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Aug. 14, 2022 - Full Haus
02:22:01
Paternal Power

A classic Full Haus this week as we effortlessly weave between timeless fatherhood content and the biggest stories of the day. Enjoy it...or else! Break: "The Nationalist" by Final War (DJ Pablo) Close: "Wish the Lads Were Here" by Skullhead (DJ Sam) A listener endorses this book if you're worried your marriage may be on the rocks. Coach endorses this classic novel about life in the country. 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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Sometimes we stray pretty far from our core mission on this show, which is, of course, to encourage more of our people to get married, stay happy, and raise big, strong, healthy white families.
And why shouldn't we stray from time to time?
As I remarked on another program once, it would be kind of gay if all we talked about was marriage and fatherhood.
And on this blessed anniversary of August 12th, the first major modern stirring of mass white revolt against our slavers in America, we will do both.
We'll feature some comfy, newish dad conversation in the first half, and some meatier metapolitical topics will follow in the second.
Consume it all or pick and choose if you must.
Summer's almost over.
The struggle continues and things get more interesting and accelerated with every passing day.
So, mr producer, hit it.
Welcome everyone
to episode 136 of Full House, the world's most versatile show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
I am your high spirits host, Coach Finstock.
That's right.
It is a gorgeous pre-fall night here in Appalachia, full moon overhead, crickets chirping, dog right next to me.
And I am thinking back fondly to a hot as balls day, as it was clinically declared in Central Virginia five years ago.
And we are, of course, back with another two hours of, if not the most insightful, at least the most heartfelt content that is fit to publish.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Sean and Ted for their kind support of the show this week.
And also, true, heartfelt best wishes and prayers to a very special couple and listeners of the show who welcomed their firstborn this past week.
And that little guy just could not wait to go full term and get out into this world and fighting.
So that little guy is struggling to hang in there, but he is making progress every day.
Our new parents have quite the struggle ahead of them in the near term.
So if you would like to show them some love and solidarity, please hit us up privately for a way to send them perhaps some material support that they will surely be needing as they go forward with their new white life.
And with that, let us get on to the birth panel.
This anniversary every year because it reminds him of his lowly coarse cowardice sitting in his basement, strumming a guitar and listening to old records while we were out there fighting for survival and bleeding in the streets.
Sam, I'm surprised you had the gall to come on this week.
Yeah, no, I got to do it.
Yeah, certainly a momentous day.
But, you know, even in that time, my reaction to that was, yeah, good luck with that.
I was truly expecting something bad.
Sorry, some asshole is beeping their horn here, but yeah uh, I did, I did sit that one out.
You know, and I mean, in years gone by I I rarely ventured too far.
I always figured, if i'm going to get arrested and and thrown in jail, I want to at least be somewhere close where my family could come visit me or something like that.
So you know that that was just a little too far for me to go.
Uh, but um, but yeah, but hey, I wanted to mention uh quickly about um, you know I, I do a little guest spot on this show sometime called White Power Hour.
I've mentioned it before and we've had uh, some of their guys on here and uh, recently there was a uh, a parting of the ways with uh, the producer and one of the personalities on the show.
So um we, we got a new producer, you know, and uh well, at the time, you know, Mark was asking me to take a bigger role, which I said sure, no problem, it's no big deal to mix together stuff and balance the levels and all that.
But uh, I said uh, you know I I, the the big, the big job is really picking all them songs and everything like that and uh, so anyways uh we, we proceeded, and then he, he contacts me, says okay well, send in your segment.
We got a new producer.
You know who the producer is.
He says Jazz Hands.
No really yeah, I said are you kidding me?
And he says well, I mean uh, you know like if, if you, let's say, you called a pizza place and you to order a pizza, and then you hear me answer the phone, start talking to you, you would know it's me right, you know.
So he says, I mean, so I, you know, I kind of I don't believe it.
But i'll tell you a small reason why I do believe.
It is um, if you listen to FASH THE Nation, there was a run of shows where he was playing a lot of German rac as the closing music.
So you know I, apparently the guy denies it and it's not somebody that Mark knows irl.
So uh, you know take, maybe this will make some people uh interested to listen to the show.
There you go, do some uh voice forensics there fam yeah well, of course he doesn't even the.
The previous producer, Jay Hate, never spoke on the uh, on the actual show, and neither neither does this guy, but but I thought that was interesting.
That floored me.
I said, are you kidding me?
But I said, convey my best wishes.
I certainly enjoy listening to Fash THE Nation, but uh also uh recent recently coach uh, I went to a drive-in.
When was the last time you've been to a drive-in?
Never in my life, never.
See, you're showing your age there, you're just a young tot.
You're a young tot compared to me because I I remember when I was a little kid, we would go with my family, or even extended family, and uh, but now drive-ins are very rare, and especially in the metropolitan area area, shall we say they.
They are non-existent, because you know why, and uh, so we had to take.
Uh actually, i've been to this drive-in before and uh it's, it's a little bit of a ride out of town, but you, you got to go that far to avoid you know what niggers.
So uh, are you saying that we can blame them for the decline of the drive-in in America?
Absolutely oh, my god really, what were they like honking at, like funny scenes, or doing drive-in drive drive, drive and drive-bys?
Yeah yeah drive-in, drive-by.
Yeah well, whatever it is, I mean the same reason that they destroy regular theaters, you know, wherever there are regular theaters and and they take over, then they shut down too.
But certainly I mean the, the uh well, let's just put it this way.
I mean i'm, i'm no more guilty than anyone, because the fun thing of a drive-in is you got to sneak in a little booze, you know.
And then uh, maybe you sneak off and did diddle your wife.
Uh, if you can, I was gonna say little hanky panky, a little hanky.
Well, diddle diddle's.
Nothing wrong with the word diddle, is it?
Hey, Diddle diddle the cat in the fiddle yeah, that's what we're talking about.
So yeah, we went and we saw uh the, this movie, Elvis.
Have you seen this or heard about this movie, Elvis?
It's with Tom Hanks.
Yeah, it's uh, you know, just like any modern movie.
There's a lot of visuals and it's visually stunning but uh, it's garbage movie.
But there are a couple good scenes, like where the segregationists are meeting.
They got the rubble flags out there and they're.
The idea is that they're against this nigger music, rock and roll, as being nigger music, when we all know that Alex Haley invented, first of all coined the term rock and roll and invented the, the medium of rock and roll.
Alex Haley and the COPS, but uh, a white man.
So uh, but anyways, it was fun to.
Of course, a drive-in is always a double feature.
So there's a kids movie which was uh, League Of Super Pets and uh, and then there was the main feature which was Elvis.
But a uh, a drive-in is a lot of fun and if if if, you've never uh been, or if you could find one in your area, it's a lot of fun to go.
Cool uh, lots of sam, you must have cheated and had your caffeine tonight instead of uh, after after show morning.
When you said Alex Haley, I I thought of Roots first off.
I didn't know that there was a guy named Alex Haley, responsible for no, it's Bill Haley, Bill Haley in the comments.
Oh sorry, sorry.
Well, that's, that's even before my time, if you can believe it.
Alex Haley looks a little like yeah, that was about my Bill Haley.
Alex Haley had some white man in his bloodline looking at his face, but but Bill Haley coined the term and invented rock and roll music.
There you go um, so a couple thoughts there.
Uh, I my it's funny that you mentioned Elvis, because I mentioned we had the in-law uh meetup a couple weeks back and they just gave us a bunch of old dvds.
I don't know if they, like are just emptying their collection or they're getting them in the discount bin, but one of them was Elvis In Blue Hawaii, I think.
Yeah, I think I have that record watching it and uh, but it was a, it was a movie and I was just looking at that.
I was like, could you imagine being Elvis in the 50s, talk about top of the world, like the most handsome desired famous, beloved uh crew?
Nor in all the world.
I I knew there was some percentage, supposed some people, middle name, Moses's brother, some some people have said um anyway, but yeah, never did a uh a drive in theater.
But all right well, I'll save that for later.
I did want to mention that, you know, we weren't, we, I boosted the Charlotte, we'll, we'll talk a little bit about Charlottesville, the show, do a whole deep thing.
I boosted our, uh, we did a full retrospective two years ago, episode 59.
We told you so because when the BLM summer was going on and all of those monuments across the country were getting to face, uh, it was very poignant for us who rallied at the Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottesville.
Oh, yeah, we told, yeah, we were, as usual, we were ahead of the curve.
Um, and I was on a call before this show.
Usually, I clear my schedule before full house, but a group of Charlottesville veterans did a voice chat for at least an hour.
They're still going.
And I was like, All right, I'll join.
You know, I feel like we've talked about it somewhat ad nauseum, right?
Maybe making too big of a deal of it.
I don't know.
It was pretty freaking awesome.
Uh, so I gave a different perspective that I'll share in the second half with the benefit now of five years retrospective to look at it.
Uh, but then the other guys who perhaps haven't spoken on shows before were able to give their unique uh experiences and things like that.
I was like, oh man, I was smiling and captivated.
Uh, it's still a fascinating, powerful story all these years later.
Uh, and clearly, it continues to be for our enemies as well.
As I saw one of them put, uh, yeah, things didn't go particularly well for the alt-right in the aftermath of Charlottesville, but their ideas are more widespread than ever and more dangerous than ever.
I was like, You're damn right.
That's because we're honest, we're right, we call things as they are.
Uh, so to all of the men out there who put their asses on the line that day, except just me on this show, I think, so far as I know.
Anyway, I'll stop doing that.
Uh, bless you, we salute you.
Uh, and in a sense, you are all heroes.
Uh, all right, moving on.
We'll keep the show a rolling.
Next up, if memory serves, he was still looking up to Daddy Blump as his personal savior while we were out there risking our asses for the cause.
Rolo, how far you have come, my friend.
Uh, yeah, I was uh very make America great in 2017.
Actually, that's not exactly true.
I was, um, I was dealt a very heavy blow when he launched those missiles at Syria.
Like my, my, my heart sank in my chest when that happened.
Yep, but uh, but you know, I learned about Charlottesville on the way to TwitchCon, where some guy was telling me about it.
He said, Yeah, and he said the way the Jew media covered this really opened my eyes.
I was like, Oh, okay, how about that?
Yeah, I didn't know anything about it.
I knew Antifa was there, and I was like, Well, Antifa was there, and I hope they all explicit it deleted.
And anyone that's against Antifa, I'm just, I'm on board with them.
And then, look, and then Trump said there's good people on both sides.
I'm like, Now there's no good Antifa, but I'm sure the other side was pretty good at the time.
That was about the most explicit or implicit pro-white comments delivered by a president probably in over a century.
You'd have to go back to the good old days when America was actually America and presidents, you know, it was just assumed that they were pro-white and against the expansion of diversity.
Yeah, but so many, so many guys have said, see, we can't resist.
Uh, our special guest is like, uh, guys, I don't know why on the show, uh, but you just can't resist.
And so many guys have said, Oh, yeah, I had no idea this thing even existed until it made, you know, major national international news or I don't know.
I didn't know what you guys were all about until I saw, like you said, Rolo, the overreaction and the grotesque lies.
So whatever, whatever your analysis, whether it was worth it and all the rest of it, it brought a lot more people toward us than the cowardly few who ran and scurried under Trump's skirt in the aftermath.
Looking at you, Andrew Anglin.
All right.
Finally, our very patient and very special guest.
Oh, I did want to say no smasher again this week.
He does have late and long hours these days.
So there's no smasher drama he'll be back on.
But anyway, our special guest this week, rumor has it that he was playing video in Sam's basement while we were all putting it on the line for the white race that day back in August 2017.
And yes, I will do this bit on everyone who wasn't there that day for the rest of my life, even the younger guys.
But our special guest is a proud white father, longtime white nationalist.
And this is not his first rodeo on a recording.
I'll leave it at that.
Pablo Blanco, welcome to Full House, my friend.
Thanks for having me, guys.
And I wasn't in Sam's basement.
I was actually, my daughter was born two weeks before it.
So I just didn't have enough time.
I have a good excuse for not being there.
All right.
All right.
That's that's a mostly acceptable, acceptable excuse.
But I mean, she was talking about the best.
Although I do like Sam's guitar playing, so I would go back down in the basement, though.
Pablo, let's do the bit.
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
First time on Full House.
Sure.
As far as I know, I never did DNA tests, but from family history, I'm half Lithuanian, 25% Croatian, and 25% Irish.
And that is a blend we don't get too often here.
Yeah, it is a unique blend for sure.
So, but okay, religion-wise, I did, didn't come from a very religious household.
I did do 12 years of Catholic school, though, because the public schools were just really, really bad where I was at.
So I did 12 years of Catholic school, but currently I'm just not practicing anything.
And fatherhood status, I have a five-year-old daughter and a almost two-year-old son.
Awesome.
We're going to talk about them, not in any particular detail a little bit later, but I wanted to ask, is Lithuanian a strong part of your identity?
And has it or does it color your attitude toward Russia?
Because, you know, I in particular am fairly supportive of Russia, probably compared to other guys in the cause.
And as we all know, it's the Eastern Euro bros, aside from the Serbs and maybe a handful of other countries that are most viscerally anti-Russian because they have the long memories, at least of the Cold War, if not longer.
But just curious if that colors your attitude or if Lithuania is just like, it's just an ethnicity that you have.
It's not a strong part of your identity.
I've always been closer to my dad's side of the family, which is the Croatian side.
So I more identify with that more than the Lithuanian side.
So I guess it doesn't really give me a strong opinion about Russia either way.
Okay.
Gotcha.
And opinion on Serbs as a stronger Croat identifier.
Gotta ask.
They're my white brothers.
I got nothing bad to say about them.
Good answer, Mr. Diplomat.
Yeah, apparently the Croats and the Croats and the Serbs are having some sort of like bro moment in Bosnia right now.
Apparently, like the Muslims and the Croats have kind of been ganging together to keep Serbs out of power or at least prevent the Serbs from seceding in their Srpska Republica there.
And I guess now I haven't seen too much in the news lately, but it's like the Serbs and the Croats are sort of like saying, how about what if we worked together instead and got rid of this damn Bosniak crappy tyranny that we have there?
Anyway, interesting story to follow from the Balkans there, which are usually a very, very sleepy, quiet part of Europe with not much going on there.
I had to tell Jup had to tell Junior about Gavrilo Prince Eep the other night.
I can't remember how World War I came on, but trying to explain to a 10-year-old about the causes and the sources of World War I.
It was a fun, fun challenge.
I think he followed around, followed along.
Anyway, Pablo, how did you get red-pilled?
You long timer or did something happen real quick?
What's your, you know, how'd you end up thinking like we do?
Yeah, well, there's not one major event.
I was just kind of a product of my environment.
I grew up in a very white working class area.
And, you know, racism was fairly normal at the time in the 90s.
So I was already pretty based as a young lad.
So started hearing stories about skinheads in my neighborhood when I was about 14.
I didn't know too much about them and didn't know how to get a hold of them.
So I just kind of let it be.
And then as luck would have it, I got a job washing dishes at a butcher shop when I was like 14, almost 15.
And one of the guys came up to me when I was working there and he was like, hey, man, do you ever listen to any hate rock?
I was like, what the hell is hate rock?
I don't even know what this guy's talking about.
So he gave me a, he gave me a tape, a mixtape.
And I got home and I played it.
And man, I thought it was like a bunch of good, really good pro-white bands.
And I thought it was like the greatest thing in the world.
Couldn't believe that there was people out there advocating for white people.
So, you know, I went, got a bunch of music, started buying books and started painting the town red, bought a, had my parents buy me a pair of boots and a bomber.
And then I just kind of went from there, man.
You know, the 90s was a lot different.
Like, you know, but back in then, like all my friends' parents and our parents were always bitching about Jesse Jackson and affirmative action.
And like, so we were all kind of based as kids.
And then it didn't take much to push us over to the edge.
That's so funny.
Because growing up, I didn't have an anti-racist.
That wasn't a thing back in the 80s and 90s, right?
But it was just the standard, you know, implied that racism is bad, that blacks were oppressed.
You know, my town was probably 85, 90% white.
So there were a few black kids in every class.
And they were usually class clowns more than real trouble.
I think that came later in high school.
But yeah, I think we forget.
Sometimes I'll speak for myself.
We just assume that everybody has this like normy, deracinated upbringing in America.
And then, you know, they find 4chan or they get on Twitter or whatever and they have this awakening.
And it's like, no, actually, our views are much older and more widely accepted in recent history than just kids getting on the internet, right?
All you need is exposure to it and parents who aren't products of, you know, Pax Americana, why America thinking about race and stuff like that.
It's a good reminder.
Now, do you have red laces in your black boots?
I didn't know that that was a thing.
See, I'm such a noob on the side.
Maybe you shouldn't answer that.
I don't know.
Yeah, I did many years ago, but actually, currently, I don't even own a pair of boots.
So I'm kind of, my hair is a little long now.
So, you know, but it's still in the heart.
So that's what counts.
Sam, you got to whip this guy into shape.
Fatherhood has made you grow soft and weak.
It does happen sometimes.
I am brown as a berry because I took the, it was a gorgeous day today.
It was like 80 degrees and full sun.
And I was like, oh yeah, it's a pool day.
So took the kids to the pool and junior didn't want to go.
Potatoes still in the floaty stage and daughter after getting her swim lessons.
I don't think I talked about this on the air, but we were talking about you have to teach your kids to swim.
And I've tried to teach all my kids to swim.
It never freaking took.
Either I was a bad instructor or it was just dad and they weren't listening.
So I've always had to get swim lessons.
And daughter got her swim lessons finally.
And now she's just a total fish going off the high dive, going off the low dive, you know, underwater, opening her eyes, etc.
So it's, it's wonderful to see.
But enough about me, Pablo.
You are the proud father of two kids and they're still relatively young.
God bless you.
How are things?
Give us some dad content.
All right.
Let's reinvigorate the audience with the joys and the glories, brother.
Give us some highlights.
What are some of the things that make you happiest about fatherhood?
Well, I mean, just seeing their smiles and coming home to them after a long day at work is probably the best.
But going from one to two kids was actually kind of surprisingly hard.
It was actually harder going to that from zero to one.
So that was pretty shocking to me at first.
I was just getting in the groove with the first one.
And then all of a sudden, we got the second one coming and it totally derailed everything again.
Had to find a new routine and everything.
But it's been great, man.
It's been a trip just, you know, learning how to be a good father and, you know, dealing with the blows and fatherhood.
You're absolutely right that it's worth, it's priceless when you have young kids under the roof.
One of the absolute greatest things of fatherhood is coming home from a long day at the work, long day at work, and they're young enough to still be excited when dad walks through the door, run to the door, and yeah, makes it all worth it.
But more detail, please.
We're going for the highlights and you're instantly like, oh, whoa, having the second kid was really hard.
Can you believe this guy's right?
I love it.
Well, the highlights happen every day, man.
It's just all the little stuff, like just seeing their faces.
And like, so we just bought, and we just got a pool installed, actually.
We just brought up swimming.
So we've been doing that recently.
So they put it in about a month ago.
And so I've been taking the kids out every day and doing, trying to get them swimming lessons.
Of course, the youngest is still not any close, but I've been working with a daughter and she's getting pretty close to taking the floaties off and just swimming.
Been working really hard at that.
But it's just teaching them how to be good human beings and teaching them all, you know, everything that they need to know is what really I love to do and it makes me happy.
Sure.
And how about going in more detail then about parents always or they think about this or they tell the stories oh man, whatever the number was like usually it's their last child that was the most difficult to add to the brood, whether it's sleeping, whether it's the other kids' reaction or it's just pulling your hair out.
It's like, oh wow, this is a much bigger.
Somebody said having one is man-to-man defense.
Having two is a zone defense and having three plus, it's like every man for himself, just whatever works at the time.
But yeah, what was so hard about going from one to two?
You mentioned the routine, I guess, but smack some wisdom into those lovely, lucky parents who are going to be adding to their brood soon.
Yeah, well, even with the first one, the hardest thing I think was the routine.
Anything that you had done before is totally going to be out the window.
You're going to have to develop a whole new routine.
So we finally got the first done.
And then the second one came along and threw out the routine again, but this time you have the first one.
And then she's running around screaming and then upsetting the younger one.
And then like, so now you're dealing with two screaming at the same time.
And it's, it's just hard to keep a calm household sometimes because they kind of feed off of each other.
You want to pull your hair out sometimes for sure.
Absolutely.
I'm trying to think what I mean going from one to two for us was easy because dear daughter came out angelic and perfect, was a good sleeper and easy going, all that stuff.
Oh, this is a piece of cake.
And then Potato came and was just way more ornery, wouldn't sleep in the crib.
You know, we tried all the sleep training and letting him cry and the rest of it.
He could just go for hours, which is when we broke down and we're like, okay, co-sleeping, it is apparently.
Our second actually was he screamed non-stop for the first year and a half of his life.
Like every waking hour, he was screaming.
So it put a lot of pressure on us.
It was hard.
He's come a long way.
Yeah, he has.
We just, you know, stayed with him, kept him stable and comfortable.
And now he's like a normal little child.
But for the first year and a half there, we thought there could be potentially something wrong.
We're going to the doctor, like, you won't stop screaming.
And, you know, they just, they told us, you know, just stick it out.
It's going to be okay.
And we thought, no, there's something wrong for sure.
And then just one day, like a year and a half later, he decided to stop screaming.
And then now he's like a happy little boy.
That's an important lesson right there, actually, for prospective parents or young parents.
Sometimes you think, this is the rest of my life, this screaming kid and changing diapers.
And I can't even take care of myself and look at my hair or whatever it is or look at this house or we can't do anything normal or we had to cancel our plans again for some such and such thing.
But you know what?
Those times they go by.
This is like a very normal part of life.
And I think that that's one of the things that bothers people is because you feel like this is some great calamity that has befallen us and it's only us, you know.
But if you, if you lived on a block where there is, you know, 110 kids, like in the basement of the church, we used to go, there was a picture out of the newspaper back from like 1958 or something like that.
And it said, this is the block with the most children in the city.
And there was a picture with all this, all these moms and strollers and kids or all these kids.
Well, you know what?
When everybody was having a hard time paying their bills, when everyone was having a hard time keeping their house clean or whatever it is, then that was just normal, you know.
But when you're going through it alone, which is often how you feel today, you know, you just don't have the right expectations.
So the lesson to take from all that is, yeah, you just hang in there.
You know, it sucks.
I remember Pablo and I, we were at a event at Comrade's house and it was going to be a stayover and all that.
And then they couldn't stay over because he just, you know, he couldn't come calm down or get comfortable.
And, you know, that's just normal.
That's, it's okay.
You know, I think maybe some people, they get really bummed out by that.
And I would just say, nah, that's, that's just part of having kids and having kids and having family that that far outweighs having a good time at a comrade's house, which we can do anytime.
So that's what I would say.
And the other thing is, in generations past, nobody did this all on their own.
You had sisters and aunts and cousins and mothers, you know, mother and mother-in-law that all would swoop in and help that new mom and make sure everything was good.
And now families are just not like that.
And so the husband ends up taking much more of a role, which is in a way, not exactly right.
You know, the husband, he's got his whole day.
He's got, he works whatever he's doing.
And then it's almost like he's got to come home and kind of take over for the wife almost.
And it's just kind of an unnatural scenario we're in.
But anyways, you got to just hang in there and we're getting back to that.
You know, we're catching on and we're going back to those types of things and we're helping each other out more.
And we got to keep that in our sights.
Absolutely.
Yep.
We brought Potato to a family party once when he was young.
I don't know.
one or just under one.
And he just screamed the entire time, could not be consoled.
And we were horrified, apologetic.
What's wrong with him?
But that was an, I mean, I still, I remember that vividly.
It's like scar tissue.
And that was just one, one event.
So yeah, I feel for you, Pablo.
And I'm also, you know, I can be like a real softy, sentimental guy about things.
And then other times I can be oddly cold.
Like, you know, the world, the world gives you certain things.
The world takes away certain things.
And you just have to deal with them and not get super sappy about it.
I guess it's like the less important stuff that I get sentimental about it.
But I've been thinking a lot about the lovely couple that reached out to say, hey, yeah, baby boy was born, but oh boy, it was too early.
And what they're going through right now.
I mean, at this point, they're, you know, they're rightfully worried.
Is he going to make it through?
Is he going to have serious problems when he gets older?
And our old pal, Jo, I shared the story.
And he said, I want everybody to remember that Tyson Fury was born months premature.
He was something like just over two pounds.
And he went on to become the undisputed heavyweight champion of the world.
And plus, he knows the score on the Jews too.
So with a little bit of luck and a little bit of mom and dad's love or maybe some Irish gypsy magic, almost anything is possible with these kids.
Another thing that has occurred to me lately, and I'm not proud of it.
I'm not ashamed of it, is that I really have not roped the kids into much more housework or chores or things than just, you know, the bare minimum.
Hey, can you set the table?
Hey, can you give me a hand out here filling in some holes in the road?
Just not too much.
Pretty, pretty light duty, right?
Hey, give them something they can do, you know, for sure.
And don't don't overload them because it's discouraging then when you can't get it done, right?
For sure.
Yeah.
And I guess my concern is that I'm being too soft and not giving them enough callous work.
Of course, it's different with boys than with girls, but I've been reading, I mentioned this before, reading Growth of the Soil.
Knut Hampson won the Nobel Prize back in the 20s.
He was a national socialist later in his life.
I don't know if he was when he wrote the book.
It was a little early.
But just this, you know, vivid tale of a frontier Norseman growing his family.
And those kids were working with the animals and helping to build the barn and helping to put up structures basically from the moment that they were young.
So don't forget, dear listener, to not just be kind and loving.
That is the most important thing.
Keep them safe and give them a nurturing childhood worth remembering.
But don't be afraid and don't forget to get them out there and put some sweat equity into whatever it is, apartment, house, mow on the lawn.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yep.
And again, there's so many times as a parent where you're like, you know, this would just be a lot easier and a lot faster if I did it myself.
And they can veg or read or play toy cars on the ground.
Well, One thing there I remember hearing or reading it maybe many years ago is like when you give your child something to do, let's say you're cooking or something and you're telling them to, I don't know, stir the bowl or whatever it is.
Whatever you tell them to do, do not redo it.
You let them do it.
And if they do it, maybe not perfectly or whatever, you let it stand.
You don't go back and redo it over them.
You know, that's, that's part of it too.
Absolutely.
Yep.
With Junior, the most rewarding thing was getting him out there.
I said, all right, bring the wheelbarrow.
We got to fill in some of these potholes with gravel and rocks that we have elsewhere on the property.
And it was a hot day.
There were a lot of potholes.
And son of a gun, you know, he can be a little lazy like his old man sometimes, but that's a reflection on the parents, not a criticism of him.
But getting out there in the hot sun, filling holes in the ground, not only was it good, necessary work, but heck, I think we even enjoyed it.
And then for daughter, not to pigeonhole her into only feminine things.
God knows she can get out there and likes to compete with her brothers too, but just cooking.
She's making grilled cheese now at the age of seven and making a good one.
She gets angry at me when I do certain things that are usually her job in the kitchen.
Well, which fills my heart with joy.
That right there is an important thing because if you are going to wait hand and foot on your children, you're going to be doing it for a long time.
So all the way back to even when they start to learn to eat.
I remember we had a homeopathic type doctor when the children were very little.
And he said they should go from breastfeeding, not to baby food, but you kind of overboil like carrots and cut up cube carrots and cube potatoes and let them with their own two little fingers, finger and thumb, pick it up and put it in their own mouth because they learn to eat.
And if you're going to feed them and spoon feed them, you're going to be feeding them for a long time.
So I think teaching them to cook and teaching them how to take care of themselves to a certain extent is important.
And my two oldest sons are actually extremely good cooks.
My one son that he's going to college in another city, but he takes pictures and he will post the things that he made and on Facebook or he'll send us pictures.
And I mean, it's impressive.
And my other oldest son, he is also has a lot of good recipes and he likes to eat and he likes to have certain recipes.
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
The other thing, and I got more for Pablo here, but the cycle of life, the circle of life, it still makes me a little bit sad that Junior and now even dear daughter at seven are too cool for bedtime stories.
They're into reading for themselves, but you have more.
And then you get that same warm fuzzy with the next generation.
You get to do all those things all over again.
And I'll admit to it, to a certain extent, now that I'm in my 40s, slightly lower energy, been through the rodeo twice.
It's not quite as special and 100% heartwarming as it was in the earlier days, but the magic is still there.
And especially when you realize that you're probably not having more.
Oh boy, it kicks up the preciousness of it all the more because you realize, who knows, this might be the last time I change a diaper of my own, you know, progeny.
This might be the last time that I read a bedtime story.
Yeah, you might be changing your own diaper pretty soon.
So true.
Now, Pablo is in his early 20s, a multi-millionaire and lives in the Mick.
As I understand it, but no, Pablo, what's your what's your inner wife's outlook on having more?
You got a decent spacing so far.
You definitely doing it.
Do you debate it?
Are you just going to let nature take its course?
Well, that's probably going to be a big regret of ours because we kind of waited a little too late in life to start having children.
If we had more time, if we were a little bit younger, we would probably do more.
And my wife also had some very rough pregnancies.
She had proclama and gestational diabetes during her pregnancies.
So we are officially done.
And yeah, we made that permanent.
So it's that this is it for us.
Oh boy.
All right.
I won't probe as to how it's permanent.
All right.
So on my side, don't worry.
Oh, all right.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, that could be reversed, you know.
Well, the way I look at it, I mean, what if my wife died and then I wanted to get with some other woman and she wanted to have babies?
I mean, you know.
With during a C-section, it's actually a pretty simple procedure to make it permanent on the woman's side.
So that's what we did.
Oh, okay.
Oh, all right.
I thought you said that it was on your side.
All right.
Yep.
No, no, no, no.
It wasn't on my side.
Yeah.
When we wifey was touch and go after the delivery of the third.
And we said, okay, that's probably a sign that it's time to pull the plug.
But I refused, just candidly sharing.
I was like, sorry, I'm not doing it.
That's that.
There's no debate.
I'm just, I could not.
It's just practical.
I didn't, you know, I didn't even, I didn't even think of it that way, Sam.
Like, what if you die?
What the new feeling?
There was just something so.
And again, I'm not.
Yeah, we know we got.
What if God wants me to take two or three wives?
I mean, you know, yeah, I just, there was something I just knew.
And to my wife's credit, she did not push the issue at all.
She floated it.
I shot it down.
And I just said just viscerally.
I don't think I even gave my answers.
Well, there's something about it.
There's a lot of bad health things.
I mean, because those proteins and everything are being emitted normally.
And so then they're instead of coming out, it's being reabsorbed into the body.
That's supposedly to do with hardening of the arteries and stuff like that.
No man should ever submit to that.
Yeah, I totally agree.
Not good for you.
It's unnatural.
And then all of the other reasons that, yep, there's what if there's what if, yeah, yeah, absolutely.
I had a question.
I was, you know, we were supposed to have another guy on here, and I wanted to put it out just generally so it doesn't sound like I'm asking Pablo here specifically, but I'll just put it like to coach and Pablo or anybody.
Like, what about, has anybody had the problem?
Like, I mentioned this stupid movie Elvis, this nigger worshiping movie Elvis at the beginning.
But, you know, apocryphally, Elvis couldn't do it with Priscilla after he saw the baby come out of there.
Any problem like that?
From anybody?
No, no problem on my end.
I don't see that's a big deal, but some people do think that's a big deal.
So both of mine were still.
No, I stood on the other side of the curtain.
I did peek over for a minute and I saw enough.
And then I didn't, you know, that was it.
So I never had that problem.
So, but I can see it being an issue.
Good, good question, Sam.
Yeah, I remember when my wife was going into labor with our first and she was like, just don't look.
You know, she knows, she knows me.
She's like, she was like, don't look.
I was like, all right, fine.
I was in there with the room holding her hand, you know, up at the, toward the, toward the pillow, the head pillow.
And, uh, and I did sneak a peek and I said, oh, boy.
You know, I think Junior was crowning at that time.
Yeah.
Wow.
Oh, boy.
So it's funny.
I totally remember the image.
It has stuck with me, but no, it did not at all scar me spiritually.
Yeah, no, not at all.
I don't get flashbacks or have PTSD from seeing the deal.
I do actually, I regret.
I pussed out, you know, on all of the doctors for whatever reason.
They're like, do you want to cut the cord?
I was like, no, you are a medical professional.
I'm not very handy.
Who knows if I'll cut it too high or too low or too crooked?
So I never even cut the cord.
And then, of course, there's the other concern.
And I'll phrase this carefully is, will she still feel the same after pregnancy?
And I think that that's something that like, you know, rookie dads probably are worried about.
And I'll just say, you'd be juiced about that.
I don't know what that means, Rolo.
He trains women to be stronger down there.
So it feels a little more classic, as they say.
Got to have strong thighs and all the rest of it.
But that all that has not, I could see my wife cringing in the corner right now.
She's listening to this a couple of days from now.
Feels like the first time.
Feels like the first time, maybe.
Sorry.
Well, you know, as far as like, how does all that work?
At least from what I understand, like the bones and everything soften down there so that everything gives when the baby comes through.
So yeah, you think like, man, how does it go from that to that?
But that's just nature's process, you know?
Absolutely.
Sam, my wife gives me so much deserved guff because our dear friends who had their baby a little bit early, he was also born breach.
And she was like, you know what breach means, right?
I was like, technically, no.
Coming out the wrong way.
Yeah, you know, that's how I would go down a slide if I were a young, young buck.
I would want to go headfirst.
But I guess, yeah, you know, when they're really, I guess it's late in pregnancy.
I see, I'm learning these things at the age of 41 after all the kids have been have arrived that I guess it's late in pregnancy when the baby sort of shifts into land, it puts his landing gear down by putting his head downward dog or whatever they say in yoga.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I always thought that it would be easier to just reach in there and grab the kid by the by the feet instead of trying to get a hold of that slippery dome.
But again, what do I know?
Pablo, we haven't done this to guests in a while.
It's always my oversight, but what is your favorite childhood memory?
Don't give it too much thought.
Just the first thing that comes to mind from your childhood for the benefit of the audience to possibly recreate it with their families.
Okay.
Wow.
I'm going to hit the thing.
I mean, let's see.
Well, I guess probably going out boating with my dad.
I think he bought a boat when we were, I don't know, probably around 10, 11, something like that.
And we started going out to a local lake around here and just, he would pull us around on the inner tube and just fling us off the inner tubes.
And we just have so much fun on that boat.
And it was like things I'll never forget for sure.
Sure.
Something magical about water.
Water and childhood and sunshine.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's not.
It's definitely something I like to do once my kids get a little bit older is uh, you know, do the same thing.
Uh, take them out on a lake in a boat and just fling them off the inner tubes.
You know, hell yeah, get a little, get a little bit of payback on the boat when they're on the inner tubes, flinging them off.
So it's a little late in the season for the audience to benefit from it this summer uh, but for the past two summers, I think uh, I have sat down with Junior and created a summer bucket list.
Uh, sorry for the reference to that movie with Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson, but uh just, you know, anything that comes to mind from the mundane, you know, go to the pool or go to the movies.
Uh, to the more adventurous and son Of A Gun, we put it right on the fridge and we check those suckers off.
You know, go visit grandma and grandpa.
Uh, we only have a couple items left.
We've only got like another week or two of summer here before school starts and uh, we've saved sort of the toughest for the last.
Our last three remaining bucket list items are to hike up this uh hill or mountain near us which is kind of involved and it's been really hot, so I don't want the kids to get heat stroke while leading them on the Batan death march up this mountain.
But we still got to squeeze that in.
And Junior wants to go see his first major league baseball game.
Uh, which i've been conflicted about.
You know most sports ball millionaires and the spectacle.
The last MLB game I went to was probably a nationals game and I remember just hating being there from the crowd, the cost, the expense of beer, me being a stick in the mud about how stupid, you know, gladiator games, professional sports are.
But I think on this one I get a cucking on principles pass that our young kids still deserve a trip to the Old Ballpark or whatever it might be occasionally.
Sam, you think that's acceptable.
Uh, even given what we know to support such a horrific.
What if he really likes it?
Now he wants to go to baseball games all the time.
I don't know.
Check out a minor league game.
Yeah, minor league games.
Yeah, the minor league games are a lot cheaper and they're actually a lot more fun.
I mean, it's not so crowded there it gets, really and they're a lot wider sure yeah, that's beautiful, exactly in this case.
Junior is a hard customer and he's like, no dad, I want to see the real thing, like Babe Ruth and Mickey Mantle, you know.
So there's like there's three stadiums that are all roughly equidistant from us and i'm like which one is safest?
Which city is better to go to?
Can pick that one.
Yeah, I don't know which, which ones those are, but if you're coming through this area uh, you know, White Socks Park, even for somebody who is not a sports fan uh, I think would love it, because there's broad concourses, there's a ton of grass, very beautiful park and there's any kind of food you can imagine.
And uh, i'm not any kind of sports fan either, honestly.
But I remember when the kids were younger and my wife is no sports fan at all, but I said oh, come on let's, let's go, because it's just like I described you.
It's beautiful park.
There's grass.
There's things to see.
Even if you don't care too much about the game, you watch the game a little bit, but there's other things to go and see and do.
You know, the White Sox, they kind of pioneered a newer era with Bill Veck, if you know that name.
Bill Veck, he was the one that brought into baseball all those things of like having Elvis night or having different promotions or having live music or, you know what I mean?
Like just trying to bring in non-sports fans.
So I would say something like that is can really be a fun time.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
I mean, I guess I could show whatever.
There's four stadiums that are within the striking distance: Phillies, Pirates, Orioles, and the Nationals.
And I'm probably going to probably take them to a Pirates game just because Pittsburgh, you know, probably the safest of those options.
They're all roughly the same distance.
Well, Philly's a little farther.
And I want to see the stadium too.
It's supposedly really cool and beautiful.
And Pittsburgh is a cool town.
So we're probably going to do that.
And I'll just swallow my pride.
And there is a magic to it.
I remember when my parents took me to a Phillies game.
I was a big Mets fan growing up because I was a natural reactionary and hated the fact that all my friends like the Phillies and the Eagles.
So I was a Mets and a Giants fan.
So we went to a Phillies game sitting in the nosebleeds at Veterans Stadium probably on a Friday night and everybody was drinking.
And I'm up there like a little ingenue noob chanting, let's go Mets.
And I remember some old Phillies fans behind me threw peanuts at my head as a child.
So very, very traumatic.
I remember that Daryl Strawberry in the outfield.
They were all chanting for Daryl.
I'm like, poor Daryl Strawberry.
He's getting such a hard time out there.
Little did I know Daryl.
Daryl had a taste for the Oblivion Marching Powder, among other things.
Maybe that was Doc Gooden.
I don't know.
Pablo, are you obviously our son is too young?
Have you started talking to the daughter about any of our issues yet?
Or too young, just let her enjoy her glorious, you know, sort of naive childhood so far.
She is a little too young.
I haven't really brought it up yet.
My dad, on the other hand, he has started.
He started.
He was already started.
She came home and she was watching.
I don't know if you saw her Ryan's World on YouTube.
And my dad caught her watching it because he was babysitting.
And then I guess he called Ryan a fruitcake.
And so she came home and said, Papa, call Ryan a fruitcake.
Pretty safe.
Pretty safe as those comments go.
That's not too bad.
Yeah, but then she also said, you know, one time she came home from grandpa's house and I came down and I was wearing a pair of basketball shorts and like a baseball hat.
And she goes, you look like a black person.
Ah, there you go.
And that's not even me.
That is my, that is my dad saying these things to her.
So he's been starting to drop little red pills to her.
But myself, I've been playing it safe because she's too young and she, I don't want her to go to school and say the, you know, the wrong thing.
And then we'll be down at the principal's office.
So I've been keeping it pretty low-key right now until I feel like she's responsible enough to handle that information well.
Yeah, that's that's still pretty young.
That's one of the questions we get, you know, asked most often is, when do I start?
You know, when do I sit down and have the talk with my kids?
And the answer is, of course, it depends.
And it's better not to do it all in one sitting and just sort of let it percolate and matriculate and bounce around in their noggins through passive, you know, sort of comments about the world.
If all of our listeners are probably in the same boat, we tend to spend a lot of time in the car.
Car is like the most captive audience for family time that you probably get after the dinner table.
And with the older kids, you know, on a long car ride, yeah, I'm going to let them play on their tablet or on their phone.
But with Potato, who's still young, you know, he's not playing on a tablet.
Of course, you could pop on a movie if you got a screen popping down.
But the conversations that you will have in the car with your kids are priceless from the totally whimsical.
The other day, Potato asked me if it was possible for us to drive up into the clouds.
And I said, yes, technically, son, it would be.
There would have to be a really high and strong bridge to get us all up there, unless it was a foggy day.
So he learned that fog is basically like clouds down on the ground.
And then he asked me, what do clouds taste like?
Do they taste like cotton candy?
I said, huh, I never thought about that, but clouds kind of do look like cotton candy.
And I said, remember the humidifier?
What the humidifier feels like when you put your face up there and it's shooting water vapor out?
And I don't think he remembered that, but just little fun, precious stuff like that.
Now, Rolo had no fun and no precious stuff growing up.
He was like Harry Potter under the under the stairs.
Shaking his head.
Yep.
Yep.
Rolo, Rolo, have I asked you for your favorite childhood memory?
Or was I just not listening again?
No, no, you definitely were not listening.
It's very elaborate.
I told the whole spiel.
But yeah, after I told it, you said, I'm sorry, were you saying something?
Very good.
Well, we'll move.
I can't tell if you're trolling me or not.
I am trolling you, but you did ask and you just forgot.
Yep.
Okay.
So forget about that.
Shame on me.
It's not just a meme, Rolo, totally disrespected.
Rolo, tell us about your adventures in matchmaking.
You got it.
You shut us down last show or you maybe even edited it out.
But Rolo, yeah, you know, I've been pimping Rolo on this show sincerely.
He's handsome.
He's smart.
He's kind.
He's great with kids.
He's ready to rock and roll with the big white family.
But ladies, get your asses in gear because he's got options.
Come on, give us, give us a little something, please.
You know, we need, we live, is it atavistically or not?
Atavistic means like a throwback.
You know what I mean.
Can I talk now?
I'll shut up.
Thank you.
Well, I've been out there.
I've been courting a few ladies over the last few weeks.
And I took a lady out to play pool.
And she went to the bathroom.
Better than the bowling alley.
Okay.
I mean, debatable.
I mean, you know, whatever.
I mean, I'm a bowling alley guy at heart, but she went to the bathroom.
And then there was this girl next to me.
Like I was sitting on a stool and she says, can I have a hug?
And I'm like, all right, drunk girl.
You know, I'll give you a hug.
And then she wouldn't let go.
And I'm like, okay, this is kind of weird.
And then she licked my face.
Now, this is what was weird about it.
Like, if you've ever been with a girlfriend or a wife who's like playfully licked your face, like, it's like, ah, that's okay.
You know, it happens.
They do that.
This would have been.
Was this like the orderly in Terminator 2 with Hamilton?
It's possible.
It was like if you spit in your hand and rubbed it on someone's face.
There was just that much drool on there.
Was she hot?
Did you lick her back?
Not after that.
She basically spit on my face.
She was cute until that happened, but that was so gross.
It was just like, it was really uncomfortable.
You know, I um uh, went and washed my face after that and uh but, and so this was just a second girl.
So she saw that you were a man with options and she waited until your shotgun rider went to the bathroom to come over and accost you.
Yep, and when the girl came back, I told her about that and she said I think she looks like a lesbian.
She didn't look like a lesbian, she just wanted to insult this girl.
So what do you?
What do you talk about on the?
What do you talk about on these uh, early days dates role?
Are you just playing it cool?
You just like uh, making small talk?
Look, I I know a guy who said that he always talks about the jq as early as the second date, and I think that guy is full of crap and I don't believe a thing.
He's ever said, uh I, I keep it very grounded in normydom, so to speak.
She, she laid it on me like her whole, like all of all of her baggage and her plans for the future, and at the end of it I just said, I like to make my own ice cream.
Yeah, I like to keep it very uh, limited because uh, you know it's, it's really easy, like if someone brings something up and like, let me tell you why Jews are behind that, or like you know what, there's probably some black people involved.
And let me tell you about this table called 43.
So you know, I I i'm pretty good at reading the room is something I I picked up uh doing, uh some other skill.
So I I see what they're into and I I have pretty, pretty vast likes, or at least likes in the past, that I can still use to relate to people.
But uh it, it is uh all right, and some sometimes hard to fight the urge to say, it's true, do you that fair enough?
I think that's pretty safe advice.
How about the wanting to get married and have kids one day is, is that something that softens them up or does that scare them away?
Or do you even broach that at all?
Okay, so of the last four girls, I met one of them.
I felt like she was kind of like I could have probably, without too much effort, got her to our beliefs.
But and I, I have immense respect and admiration for Dark Enlightenment, but she was about as autistic as Dark Enlightenment, and that works well for an intellectual, but for a girl that you took out for ice cream, it was very unattractive.
But the and the other three girls two of them told me they could not have babies.
I didn't pry one.
Oh my god, i've heard that so many times.
One straight up said at 18 she decided to get a hysterectomy.
Another another one, she just said yeah, I can't have babies.
And another one was very adamant, like you, there's nothing you could do that could ever convince me to have a child ever.
So these aren't endeavors that are really going anywhere.
One girl, though I would say I actually enjoyed spending time with.
The other ones were just I felt I felt bad for for um, for dark enlightenment in female form, because she, she had kind of a she's all that thing going where she just, you know she needed Anna Paquin to come in and touch her up, but but just her personality goes out on dates and all he can think about is dark enlightenment.
He's like, if only you were dark Enlightenment, it's not all I could think about.
But if someone's like okay um so uh, basically the thing is, and then what else am I gonna think about?
Like Amat like, what do you do if you're like you go out with someone and they're like ottoman empire collapse uh, a Baudrillard like, what do you?
Where does your brain go?
Sure, and what are your deal breakers?
Rollo, what's like, is there anything that they can?
I mean you're, you're shameless.
I'm sure there's zero deal breakers.
Uh, is there?
I have a few things.
I have a few.
Okay yeah, s TVS all right.
Um well yeah, I'm not too harsh on the like the not having kids, because I feel like you can probably convince someone at a certain point.
Maybe.
Not an instant deal breaker.
Bad sign, but not.
Yeah, it's a little bit play along a little bit at least.
This girl was like, she wasn't like, yeah, at this point in my life, I don't want kids.
No, she was like, I will never, ever, ever have kids ever.
So it's like.
Okay.
So you basically just don't want to ever grow up.
Got it.
So that's just kind of like going to be a hard nut to crack.
Obesity is a huge deal breaker.
Wow.
Obesity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Obesity.
Not like someone's overweight.
And also, why are they overweight too?
Like if someone is completely sedentary and this is the main deal breaker is drug use.
Like I understand some people, like there's a lot of women.
She might steal your stash while you're asleep.
Exactly.
That's my problem.
I got two rules.
Don't touch my Percocet.
And do you have any Percocet?
Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you, Rolo.
Problem.
Bring us back to reality.
No, no, no, no.
I was good.
Thank you, Rola.
I wanted to indulge.
We need to milk you for more single guy dating content going forward.
Because that's, I mean, you know, I mean, hey, in all seriousness, you're in the suck.
You're in the struggle.
And so many of our listeners are too.
Pablo, how did you meet and court your wife without probing too deeply?
Well, I was at a concert and well, the concert was over, actually.
And I was walking down the street.
And she was walking down the street the other way.
And her and her friends screamed across the street and they said, hey, do you guys know where there's any bars at around here?
I said, of course I do.
And then we took them to the bar and started talking.
And then we've been together ever since.
So it was serendipity, I suppose.
Good stuff.
And is your world outlook ever a problem in the marriage?
Again, I don't mean to probe, but you guys see things eye to eye more or less, or can it be a problem?
No, we see eye to eye now.
It wasn't always that way.
She her dad was kind of like a race realist.
So she kind of had some idea of what was going on.
But at the time, she was like in 2008, she was an Obama voter.
So and then we met in 2009.
So I had, you know, bring her back to reality.
And then she was very open-minded, though.
So the hardest thing for her was grasping the JQ.
Of course, that's always, you know, the hardest.
Everything else is kind of low-hanging fruit.
She was pretty resistant on that for a while, but like, I just, you know, stayed at it.
And then she started, you know, noticing things here and there.
And then eventually, you know, now she's almost more radical than I am.
So hell yeah.
I think you make a good point there that the JQ is a real Rubicon for people to cross.
Yeah, for sure.
She was open-minded about everything else.
Like I said, her dad was kind of a race realist.
So she kind of had some thoughts on race.
So that wasn't hard.
But, you know, she was like, she's real open-minded.
So we met August 1st in 2009.
And then by Labor Day, we were having a big national meetup in the club, the White Nationalist Club I was in at the time.
So I wanted to bring her.
So I kind of had to really speed things up because I didn't want her walking in to just surprise her, you know?
So like I, you know, I had to speed things up.
And then she came down with me to our big national meetup on Labor Day.
And she did really good, man.
She fit in and just, you know, she is, she's a good girl.
That's funny.
We had a guy.
That's awesome to hear too.
It's not funny, but it made me think there's a guy who's been around for a long time.
He's been involved IRL for years, you know, makes it to most everything that he can.
But he's not, we nobody had ever met his wife and he's never brought his wife out.
So she finally came out a couple months back and I was a little nervous.
Like there's got to be a reason why.
And she was totally cool.
She like, she, she got everything.
She hung out.
She's just like, you know, you guys make a big deal out of this.
It's just like, you know, it's the way of the world.
And it made me think of our approach on this show because I've gotten a lot of feedback more recently than usual of our guys sharing the show with people who may or may not be where we are in terms of world outlook on race, Jewish power, and all the rest of it.
And it's not a shtick when I say that the way that at least I want to handle it is just some of this stuff is common sense.
It was common knowledge just a generation ago.
And we take it for granted or we assume that you, dear listener, from Kikeslammer 88 to Normie Housewife listening to Full House for the first time, that you're just going to get it.
And perhaps, you know, there's some people who need a little bit of like foundational work reading books, reading articles, or, you know, we have done shows where we talk about the JQ or what's with the Hitler thing and, you know, stuff like that.
But at this point, you know, well over three years into doing this show, many more years for guys involved in the cause and being red-pilled or awakened or whatever.
At this point, it's just the way things are.
The evidence out there is more apparent than ever before.
So we're moving forward as normal people with a healthy, honest world outlook.
And you, dear listener, even if you're still scratching your head on some of our assumptions or they might make you a little bit uncomfortable, just give it some time.
Telling the truth is arguably the most important thing to us, and not giving you, like so many content creators, deliberately avoid talking about race or Jewish power or, even worse, than just avoiding it or stepping over it, will mislead you and take you down rabbit holes into things like conspiracy stuff or day-to-day politics or conservative versus liberal stuff.
That it's real, but it's still largely theater for you to not pay close attention and internalize and understand the reality that whites are under attack in every country in which we dwell and that Jews are largely behind that phenomenon, overwhelming whatever the percentage is.
So that's how we're carrying it going forward.
If you have any questions, please reach out.
We did have a young guy reach out and say, you guys mentioned all these books and articles and stuff.
Where can I find them all?
And I said, well, they're all in the show notes, Whippersnapper, if you want to go and look at our library at full-house.com.
All the things that we've talked about on the show and so many people too doing the work, Rolo included.
Losers, go in and listen to our back library from episode one to 136.
God bless you all.
All right.
We are over time in the first half.
It has flown by.
Hope the audience enjoyed.
Usually, we do sort of comfy laid-back chit-chat in the second hour with Meteor Suffer in the first.
This week is backwards, and I've got at least three things that I really want to dig into.
And I know Sam and Rolo will be able to add value as usual.
And Pablo, uh, hard-working father, white working class, I presume.
I don't actually know what he does.
Uh, you got to wake up early tomorrow, brother.
So, uh, God bless you, your wife, your two children.
Thank you for coming on Full House.
Anything before we go to the break and turn the DJ booth over to Pablo Blanco?
All right, sure.
I'll be able to play a song for you guys.
The band is Final War.
The song is called The Nationalists.
And I picked the song because I think it best exemplifies our roles as fathers in the white nationalist struggle here.
So I hope you guys enjoy it.
It's been a blast being on the show, guys.
And I hope it's not another five years before I'm on the show again.
Amen.
Thank you, Pablo.
Pleasure to have you on.
God bless.
Good luck to you, wifey, and the kids.
And we will be right back.
Wanted the best for his nation and for his family.
So he worked hard every day, grinding his hands to the bone for his land and his children's future.
He would fight even if he fought alone.
He's a patriot to the core.
Never wanted nothing more than to see his nation prosper and his children succeed.
He's a nationalist all the way.
All he wanted was to see a new day.
So he fought strong, never giving in.
Cause the strong survived and made the best man win.
But there was nothing I could hold him back or stand in the way of his dreams.
Cause this man was full of pride and driven by victory.
Every day when he awoke, he looked into his children's eyes.
Then he took his wife by the hand and said, For you are the reason I fought this fight.
He's a patriot to the core.
Never wanted nothing more than to see his nation prosper and his children succeed.
He's a nationalist all the way.
All he wanted was to see a new day.
So he fought strong, never giving in.
Cause the strong survived and made the best man win.
Said, What I've done for you, please don't forget.
Then he kissed his wife and daughter, and he turned to his son and said, Well, you are the one who holds the flame and carry it forth, and one day we'll win.
He's a patriot to the core.
Never wanted nothing more than to see his nation prosper.
Then his children succeed.
He's a nationalist while the way.
All he wanted was to see a new day.
So he fought strong, never giving in.
Cause the strong surviving may the best man win.
He's a patriot to the core.
Never wanted nothing more than to see his nation prosper.
Then his children succeed.
He's a nationalist while the way.
All he wanted was to see a new day.
So he fought strong, never giving in.
Cause the strong survived.
Welcome back to Full House episode 136, second half, serious half this time.
Hope you enjoyed.
A bunch of guys kicking around, some dad talk and banter and kids and wives and fertility there in the first half, our original bread and butter.
And in the second half, we're going to get a little bit meatier.
Before we do that, though, I went to take a leak outside the recording studio down here in the valley this evening and I looked out to find a horrible murder scene and a very tragic one.
My dog, who was basically lying next to me for most of the first half at some point, had snuck off, stolen one of my old He-Man figurines, which the kids have played with throughout childhood and just totally mauled man-at-arms.
Only real 80s kids will remember that.
But F for man-at-arms.
And while watering the flowers, I looked up at the sky and I did see a shooting star.
That's right.
It is the Perseid meteor shower season.
We're sort of post-prime by the time you're hearing this.
They might still be kicking around up there in the night sky and the moon is pretty bright.
So it's not the best year for the meteor showers, but can't hurt to get out there with the kids.
Let them stay up a little bit late.
Look up at the sky and hunt for shooting stars.
Another fun memory of ours and hopefully one you can add to your quiver.
No new white life this week aside from the one that we already mentioned.
Lovely couple pulling for their young little guy.
He's little for now, not for long.
He'll be up and fighting and fighting dad before you know it.
But we did get a series of nice notes from the audience.
I'm going to read these on the air.
Sam loves them.
Oh, I like, yeah, whatever.
But no, this is like sincere stuff that people take the time to write to us.
And I wanted to give the writer credit.
And I swear on my grandmother's grave that no, I don't make this stuff up.
All right.
This is from Son of Rome.
And he says, hey, guys, want to reach out and give the compliments you deserve.
Your show has quickly become my favorite.
Informative, entertaining, funny, wholesome content for our guys is something very much needed.
Coach, you do an amazing job of leading the show and asking great questions.
Thank you for not mentioning long-witted questions there, my friend.
Always great commentary that has taught me a lot about our way of thinking, family life, kids, etc.
Sam, your wisdom and super informative knowledge on Christian identity has greatly helped me to cement and further my strength and pride as a white man.
You are a wise and kind man with great stories to tell and a wealth of knowledge.
Smasher, strong and brutally honest.
Fed poster, extraordinaire.
You are always great for honest, unfiltered hot takes and some truly great insight and advice.
A huge inspiration as well for all you've contributed to our cause.
Keep doing what you're doing and don't stop.
I'm truly excited to start a family of my own and bring strong, healthy new white life into the world.
And you guys have given me even more confidence to do so.
Hope I get the chance to meet you all someday and can contribute as much as you all have.
Thank you for all you do.
Hail Victory.
Son of Rome.
Hail you, dear sir.
Godspeed.
Good luck.
F for Rolo.
No love for Rolo.
It's okay.
Maybe Son of Rome was listening to the older episodes before Rollo got on mic.
It's okay.
It's funny.
Sometimes somebody gets left out.
Smasher got left out from a nice note we got from the audience that I posted on the Telegram channel the other day, too.
So go figure.
You never know.
Got another one here.
Let's see.
Really dig the show, fellas.
Much thanks for all the wisdom you impart to us, especially to us bachelors.
It keeps me grounded and pushing forward to be the best man I can be.
Keep up the awesome work.
That was from Sean.
And then I did not get his handle on Telegram, but a little bit of a tip here.
This is going back to our episode about the war on men.
What did I call it?
The Mampire Strikes Back.
Maybe perhaps a bit of a stretched portmanteau there or whatever the hell you would call that play on words.
Anyway, great episode as usual.
For the men that are facing divorce or suspect they will be.
It's at like 95% of the audience.
Atoish.
Just kidding.
I cannot be more highly, I cannot more highly recommend the following book, The 10 Stupidest Mistakes Men Make When Facing Divorce.
And that's by Joseph Cordell, C-O-R-D-E-L-L.
We'll put that in the show notes.
And if you are in a hairy situation, check it out.
I, of course, have not read it, but I'll link it anyway for those of you who might need the help.
So with that, if you got new white life, email into the show, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
And we're going to move on here as promised.
And I'm going to start with Charlottesville.
And before you roll your eyes there, dear listener, oh, it was like Vietnam veterans, you know, talking about the war nonstop 10 years later.
Hey, it's not just us.
It's not just a bunch of guys who were like, oh, yeah, I was there on a hot summer day and things got crazy.
And then we made the news.
I'm really special.
There are guys who regret going or, you know, realize that, oh, man, how great could it have been if the speeches actually went off, right?
Like we all crow about this like amazing experience facing off against snarling, violent Antifa in the streets and seeing our rights literally dissipate and robbed in front of our eyes by the cops as dictated by the politicians.
But you have to wonder what could have been if the cops actually did their job and let us talk.
Lessons.
I'm not going to go through old war stories as much as I would love to do that.
Just we've done it before.
Check out our episode.
We told you so.
Lessons for the audience.
All that it took to set the world on its ear and drive the media cycle, force the president to give a statement, et cetera, was maybe how many people were there?
I'd say a thousand tops.
It depends where, when, torchlit, march, et cetera.
All it took was roughly a thousand brave white men and women to show up with, let's be honest, haphazard planning, sort sort of last minute directives, disparate groups, different arrival times, et cetera.
Just showing up that day and flying the flags and chanting the chants and giving back when they were giving it to us was enough to really shake up the system and force them to reveal their hand.
Pow said that Charlottesville was the day that Zog was forced to let the mask drop in America.
And having been there and seeing what happened there was truly, even if I were a civic nationalist and I believed in the sanctity of the Constitution and our democratic process and our American ideals, what happened there that day was shocking because we went there with noble intent, not violent intent, self-defensive intent.
The enemy, antifa, the left, anti-racists showed up prepared and eager to spit on us, to club us, to throw frozen things at us, to mace us, and even to use improvised flamethrowers against us.
And were the F and bad guys, it just doesn't make any sense.
It's a total F and lie.
And of course, the cops, it was a deliberate, negligent situation as dictated by the police, or excuse me, by Terry McAuliffe and Mayor Siner in Charlottesville to tell the police to stand down to enable violence, call it a nonviolent assembly or call it a violent assembly and disperse everybody.
And probably they wanted there to be bloodshed.
They wanted one of our guys to open up more than Richard Preston with a warning shot at a guy shooting flames at people peacefully leaving a park.
So remember that lesson, betrayal, Zog dropping the mask, sometimes showing up as half the bottle, even if half the battle, even if you don't get your speeches out too.
Sorry, guys, I'm going to go a little bit long here, but I just had to get this out maybe in different areas, but it's important.
Number two, it was a massive, tragic, missed opportunity for our side, a learning experience, painful that day, as for by listening to this and you don't actually know the truth.
That's a state-sanctioned investigative report that basically told it how it was.
And there's some killer quotes in there where basically the police chief is like, no, let them fight it out so that then there's violence and then we can shut it down.
The most flagrantly like government stifling of a First Amendment right, perhaps in recent American history.
That was a class action lawsuit waiting.
It was a softball.
It was just waiting to be picked up.
If anybody could have, should have done that, it was probably Spencer, but he was either too incompetent or too distracted or too selfish or too lazy to do it.
And truth be told, too many of us, myself included, were not quite ready in August 2017 to put down on the dotted yes, Bill, and yes, I was and yes, I was deprived of my constitutional rights because after that experience, you're like, well, what the hell are the chances that we're going to win?
But it was such a slam dunk that I think that could have had legs in any half decent court to potentially punish those responsible and lead to a big payout.
What could have been?
Number three, cowards, Monday morning quarterbacks and wilting lilies in public pissing matches are total cancer.
We tried to keep it together after the fact and maintain discipline, maintain message discipline and say what happened, that it was a setup, that it was betrayal, that it was the left that brought the violence that day.
But no, that was too much to ask of our side to stay on message, on honest message.
And instead, we had people running back under Trump's skirt.
We had guys doing the endless optics navel gazing.
And then we had just like straight out, like, I think guys who were getting paid or were liars just, you know, just throwing us under the bus, calling us stupid.
You should have known, haha, Monday morning quarterbacking.
Like I said, we didn't even get to hear any speeches.
Imagine what could have been had those damn speeches been on the public record for all time.
I went back and I posted on the Telegram channel just a video of our guys chanting FU faggots to Antifa.
That's worth a million bucks.
And imagine if we had some real stem winders from the men who were there ready.
That one speak.
It would have been something.
That one seems to really get to them for some reason.
Reminds them of getting bullied on the screen.
Don't they know it's 2017?
You can't say faggot.
Oh, we can say a lot worse than faggot faggots.
Yeah.
So listen, it sucks that it went the way it did.
Sometimes you lose battles and win the war.
Sometimes you lose battles and lose the war going forward.
You know, what's done is done.
What's passed is prologue.
I guess the statute of limitations, there might be a lawsuit or two still floating around out there.
Not sure exactly where they stand.
Obviously, the men who were most involved or got roped into that kangaroo court suffered more than anybody who just got doxed or who just lost their job because they had a hefty settlement that still was a disappointment.
But it deserves more than just, oh, that day was awesome or they were violent.
There's lots of things to learn from that.
And I think it does have to happen in some new shape or form in the coming years where there is a massive more disciplined and more protected, you know, lawyers, security cameras everywhere to show the truth and have the ability to get that out rather than just let the mass media do their hatchet work.
Sorry for the dog barking in the background.
I'll shut up there.
Sam Rolo, any, I mean, I'm not saying this snarkily, but not having been there, I know we've talked about it before.
Anything else you want to add on this five-year anniversary?
Well, yes, I'll just add to what you said, which is the civil rights violations right there.
That's worth a lot of money.
You can look at different precedents and different types of cases.
When you deny somebody their civil rights, that's worth millions.
And when you consider all of the people who were doxxed and lost jobs and all kinds of fallout from this, that right there should have been pursued and maybe can be pursued.
I don't know.
But that is extraordinary if you'll consider it.
Imagine if the tables were turned.
Imagine that.
Yes.
Yes.
National socialists circled, armed, and assaulted a group of black, well, not even black nationalists, but civil rights marchers, peaceful BLM protesters and shut them down and the police just look the other way.
It would be the biggest scandal since Tail Hook.
Yeah, I'm thinking Rodney King.
Didn't he win some kind of big lawsuit because denial of civil rights?
I mean, you got to like use your imagination.
How?
How was that guy denied his civil rights?
You know, but we're not crying in our beer or lying or it was flagrantly obvious.
Like that's the nature of our enemy.
Absolutely.
The other point I wanted to make is, like you said, the aftermath, the dissonant kind of reaction and takes and blaming.
Yeah, all that, you know I I, I will give the credit to Horace The Avenger.
You know you are either pro-white or you are anti-white.
That's the only thing I want to hear about.
All of this infighting or people degrading one personality or another, whether true, not true valid, not valid.
I don't care about that, I don't want to hear about that and it's, it's unfortunately done too much and at too many levels.
You are either pro-white or you are not pro-white.
That's that.
That is really the only question and that's the only question I care about.
Yep, absolutely.
There was um, there was an article that the Enemy put out like a Seville retrospective five years later, where are they now?
And they actually threw me in there due to my relatively uh, recent notoriety and uh friend was like, is all that true, what you know what they wrote about?
Because a lot of people whatever, I can't talk about it in detail, but they don't know my backstory and uh, I said, oh yeah, it's all true, except for you know more or less.
Of course, it's sneering and and dishonest at its core, because they're trying to score points, uh.
But the only thing that was not honest was the you know, the white, the white nationalists, inspired violence.
Like oh no no, i'm sorry, actually we went there, we really wanted to go to the park, hang out with our friends and listen to speeches.
The other side instigated and brought the violence and in some cases, men fought back, including in the parking lot, including at the torchlit march, you know so, like it's just uh, it's just, it's it's lies.
Uh, because they are legitimately they tell you yourself, they are legitimately scared that the Great Replacement has seeped into the public discourse, that criticism of Jews as such has creeped into the political discourse, not just from us but from mainstream guys.
And you could say, oh well see yeah, you guys got used, you got chewed up and spit out in Charlottesville and then the uh, the charlatans now are running with your talking points.
Well, even if that were true, which is, there's elements of truth to it, but it's not 100 true uh, partial mission accomplished, because you start with raising awareness and letting people know the score, and those things are more widespread today in America than ever before, thanks to the internet, thanks to us, thanks to Charlottesville and plenty of brave people who have suffered for their views.
Now Rollo had the temerity to criticize Steve King.
Uh, and Steve King tweeted, I gotta, i'll pull it up Rollo, can you pull it up or something i'll stall.
But Rollo was like, look, do you see that cocky statement from Steve King?
I was like I didn't read it as cookie.
Steve King put out something like, I just learned that Merrick Garland is Jewish.
First no-no, noticing is not allowed.
Wagging my finger, and he was like it was the same way that I found out that George Soros was Jewish.
So he's connecting Soros to Garland, noting that they're both Jewish.
And whatever Steve King's flaws or merits from the past uh, having someone prominent, I have it right here.
All right, read it please.
I just learned Merrick Garland is a Jew.
Therefore, I withdraw all my previous criticism of him.
I cannot withstand another wave of charges of anti-semitism like I received for criticizing Soros.
By the way, that's how I learned Soros is a Jew.
That's totally tongue-in-cheek, Rolo, you dumbass.
Sometimes you stump me and I sound like a dumbass, but he's saying he totally withdraws his critique because he found out he's Jewish.
Well, one, yes, he's a Republican.
So I have no reason to not believe that he would do something that stupid.
But had he not censured himself, he voted to censure himself for saying white people need to have more babies.
Had that not happened, I would say, okay, this is it.
This is a good own.
But because he did the most pathetic thing ever, I absolutely believe that this is not tongue-in-cheek.
Okay, I am not capable of that level of cynicism.
I see that totally as Steve King being a little naughty with the JQ on Twitter.
And I've met Steve King, Rolo, at Washington National Airport waiting for our bags.
And I went up and I just wanted to pay him a compliment because I had just seen him moderate a Republican debate.
And he actually did a nice job and he asked tough questions.
I just said, sir, just said, you did a really nice job and I appreciated your work on that debate.
And I thought he'd be like, oh, yeah, thanks.
You know, vote for me or something.
But he stopped and talked to me for like 10 minutes and asked questions like, oh, what did you like about, you know, do you think we should do more of those, et cetera?
I was totally blown away in my first and like late night baggage claim just chatting with Steve King at DCA.
So whatever Steve's flaws and cuckoldry here or there, and I guess he's going in.
I think Steve is going to Amrin, maybe.
If not, it was either the Fuentes outlet or Amrin.
No, he spoke at the, I'm pretty sure he spoke at, he gave like a, didn't have like a speech in person at AFPAC.
I think he had a pre-recorded thing there and it was unrelated to everything else.
And then he condemned them like immediately after when they asked who he was.
I'm pretty sure that was Steve King said the Mexicans have cantaloupes for calves from hauling drugs through the desert.
And there was a clip years ago of some, they were at like a dinner or something and Steve King and Rand Paul are seated at a table and some hostile Latinx harpy comes up to start asking them about the undocumented.
And you see Rand Paul just like slink away like Homer into the bushes.
Like, I'm out of here.
This is no good can come from this.
And Steve King is just like sitting there like, you know, taking and giving in return.
So whatever.
There's so few edgy or risky or, I don't know, politicians who are even willing to tiptoe up toward the truth.
Are there any?
At this point, when someone like sneezes on like into their right elbow, that's considered a racist dog whistle at this point.
Zog is so scared of everything that everybody is doing that I would be shocked that they would allow like if Steve King is being serious, I expect him to be dead of a heart attack, hanging and shotgun to the back of the head, suicide by the end of the week.
Yeah, showing up with the black eye like so many other politicians, at least.
But no, it's a good point.
Of course, Tucker is exhibit A in is he sincere or is this a cynical opportunistic grab for ratings by playing?
I think Tucker is a classic case of I know, but the money is more important.
Probably.
Yeah.
And if you force me to guess.
Yeah, but he's like fabulously rich.
He's from a wealthy family.
Right.
That's what you would think.
He's already got enough money.
He can write a book and sell millions.
He's, God knows what he's made.
Many people have enough money in our eyes, but they still will ruin the lives of others just for a little bit more.
It's like you know that game ducktails like, however much money you have, it's always worth killing someone with a cane for just a little bit more.
Yep uh, I put out a poll, both internally and externally recently about who do you think is going to win the uh presidential not the nomination, but the whole enchilada come january 2025.
And uh Ron To Sannis took it both privately and publicly.
Uh, with a plurality, wasn't a majority.
Um, I think Trump and uh Butige were actually the second ones.
I guess people think that Butt Plug is a uh, a dark horse candidate to get the nomination.
I think Newsom would be more so, but anyway, that's uh, there's a lot of still like two and a half years ago to go Jay Inslee what i'm sad that people call him Butt Plug because his name is Buttigig.
So Butt Gape is a much better name.
As long as you're not still pushing Jay Insley on the poor audience in your terrible political analysis rollover never heard of.
Okay, you know what I?
I remember a certain guy whose hands were really jazzy like assuring people that Michael Bloomberg was gonna be the Democrat?
No really, there's a lot of people there are.
I'm pretty sure that it was.
It was early on and he was ahead on the polls for a long time.
It's just because look at the rest of the Democrats.
But it's, there's a clear line between who the system wants to put out and who the people will accept, because it was very obvious that they wanted Kamala Harris to be the president, but she polled so low that they just had to push her into the background, like Joe Biden was just all that they could feasibly run, because everyone else was so reviled and, and I think with Gavin Newsom it's like he's young he's he's, he's handsome,
he's in a popular state, but he is really hated.
So I I I can see them pushing him and trying like oh, isn't he so cool?
But that that guy isn't just hated in California, he's hated in many other states.
I don't know who likes him outside, like the Beverly Hills or San Francisco elite, and even they probably don't like him very much.
Fair enough, and uh, i'll Ecrow.
One of the worst calls I ever made was I actually thought the Beto was going to be the nominee instead of Biden.
If you recall, Biden lost like three of the first four primaries and he only really got some traction after they literally like hauled every senile, uh old black in South Carolina to the polls for that Democratic uh primary.
The uh Jim Cliburn, uh banging the drum for Biden.
I'm sure only reason I say Jay Insley is because he just doesn't have the baggage that the other candidates have.
He is inseparable from like policy-wise, from everyone else.
He is like the most neoliberal and he is running a state terribly, but a lot of people don't really know that so they can squeak him by and he's still somewhat presentable without all the baggage that the other people have, because they still have to convince people that this is someone that people will vote.
Ears are bleeding.
If you say Jay Insley on this show one more time, i'm bringing back Jack The Father as the producer.
Okay, this is the worst take in history.
There are far worse takes as far as predictions.
Okay.
Kamala Harris, I think, is a worse take.
If Jay Inslee wins the Democratic nomination, I will start to give you some respect on this show, Rolo.
I do not believe you.
Okay.
Mark my word.
Mark it down, audience.
All right.
Jay Inslee becomes president.
No, he's lying.
Don't believe his lies.
Just the nomination is enough.
All right.
I got a special request for a coach take on the Trump raid, which was all the talk of the town earlier this week.
And it's still major headlines.
MAGA people are whipped into a boomerwaffin frenzy.
I'm sure the left is sneering because they're just doing what they've done to Trump from even before he was inaugurated, which is, of course, attack, sabotage, makeup shit.
But in this case, I am not doing big-brained centrism.
I'm just telling you what I think happened there.
And we can have multiple things going on.
This is not all theater.
It is 100% entirely plausible that Trump either deliberately took these super special top secret documents back to Mar-a-Lago because I'm the president and I do what I want.
It's possible he was like just haphazardly like, bring those boxes.
AI declassified those or whatever.
Or there could even be a legitimate disagreement.
What about this?
There could actually be a legitimate disagreement between the government that has certain rights to archiving things and having access to material and Trump and his interpretation of what he declassified and what was his rights as a former president to have access to files, et cetera.
Whatever it is, I am absolutely not cynical enough to think that this was a ploy or more theater to boost Trump, which of course has been the effect among his already rabid, maybe dwindling, maybe rejuvenated by this supporters.
I think that the system, whatever our critiques of Trump are, and they are legion, from cowardice on January 6th to doing everything for Israel to not fulfilling any of his promises to ASAP, Rocky, you name it, to bombing Syria.
There's tons of reasons to hate the man and his utter failure in a very special gift that we gave him for four years.
But the system hates him and wants him destroyed.
And this is either a warning shot across the bow to him of what he's going to face if he tries to run again.
I mean, what they're charging him with and what was listed in the in the warrant, which is also issued by a Jewish judge, is basically a violation of the Espionage Act, which if prosecuted and convicted, would rule him out, most likely, from running for president.
He'd be barred from holding public office.
The other thing is, of course, the absolute ludicrous idea that they would ever do anything like this to Hillary and the 30,000 emails and the private homebrew server in her like ladies' room in Chappaqua to Obama.
You think Obama was like super fastidious?
He was notoriously lazy, you know, for whatever reason.
Yeah, you said it, not me.
He even admitted he was lazy.
Obama like got out of the White House and he like went home and like smoked pot and played video games for a while.
And his publisher was like, sir, sir, can we get that manuscript?
He's like, yeah, yeah, I got to play some Halo.
Supposedly he likes crack, not pot.
No, but at that time, he was smoking pot.
But yeah, he's cracking still ears.
Yeah.
Really?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
Hold on.
We don't know this.
He said he did, but, you know, we can't prove that.
It's in his autobiography.
yeah i mean you know who are we to say when a black man's telling the truth or not and who who is that remember that canadian guy he was gay with and everything what was that guy's name larry sinclair larry sinclair how how could we forget yeah i and you know larry sinclair would do do powder cocaine and obama would smoke crack cocaine and then they'd have gay sex Thank you,
Sam, for that vivid image.
But there's a tie-in here between Trump and Charlottesville.
And hear me out, because we all hate Trump, or at most we would cynically or opportunistically vote for him just to flip a finger to the system and for the for the popcorn factor.
But I think it's undeniable that the system legitimately hates Trump, wants to see him destroyed because of the animal spirits that he aroused in the rabble, in the Hoi Poloi.
And he didn't even do that much.
He was still a toady for the Jews and they still want to destroy him, which makes me think of Charlottesville.
We didn't even get to give the speeches.
We didn't even get to assemble and show our true colors.
And it still infuriated the system and was hitting, smacking the hornet's nest with the big effing stick, as I said back then, apparently.
Yeah.
And I'll tell you, this is, you know, it is possible that the system didn't hate you guys over Charlottesville.
It was because they let all the things that led up to Charlottesville happen.
So it was like Charlottesville was just the one that they decided to clamp down on.
Because wasn't there a Charlottesville rally like a week or two prior?
There was one in May 2017 that was not announced in advance.
Yep.
And I was at that one too.
And it was kind of funny.
We were going to do Lee Park during the day and there was like some multicultural festivals.
We had to do it over at secondary Confederate statue land and like a gaggle of Antifa showed up, but they didn't have time to prep and it was mostly women and we just like shouted at each other and laughed at them.
And then we did a torchlit march at the Lee statue.
Only true Seaville veterans will remember the first one.
I remember I played Erica marching into that park holding a tiki tour, which was absolutely awesome.
And then we went out and partied and it was awesome.
So that's what gave birth to Charlottesville too, with Charlottesville one and all the events that preceded it.
Regardless, though, I am, this is real dangerous ground for me.
We're going to be honest with the audience.
At this point, August 2022, I am tempted to pull the lever for Trump again in the primary.
If he makes it, I don't think he'll actually make it to the general.
I voted for DeSantis.
I think that they'll find some way to trip up Trump electorally, legally, et cetera.
But on the off chance that he makes it there all the way, simply for the theater, simply for the finger in the eye to the establishment and for the minuscule chance that he would actually be punished Trump likelihood?
Small.
Possibility, not zero.
I was huge anti-Trump in 2020.
Obviously, I didn't vote for him.
I wrote in a certain historical personage.
But I would consider going for the guy again, even knowing all that I know, just for what I believe would be a legitimate Democratic revolt.
And I can see and hear the audience rolling their eyes in certain segments of our listening population.
Others are like, yeah, that kind of makes sense.
We still got there.
There's like one or two guys who still like Trump legitimately and think that we've been too hard on him all this time, which I think is ludicrous.
But anyway, that is my analysis of the Trump raid.
It was a shot across the bow.
really want him destroyed for not so much what he actually delivered, but for what he promised and for the animal spirits that he inspired in America, even if we who know better, and there's plenty, I know a lot of MAGA people who finally, finally got it after January 6th, after the election, and they saw the cowardice and him not pardoning those poor people still rotting in jails.
By the way, Glenn Allen has been in correspondence and contact with some January 6ers and wants to come on the show to talk about his horrific experiences, seeing the realities of them.
Awesome.
Glenn Hammer wants to come on the show.
Hammer's been off air for a while, but real, you know, edgy guy, but I really like going on the Hammer stream.
And another teaser here for the audience.
I can't say too much, but a significant personality leader man in the cause has a big announcement that he wants to make on Full House.
You can read between the lines there.
I can say no more.
But that's coming too.
And I also want to have on, I won't say their names in case they change their mind about coming on, but lovely husband-wife duo who are essentially expert homeschoolers because we kept coming into the fall.
I feel like everybody's going to be back to routines, you know, summer's over, vacation's over, and life is going to get a little bit more serious again.
So we got plenty in the hopper.
There's a couple more that awesome guest who couldn't make it on for the first half tonight, who's been on before.
So there's lots more coming.
Sam Rolo, any other thoughts on Trump before we move on to the last big one we got here in the second half?
Sam, if you got something and you'd like to go first, I got something.
No, go ahead.
It was good, coach.
Very good commentary.
What I'd like to say about this is in the last few months, especially, or this whole Biden presidency, there are so many steps the system could have taken to get people to put a little more faith in it or give the illusion that they're not just here trying to destroy us.
But every single step, it's like what the system has done is it's identified the right thing to do and just done the complete opposite.
I think that this is having the opposite effect that is intended, but I don't think the system learns.
I've said this, I'll keep saying it.
I do not think the Jews in power are smart.
I think they're stupid.
And I think that they believe that when they arrest the president for having classified documents, and they were very vague about it too, someone explained to me what it was.
And it seemed like the kind of thing where they could go after anyone for it was like any document from between 2017 and 2021.
It's something very, very strange where for all we know, that was his records to destroy the piss tapes.
So it could have been something benign that nobody cares about.
And they went after him thinking that, see, look, look, he's a criminal.
You don't want to vote for a criminal, do you?
And then his whole shtick was, oh, look, look at how they attack me.
Because he was like strangely the strongest man in the room, but he was always a victim.
And it's like he has this magical power to always be a pussy.
And yet it makes people like him more.
It is the strangest thing.
I think this is another one of those cases where the system is went after him to send a message and it just made his supporters cling to him harder because this is clearly the system punishing him for something.
And people pick up on it because the system did it.
It's like that scene from role models.
Like, oh, because I did it because I'm black.
Like, no, because you did it is why you did it.
Like the system, you did it.
So we know that you're just messing with him.
Like, we know.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Absolutely.
They're nibbling at the, you know, it's like Gulliver's Travels or whatever.
Well, I mean, hell, they've been trying to tie him down from day one.
Somebody asked me recently, like, what are they doing?
Like, are they scared, Coach?
Or like, why are they doing this?
Yeah, it seems to be counterproductive.
It seems to be agitating.
And I think it is fear.
I think it's fear.
Yes.
But yes, they're freaked out to a certain extent, Rolo, but let me, as a man who spent 20 years in Washington, D.C., which is true, and I had Joe jobs and I had semi-important jobs.
I absolutely witnessed powerful mover and shaker, wealthy, connected Jews in operation.
And I don't, there's one, one is that they are disconnected from the realities of middle America, anything outside their gated community or their that's what scares them is that starting to set in that they are completely disconnected from this and Trump woke up a lot of that.
Correct.
But I think they are so they're well, they know what to do.
They're going to keep doing, they think they know what to do, which is to keep doing.
They're like, okay, we've like played nice and we've done this like long game of subverting and like doing things a little bit cloak and dagger behind the scenes.
And now it's like, no, we are putting all Jews into office.
These future neo-Kulaks will be brought to heal one way or the other.
Maybe we'll hire a rose bowl full of armed IRS agents to kick things up a notch.
Maybe we'll unleash black savages across cities all across America for an entire summer over a justified police action in Minneapolis.
Time will tell.
You could see there's a couple of things at play here.
They're disconnected from reality.
They get their news from Axios and CNBC and other elite outlets.
They're disconnected IRL.
They think that they can squash it.
They're a little bit freaked out.
I think it's the lower tier Jews, the media class, their lackeys, the commentators, the Robert Reichs, right?
Who sort of get paid?
They get paid to be warriors and exaggerators and Nazi 2033 and all the rest of it.
They're not entirely wrong, but their shtick is to overreact.
And I suspect that the most powerful elite Jews, and I'm not talking about Klaus Schwab, but they're usually political appointees or high-level officials or BlackRock and the rest of them.
I suspect that they are both disconnected and so utterly confident.
I mean, could you imagine how confident you'd be if you essentially had limitless money at hand and politicians doing your beck and call and you had a nuclear-armed ethno state to flee to if things went so wrong?
You would be cocky and overstep and miscalculate too, which of course we know also the Jews have done throughout their centuries and millennia of ethnic operation and it has bitten them in the ass before, but they've had such a nice long run here milking the cow until it's nearly dead that I think that they think they can keep milking it.
China is the wild card.
Russia obviously is calling their bluff in Eastern Europe.
Maybe in their private cocktail hours in wood-paneled billiards rooms, they really open up about this stuff.
But having seen them in operation, they are overconfident and they think that any obstacle is just something to be worked over and that the proles can be squashed one way or another.
They can be overdosed to death with drugs.
They can be driven into debt and despondency.
And if that doesn't work, and those little white rat bastards, don't isolate that.
I'm using their thought process.
If they still do things like January 6th in Charlottesville and voting for Trump, well, then we'll put them in prisons to scare them.
We will take away everything that they have on social media and their bank access and we'll get a lot of people.
Oh, sure, open porters.
Listen, let's not overlook that the invasion is worse than it's ever been.
And we're probably only like a decade away from it.
Somebody commented that like they don't even talk about amnesty anymore because they're like amnesty.
Amnesty just, you know, just becomes a huge political headache in Congress.
We just don't need to deport them.
Just let them in and swamp this place.
And then, you know, maybe once they're totally broken, then we'll formalize the legalization process.
And until then, we'll fly them around and the whole Texas bussing migrants up to New York and other cities.
At first, I hated it as a effing stunt when they should be rounding them up and sending them back however they could.
Like a plague, which is what Churchill called Lennett in a SEAL train to Russia.
But it's also kind of nice to see like the mayor of Washington, D.C. freak out and like call on the National Guard like, oh my God, you know, we're getting swapped.
We need help.
There's Mexicans here.
What do we do?
Too to tango, et cetera.
All right.
I promised it.
Let's do it.
Third major segment.
Thank you, Rolo.
I think we're good on that.
Christian nationalism.
There's a couple of things going on here.
It's again, the talk of a town.
It seems a little trendy to me.
This is not new.
Christ is king and Torba and Gab and repent ye sinners is not something that just all of a sudden came up overnight.
But I think it was maybe the Daily Beast or somebody.
The usual suspects are hyping it into this new thing that is a terrible threat, maybe because white nationalism is like, you know, they're tired of writing about that.
So they're doing Christian nationalism.
And I have not listened to any of the TRS shows where I'm sure they have broken this down.
A candid statement.
I don't know what their takes are, but I know that they're probably hostile to Christian nationalism as such as a cloak, as a, and I suspect that they think that it is cowardly and using Christianity and religion as a defensive mechanism rather than as a true winning strategy to achieve the important objectives for our people.
I think that's a fair assumption or guess that that's what's going on, because you do see a lot of the commentary where it's like, oh, no, you know, as long as Jews convert to Christianity, then it's all good.
And we all know that that is a flawed strategy.
And I was tempted to be normal diplomatic coach here and say, look, you know, I'm not a devout Christian.
I'm technically not a Christian.
But Torba does good work.
Torba names the Jew.
Tartian nationalism.
I know it's bigger than that.
You know, it's moving in the right direction.
It's like, you know, it's not exactly a total off-ramp, right?
I'd prefer it be Christian.
Why not call it Christian white nationalism or white Christian nationalism, whatever.
And you could argue that that's not really possible with like some Christians because they deny that you can make it racial.
But what really stuck in my craw is seeing some of the commentary from Torba himself, where he's writing back and saying, you all will bend the knee.
These very grandiose, over-the-top Christian religious pronouncements, including, you know, we should, if you are, if you are not with Christ, you are antichrist.
We should start using that one.
It's like, okay, buddy, you're calling me antichrist.
I'm not like thin-skinned here, but that pisses me off that I'm already disinclined to be Christian based on natural skepticism and all the evidence of the flaws from Catholicism to certainly the Protestant sects.
Take your pick.
And then this promise of like a new Inquisition whereby there will be a Christian totalitarianism.
And of course, the kicker is like, well, I could take a little Christian totalitarianism if it were hostile to Jewish power and in support of white interests.
But it just sounds creepy and it reawakens my animal anti-religious sentiments when I see these guys do this over-the-top Christ is king, bend the knee, repent, ye sinners.
And it makes me say nuts to that and not be charitable and diplomatic.
And in fact, assume the worst, that this is either cowardly or opportunistic, or I guess at the worst extent, it could be some real new like religious totalitarianism that they're LARPing about.
Because remember, you could say, oh, they're not talking about you, coach.
It's tongue-in-cheek for Jews or it's not going to be a religious theocracy.
They're just using rhetoric.
And it's like, okay, sure.
Well, like our guys aren't actually building ovens in their in their basements for Tim Wise or whoever else it is.
But the rhetoric and the memes and stuff reflect some sort of desires or hopes or aspirations to a certain extent, not literal ovens, but you know what I mean.
So Sam, I'll stop there.
But, you know, you are by far the number one Christian on the show.
And go ahead, have that.
I'll shut up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, I hear what you're saying.
And I'll just, yeah, I'll just say, Sam, you, you have done more progress on Christianity with me than probably anybody since that once really nice Catholic priest I had back in like CCD in 1992, Father Pete.
But you have done it not by saying, coach, you really got to get straight with God or you're going downstairs when you're dead.
You do it with tolerance and understanding and like spreading the virtues and the wonders and the frankly racial aspect of it rather than trying to scare me into being a Christian.
Speaking personally.
Right.
Well, thank you for that.
That's good.
Yeah.
You know, if they were leading with that message towards something good and accomplishing things, you know, it would win people over like, well, look at they've they've taken care of this, these trannies and these faggots.
And look at this, they're straightening up the cities.
And you know what I'm saying?
There's, there's nothing that breeds success like success.
So it would, if, if, if their Results were good.
I think people would say, like, well, okay, they're preaching Christ and you got to believe.
And if you don't believe, if you're not gathering with Christ and you're scattering with the devil, all that stuff.
Okay.
But, you know, it's, you just get the feeling from them that they are Zionist, you know, at heart, and that it's about this religious confession,
so to speak, but ignoring the facts on the ground, you know, like it reminds me of the scripture there.
I'm trying to think where it is.
It's Christ saying, you know, God the Father will uproot every plant that was not planted in the garden.
So, you know, the plants that the Father planted, those are the good crops, but the plants not planted by the Father are the seeds, the terrors that have been sown by the devil.
So the entire Gible message is about talking about this like good race and bad race.
So that's what is not really evident in their message, you know, and that's that's what kind of strikes a chord with me, like that it's it's kind of a false thing.
Hey, great.
To the extent that that somebody with a Christian sentiment is putting forth Christian ideas into our laws and jurisprudence and the society.
Even if you're not a Christian, you would like my experience is that a lot of non-Christians, whether atheists, agnostics, or even pagans or something else, we kind of, as white nationalists, we kind of have the same moral fiber, you know, like the way I look at it, like the Bible says the law is written in the hearts of his people, which implies that the law is not written in the hearts of those who are not his people.
So I, you know, like, like there's a way that you could bring this kind of a message, but like the way that you're describing it and all that.
And I haven't followed enough of those talking points enough to respond exactly.
But I remember we had a show where we couldn't have the actual show on because this asshole threatened us, basically.
Yeah, he was a Christian nationalist.
Yeah.
He recorded a lovely first hour civil.
Yeah.
Good, good conversation.
And then after the fact, found out that he had a racial or even an affinity for the Third Reich.
Oh, no.
I thought he was even agreeing with me in that first half.
And it comes out, you know, the guy's like telling you, writing you threatening letters and stuff like that.
I mean, you know, how gay is that?
So that's kind of what I really, you know, and when I, when I talk to these types of Christian people, it's, it's, some of them are the hardest, hardest people to talk to because when they're so tied up in all of that thing and they have the wrong take, you know, it's their, it's, they're bound up in it.
Maybe their whole family is even bound up in it.
So poison.
It's a sick, it really is.
It really is.
But not that they're unreachable, but a lot of them are like that guy we had on are virtually unreachable that they just don't see the bit of good that is in what they're saying, but they're missing it for all this other stuff.
Pebbles in the skull or ultimately for some of them, I think it's it's cowardice too.
And then they realize that if they if they went the whole way that they're trouble, but if no, that's a good point.
Right there, that's a good point.
Because if you really stood up to what this, what the implications of all this thing is, that could, you know, you could lose your business, you could use your life, you could lose your, where you work, where you live, anything.
You know, they're not, they're not willing to pay that cost because they still believe that somehow, no, no, no, no, we, we have the power and the numbers to implement our views.
And we, they, they don't understand what time it is on the calendar and where we really are in the scope of everything.
And they've, yeah, they've all, they, they attack Christianity as such through, you know, trying to make it more difficult to have religious schools and tax implications and all the rest of it.
They already have forced people to bake the cake, bigot.
And no, sorry, your religious views on gay marriage is not enough to get you out of serving people that come in opportunistically to rub your nose in shit.
So even if we were to grant the legitimacy of using it tactically as some way to get toward victory, because, you know, a young guy I know was like, who cares, coach?
Like, it's about winning.
You do anything you can to win.
I'm like, yes, but I don't think that's a winning strategy.
I think you got to turn off that.
It's not going to be the defensive cloak that they think it is.
They've already shown that to be the case.
Sure.
They do.
Look, they hate Christians for sure.
They hate white Christians the most.
They hate non-Christians even more.
The argument is the guy that came on is he couldn't shun you quickly enough.
Right.
So he, he just burned a bridge.
So what, what are you, what are you trying to do?
Like, he wasn't like saying like, hey, man, you know, I don't think what you're doing is a good strategy.
I think it scares people.
I think you should come to my side.
No, he, he was like, don't you air that.
Shut it down.
You are.
Yeah, you're evil.
Like, so there's their strategy is not like, even if it, you don't think it's a good winning strategy.
They don't seem to want to win.
They don't seem to want allies.
They seem to just want people to know that that is the label that they're giving themselves.
It's not about winning.
It's about you knowing that that's what they call themselves.
Because most importantly, they're not like you, you Nazi.
Well, yes.
Well, yeah, respectable.
I want to mention something that Smasher said one time.
We were talking about this.
And like, okay, the Jews becoming, let's say that Jews or all of them or some of them became Christians.
Would that change the way that they act?
No.
And I'm sorry.
I don't think so.
Hold on.
Look at blacks.
Blacks are like 90% Christian.
Does that in any way inform the way that they live their lives?
Absolutely not.
Well, there's another angle to this also.
The difference between Christianity and Islam is how many of these non-whites, which like, and that's the thing, I just don't believe most of them can be Christian.
Like, I don't think my, I don't think that my cat or my goats or my chickens can accept Jesus as the Lord and Savior.
So how?
Well, you know, I'll try better next time.
Sorry, coach.
What's to stop some mud people from just saying like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm Christian shit.
Or like, oh, yeah, I am Christian.
Yes, yes, yes.
Give me access to your women.
Yes, I'm a good Christian, man.
Like, there's nothing stopping them from just lying versus like taking our pro-white, anti-Jew stance.
It's way easier to lie about the other thing.
I could even grant the global universality of Christianity to blacks, Indians, Chinese, whatever.
There are devout Christians of all races.
That is true, 100%.
It doesn't make them white in spirit and outlook and all that.
Sorry.
They want to be Christians.
They got to do that in their own country on their own time.
And, you know, I think you're missing your point, though.
But my, well, my point, my point, Rolo, is that if you think that you can convert Jews to Christianity and not have them do their classic subversion bit and do it opportunistically, whether it's out of opportunity or cowardice or whatever, then you are dumb as a bag of rocks or coward.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, I don't know what the hell that was.
She was like, no, I didn't convert.
I'm a proud, you know, Israeli Jewish scientist.
I didn't convert to Christianity.
I'm pro-Christian, though.
It's like, I'm sorry.
There's if we didn't have evidence of what happens.
If you didn't have evidence of what Jews have done when they converted opportunistically, then maybe I could forgive you for your naivete.
But no, there's what do you think they do?
Well, I think there is another aspect of this that you're not addressing is that if you have a, yes, if you have a Christian nation, like just like, oh, you can have any, any Christian come in.
Yes, the Jew thing is a big deal that there's nothing stopping from Jews from lying.
And it'd be even easier for them to lie at that point.
But if you have a white nation ran by white people with white rules, you cannot subvert it as easily.
Whereas you could, anybody can come and say, yeah, I'm Christian.
It's way easier to lie and just say that you're Christian because these people, they don't believe it.
I don't think blacks don't think about what happens after they orgasm.
Like they don't think like a baby comes from late in the second.
Nonsense.
Like nothing happens.
I smoke a blunt and I drink a 40.
No baby comes out of here.
So they're not even going to be thinking like, what happens if I am judged eternally for just lying because I want to be close to a white woman or I want to get free stuff from these stupid white people versus a long way to future.
Yeah.
Because I am.
They don't even think about that.
It's not even on the horizon where I am a Christian and I do believe in all that stuff.
But I understand that we need to have a white country.
And if we, let's just say, let's say I'm more magnanimous and then there are some East Asians that can be here because, you know, after we kick out all the Antifa and the shit libs that were rooting against us, we can have maybe half a percent of the Asians here that were decent engineers that were pro-white.
Well, just bear with me on this one.
I was not making that argument, Rolo.
No, no, no, I know.
But I'd say like versus like a Christian nation where you have, you have a Christian nation under Christian law.
It's too easy for people to just lie and say they're a Christian because you can't demonstrate, like you can't lie.
Oh, yeah, I'm pro-white.
And meanwhile, you're under our edicts.
And then you can't have a bunch of black people saying like, yeah, I'm pro-white shit.
Versus these Christian nationalists, they'll let non-whites just say, oh, see, look, look, see, racist owned.
We got all these Christians here.
Where these are people that will just take advantage of them because they're letting them do it.
And you have white racial awareness on the uptick and you have religiosity on the downslope almost around the world.
Now, sorry, I'm not trying to like be a Debbie Downer for our faithful listeners, but I think those are like, that's an honest assessment of the trends.
You see it in the immigration statistics too.
Immigration still maintains a very high percentage when you ask people what they care about and opposition to it is on the rise again.
Credit to Vider and so many guys working in those trenches for so long.
So yeah, I don't think it's a winning strategy.
I do think it is a distraction to a certain extent.
I don't think those guys are capable of staying in their lane or being good messengers as I myself got effing triggered by the hint or the subject that I was somehow not the antichrist, but anti-Christ, just because I am not going to church every Sunday and embracing him explicitly and wholeheartedly as my personal savior and my family's savior.
Sorry, just really stuck in my craw and maybe more negative to it than I had planned to be on this show.
So with that, we're at two hours.
The damn dog is barking.
God knows what He-Man figure she is chewing on right now.
It's probably it's probably stink ore.
Was that a real one?
I think.
Yes, it was.
Yeah, and you could like put that, he like smelled like garlic or something.
I remember that.
Yeah.
I don't know if it smelled like garlic, but it definitely smelled.
Garlic smells lovely.
That's not a stink.
Anyway.
All right.
Rolo, thank you, my friend.
The Jay Inslee edict has been issued.
And regardless, that aside, fine.
I'm going to start campaigning with him just so I can not go to bed crying after every fallout.
Rolo is the real Democrat.
Yeah.
See, Democrats are the real racists.
Exactly.
You know, can we get my good friend on next week?
His name is Richard.
You know, he's been talking to me about all these really great Democrats.
Richard who?
Don't ask what his last name is.
Don't worry about it.
Oh, obviously allusion to Richard Spencer.
No, no.
No, yeah, Richard Spencer.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
That's who you were referring to.
Sorry.
It's a little late.
Second hour.
I stole one of my wife's Vizys.
Sam, you got to try these.
I've had every hard seltzer under the sun, but this one has antioxidant vitamin C.
Oh, wow.
Ocarola, superfruit.
So I'm not drinking alcohol on this show.
I am taking my vitamins, dear listeners.
All right.
Yes.
Dizzy, please sponsor our show.
My kids are starving.
Speaking of which, full house episode.
Oh, Sam.
Thank you, dear buddy.
Lovely show.
Yeah, good show.
What about the closing music?
Can I introduce the song?
Hell yeah.
Let me just bring it home.
Full house episode 136 was recorded on a gorgeous, oh man.
I'm in a t-shirt down here and we're getting toward that time of year.
It's so God, the seasons and this show, before we know it, I'm going to be out here in a hoodie and breaking out the propane heater.
But there's a waning full moon out there.
The crickets are going because they know that their time is near the end.
And yeah, guys, enjoy the rest of your summers.
Out there to check the last of the Perseid meteor showers if you can.
And this was Full House episode 136.
It's now August 13th.
We'll get this puppy up on Friday, thanks to Rolo's hard work every week.
Follow us on Telegram, ProWhiteFam2.
Follow us on Gab if we don't get showed from Gab for my critical comments, gab.com/slash fullhouse.
And please drop us a line, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
Givesemgo.com slash fullhouse if you like what we do, appreciate it.
And of course, the other one is full-house.com and support us tab.
So all of our Charlottesville veterans, we salute you.
We love you.
Eternal glory to every man and woman who showed up that day, whether you got clubbed in the head like me, or whether you just walked into the park, saw some American treachery on display in its worst, and made it home safely.
God bless you.
All right, Sammy Baby, it's over to you for our closing tune this week.
Have fun.
Well, we had hoped to have another guest on, and he was not able to join us, which is okay.
We'll get him another time.
But he had suggested a song, and I think it's a good song to play, which is the band is Skullhead.
And the name of the song is Wish the Lads Were Here.
This goes back to, oh boy, I'd have to look it up, but probably something like 1990 or something.
Going back a little ways, but a really great song.
And for those really motivated fans, somebody might be pointing out, hey, Skullhead later in the career had a little bit checkered past with a few things I'm not going to go into.
But yes, yes, you're right.
But it remains a great song.
Wish the Lads Were Here.
Ammy Baby, enjoy, fam.
We will talk to you next week.
I don't know which one of our special guests we're going to get in the hopper for that one, but we'll talk to you then.
We love you.
And we'll talk to you next week.
One, two, three.
See ya.
See ya.
We could have a laugh.
We could drink some beer.
We could get right into the spirit of the night.
And I just wish the lads were here.
Yeah, I just wish that for this time that the lads were here.
And no matter where, find the clouds.
We'll think of home.
And we'll think of friends.
But we won't change no matter what we go.
No need for me just to step away.
And we'll be home at the end of the day to the brightest lights.
And we'll get it through the night.
And I just wish the lads were here.
Yeah, I just wish that for this time That the lights were here.
On the street tonight, drink your leather hate.
You got anything on the avenue.
Want a lifeline, what's your queue and the game.
And I wish tonight the lights were here.
We could have a laugh, we could drink some beer.
We could get right into the spirit of the night.
And I just wish the lights were here.
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