is I can kayak canoe and uh okay, this was uh I got a quick one from the dating thing.
Uh, Nikki dropped it in the chat like just moments ago.
Uh, hey, did you hear that the craft company is actually opening up a dating service?
You know, craft like macaroni and cheese, that whole company.
Yeah, it's going to be called craft singles.
Okay, sorry, over to you.
Well, uh, I went on a canoe trip with my son, my youngest son.
We're in the troops of St. George, and uh, we went on a canoe trip, which was a lot of fun.
I just thought I would share it.
No, no great big point to it, except that uh it's important to go and do things with your sons.
And uh, the great thing about the troops of St. George is uh the fathers have to join, we have our own uniform and everything.
So, um, so we went on this canoe trip and we set out in the morning to go.
And uh, what was supposed to be a bright, sunny day was uh looking pretty cloudy.
And sure enough, as we were on the road for not too long, it started really raining and some nice big bolts of lightning hit the ground as we're driving.
And so, I get on the app and I said, Hey, everybody, uh, we were we doing this or what?
And uh, yeah, they weren't even on there, and then after a little while, oh, yeah, uh, it's it's uh, it's we're at the time we're going to be on the river, will be uh, you know, the thunderstorms will not be happening.
So, I said, Okay, so I went on AccuWeather shows uh uh rain until a certain time and then uh followed by thunderstorms.
So, basically, the whole day, and I said, Well, all right, we'll go.
And these guys are hardcore.
I mean, they will camp in the winter and everything.
So, I was well, all right, let's let's go for it.
So, we get out there, yeah, we get on the river, and and man, it was raining cats and dogs, but uh, it was uh, the temperature was just right where you didn't, you didn't get the chills, it felt nice, it was warm enough where the rain was kind of refreshing, though annoying.
But uh, occasionally, it would let up, and uh, so we were out there on the river and um uh with the whole group who were out there and and you know, the troops of St. George, their whole thing is when we are out camping or doing something, we do normal things.
So we break, we have like a real lunch where we prepare food and surf food and all that stuff.
So we did all that and kept going.
It was actually a lot of fun.
And they trained us beforehand what to do if you capsize.
Sure.
And because in a canoe, it's very possible.
And so, and it was a good thing because about the last, oh, 30, 40 minutes of the trip, which was we were, it was a, let's see, what was it, seven miles.
So in the last just 30 minutes or so of the trip, the sun came out, the rain dried up and it was nice and sunny.
And but then the wind picked up and the river got very choppy.
So we're going going with the current, of course.
And but the wind was was a head, a headwind.
So you know how hard that is to paddle into a headwind and your canoe wants to turn one way and then the other.
And it's a two-man canoe.
So my son and I were trying to go and we it was so hard.
And we got out in front of everybody too, which was we should have let somebody else get out in front so we could see what how they handle it.
But so we were going and sure enough, we got turned into a trough and we went right over.
And you know how it is, like when something happens, could be if you've ever been like in a car accident or almost like you just missed a car accident or something, everything kind of goes slow motion, right?
And so the thing turned and I felt it turning.
I said, we're going to go over.
Sure enough, boom, it dumped us right over.
And, but we were ready because we were trained.
And of course, the thing that you do is you, even though you're kind of in shock or surprised and unhappy about being turned into the river, you got to go under the thing and pick it up, pick it up by the bars that are on either end of it because there's the real possibility that the thing will fill with water and go to the bottom.
And if you think you're unhappy now, the thing that capsizes can sink.
Yeah, I would have just no.
So if you think you're unhappy about getting tossed into the river now, think about when your canoe goes to the bottom.
But so we got under it and we pushed it up over our head and tipped it over and we were able to get back in it.
But also the other important thing was to have all your important stuff in a plastic Ziploc bag with air in it so that it doesn't also go to the bottom.
So we had all those precautions.
We knew what to do.
We had the presence of mind to do it.
And so we got back in our canoe and we somehow we did make it to the shore.
But when the place that we rented the canoes, when they saw what happened, they sent the pontoon boat out to get everybody else or at least a few of the people, the slower ones out there.
Because they were likely to capsize too.
Yeah.
Yeah, they were at risk of it.
Yeah.
Well, there you go.
Pay attention to your instructions.
Oh, yeah.
And you guys did it.
When we used to go rafting in high school or late high school, and we didn't have cell phones back then.
So we didn't really have to worry about electronics.
But truth be told, it was our cigarettes that we had to plastic the late 90s for to keep them dry.
And the later used to have these things you could put around your neck.
And I went tubing once and I don't know if I didn't have shoes or whatever, but my two popped like halfway through.
Oh my.
There was no pull off.
And it was kind of a rocky raging river.
And so I had to float down.
I mean, I had a life preserver on, but I had to float down this damn somewhat rapid whitewater river.
And I thought I was going to crack my head open at the time.
I was like, I might actually die in this.
And I just, you know, the skin of my teeth made it through.
So anyway, good stuff.
Troops of St. Troops of St. George for our listeners looking to get involved with their kids in something that is more based than the Boy Scouts, which ain't hard these days, I guess.
Right.
Right.
Yep.
Smasher, anything in the stack you want to pop off with before we start bringing this thing on a final approach?
No, I'll bump my topic.
I want to do more, a little more homework.
Yep.
Coach, I also wanted to mention about over a year ago, I think it was you that sent me a copy of the new nobility of blood and soil.
It was the good people at Antelope Hill, but yes, they sent one for me and one for you.
So I did mail it to you once, sir.
Yeah.
And I just finished your address.
Yes.
Very good book.
Yeah, really good.
And I just finished it, which maybe some listeners might say, what is this guy reading on a second grade level that it took him that long to finish the book?
But no, I have the bad habit or I don't know, the habit.
Let's not call it bad habit.
I'll read at least three or four, even five books at the same time, just because, you know, I'm in the mood for different things, sometimes in the mood for something like that, sometimes in the mood for religion, sometimes in the mood for something else, you know, other kinds of books.
So I did finish a really great book.
I highly recommend it.
The detail that he went into with this idea of founding the Haghof, you know, for the, to create this new nobility, I think is a good thing.
And he had a lot of interesting concepts in there.
I thought it was interesting how he was talking about how at the time that this book was published, was in the 1920s, and he had no doubt been writing it for a while.
So you see how far that goes back.
But how he was saying in there how this idea was so necessary because in his words, Germany was so mixed racially already.
And that we had, you know, like we would think of compared to now, you know, how different it would be.
But how, how, you know, and he talked about things like racial or genetics is not how it is and how it is not.
You know, he was talking about that like we can we can improve the breed in a sense.
You know, like some people might have the idea, oh, if we have, you know, racial impurity or racial factors, no, those things could be bred out.
I thought that was an interesting concept.
And yeah, good for you.
You and Smasher did the did the work, Sam.
And we didn't mean to review that one, but that just got pushed back on my stack because it does look like a dense one.
It is.
It is rather dense.
And I'm just picking out a few ideas in there that I thought were worth talking about.
But also, I was thinking like, you know, if we were to do something like this in our society, I'm thinking like I compare it like to the U.S. Marines.
Like, let's say we consider the U.S. Marines have this lot of good things.
They're the bravest, the toughest guys, and admirable in different ways.
And so if we talked about the U.S. Marines long enough, we'd say like, well, maybe just every American should be a U.S. Marine.
Well, obviously that's not practical or doable or advisable even, you know, but the idea of having maybe some kind of program that selects what we would think are the best racial stock and the people that would join such a thing would maybe benefit in some way.
Their housing would be provided and things, you know, in order to foster. some kind of segment of the population that we're trying to breed to be better.
I think that's like a good idea.
But also the counter idea, I thought, too, like, you know, because think of that time when this book was written.
And so they had this concept of like an agrarian society.
Every man would have like a little farm and Jamesonian.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like maybe we'd be trying to breed people to be this like agrarian person who had certain type of smarts and could work all day and all that type of thing.
But then maybe we wouldn't breed for the computer nerds we would need because we didn't even envision that, you know?
So I guess, I guess in a way, I feel like within our, of course, excluding non-white elements, but within our white race, like nature has to has to also be allowed to run its course because nature might actually be wiser than we are.
She's her own natural planner or central planner in a sense.
Yeah.
So like in a way, you have to trust in nature, but also there's something to be said for taking measures to make sure that we preserve what we think are the good elements or the best elements.
Yep.
Well, take it, Tim.
Let me put it next in the stack.
I'll let you get in too, Smasher.
I feel guilty now.
I didn't know that you guys were reading it.
That was the project, but it was just, you know, got distracted.
I am reading my current read right now is very similar.
It's Knut Hampson, Norwegian, Growth of the Soil, won the Nobel Prize in Literature 1917, maybe 1920.
And he, to his death in the 50s, was a Adolf Hitler fan, supporter, and National Socialist.
It's a beautiful work of fiction about a simple Norwegian man who goes into the wilderness, creates his homestead, finds his girl, and just keeps working and working and working to build his life.
But I don't mean to distract from a new nobility of blood and soil by Walther DeRay, who went on to be the Reich's Minister of Food and Agriculture or Food and Health, something like that, food and agriculture.
So I will tag that in there and maybe we'll do a special on it too.
But Smasher, while we're on the topic, and yeah, I didn't mean to cut you off there.
I just want to get that up.
Oh, I was just going to say that there's nothing wrong with a little bit of eugenics.
Absolutely.
No, it's I don't think it needs to be some, you know, super crazy, unethical thing where you're.
I mean, maybe it's kind of a Jewish meme like that eugenics automatically means like kangaroo court doing like these horrible immoral things when realistically when people talk about it, at least when we talk about it, it would be more like third Reich style, you know, very, very ethical, you know, really for the betterment, the elimination of not cruel.
Yeah.
Right.
No, absolutely.
Yeah.
Like in all things in life, what's a happy medium between like living in mud huts and clicking our tongues and eating bugs or living in, you know, 500 story skyscrapers in concrete jungles, utterly disconnected from life and nature and things like that.
Yeah.
Something.
Well, I wouldn't want to say the suburbs, but, you know, some agrarian aspect in your life.
Yeah.
Are you saying Europeans?
Europeans are the midpoint between blacks and the Chinese.
Well, the thing is, and we tend to think of things in this country in a binary sense, right?
It's this or it's that.
And I was talking with this very excellent Greek man at our recent thing we had together.
And we were talking about this.
In Greek philosophy, there's this idea of the virtue which has a vice on either side.
Like, for instance, let's say we would, we would say courage is a virtue.
And then on one side, we'd say cowardliness is a vice.
But also on the other side would be foolhardiness.
Impulsivity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I think you should try to think of things more like that is a more mature way of thinking.
Before we leave this topic of the books, I want to thank our dear friend who we also saw at our gathering from Antelope Hill who gave me two books.
I'm sorry, I can't, the titles escape me at the moment, but I have them right on my nightstand there.
And I thank him from the bottom of my heart.
That was wonderful to get pick up a couple good books.
And Rolo either taught my youngest son or my youngest son, I think Rolo taught him to say, hey, you know, hey, dad, what does that say?
What does that say?
Because he's starting to recognize, well, he's starting to basically read.
It's very early days.
Yeah, I taught him that one.
Well, he was doing the one over and over.
I was getting tired of it.
I taught him two new ones.
What does that say, Dad?
D's nuts.
And he was shooting Rolo and climbing on Rolo throughout the course of our little gathering.
So it was very, very cute to see.
All right, gentlemen.
Go around the hoard and thank everybody.
Rolo, you go first.
Thank you very much.
Any last thoughts?
No, but it was great to be here.
Thank you.
Amen.
Thank you.
File by 9 a.m. tomorrow or you're off the show.
Smasher.
I want to edit a couple of those appendage.
I wrote some things down.
No, I'm not angry.
I understand.
Family show.
Yeah.
Donate to me.
What does blank blank mean?
Oh, yes.
Donate to the show.
Good advice.
Good advice.
My AC condenser is almost dead.
It will only run for like an hour at a time now.
So don't house or on the house.
Okay.
It's almost 20 years old.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Don't donate to the show for that reason.
I'm just chilling.
Donate to the show for that reason.
Smasher's got four kids under the roof and his air conditioner is failing.
Yeah, don't say it to me.
I'll be too tempting to tempted to wet my beak.
Just give it straight to him.
They're actually, I mean, our house isn't like very big, so the new condenser isn't super expensive or anything.
Are you waiting?
I mean, you might as well just replace the damn unit if it's 20 years old.
You're not just going to go in and replace a piece, a part, are you?
No, yeah, yeah.
We'll replace the unit.
Yeah.
But it's still, it's like, because the house isn't that big, like it's not super expensive.
You know, it's not like I've got a 6,000 square foot house that needs a $9,000 unit or something.
But it's also like, we've been opening the windows and getting a nice breeze.
And then we turn the AC on for like an hour at a time and it maintains like an okay enough temperature.
And it's like, you know, maybe we can just limp this until like winter.
The autumn or something.
Right.
Like sometimes.
What's your heat?
Is your heating natural gas?
Furnace.
Yeah.
Yep.
And have you done the, I'm sure you have.
You've done the trick where you open up the windows at night, like everywhere to let the cool air in and then shut them once the outside starts heating up.
Yeah.
Yep.
And our all our windows are double hung too.
If you don't know about how you should open your windows, it's really actually, I think, probably important if you really want your windows to work.
Look up whatever type of windows you have and look up like how you should really open them.
Double hung windows.
You should open the top and the bottom to make them meet in the middle.
And what it does is the cooler air comes in through the bottom sash opening and your hot air goes out through the top.
And Allison thought I was BSing and then I did it to the windows and she was like, I can actually feel the air like circulating at the window.
But what about this?
What about the screens and the bugs?
Because the screens don't cover the whole window top to bottom generally.
If you some do mine do not.
Mine's like you have the screens, they slide up or they slide down.
Oh, I don't know.
Ours cover the whole window.
But even some of our windows don't have screens and I just open them too.
Yeah.
The airflow is more important.
It's like the rapture with the locusts.
If you leave a window, like if the door is open for 30 seconds here, it's much worse at night.
It's much worse down there.
Yep.
All right.
Heard it from him and Sammy Baby.
Thank you, sir.
Yeah.
Wonderful show.
Good topics.
Looking forward to my latte, which I permit myself once a week on Friday mornings after a late night with the guys out here, you know.
And my dear mother, bless her heart, she always gets me an apple fritter once a week and she leaves it for me.
So that's what I look forward to after this show.
We're going to name the show Guns, Germs, and Gays, perhaps, not Guns, Germs, and Steel.
I don't know.
I'll think about it a little bit.
It's always a creative collaboration.
All right, everybody.
Full House episode 133 was recorded on a damn muggy.
I've been saying gorgeous, wonderful, lovely for too long.
It was July 7th when we started.
It's now July 8th, 2022.
Follow us on Telegram and Gab and check us out at givesendgo.com and full-house.com.
And to all of our listeners, rightfully freaked out about the state of our society from gays to guns to monkeypox.
You don't have to worry about the latter one unless you're a degenerate.
And possible future gulags.
Just keep in mind in the back of your mind, in the forefront of your thoughts, what our old pal Alexander Solzhenitsyn said at the top of the show.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
And Rolo is at the Wheels of Steel this week.
What do you got in store for us, brother?
That would be The Sentinel by Judas Priest.
Okay.
Rolo and I were in the car on the way to the airport and he said Judas Priest was one of his favorite bands of all time.
And he started, I said, wait, There's two good, two good hits.
Breaking the law and you got another thing coming or something like that.
And then he actually rattled off a few more great ones.
And quite appropriate because the lead singer was gay.
Not to put a damper on our musical enthusiasm.
Thank you, Rolo.
This is The Sentinel by Judas Priest Smasher.
Please do the honors, my friend.
See ya!
The figures from the reverence prepare for quick surprise.
Marching for a sign is my son.
Storm control of him can go down.
Can't the blade of the seed at all.
You're twining the enemies, smoking solo.
But even though it's empty shell, I can see the bell begging.
Ringing out its call, so begins to come to end the hell of hell.
Cannot be the same.
And I'll amidst the upturned, burned out cars, the challenges await.
And in their fists, touch iron bars with which to feel his fate.
And crash his chest, it's gavin's rest, for rows of throwing knives.
Whose razor points they challenge tests unfinished many lives.
Now facing one another, the stand-up eats the time.
Then all at once, a silence falls as the bell ceases its chime.
Upon the sign, the challengers with shrieks and cries rush forth.
The knives fly out like bullets upon their deadly course.
Screams of pain and agony rent the silent air.
Amidst the dying bodies, blood runs everywhere.
The figure stands expressionless, impassive and calm.
Unfortunately, victory when the seas of death is signed for them, Not the way to say to go to the men to, not the way of the same town.
Song is all down, Just under the rain of little spots.
For me,
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