A committed young ourguy pinched for alleged pro-white activity and facing serious prison time joins us along with veteran corrections officer and proud new father Jack McKracken to discuss all things activism, stoicism in the face of adversity, and best practices should you find yourself behind bars. Close: "Summertime Blues" by Zach Bryan Surviving Prison (Jack McKracken) Support our men behind the wire via the Global Minority Initiative Subscribe to The Occidental Quarterly Asha Logos on YouTube 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!
By now, we all know that merely exercising your First Amendment rights can lead to social, professional, or financial pain.
For some, it can even be a death sentence.
But we're now so far down the filthy Wymerican slippery slope that fundamental human activities like self-defense or stopping crime or even protesting or distributing literature can now mean a lengthy prison sentence right here in the USSA.
Most of us worry about getting doxxed and losing our jobs, as if that's the worst possible outcome for having the wrong opinions.
Others recognize the evil and injustice, but feel compelled to act in many different ways, some wise and some not.
This week, we welcome a young listener who got pinched for nonviolent activism and now faces the possibility of five years in the clink.
Is he quaking in his boots and questioning his life decisions?
Or is he taking it like a man and resolving to never falter, never slacken, and never quit?
You'll find out this week on Full House with a bonus return subject matter expert.
And who knows, you might be in the same boat one day.
So, Mr. Producer, back in the saddles.
Welcome, everyone, to episode 135 of Full House, the world's most fearless show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
I am, as always, your shamefully desultory host, Coach Finstock, back with another just one hour this week of content designed to hit the spot.
Maybe you can hear in my voice why we're only going one hour.
Anyway, before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Publius Felsius and Beatrice von Bora for their kind support of the show, as well as a certain autistic Anglo who insisted that the kids get ice cream as the strings attached to his largesse.
For shame, sir, but thank you all the same.
Also, I did want to enunciate, or I want to enunciate the reasons for the delayed show as much as you want to hear about them.
But we were on an extended visit with the in-laws.
I had a bint of content creation doldrums, and then I got sick, felt so bad.
I took a COVID test.
And the good news is that that one came back negative.
The bad news is that it is indeed monkeypox.
It's true.
I'm sorry, folks.
You knew there had to be a deep, dark secret lurking behind this wholesome program after all these years.
But with that, enough of me.
Let's get back to business.
First up, I don't think, I don't know that he's ever done serious time in a federal penitentiary.
But if you look into his steely, resolute blue eyes, you realize there's some serious potential for it still there.
Sam, how are you, my friend?
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
Yeah.
No, never, never did any hard time.
You know, I've been pinched a couple times by the coppers, but nothing too big.
But yeah, interesting guest, interesting topic for sure.
And it's good to be here after our little couple of weeks there being off.
I know, big guy.
I am sorry, but it just, it happens sometimes.
And this is kind of a little bit of a dangerous show, a little risque show.
Yeah.
Not for us per se, but for our noble guest.
We'll talk to him about it.
We did discuss, you know, the risk of talking about this, but he's a confident young man.
Well, we'll see.
We'll let the audience judge.
Next up, the only thing, go ahead, Sam, please.
No, go ahead.
I'm sorry.
No, well, I was going to either move on to Rolo or compliment you on your ink, too.
That's another sign.
You're ready to rock and roll.
Well, you know what?
I was going to mention.
I went fishing with my youngest son the other day.
I sent you a picture.
Maybe you saw that.
And we were out with the troops of St. George, which is, of course, the Catholic alternative to the Boy Scouts.
And we had a good time.
The fish were very clever.
They were biting, but they knew how to avoid our hooks pretty good.
Though we did, between us all, we did catch a couple of them, but it was kind of a smaller group.
And I really had a chance to talk in detail with some people.
And I think I radicalized some people.
You know, I've been working with this group now for over a year.
And I've been waiting to get my opportunity to have a little one-on-one conversation.
And I think it paid off pretty good.
Good stuff.
Glad to hear it.
Yeah.
The kids went out and actually just did a little fishing on their own today.
Junior caught the first one on his own, totally unassisted.
He was very proud of that.
And then daughter, who's been the little fisherwoman of our property for the last two or three years, she immediately said, all right, give me that thing.
And then she went and caught one too.
Both.
They're fun to catch.
You know, they fight and they're tricky too.
Yeah.
Slippery bastards, too.
Yeah.
All right.
Next up, the only thing worse than Sam guilt tripping you for not being able to record the show one week is this guy tag teaming with him.
But he is our number one grade A prime white male bachelor with zero kids that he knows about.
And that is the great Rolo.
Welcome back, buddy.
Thank you.
It's good to be here as often as I can.
It really keeps me from crawling into the bottle of alcohol or pills, you know, whatever is near me.
Ajax or whatever.
I'll only lie to you.
I learned it from watching you, coach.
That being said, it's great to be here.
Sure.
No, I know.
You would, you would damn Sam.
Like Smasher and I are like the Appalachian recluses.
You know, we only emerge when dragged out kicking and screaming.
You and Sam should you guys just organize the damn show and host it.
And I'll come on and just have cool stories or press little buttons.
How about that?
That's what that's what I've been saying for weeks.
Sam has Sam's notes like slowly turn into like a man of yellowing the length of like a Stephen King book.
Like he's, we got the Dark Tower's got nothing on Sam's notes.
Okay.
Let's be fair.
And next in a special full house feature, we have on a recurring guest now and also a subject matter expert.
He puts the hailer in jailer, if that makes any sense.
And he is also the official full house new father of the year.
It's true, prolific author by now, corrections veteran and big galute to boot.
Jack McCracken, congratulations again and welcome, big guy.
Hey, brothers.
Thanks for having me back on.
Huge fan of the show.
You guys know that.
It's been too long, but always happy to be here.
Absolutely.
And how is the new babe and the new mom?
Got to ask, we're going to have her on for a special with you guys.
I realized I was like, you know, honed in on this crime, thought crime and punishment issue.
And I said, oh, crap, we should have the lady on too.
But how are things, big guy?
Really good.
Everything's great.
the baby's uh he's he's two months now and it's my first kid so i'm just kind of figuring everything out he's uh you know he's he he cries at weird times he he's hungry you know all the time he kind of reminds me of me actually um but it's great you know i i wouldn't change anything he's just the best and it just blows me away every time i look at him i just i'm just speechless uh she's she's doing great too yeah she's great Yeah, and he looks like mom too.
So we really hit the jackpot there, you know, right out, right off the bat.
Yeah, thank God.
All right.
Finally, thank you, Jackie Baby.
And our even more special guest and patient guest as well.
He and I spoke by phone a couple weeks back about the predicament that he finds himself in.
And I found him to be solid, smart, and committed, despite what he may be up against here.
Hopefully he doesn't disappoint tonight either.
Fritz, welcome to Full House, my friend.
Well, hey, guys, thanks so much for having me on.
I really appreciate the opportunity.
And I just want to get my story out there for anybody who may be wanting to do something and are worried about the potential fallout because of that.
So just want to get my perspective on the record that's my own and not the painting that's doctored up and to frame their political agenda.
That the system wants you to be painted as for sure.
Yeah, I found it kind of inspiring that you weren't like, oh, woe is me, coach.
You know, I got this hanging over my head.
And oh, look at what I did with my life.
No, you were like, oh, yeah, this sucks, but we're going to move on.
But we'll get to that too.
Fritz, we'll start you off easy with our interrogation here, our full house interrogation.
What is your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please?
Yeah, sure, coach.
So I'm German, Irish, Scotch-Irish, and Dutch, as far as I know.
And I am not a father.
I would like to be one day.
And I would say I'm torn between Christianity and Catholicism, and then a little sprinkle of paganism in there as well.
So still searching for the right path.
That's all good.
You may have time relatively, sorry, I don't mean to joke, but you know, the spirit, you got time to go on more journeys, possibly soon.
I hear Islam is very popular in prison.
Yeah.
You know, before the show, I told the inner circle that we were having this, having you on.
And Patrick Little said, well, at minimum, he's about to get a free PhD in race relations.
So, you know, silver linings and all that.
So, you know, you're a younger guy.
We'll just say you're a Zoomer for sure.
How did a good boy like you with your whole life ahead of you wander into the dark underworld of pro-white activism or just, you know, your red pill story, whichever, however you want to take it?
Yeah, for sure.
I think it's a valid thing that everyone needs to go through as far as getting their wits end taken care of with the problems that we face today.
So I initially started out with having some Mormon friends.
I've listened to that episode and they were pretty traditional in their sense of belief system.
And they were calling them porch monkeys, spearchuckers.
And that was kind of like, you know, taken aback at first, but it really settled in once I got into my educational background.
My whole college career was essentially fire science and emergency management.
So I worked for a fire department for a short short amount of time.
But within that, Within that job, it's basically you're dealing with the dregs of society and you're administering Narcan to fentanyl overdoses and you're dealing with domestic disputes.
And not to mention, I mean, the farm equipment will shoot at anybody with a uniform on it if you're not careful.
So that was a rude awakening for sure.
And I really had to, yeah, had to take my choices into consideration with the future going forward and really make a decision on if that was the right career path for me or not.
Yep.
Our EMS SOS show with Durandle and Alex McNabb too.
Yeah, being on the streets and seeing the dark underbelly of society has a tendency to do that.
A buddy of mine used to drive an ambulance or work in an ambulance and he said, once I got shot at in that ambulance while trying to serve this underserved neighborhood, that's a radical red pill overnight.
All right.
So how did you, so you had some racist Mormon friends and then you find yourself allegedly, you know, we see that the keyword of the show is going to be allegedly cheekily and not and not cheekily at all.
Allegedly, you were engaged in pro-white activism.
How did you go from, you know, racial awareness to feeling like you had to or you wanted to do something IRL about it?
Well, I feel as though if you know the score, I feel like you have to do something, be that improving upon yourself, be that trying to wake up those of those friends of yours who are searching.
I mean, they're still stuck on the flat earth Jesuits argument and really trying to just make something of myself, not in the sense of searching for clout or anything like that, but more like trying to, you know, when your grandkids ask you, what did you do before the Great Race War?
Well, I can have a story.
And I'm not sure if your listeners are familiar with Asha Logos.
He is a creator on YouTube who has a very well put together, segmented our subverted history series.
And a couple of his more commentary videos are very much so in the sense of, you know, if you have an ability to do something, no matter how small, no matter if it's just simply for you, you have to do it, especially if you know the score, because that's the only way we get out of this problem is to take action in our own houses, in our own communities.
And from there, it will build into something greater.
And hopefully we will prevail with that.
But long story short, I hadn't had any kind of history with activism.
I had never done anything.
Where I'm located, it's very, shall we say, isolated.
You're kind of in a bubble up here.
And I just had the opportunity.
There was an event that I was aware of.
And so I literally just put up some stickers.
And that was enough to really draw some heat to me.
And I guess don't prod the beast or you'll get the teeth or something like that.
And is it, I mean, is it fair to share with the audience how, you know, in the age of COVID and masks, even with cameras everywhere, how did they know that you were supposedly, or how did they come to suspect you had put up these naughty stickers or flyers?
Right.
I think that's an important point to make, specifically with just the amount of sticker activism and just flyers and leaflets that I do see with a number of different organizations out there.
And I really, you know, need to hammer the point home that you are all carrying around a tracking beacon in your pocket, whether you have as many loopholes and onion routers and Tor routers and VPNs.
Doesn't really matter how much you have because, at the end of the day, all that stuff has a back door and they're able to utilize it against you when the time it comes.
So long story short, the locations where I put up my stickers, the federal agents subpoenaed all the cell phone towers and got the entire history from all the customers who are using those cell phone towers at the times that they alleged.
I put up these stickers and basically sifted through 10,000, 20,000 pages of cell phone data to find the corresponding congruency.
between all all the different um towers that they they looked into.
So essentially, you have to be careful with everything you do, especially with the mindset that we have.
And man, don't take your phone, just leave it at home.
Just go with the homies, go with, just for good peace of mind.
Yeah, we're not even counseling how to uh get out of uh prison uh in advance, it's just uh yeah, leave your phone at home and go for a nice walk in the park and uh free yourself from the, the constant back and forth.
All right, we're gonna get jack in here uh real quick, or here real quick um.
And I just had to add for the audience's edification.
There was a complicating uh allegement what's the word allegation, excuse me?
Uh, in your case, that we're not going to say whether it's true or false or what it is uh, but they allege that you didn't have all your i's dotted and t's crossed, which is what made uh walk in the park, turn into something bigger.
Is that a fair characterization?
Yes, I mean, there's other aspects to the story and I will try and drop the breadcrumbs for that as much as possible, but not put myself in harm's way, for you don't have to.
Yeah yeah I, I think that's.
That's good enough.
So yeah, if you're gonna, if you're gonna, do activism uh, make sure you know, make sure you have all your credit cards paid on time uh, and your dog is licensed at home and all the rest of it.
Um, all right uh, let's see real quick.
The another big lesson that we wanted the audience to get out of this one is that you made the classic blunder oh young, confident one and you thought, or were confused enough to think, that you could talk to the cops.
Is that so, sir?
Unfortunately yes, I figured my devilish silver tongue would allow me to escape their uh, their legalese, let's say.
But at the end of the day, we have a saying, and it's uh, the five words, those five words are, I have nothing to say.
And if you and all the friends and family and anybody else who they try and gain as a witness or or any other you know, fight against you, it's uh, you know, as long as you're able to keep your tongue tied and not give in to their games, then you have a much better case of defense, no matter what the issue.
And I unfortunately, was not aware, aware of the extent of how far they would take this.
So I figured, hey, they're just asking me about these stupid stickers.
They're not going to be, there's, there's, we have the freedom of speech in this country, right?
But worst case, you got van, right?
Yeah.
Or littering.
Right, exactly.
Something along those lines.
But yeah, it's, it's just not worth it.
There's no way that that shapes out in your favor.
And until you have an attorney there to help you with any of those complications, just invoke the fifth.
Do not say anything, no matter how small and simple you might think it is.
It's just not worth it.
Amen, brother.
And the worst case scenario here, your case is still winding its way through the bowels of the judicial system.
The worst case scenario, so long as we know, is five years.
And would that be federal or state or regional?
Do you have any ideas?
So that would be federal.
This was all coming down from a federal complaint.
And as far as I've done my research, it seems that's the safest place to be if you do end up in that place.
State, you're just stuck with all the petty offenses and petty criminals, thieves, child molesters, all the whole nine yards.
Whereas in federal, you're more stuck with the higher end criminals, such as fraud.
I can't rattle off the things off the top of my head, but you're just dealing with higher class people.
But you don't want to be an end.
More prominent thought criminals, too.
Make some good friends there.
Yeah.
But yeah, long story short, it's going to be federal.
And just for the listeners, do not be doing anything else that could potentially get you in trouble if you do want to do some activism.
And just be very careful because any strings that they pull will be pulled.
Any strings that they can pull will be pulled and they're not in your favor.
So for the five-year question, obviously, that involves something extracurricular to the stickering.
Going forward with anybody who wants to be active with just pamphleting, you know, as simple as that.
Make sure that you're not going to be, you don't have any other loose ends in your life that could be used against you because if they want you, they will get you.
Long story short.
And I didn't think that it would come to where it came to for me, but they're be careful.
Yeah.
Well, you made some presumptions about what life behind bars is like there.
And it just so happens that we have a subject matter expert.
As I mentioned, Jack, let's get you in here, big guy.
We have our young, baby-faced, innocent friend possibly going into the big house where you ruled with a bull whip and a bullhorn, if I recall from Live in the Dream.
Jack wrote a whole book about us.
He wrote a whole book about his experience as a corrections officer.
And he happened to have written at least one article.
I believe it was the hyphen report, maybe the colon report.
I can't keep those straight.
But Jack, plug your stuff right here for the audience that needs to have tactile information in their hands and smack some wisdom into our young friend's head, if you could, buddy.
Sure thing.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I spent five years working as a New York State correctional officer.
So that was state prison.
That was in a Super Max, New York State.
I wrote a book about it.
It's called Live in the Dream.
It's on Antelope Hill Publishing.
You can go pick it up.
It was fun to write.
I've heard it was fun to read.
And I also have an article that covers this very kind of subject matter on the hyphen report.
It's called Waken the Nightmare.
So it's kind of a sequel to my book.
It's very short.
Basically, it gives you a rundown of what you should do if you get pinched and if you are facing a prison sentence, which if you're dabbling in our politics, it's pretty much just bound to happen at some point.
It feels like, sooner or later, no matter what you're doing um, and I kind of run down a few things.
So, you know, I would say rule number one, and if you've read the article, you you probably already understand this.
But as a new inmate uh, you're just going to want to say no to everybody because all of a sudden, you're going to be brand new, you're not going to know anyone and you're going to have a lot of friends.
You're going to have a lot of guys come up to you with restuff.
Hey man hey, you know I, you know, I heard what happened.
You seem like a cool dude.
You know let's, let's talk, let's hang out.
Hey here's, here's some hershey bars.
Like here's a, here's a pair of shower shoes.
It's like oh, didn't they tell you they're not going to give you a belt?
Here you can have one of my belts, because you know you got to keep your pants up brother, you know.
But while it may seem nice at first, a lot of that kind of stuff is just early attempts at manipulation.
They're going to want to try to extract something out of you later and they're going to try to guilt you.
Um, if you don't, if you don't, pay up.
Uh, it's gonna.
It's gonna vary on on prison to prison, i'm sure, but that's just like.
That's like inmate manipulation 101, and I don't care where you are.
Um, someone at some point is going to try to do that and the best thing to do is just say no, and no one's going to get mad if you say no.
They may fake it or something um, but uh, just say no and and and you you'll be, you'll be able to dodge that very easy bullet.
I remember you Jack, and I want to flag.
Jailbreak was our episode 79, where we featured Jack and all of his uh, some heartwarming and most of them sad and disgusting tales about life as a corrections officer uh, but I remember you talking about the new jacks who are coming into the police academy.
But i'm sure you saw your share of new inmates coming in, and i'm calling to mind Tom Sewell.
Uh, when he was in solitary for seven months, said, the hardest day of prison is your first day and the next hardest day is the second day, something to that effect.
Uh, what did you see when, when new guys came in, were they all freaked out?
I guess it depends on whether they're hardened criminals or or newbies.
Yeah, i've seen it a little bit.
When I first started working corrections, I worked in a uh intakes intake center.
It was a medium facility and it was mostly like dorms uh, but that's where you went after.
Uh, if you're a criminal, after your court was concluded and you were you received your sentence.
So a lot of these guys were shell shocked with, like man, I got you know 10 years for x, y or z so they would get sent there.
And yeah you, you could kind of see it.
A lot of guys were like didn't really understand that they were in prison yet.
You know, they just kind of walk around, kind of kind of in a daze, um.
And then you had other guys who were technically new inmates, but this is like their fifth time in, so they were already, already knew what to do and how to handle themselves.
But it does it.
It does suck.
In the beginning it it is really bad, but then you know, every day it gets a little bit better and then, once you're in your groove uh it's, it's just not going to be a problem.
You know, I I think there's a lot of um fear, that's that's placed in people's heads about prison.
That comes from Hollywood and a lot of it's completely, you know right unsubstantiated, unsubstantiated.
So as long as you don't act crazy, as long as you are able to handle yourself just like a normal person, as long as you don't have any crazy history uh, being a rat, some sort of like molester or something, I you really don't have anything to worry about.
As long as you have a level head jack.
Does it ever pay?
You know, you can be.
You can say no to the other inmates for them trying to rope you into their schemes.
But does it pay to be a good boy for the guards?
Obviously you don't want to be a bad boy that could get you a bad treatment.
But do you ever see kiss asses to the guards?
Does that work to be like extra special good for the guards?
Um yeah oh, it's easy.
Yeah yeah, you can.
You can very easily manipulate a corrections officer.
It's it's actually not hard at all and you don't even have to be a butt kisser or anything.
Um, all you got to do is just not be a problem.
So if you have a reputation of just being invisible or being someone that a that a corrections officer can consistently not rely upon, because they're never going to really rely upon you for anything.
But if you just don't make trouble um, you'd be surprised at how easy you can build a rapport with that, with that, with that co.
Um, little conversations here and there um, over and over again throughout the week, throughout the month.
Next thing you know you're, this guy talks to you on a regular basis because he's bored, he's got nothing else to do.
Remember, you're going to be living in that place.
That guy's only coming in there eight hours at a clip, so you have all of that time to figure out what you're going to say to this guy.
If you need something, how you're going to do it, how you're going to make sure that you know when he comes on shift uh, your sheet's not going to be up, whatever all the little infractions are that are going to be in your jail, that you're not breaking them.
Um, you know you, you could, you inmates manipulate guards all the time and you can very easily do it yourself.
Think about it this way too, technically, co is law enforcement.
These guys have all kinds of sensitivity training they're.
They're trained to accept uh uh, trannies in the workplace.
They're trained to accept home of stuff and everything Zog pushes on them.
Um, you know, if the state can manipulate them into believing all that crap, so can you for your own benefit.
And I say, do I got so many questions for Jack myself, just for the inevitable day when Rollo plants evidence on me?
Uh so, but I don't want to.
I don't want that day.
That day is long come.
It's just a matter of when they find it.
I, I had a feeling.
Uh, one more from me and then i'll turn it over to the, to the other guys too.
Uh Jack, you hear stories about um.
Well, before we went to tape, you did have the sort of good advice for our friend Fritz that hey, five years for a young guy, that's not that bad right, it's a relatively short sentence if it comes to that.
Uh, you do usually get time off for good behavior, which we expect.
Um, and do they allow you to go to work in the kitchen or in the sewing room right away?
You know doing those productive activities, making license plates, whatever it is or do you have to sort of establish yourself first before you go be a busybody?
Hard to say for sure.
It really depends on the facility and what kind of department has you in custody.
I think it's really going to depend on that.
So you may have to wait a little bit before you get a really good paying job.
In my experience, the kitchens was like the place to be.
You got paid the most to do that.
So a lot of inmates went there.
And a lot of gangs and stuff would sometimes try to angle themselves.
So they would go to the units where certain jobs would be issued.
So for instance, like A block would always do, you know, X, Y, or Z job.
And B block would always do, you know, this kind of job.
So getting the better jobs is always kind of a thing people angle for.
But the place you go to might not have that paradigm, that kind of thing.
Regardless, though, five years, if that's going to be the maximum sentence you get, that's really kind of nothing to worry about.
It seems like a lot, but compared to some of the stuff that some other people get, five years is pretty good.
And you're probably going to be released early.
So for something as not impactful as what you were describing, you probably only get like, what, three at most, which is even better.
So knock on wood.
Yeah, I was checking out globalminority, gminority.org today to see that Jacob Goodwin, Alex Ramos, and maybe another one or two Charlottesville guys are still behind bars.
And I guess this would be the fifth anniversary this year.
So those guys are, I'm pretty sure, almost about to get out.
Go ahead, Fritz, please.
Sorry for hogging your time.
This is open mic with an expert if you got anything that's that's bugging you about potential looming time.
Yeah, I mean, I do want to apologize.
I had to start driving here, so any background noise, I do apologize.
But at the end of the day, I think it impacts your family more than you if you're already in the mindset of, you know, what I'm doing is potentially going to lead down a path that would be frowned upon from most perspectives.
And that was something that I was really understanding and but not considering in the fullest thinking that it would actually happen to me.
And one point I wanted to make is just, you know, you got to really understand that the people that care about you are the ones who are going to be impacted about this more so than you if you think you can handle the lockup time.
And not that I'm inviting that, but it's really put a large strain on my family relations with my parents.
I'm in a complicated spot with my, I wouldn't say that we're together per se.
We're still communicating, but with my girlfriend, my ex-girlfriend, you know, this really made things very difficult.
She understands my perspective.
She knows the score.
Be careful with how you're framing yourself.
I don't think that it's healthy to really be something that is frowned upon in society.
I think that you still need to keep your wits about you, have your day-to-day life, have your hobbies, have your friends that don't need to know about your online activities.
But at the same time, that's one of the reasons why I'm so okay with this happening is because I realize the need for activism.
And I realize the risk that that provides many people who don't necessarily want to take that opportunity.
But at the same time, it's now or never.
Like the time's getting sped up with in regards to what the federal government is doing as far as providing funding for different operations within the federal government, FBI branch, CIA.
We've just seen this three-page article.
I'm sure you guys have seen it.
I think it was posted on Telegram, but it's essentially saying that all the right-wing conservative types are being given the boot in the military, in the federal government branches, in all types of service, simply for their views.
And they're getting more and more funding for the opposite, for cracking down on people that they perceive to be others in the grand scheme of things that are not going to ride with their built-back better plans.
So I understand the significance of all this stuff.
And that's why I'm not shying away from the possibility of what I have to face.
Obviously, I'm not going to enjoy it, but if it does happen, I'm going to make the best of it.
Like you were saying earlier, Jack, like there's opportunities for education.
You can get your whole, I mean, if you have any goals, you need to work on getting off of your screen and getting closer to personal relationships.
Well, you're going to build a lot of personal relationships in jail.
And not necessarily those will be beneficial, but at the same time, you can really work on yourself is what I'm getting at.
And you can build that into something that will be beneficial for the long run.
You said five years is really nothing.
Yeah, it's really not a lot in the grand scheme of things.
Of course, you know, your elderly grandmother, that's quite a long time for her.
But in the sense of building something out of yourself and getting to be more knowledgeable, more well-read, and have a more motivated goal and the steps to get there, I think that in my personal case, it's going to be something that will be beneficial.
Oh, you're going to come out jacked, tattooed, with a ton of street cred and swagger, and God knows where the world will be.
There he is.
He's flexing.
All right.
He's in good shape, ladies.
Put him in the Rolodex for T-minus three years from now, hopefully again.
The other thing that occurred to me, too, big guy, is that with COVID sort of waning or over, that was a huge nightmare for a lot of our guys behind bars because that meant 23 hours on lockdown, even if they were nonviolent, not needing to do that.
So hopefully you're going to have a little bit more liberty behind bars than a lot of inmates have across the board over the past two, three years.
Sam, I wanted to get you in here because you did activism in your salad days or your heydays.
And there's always the debate, right, about like, okay, so putting up a little flyer.
I'll just unfairly characterize it.
Oh, okay, you're putting up a flyer that some people might see that even fewer might pay attention to, that even fewer might be, you know, have the light go off in their heads for, and you're risking a lot.
I'm not denigrating young guys who do it.
Have your thoughts on activism in that sense changed at all?
Yeah, it's something to think about because our enemies are very serious about denying us any kind of First Amendment right to freedom of expression, freedom of speech, and all that.
You would think anything that I would put on a flyer and hand out and post up, that's got to be covered, right?
No, absolutely not.
They are very serious about denying us rights.
So you've got to keep that in mind.
And then there's what is the impact of putting up flyers or handing out flyers.
I think I talked about on the show before, and I've certainly, I think, given you the details of my case of I had a very similar type of a problem many years ago.
And this is not any kind of new problem, by the way.
You know, it's been like this for a long time uh and uh uh they they, they will do anything in their power to try to destroy you, destroy your name, put you in in danger by exposing you, and things like that.
So I have found in life that uh, personal conversations with people are at least as impactful, if not more so, than putting out flyers.
Putting out flyers is great because you, you can, you can get a name out there.
So if if if, somebody is to put up a flyer or a stick or something like that, you know it should be so that people could could look up a website or something like that and get more information.
But I I find that when you talk to people uh our our uh, ideas have such currency, especially now that people are are thirsting for the information.
So I would say uh, the being somebody who knows how to talk to people and how to strike up conversations, and certainly with people in your life using, of course, good judgment, whether you're talking to anybody that you work with or things like that, you have to use a lot of judgment there, but you can talk to people and have a tremendous impact that way.
So definitely be very be careful about putting up flyers and stickers, because they will.
They will throw every single thing uh, like you say uh loitering littering uh um uh, you know uh vandalism, all kinds of things that that they will not charge somebody else with, but they will charge us with because we hold a view that that they don't like.
Yep, most don't know this, but I actually did a little bit of flyering activism somewhere around 2017 and it was so exhilarating you would have thought that I was trying to break into fortnox the amount of homework that I did and look at, I did, you know, like scouting trips and all I was doing was like push pinning flyers up to bulletin boards in a certain spot.
What a time to be alive yeah, you know.
And, and how and how many people really even look at those things nowadays.
I, you know, I mean maybe, maybe there is value to it, but but back before the internet sure, being able to hand out flyers and a business card or a pamphlet or put up a sticker, that had a tremendous amount of uh currency, but now, with the internet things, I would say that if, if you want to um, do flyering and stickering and things like that, maybe doing things on the internet.
You know, um being in a chat room or posting or or uh, you know, being in and online in one kind of way or another putting out ideas.
That's also a way to do the same thing.
Yeah coach or, excuse me Sam, I wanted to um jump in real quick and say yeah, I believe that when you have the knowledge that you've, you've accrued through essentially lurking through all these different these chat room pages, these 4chan posts, These YouTube videos, because I'm pretty far into it as far as knowledge base, and I was always the lurker.
I never did anything, but then I've, I mean, you guys really have motivated me, and that's why one of the reasons I wanted to reach out is I didn't know about your show until after this whole event happened.
And then I was working through the winter just binging every single episode.
And it was just such a wonderful thing to be able to hear other guys talking about this stuff with the same ideas and the same point of view saying, hey, if you know something, it's your duty to do something.
And, you know, no matter how small it is, you can do something.
If you don't feel like you're a powerful enough figure, you don't have to be, you know, on the history books and in the front pages, but you can go volunteer at your local super or your local soup kitchen and talk to the guy next to you and just be a present conscious consciousness that has these right ideas and can back them up with facts.
Because a lot of people will just binge information and I have been guilty of that myself.
But at some point, it's just mental masturbation and you're not actually achieving anything through it.
And so I just wanted to say, I'm not going to drop my social media on here, but with the different points you guys have made throughout the episode saying, you know, it's your duty to do something.
I used to be on, and this was part of my red pill journey.
I was always into the whole banking cartels and the oil guard, the oil agarchs, and all this other stuff that is very, you know, well tied into where we're at.
But it was, you know, the final pill, the final nail in the coffin is the Jewish question, the JQ, for anyone who's not aware of that listening.
But I got into the pipeline through Instagram.
There was quite a few people on Instagram that I found, and then everyone got banned, and we all migrated to Telegram.
And then Telegram had its heyday.
And I think that a lot of people kind of made it bad in the sense of there was just a lot of spurgy behavior, not a lot of actual progress being made.
People were getting banned that were not deserving it, and other people were being left up that were just making a noise.
And it was essentially an echo chamber.
And so I did get off of Telegram for a number of months and I went back to Instagram.
And there are still people on there, but with the censorship, it has really curated content.
So you have to be very careful with what you post.
However, if you're smart enough with it, you can still post very informative information that will make people have to question the reality that they've lived in and break that brainwashing cycle and really dig deep into some of this stuff.
And so I have built a page within the last two months, maybe a little longer, that has over a thousand followers now.
Completely organic.
No shout-outs, no, or what's it called?
Hashtags, none of that stuff.
Literally just posting videos that are very, very thought-provoking and basically letting the Jew speak for himself.
Because, I mean, at the end of the day, they all have to tell you what they do.
That's the revelation of the method.
And you have plenty of opportunity to do something no matter how small it is.
For me, I figured I'm going to start some social media that's that's going to provoke some very specific mindsets because I've had people reach out to me from their business, their business pages, like a soap company, a Windows and Doors company, and they're just reaching out to me saying, hey, I love your page.
I've been searching for some truth and I came across your stuff and you seem to be like on this Jew pill question.
And I'm just like, just go here, let me link you to the greatest story never told, Europa the last report, and come back to me once you finish some of this stuff.
See, that's very powerful.
Back in the day where you would hand out a flyer so you'd have a P.O. box, well, it takes a really ballsy person that's going to write to a P.O. box and give their own contact address to be contacted back.
Or if you say, hey, we're having a rally or a get-together, why don't you show up to that?
That is really a big hump to get over to get a normie person to come and stick their neck out that far.
But now in the internet age, people can easily set up a sock account.
People can visit a website or go on a chat room or a Telegram channel that you can correspond with people by email.
It's a golden age for us in a sense.
It's so funny, Sam.
You know, back in my day, we had to write to the old P.O. box.
And I heard from a young Zoomer the other day, we'll call him Little Baby Zoomer.
He was like, oh, I got radicalized on Snapchat.
And then I did the old guy thing where I was like, well, in my day, you just made a shit post account on Twitter, young man.
So, you know, it's like, whatever works.
And I wanted to commend activism, even something as quote unquote simple as putting up flyers for Fritz and everyone who's done it is that for our guys, seeing that stuff in the wild.
I remember one day I saw a Patriot Front sticker in a park in a grocery store parking lot and my eyes and my, you know, my smile just lit up thinking, oh, that is so wonderful to see right here in my backyard.
I wonder if I knew him or if I wonder if it was him.
You know, I know a couple of those guys.
So it's not, yeah, it's not just for the Randos, but sometimes we are now big enough that it's a shot in the arm for our guys as well.
Jack, I want to, yeah, go ahead, please, Fritz.
Oh, I was just going to make another quick point.
I saw one of the little Jews rubbing their hands in this resort town that's very, very liberal.
I saw it on one of the ski lifts last winter and I was just over the hill.
It's like, okay, our guys are out here in the wild.
It's super great to see that super white pilling.
Oh, yeah.
Talk about talk about sticker campaigns.
Do you guys remember a few years ago, somebody was going, going around putting a sticker and it said we are everywhere and it's a swastika on there?
Remember that?
Oh, man, that had to be chilling, right?
For the, for the enemy.
Powerful stuff.
Yeah.
Who knows?
Maybe it was Rolo's future wife, little ski bunny, put up that shekel grubbing icon on that ski post or whatever.
So there you go, hopefully.
Jack, I don't know if I asked this when we did our prior show, but is there any implicit or maybe even explicit racial solidarity between white guards and white inmates?
In other words, should Fritz, should he be looking out for possible like, you know, bro moments, like being a good boy and of the same race?
Or are most corrections officers just deracinated armed bureaucrats, essentially?
I would say most of them are probably just they're basically just glorified DMV workers at this point.
I wouldn't look to them or try to connect to them at any kind of racial level.
But this is going to depend on what region you're in, what prison you go to.
They're all different.
You know, I really only talk from my experience in New York where race, there weren't really a lot of white inmates, you know, to be honest with you.
They were mostly black, Hispanic, a lot of Puerto Ricans and whatnot.
In the extent that they had white guys, they were mostly old and nobody really gave them any problems.
It was almost like a novelty scene of like that.
Sure.
But in other places, it's different.
I've heard, you know, out west, race is a huge deal in California and some of the prisons out west, whereas I just didn't have that experience.
But yeah, I would say don't look to try to become a racial brother with the white CEO.
If anything, it's just nice to have a white CEO on the unit because they actually kind of care about their job.
If you need something done, if you need something from security, like if you need them to take you somewhere, if you need some sort of like, if you need a new roll of toilet paper, for instance, you're probably going to get it from a white CEO more than you would like some minority, like just whisked off the street to work that job.
But that's about it.
How about things that you saw?
Obviously, in terms of helping Fritz pass the time, maybe you won't need to pass the time, but maybe you will.
Obviously, you've got reading, you've got working out, you got possibly getting involved and working in the joint.
Anything else that you saw inmates do that you thought was creative or productive that made the time seem shorter?
A lot of guys did chess.
You know, once they had someone they were kind of okay with speaking to on a regular basis and they didn't feel like they were going to get jumped or exploited, you know, you have like a chess buddy.
There was a lot of games and stuff, a lot of Scrabble.
Everyone's gambling.
I don't recommend gambling, but if you have stuff to put up, that might help you pass some time playing like Scrabble for a bag of legs, potato chips or something.
Scrabble is a great game, but how are blacks into Scrabble?
That's a game that literally involves both spelling and knowing the definition of words.
Ebonic Scrabble.
Yeah, no spelling rules.
Ghetto Scrabble.
I'm sure it's a thing.
You got a lot of ghetto Scrabble.
Yeah, but some of the old timers, they would have like these ancient, I guess they make, and I never knew the silly word prison, but they make Scrabble dictionaries, which are like books filled with like commonly used Scrabble words.
So most of them had one of those lying around to sell.
So they would a lot of times just have a cheat sheet.
Yeah, so a lot of like board games.
And I recommend that if there's any, if there's any at all educational or legal materials that you're going to have access to, just take advantage of it.
You know, you might as well, you might as well use every resource that the state has given these people to your own advantage.
Just do it.
Study, take a class, something.
Come out with that GED, Fritz.
Yeah, that was a big theme of Jack's book, which was how much assistance went to largely Nair Do Wells, you know, Jews and Jewish NGOs trying to help these really hardened criminals with their legal defense and then getting housing out of the clink and all the rest of it was pretty disgusting.
The thought also occurred, Fritz, that I know a guy who's behind bars who legitimately started an Odinist religious group in his prison because one did not exist.
And of course, they did give him a hard time.
Maybe they thought it was a joke at first or just some ploy, but he was legitimate and was going around asking guys to please send literature and DVDs, which we did help do.
And I think he got it off the ground.
So that's just something to keep in the back of mind, back of your mind.
I will say, since my book was released, a lot has actually changed in some of these facilities, I will say.
So as a quick update, I have eyes and ears in a lot of different correctional information banks.
I got a lot of people reporting to me some of the stuff that goes on.
So right now, and I know this is in New York prisons and a lot of other state prisons too, but they actually give you tablets.
You can get like an iPad and have games and email and stuff right from the cell.
So if you go to one of those facilities that has an iPad, you might just be playing Flappy Bird for five years, in which case you're going to buy the public.
You're the striker of prison, Jack.
Fritz, before I forget, and we'll give you some more time here as we start to land this puppy, I just wanted to clarify, you know, you're not coming on the show hat in hand, crying poor mouth.
You do have a lawyer and you do have loved ones.
But if you do go away, I already offered, of course, to try to help you get on G Minority and make sure the people rotate and stuff like that.
Are you worried about getting a little lonely and sad back there and visitation and all the rest?
You know, I've heard once that there was a, it was that it was very dangerous to be okay with being alone.
However, with my upbringing and where I am location-wise, it's been something that was kind of inevitable.
And I do feel as though I would be able to pass the time with a good sense of accomplishment throughout any of the menial tasks that they provide for us in there, but at the same time, get something done.
But in the meaning, in the regards of communication with the outside and loved ones and family, I definitely would appreciate for them to continue reaching out to me.
I keep a pretty small social circle as is.
And with my story going public, there was a lot of those in my immediate surroundings who were very taken aback by that.
And I kind of had to explain away, and not in a sense where I was apologetic, but also a sense of understanding where they're coming from.
You kind of have to meet them where they're at.
And you can't really, you know, don't cast pearls before swine because they're not going to understand any of this stuff.
They kind of have to be led to the water, but they're not going to be able to drink it unless the water is, you know, Kool-Aid for their brain.
And so perspective-wise in some context, where I'm at location-wise, we have the lowest, not lowest white per capita, but the lowest, what's the right word?
The population density is very much skewed so that you have a lot of different people here.
And it's very difficult for me to walk down the street and not see three or four different races and they're all speaking a different language.
And so because of that, with where I'm at mentally, I do keep a small circle.
However, if anybody wants to reach out to me and talk about any of this stuff, religion, race, fitness, I am 100% accepting of that.
And I'll speak to anybody.
It doesn't matter who they are because at the end of the day, we need everybody we can get.
And I've got some Mexican nationalist friends and they're pretty hardcore over there.
So don't discount anybody for exactly who they are.
I know your skin is your uniform and wear it with pride.
But just know that old uncle, he had Muslims in the ranks.
He had blacks in the ranks.
He had Indians in the ranks.
And at the end of the day, I believe keep yourself pure, keep your race pure, keep your bloodline pure.
Do not allow anybody to interbreed with you.
But at the same time, you got to meet people where they are.
And they're potentially not on the same level as you.
But if they're a nationalistic-minded person, they will understand that you hold your own race to your highest regard because you have to.
And you will respect them for doing the same with their race.
So I just wanted to make that clear.
Well, especially in prison there.
I mean, it's going to be predominantly not my guys.
And I can't be shouting, you know, 1488 at the top of my lungs.
Well, there's a new silver lining is that, you know, with all this repression, there's going to be more of our guys in there to be friends with at this pace.
Yeah.
Yeah, I'll run into Gypsy Crusader and I'll give him a solid handshake.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
I believe Jack was on the hate house where they were discussing that we're all going to meet up and we're going to be playing Crash Bandicoot together.
Yeah.
We're going to be sharing the PS2 control.
Oh, I thought that was Valhalla, not behind bars, but that's that's pretty good too.
Yeah.
Fritz after you die.
Come on.
Yes, I know.
I know.
I guess.
Go to prison first.
I once said in heaven, all of you.
You only go to Valhalla if you if you die on the battlefield.
Good clarification there.
Yeah.
See, that's why Fritz is going to prison because he doesn't have any filters.
That was an implied Fed post.
No, I'm kidding, buddy.
I am sincerely proud of you and honored to know you.
I'm grateful that you reached out to the show and really grateful to have you on.
And I don't get the sense that you're trying to be a tough guy or like a fake stoic.
You're just handling this like a man sincerely.
So stay in touch.
We wish you the best.
Yep.
You bet.
Maybe a miracle will happen too.
Any last thoughts or questions for Jack before we got some new white life to close us out?
And I'm very proud that you haven't crashed your car yet driving while streaming.
I cannot find this place.
I'm trying to get to a birthday party and I just do not know this place is.
I obviously can't use the maps right now.
So I'm just going off intuition here.
Oh, all right, buddy.
All right.
We really will let you go then.
Well, I wanted to mention.
Oh, yeah.
Please I wanted to mention to Fritz, I'm a trad Catholic and I want to I want to pray for you for you, Fritz, that I think you're a good man and I think you can beat this rap.
Well, I really do appreciate that, sir.
And I have a lot of people that I have voiced my opinions with, like you were guys were saying earlier, as far as activism goes, you know, just speaking your mind with people, having a well-intentioned conversation and meeting them where they're at, which is the most important thing.
Perspective is really the most important thing.
But you can gain a lot of support from people who have seen your articles that paint you in this negative light.
And at the same time, just be like, listen, I'm fighting for my right for my people to survive at the end of the day.
And accept then maybe this friendship or relationship isn't going to work out.
But for the most part, people will meet you there.
But I think it's the momentum is on our side.
It is.
Well, thank you so much for praying for me, guys.
And I will definitely be keeping you.
I will reach out and keep you updated on whatever I know happens.
So thanks so much for that brother, guys.
You bet.
We'll put all these links in the show notes.
Enjoy that birthday party for sure.
It probably makes regular life taste a little sweeter.
Another silver lining to facing adversity.
Let's go over to Jack McCracken.
Jack, thank you so much for joining us and being our guy, riding shotgun with first-hand experience of so much of this.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Always love being on.
It's great stuff.
And yeah, man, I wish you luck no matter what happens.
Personally, I don't want you to go to prison at all or jail or wherever it is you're facing.
But just take souls in the fact that it's really not that bad.
And as long as you're just cool, you should be able to get out on skate.
Yeah.
I'll stay out of anybody else's lane and keep my head down.
Don't draw any attention.
But at the same time, understand that everything happens for a reason.
I might just need to get off my phone for a while and learn some new skill.
Uh, i've heard they have leather, leather working in there, so make some, some belts with some hidden symbolism or something like that.
Just just don't make any assless chaps, you might send the wrong signal.
All chapter ass.
Oh, I don't know, I just watch movies.
Yeah, speaking of movies yeah, fly casual Chewy when you're behind bars.
Just fly casual, you'll make it through with no problem.
All right, let's land this puppy Fritz.
If you got to run uh, do what you got to do.
We do have a couple new white lives and announcements here before we close out this extra special, one hour plus full house and let's just kick it off right here.
We usually do this after the break, but big one.
In addition, of course, we're so happy for Jack and Jill Mccracken and their new baby.
But another full house beloved uh veteran, our our greatest producer ever.
Jack the intern has been promoted to Jack the father.
Uh, he welcomed a beautiful baby girl uh recently and she is really cute and Jack is uh extremely excited about being a new dad, as you would expect uh, so we got to get Jack on to talk about that.
Sam has lined up two new fathers I don't know if it's their first for both of them, but both dads with new white life uh, relatively recently under the roof uh, Publius Felsius and Beatrice Von Bora.
Also with their kind support, let us know that they welcomed baby number four a few weeks ago which uh, really the significance of that is that Publius needs to buy her a Muter cruise for crossing the four threshold.
You can find that perhaps on lakesidetrader.com or dot net.
At least that was a good site for those things a couple years ago.
Congratulations, guys.
And they said that hopefully their daughters will contribute even more daughters to our people in the future.
And then uh, just before we went to tape our old pal Jayhawk, let us know that he and his lovely wife have another one on the way too.
So congratulations, Jayhawk.
Sorry, I don't mean to just throw you in there at the end.
We're very proud.
Awesome for you guys too.
Yeah, Sam Rollo, do you ever get any new white life announcements, or just check the inbox, and you don't even get spam.
I, i've said a few in the past.
Really well, I wasn't listening.
Yeah well, what else?
Why listen to me?
We could just make things up.
It's so much more interesting right, hey?
Hey, before I give you too much guff, Rollo uh said the other day, coach, this is what you got to do.
You got to send me all the show files and all the show artwork and we're going to get this whole library up on Odyssey.
And I said, I don't know Rollo, that sounds like a lot of work uh, but he's willing to do it.
God bless him, and I am willing to buttons and drag and scroll through thousands of images to find some of those early show artworks.
Uh Rollo also, let us know that our entire library, by the way, dear audience, T.me slash Fullhouse shows is up there every single episode.
That's the only place you can get all 135 with this episode uh, but a couple of them must must have been corrupted on the upload.
So they cut off at the break or three quarters through or whatever.
Rolo, our dutiful producer, has been going through and doing his homework and listening to those.
So we corrected one or two.
I know I got another one, buddy.
So if you listen to an old show and you were like, what happened?
It just cut off.
It's not you.
It was in the upload.
The original files are all pristine.
So we will correct those.
And I guess we're getting them up on Odyssey, despite all of the complaints about Odyssey I see left and right, but mostly from streamers.
Yeah.
So you can, you know, because we had that on YouTube for a while and it was doing pretty good considering it's all audio content essentially over a static image.
We are on, well, I turned my camera off because I was having internet issues, but tonight we were mostly all on camera.
Eventually, one day we will be live streaming after I dox Rolo.
But anyway, keep your eyes peeled for that.
Keep, yeah, I know.
See, see, I was a nice guy for most of the show.
I had to let it rip here at the end.
All right.
Keep Fritz in your thoughts and prayers by Jack's excellent memoir, Live in the Dream from analogpublishing.com.
And another one, please do subscribe to the Occidental Quarterly.
As I've been under, this is like day three of being sick.
And I just literally, you know, basically I'm a hero for doing the show tonight.
Got a fever of 101.
I'm sweating like a pig, congested, but I've been a little bit low energy, but not so low energy to read.
So I picked up my summer 2022 Occidental Quarterly, Kevin McDonald, Andrew Joyce, Thomas Dalton.
It's like a murderer's row of academic counter-Semitism.
Please do go to the Occidental Quarterly.
I'll put the link in the show notes and subscribe.
It's not cheap, but it's worth it.
It's like a fine wine in your hands of the stuff you need to know.
Hail Victory Brothers.
Talk to you soon.
Thank you, Jackie Baby.
God bless you and your wife.
We'll have you on too.
Excuse me.
All right.
Rolo, Sam, any last thoughts before we land it?
I would like to plug something.
I was recently on the Young Whites.
So go listen to that episode.
Yes.
Some people say I said my TK.
So I like that meme.
Very good.
And that's the rightstuff.biz slash T-W-H or something like that, probably.
He doesn't know.
He's like, I don't.
Just click the Young Whites tab.
Whatever.
Are you young enough to go on the Young Whites?
I don't know there.
Oh, no, no.
But you know what?
They've been around.
They've been around for seven years.
So are they young enough to still be calling themselves Young Whites?
I know, right?
Middle-aged whites, eventually they're going to have to change it.
And we're eventually going to be empty nest when Sam's kids are all gone.
And the sad day when my kids are out of the house, maybe they won't be out of the house.
Maybe we'll always be full house and things will have changed so much that moving out from mom and dad's house is not nearly as attractive as it used to be.
We'll see.
All right.
Check out Rolo.
Look, Rolo has friends outside of our small circle here.
He's got invitations.
Oh, I appreciate that lie.
All right, fam.
I have been on a contemporary country kick lately, believe it or not.
I know everybody says that new country sucks or like, but, you know, there's a lot of good stuff out there.
It's not all Florida, Georgia line, you know, sort of like rap or hip-hop infused country.
There's some good stuff out there.
And having, I had a little bit of the summertime blues.
You remember that old song from way back in the day?
And instead of that song, I found this one, which is called Summertime Blues by Zach Bryan.
And it actually made me think of our soldierly new friend, Fritz, that he is not letting challenge get him down.
And if any of you have got the blues or just a little bit of that summertime sadness, which is another good song, I hope you realize that you're not alone.
Things could always be worse.
Be grateful for what you got and soldier on.
So, this is Summertime Blues by Zach Bryan.
We love you, fam, and we will talk to you next week.
See ya.
See ya.
Boop!
I wonder if you saw it too.
Wish I still had someone to lose.
All I got at least summertime blues.
But there's a green-eyed, dark-haired beauty on some beach by Monterey.
Letting the waves wash your pain away.
But I'll never know that there's some boys out in Lowkey that are praying to get the job done.
Hauling hay and fighting off the sun.
With ladies waiting in town.
My summertime blues, summertime blues.
I've got nothing left to prove.
I'm out of touching out a tune, singing along to the burdens up high and the souls below.
All those boys who ain't got no home.
The beautiful girls I'll never hold.
This one's for you.
My summertime blue.
Quiet turns to revelry as the sun burns away the spring The coastline starts to sing with the young and heartless.
Hildenhead and the Hamptons, where the rich all go home to die.
The young kids all get high just to pass time.
I bought a bottle of the best bourbon, a beat-down boy could buy.
I'm gonna bury all my sorrow as the summertime passes by.
Summertime blues, summertime blues.
I've got nothing left to prove.
I'm out of touching out tunes, singing along to the burdens up high in the souls below.
All those boys who ain't got no home.
The beautiful girls I'll never hold.
This one's for you.
My summertime blue.
Time sit so late tonight I wonder if you saw it too.