We're joined by the always gregarious Gordon Kahl of Achtung Amerikaner to talk tough childhoods, surviving abuse, and hitting escape velocity. In the second hour we dissect the inevitability of Trump 2024, building our race up vs. attacking our enemies, and The Cop Question. BE THERE Break: "Horse Soldier" by Cole Lund Close: "Man on the Silver Mountain" by Rainbow Amerikaner.org FBI, RIP? by Victor Davis Hanson New USS Liberty Documentary And sincere condolences to Alexander Dugin. 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!
If you stop to think about it, this show is a little bit bourgeois.
Sure, we have our radical views, but all of us grew up more or less middle class and are raising families in the same middle American manner.
And our biggest individual concerns are providing for our families and immunizing them against the dangerous open sewer of modern American culture.
We're blessed in this way, as so many other white families in America and around the world face horrors beyond our comprehension.
Broken homes due to abuse, alcoholism, drug addiction, incarceration, or even premature death are far too prevalent in this collapsing civilization.
And I'm sure at least a few of our listeners grew up with these problems or might even be facing them now.
This week on Full House, we are honored to welcome a brave returned guest willing to open up about his tough childhood, how he escaped the suck, and how he plans to avoid the pitfalls he faced as a young man.
Mr. Producer, it's showtime.
Welcome everyone to episode 137 of Full House, the world's most sincere show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
I am, as always, your fortunate and grateful host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of laughs, tears, and no queers, so far as we know.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Throwing Romans, Mick, JT Says, and Adam for their kind support of the show this week.
And if you'd like to be like those true gentlemen and hear your sock name in lights as they were, please do visit us at givesemgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com.
Don't forget the Germanic spelling there, fam.
Also, I just wanted to say that I am pumped this week because I stopped to smell the roses recently and realized just how much of the content that so many of us have consumed our whole lives has been hostile.
Jews papers, TV Jews, even magazines, advertisements, and all the rest of it.
They have the power of the megaphone and it's been used for decades to turn our once upright and unabashedly proud people into soft, deracinated, trash culture addicts.
And too often, we in the cause casually dismiss our humble efforts as just podcasts or just flyering or just networking or even just speeches.
But you got to start somewhere.
Build the foundation first, no matter how frustrating the pace of progress can be.
And each week, several thousands of you set aside an hour or maybe two to let us into your head, into your home, and maybe even into your hearts.
We could really get into some skullduggery if we wanted to give you bad advice or wormtongue you into believing lies or, God forbid, even give up the struggle.
Just wanted to say we see you there in your car on the commute or mowing the lawn or slogging away in a cubicle or maybe even dicking around the house.
And we are damn grateful for your time and we pledge to never abuse it.
All right.
That's it.
Monologues this week.
Woohoo.
Enough of me.
And let's meet the birth panel and our very special guest.
First up, he did not have the easiest childhood, but you bet your ass.
He worked his ass off to ensure his kids had it and have it better than he did.
Sam, welcome, big guy.
Well, I'm trying.
Thanks, Coach.
It ain't easy.
You know, if it was easy, everybody would be doing it, I guess.
But yeah, that's good, good words from you there.
And but I hope you didn't, I hope you weren't offended that I said that we're a little bit bourgeois.
But I was just thinking about it, you know, like we really, you know, we don't have any dark skeletons in our closet here.
Like we're not facing some of the worst things that people are facing.
You know, it just made me think.
Yeah, which is a good thing in a way, right?
But, you know, we're a little bit removed from some of the worst of it.
Yeah, yeah, for sure, for sure.
I wanted to mention that this week here, just gone past, we had the Feast of the Assumption, August 15th.
Okay.
Holy Holy Day for Catholics.
And boy, we're getting them packed in here because, you know, we're getting refugees, if you will, because the archdiocese in this large metropolitan area has really put the crackdown on the traditional Latin Mass.
So we're getting all those people now, as I myself have been a refugee for the same reason, but just recent action has caused the closure of a certain place.
And so we're getting all those people packed in.
And I just, you know, you just got to wonder what's going through their head, you know, as the vites tightens on us in different ways.
I was talking with somebody afterwards and I said, well, you know, the good side of it is that people become more serious about understanding what time it is on the calendar, so to speak.
Sure.
Refugees everywhere.
White flight to the country, devout Catholics fleeing to the more serious faith.
And it's just so incredible that, you know, a Catholic church is, you know, the institution itself, I mean, they've had problems for many centuries, you could argue, but that even there, people have to flee from the mainline Catholic into the more serious.
But hey, the good news is, yeah, people are on the move.
Absolutely.
And the big metropolitan area, of course, we have nothing but scandal after scandal of this so-called church coddling these queers and kid touchers, but then they're going to crack down on the faithful that want to adhere to the traditional Tridentine Mass.
Yep.
And even though I am not a devout Christian, it always made sense to me.
White people have plenty of problems individually and institutionally.
We don't throw them out the window and give up hope.
So same goes for the various churches and faiths of our people.
And is there a reason, Sam, that there's a gigantic yingling can right in the front of your camera?
Are you just well, the camera, the camera is kind of like broken.
And so I set it down kind of more at the desk level.
And as far as far as the yingling can, I like these tall boys.
That's what we call them in the Midwest here.
I think you guys have a different term in different parts of the country.
Tall boy.
Yeah.
When you get that 16 ounce or 18 ounce can, we call it a tall boy.
And I like it because you end up having to open fewer containers.
Amen.
And you have to drink it faster so it doesn't get warm too.
I am having a Kirkland signature hard seltzer.
Speaking of queers not being on the show, we made our rare pilgrimage to Costco today.
And oof, boy, those are those are the cheapest seltzers you could find.
All right.
Our guest is like, guys, I'm still here.
Snow Smasher this week.
We pushed the show to Saturday to accommodate his schedule.
He's going to be out of the will pretty soon if this happens again.
But I got to hang out with him at a lovely birthday party for his older twins, Twins 1.0.
And I even got to mow his lawn.
He was working on setting up a trampoline and I didn't want any part of that.
So I said, all right, let me go do something I'm good at.
Let me go be.
I was mowing the lawn today.
I was thinking of you, coach.
Amen.
It still makes my heart sing.
All right.
Next up, his mother says that he is a good egg.
And in our rare, sincere moments with him, we tend to agree, even though he looks like a Hollywood pornographer at this very moment in a red silk robe.
Rolo.
What's up, brother?
Well, I got a migraine, but I would rather have a migraine and be here with you guys than not have a migraine and be anywhere else.
Our special guest even was willing to push it for your comfort.
I said, hell no.
I run this show, not him.
I guess he's a nicer guy in the show that he runs.
But I want to talk.
We had a good conversation about dating before we went to tape.
And perhaps we can touch on that a little bit more, the pathologies of the women out there and the realities.
I know we've done it before, but I think, you know, roughly like 50% of our audience is single white dudes.
So we can't go back to that well enough, even if it's kind of depressing.
Are you game for that, Rolo?
Sure.
All right.
Good answer.
And finally, our very patient and very special guest.
He is the proprietor of Americon.org.
That's with a K, fam, the home for Healthy Flyover Country.
He is a longtime pro-white activist, a very eligible bachelor up there in the Rolo tier, and one of the most gregarious high planes drifters you will ever meet.
Gordon Call.
Welcome back, buddy.
Hey, fellas.
Happy to be on.
I actually have listened to your show since the very first episode, and I'm really excited to be on here.
Bless you, brother.
And you, yep, and you do a great show with Octung Americaner.
And I'm pleased, delighted to announce that we are syndicated on there now.
Our first syndication on AmeriConnor.org, there's a little full house, full house tab.
I don't know what Gordon's numbers look like, but we'll assume that they're bigger than ours.
So thank you, buddy.
Tell the audience a little bit about your efforts there, what it's all about.
Yeah.
So Americaner.org was originally started.
We had the Europa report, which was the Europa Review guys.
They kind of like did their own thing or whatever with Otto and Pavel.
And they wanted to have a website for their show and my show, which is Actong Americaner, which originally was just being shared in the regional Midwest chat.
And it was like 30 guys listening to it or whatever.
Sure.
And we started the website and by us for us.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And a few other people kind of wanted on.
And originally it was limited solely to people from the Midwest of the United States or flyover country.
We've expanded that out.
Now, honestly, you don't have to be that, but it's always been meant to be focused on that region of the country because I felt that the guys over at the right stuff were mostly East Coast, like kind of northern, northeastern sort of fellas.
You had, I mean, I know there's all kinds of different like southern nationalist organizations, but there really wasn't anything for like the Midwest and the West.
And so that was kind of what we wanted to focus our energy on.
Amen.
I was just listening to the Midwest news Roundup show today, as a matter of fact, with you on there, Gordon.
I like the concept that he's got there.
And Gordon's got some big ideas and some solid ideas for building up a regional power platform there, essentially.
Not to forget to mention that the final storm is on America.
I was going to ask.
I enjoy listening to as well.
One of my favorite shows.
Good word.
Thumbs up from Rolo.
If you like educational autism.
All right, Gordon.
You were on Full House before on a live stream, but we were moving fast and taking questions and stuff like that.
So we didn't do the bit.
Please do share ethnicity, religion, fatherhood status.
So my ethnicity, I am mostly German, I think 60%.
And then the rest is Irish, which is, you know, about 23%.
I have some Scandinavian, I believe primarily Norwegian, but it's like single-digit percentages.
And then the rest is, you know, broadly European, 100% European, 0% Ashkenazim, mostly Northwestern European.
Religion, I am a Christian.
I don't have any particular denomination.
I don't go to church very often.
Although when I do go, I tend to go to the Orthodox church.
I really like that church.
And then fatherhood status, I do not have any children.
I am currently unmarried.
I've been talking to a couple of women recently.
We'll see how they go.
God bless.
Good luck, brother.
Yeah, we were talking before the show about, you know, we are going to get into difficult territory talking about problems at home and rough childhoods.
And you suggested, you know, you should really have a guy on who escaped it and then went on to become a father and have kids and correct all of the, you know, maybe horrors is too strong a word, but the difficulties that he faced.
And I said, well, hey, you made it through and you want to get into that game.
And I have no confidence.
You'll be a great dad and that you will make it happen.
And please, ladies, do hit us up.
Rolo and Gordon are sincerely two of the best, smartest, funniest, attractive, ad positive adjective as you like.
So hit us up, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
If you are willing to.
Punctual it worked before.
Oh, all right.
We'll talk about punctuality on dates too at the bowling alley.
And Gordon, Gordon Call is indeed a famous personage.
Is that a libertarian prior?
He was a free state guy or not a free state guy, but a sovereign citizen.
I actually, so I was a Bernie bro before I became a National Socialist.
I picked Gordon Call solely because I had heard about him on, I think, Rebel Yell years and like years ago.
And I didn't actually know anything about him, but they mentioned him being from the Dakotas.
So I was like, oh, that'll be a good name to pick then.
I didn't know anything about him at the time.
I have some respect for him.
Yeah, he was like a he was like a sovereign citizen sort of.
His big deal was he got out of World War II and decided that the income tax was communist and anti-American.
I believe he called the IRS the synagogue of Satan at one point, which, you know, like he's not wrong.
And his wife, I believe his, because after he was killed by the U.S. by the U.S. Marshals and the FBI, his wife later married a Christian identity pastor.
So I couldn't find any, I did a whole episode on him.
I couldn't find any information on his racial views.
He was Christian identity as far as I understand, because I remember hearing about that story years ago.
Yeah, I couldn't find anything about him being Christian identity, but I know his wife married a Christian identity pastor.
So it wouldn't surprise me at all.
I mean, especially like also, you know, he was a World War II veteran from North Dakota.
I imagine he had plenty of opinions on the different races of men.
The way things used to be.
All right, Gordon, let's get cracking here.
And I guess we'll put you on the couch.
Thank you for being willing to do this.
I was going to say, all right, Gordon, take us back to your childhood, but technically you never left your childhood.
So, no, in all seriousness, tell us about life growing up.
Sounds like it was rough, maybe not the worst, but yeah, let the audience know what you're comfortable with.
Yeah, sure.
So, I mean, I was, um, my mother divorced my father when I was a toddler.
I won't go into like specific ages just to like avoid that's fine.
But, like, I was, I was very young.
I don't have any memories of them being together.
Um, I have a few memories of her dating men when I was very young, right?
Um, and nothing that I can recall was terribly, there was nothing bad that happened or anything.
Um, she remarried when I was uh about five years old.
Uh, I have I have a funny story with that.
I they got married, and I refused to be the ring bearer because they made me stop watching Thundercats to do it.
True, true 80s guy.
I was furious, I refused to do it, so they had to have some other neighbor kid do it.
Um, which she later told me, you know, maybe you were onto something, but anyways, uh, so she remarried when I was about five or six years old, give or take.
And I don't have a lot of memories, like, you know, obviously, because I was so young, but within about a year or so, um, the man she married, he was an alcoholic, and he uh started to become physically abusive.
He was, he was physically and emotionally abusive.
I feel like those two things probably always go hand in hand.
I sort of doubt that a guy who's willing to beat up on you is also going to be nice to you, you know.
Uh, he started beating on her probably within a year or so, like I said.
Uh, obviously, it didn't like just start immediately, just like these things never do because these people are predators, right?
And they kind of worm their way in first, yeah.
Um, and she was with him for about I think seven years, maybe.
Um, she had a couple of children with him that were significantly younger than me, obviously, because of the age difference there.
Uh, like I said, he was physically abusive with her, he actually wasn't as abusive with us, with the children.
Um, it seemed like I don't know if she was kind of like keeping him away or if he just had enough principles to not beat children.
I don't know.
He did was it in was it in front of would he do it in front of the kids or was it like behind?
Oh, yeah, so they get into fights or whatever, and he'd start throwing stuff at her or um, like you know, hitting her and stuff.
I mean, I don't, I don't know how graphic people want me to be, but I mean, yeah, a distinct memory I have as a child is, you know, we lived in a very rural part of the state.
Um, you know, I have a distinct memory of me and my sister watching as he like dragged my mom outside and rubbed her face into the gravel driveway.
You know what I mean?
Like that kind of like very nasty, vindictive behavior.
I mean, it's something to keep in mind with this sort of thing is that these sorts of men are predatory and they're calling them cowards is like a very cliche thing, I guess.
But they, um, Sam, before we're recording, mentioned the power dynamic, and that's definitely something that is true.
Like, these are men who like, you know, like my mother is a small woman, right?
And this guy was not like a very, he was, he was actually a man lit, but like, you know, figures, even as a man lit, right?
Like, he was still bigger and stronger than my mother or, you know, a six-year-old boy or whatever, right?
And it's it would.
It would always vary.
Basically, there would be emotional abuse or physical abuse.
Oftentimes one would lead to the other.
He would be frustrated because of his day at work or something.
Right, there's always some excuse that leads to why he engages, because it's never.
It's never some, it's never him right, it's always.
It's always something that the child did or that the wife did, or that you force, you forced me, you forced me into this.
Yeah, I wouldn't have done that.
You know, maybe I went a little too far right, when I like started like, slapping her around, but she shouldn't have done this or that right, it's always that kind of thing.
And any, and you're saying he really didn't lay hands on the kids, or sparingly a lot uh, he did a few times um usually um, usually a lot of times.
Once I, once I got older um, I would try to intervene more, and that was when uh, he would lay hands on me sure um, and then they say something like, look what you made me do exactly yeah, that kind of stuff um, and you know he, my sister, it was the same case, because my sister is older than me right, and she would, she tried that earlier, but you know she's a girl right, so he didn't get as physical with her in some ways, but in some ways, like it doesn't matter because uh,
I feel like she was more affected than I was.
Um, long term um, do you, do you remember what went through your head?
You know, when he was beaten on mom, was it just, like you know, crying and hiding your head?
Or how did you deal with it back then?
If you can transport yourself um well, I mean uh, it turned me into an atheist for a while.
Uh, I legit I, I remember uh, after one incident I, I ran away like, not like away from home, but I, I ran away from the situation and I remember I was uh, I was hiding in the uh, the mud room, like you know the, the back porch room or whatever uh, with my dog, and I remember just laying there kind of holding the dog and I was thinking, you know, after i'd watched him beat her up, was just,
it seemed impossible that this man could be allowed to do this over and over, and nothing ever happened to him, he never suffered any consequences.
Um, when my nobody ever called the cops yeah, when my mom called the police um, they would maybe take him away for like a night or two right um, but usually they would come and like, calm the situation down and he would like leave of his own power right, and go somewhere for the night.
Because, you know, I don't know what it's like in the big city, but in small towns, these cops know everybody, right?
They have personal relationships with the people in town.
And I think a problem with abuse is that they don't want to cause drama in the community, right?
They don't want to be the guy splitting the family up and causing a problem because, you know, they know this guy.
Like they see him at the gas station getting coffee or whatever.
and it becomes very uncomfortable and it's easier to just be like well everybody, every married, married couple, has arguments, you're going a little too far, you need to calm down, or whatever.
You know what I mean?
And I would think it would be like the opposite today.
You know, they'd come in and, you know, just put shackles on the wife beater right away.
That's what you think.
And I don't, I don't know.
I don't know because I, I've, thankfully, I don't know of anybody that's in that situation now.
Like none of my friends.
I haven't seen it at least.
And I feel like I've, I, I keep pretty good track, I feel.
But I don't know.
I, I, from what I've always heard, domestic abuse, cops don't want to get involved.
They don't want to do anything about it.
They, it's a, it's, it's a bad situation.
They don't want to get in it.
Um, oftentimes the woman will like turn on the cops when they try to arrest the man because there's all kinds of weird mixed up emotional feelings.
You know, I mean, the, the common issue, right, is that the woman will say, like, oh, well, you know, it's not always this bad.
He's really very nice.
It's just every once because what happens, right, is these men beat on these women or whatever, and then they will do some kind of, oh, I'm so sorry.
Like I bought you this thing or like, let's go out to dinner.
Yeah, they try to make up for it.
And a lot of times the woman will say, no, I, I made him do it.
I drove him to that.
Well, because, and, cause, I mean, these, I mean, I'm sure there's love there, right?
Like there was at some point.
And it's, it's hard to acknowledge that the person that you have all this emotional attachment to is a bad person.
And you want to, and you want to make it work, right?
Like you want to, to fix the issue.
And I don't know.
Maybe it can be fixed.
I've never heard of a man that beat a woman, like learning to stop.
Yeah, it's tough.
I have seen, I, I, from what I understand, after my mother, so my mother divorced him after like seven years.
Um, it took years and years of this before she finally gave up.
Me and my siblings, well, admittedly, my sister from the same father, um, my other siblings were too young when that happened.
They were, you know, around the age I was when they got married, when they finally got divorced.
But we would beg her to leave him and she wouldn't, you know, it would always be, you're not giving him a chance, you know, to change over and over.
And again, like I, at the time, I, I had a lot of hard feelings.
Um, I assume you resented your mother then.
And uh, yeah, do you still know?
Yeah.
Uh, no, not now.
Um, I have a it was very difficult for a long time.
And to put it in perspective, at one point, um, during one of these altercations, my mother basically tried to give as good as she got and she gave a little bit better and she went to jail for a little bit.
Um, and you know, like I won't go into details just because, again, like it might be doxy or whatever, but I ended up in a foster home for um almost a month.
Um, me and my sisters did.
Um, the the siblings from the uh stepfather, they actually went to him because she went to jail, not him for that particular situation, right?
Um, and it took about a month for my father to come get us because he lived across the country.
And I blamed my mother for that, you know, like if she hadn't done what she did, we wouldn't be in this situation.
Um, my sister moved back with my mother after a few months after my mom got out of jail and everything was settled and everything, but I didn't talk to her for almost a year and a half.
Um, I did eventually move back because my father was kind of a weak man, to be honest.
It wasn't a good situation there either.
Um but, and there was a lot of stuff.
I mean, I guess, if you want to go into like yeah, go ahead.
Yeah sorry, kind of what was like the frequency?
What was the frequency with of these altercations once a week uh, twice a week uh, once a month?
I couldn't tell you, to be honest like, because I mean, a lot of it happened when I wasn't like, because a lot of it was happening at night, you know, because he would come home from work right, and he would like start drinking usually, you know what I mean and so I would be asleep.
I think, from what I understand, a lot of the times my older sister would kind of talk about this later, like I was, usually because I was younger right, I was, you know seven eight nine, ten.
I was not always aware of it happening.
I assume it happened a lot more than I knew about because, you know, Mom would try to keep it from us to that kind of stuff.
Um, I have actually not a ton of memories from my childhood and I don't know if this is normal, like if people just don't remember huge chunks of their childhoods.
But I don't for mine and I don't.
I know that my sister, I think you you maybe suppress it uh, subconsciously and my sister was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
Um, I don't know, I i've never been diagnosed with that, but I mean, I don't know if that was just a different way of coping.
Um like, I have quite a few distinct memories of different behaviors.
Um, you know uh, the time that he beat me bloody, like majorly, with like uh, you know, closed fist and everything, was when I was the last time that I tried to get between him and my mom when he they got into an argument because this was when the divorce was finally finalized and she was trying to take the lawnmower and he would not.
In this case, the man had a very valid excuse.
Well, but the thing is too, the pettiness of it is also what no, it's I yeah, it's in.
It's crazy, like that's the thing about it too is that it's it's.
It's always so such bizarre petty things.
A big memory I have is, you know i'm, i'm what's known as a white trash analyst and uh we, I grew up, you know, in trailers and stuff and I, one of my, I remember he got into an argument with my mom and they started like uh, shouting and like you know all this stuff, and he threw a block of cheese, like he was, like he was like getting into the fridge or something, and he grabbed like a block, like colby jack, and he tried to chuck it at my mom and he missed and it broke through the wall right and it and it like went into the sheetrock and I don't know, like I don't know, if they ever got that out of there because,
like but like, that's the kind of bizarre petty stuff, but that's, that's insane, like that's that is not sure normal behavior.
And i'll be honest sorry, I mean, go ahead, go ahead.
I was gonna, I was just gonna say for the audience, you know, I was like sincerely thinking how what, what's the?
What's the message that we're gonna deliver for the show?
What's the directive?
Are we just calling attention to the fact that this stuff exists?
Obviously, people know that it exists.
Is it just a a good yarn?
Obviously a sad yarn from Gordon, and we're feeling our way forward, even if it's just misery loves company.
I was really surprised.
Uh, you know, our big inner circle, broader inner circle, asked, I, I polled.
You know, were you ever food insecure?
Obviously, that's one of those new terms.
But you know, did you ever go to Bed hungry, that stuff, that kind of thing in childhood.
And it was something like roughly 50% of our guys actually experienced childhood hunger to some extent, which really surprised me.
And again, maybe that's me projecting my own comfy.
I was blessed with the worst I ever got was a spanking, deservedly, or of course, the infamous pancakes thrown into the window incident when I complained to my dad that they were overcooked.
But anyway, I just wanted to let the audience know, like, we're digging here and we'll see if there's anything that we can come out with this.
Gordon did some homework too on the stats.
And I guess for me personally, Gordon, that's, you know, when you think back to your childhood, is that is it all the dark stuff that's there?
Or were you still able?
I guess maybe for the kids that I'm thinking about out there who are in these horrible situations, many of whom you've done the homework do go on to become criminals or deviants of some type or another, but you did not.
So that's an important one.
Think, did you have it was even possible to have a healthy childhood or is this like deep scar tissue that you're still dealing with today?
I mean, for me, it wasn't possible.
I mean, so to come to perspective, right, even after my mother split from this man and he moved hours away, it affected everything.
You know, for one thing, my mother now had four children, right?
So finding another man was increased, was, you know, way more difficult than it would have been when she just had two, right?
She dated a lot more after this, you know.
And most of the men that she dated were perfectly fine men.
There was nothing really wrong with them or anything.
My siblings, like my older sister, would drive the men away.
Like she would purposefully like be like, and she would even say that she was doing it on purpose, like that, you know, that kind of thing.
She would deny it sometimes, admit it sometimes, you know, that kind of stuff.
And, you know, yeah, like there's, I can understand she was afraid.
I was effectively turned into a surrogate father by like my mother basically expected me to both be her obedient son and also act as like a father to my younger siblings when I was a boy who had never had his own father.
And as you might imagine, that that didn't work.
It was, it wasn't good for me.
It was definitely not good for them.
It took years.
It took after I was an adult for me to have anything approaching a healthy relationship with my younger siblings.
And I moved like hours away.
I didn't talk to them for a long time.
And it wasn't like, you know, like we hated each other, but it was like, you know, we will never be close.
I want to put a distance between that.
Yeah.
And it's, and I don't blame her.
Like, I don't know what else she could.
I mean, she's, she's a woman, right?
Like, what is she?
She needed help.
She had four children.
She was working like three different jobs.
She didn't, she needed some kind of help and she took what she could get.
And it just wasn't correct.
And did you, was there a time where you were like, I'm never getting married?
I'm never having kids based off that.
Because, you know, today you are certainly eager to get in the game.
And maybe all young men go through a phase where they're just interested in being cads and nothing more.
But yeah, did you have like an escape trajectory from that like rough beginning or did it dissolve away?
I've always wanted to have a wife and children, but I've, you know, I just kind of figured I'd, I've still kind of, sometimes I wonder if I ever will, not because I don't want to, but just because it doesn't seem to work out for me.
But it's, no, I never had anything where I was like, I'll never have kids because of this terrible experience or whatever.
That, that never really bothered me.
I have always had concerns about, because statistically, people that are abused are more likely to be abusive.
When I interact with my young nephews, I said this on the, before the call, I have to check myself from, I don't, I don't like abuse them.
Like, I wouldn't, but like, but I do have to check myself from, like, I get very, I get way more upset with them for like toddler behavior than is probably normal.
And I have to check myself and be like, no, it's okay for like your nephew to like not immediately put his bike away when his mother tells him to.
You don't have to like grab him and like take the bike into the garage or something, you know, like that kind of thing, right?
Like it's, it's, it's, um, because my only model for, you know, paternal interaction is physical, like not like, you know, like just physical, right?
Like there's no talking it out.
You just physically solve the problem.
Right.
Whether it's beating or whatever.
And the, the, the root pathology here of the sort of abusive stepdad.
Do you think it was alcoholism first?
You called him a predator.
You think even without alcoholism or drug abuse, a lot of these guys, they're just mean SOBs who get off on beating.
I, you know, I don't know.
I don't know what the statistics are on that, right?
I mean, it seems like alcoholism kind of goes hand in hand with this stuff.
I maybe there are people that are just like sociopaths, right?
And they will do this regardless of substance.
But I mean, Gordon, the stereotype is definitely like the drunken like wife beater, right?
Gordon, was there any like financial pressure in the household?
I mean, yeah, sure.
I mean, like, cause we were, we were working class.
Like everybody, you know, we lived in like a double wide trailer and stuff.
And, you know, my stepdad, he was like a ranch hand, you know what I mean, which is not great money.
Like that's usually not much better than minimum wage.
You don't get any like benefits or anything, you know.
My mom would work all kinds of different jobs, you know, like one, like for a few months, she'd be like a, like a, like a secretary or something.
And for a few months, she'd be like cleaning houses or like doing, and she was always cleaning houses.
Like that was something she was doing as like a side gig, like since I was born, basically.
Right.
And it was, and it wasn't that she was getting fired.
It was just that, you know, she was trying to get better jobs with better hours that she could, you know, be there with her children.
Right.
But yeah, like financially, I mean, you know, there were plenty of it.
We were using, we were going to the food pantry and stuff.
It wasn't, you know.
Well, this, this is one of the main pressures that makes couples fight with each other, first of all.
And I, I can remember too, in my own experience from many years ago, where I was working a lot of hours, you know, and it's not that I made even bad money, but just all the kids and the situations and frustrations tend to pile up, you know.
And now with the perspective of age, you know, there's, there's not a lot of anything in that realm that can really upset me, you know, for many years even, you know, financial things or things get broken or people do stupid things.
You know, I kind of, you learn to laugh it off, but maybe people at certain times of their life, you know, they just don't learn that lesson or they don't learn how to put things in perspective and takes into account a lot of things like how you look at the world or what your expectations are out of life and things like that.
And Sam, we know from your autobiography that you did not have the perfect Easy Street childhood.
Your father took off early.
And I remember the sort of vivid passage of him, you hearing him beat your brother.
Yeah.
Did that scar you too?
Or was that sort of more limited compared to what Gordon's talking about?
Well, in that particular case, he seemed to have a particular hostility towards my two older half brothers than he did for me or my brother, you know, for whatever reason.
I think that comes into like, you know, what that other marriage must have been like and what the various factors in it are, you know, so, but it did scare me a lot just because of the fury of it.
Sure.
And I guess, Gordon, looking back, you know, it's easy to say should have done this, should have done that.
Your mom essentially let the wolf into the hen house.
I assume that you just wish that she had never brought him home.
And then once she did, that she had split earlier.
I guess advice for women or mothers out there who might be in a similar situation.
Certainly none of them listeners to full house, but yeah, there's probably one or two.
I mean, I guess the advice, I guess, I don't know what the statistics are on this.
I would imagine that if a man like starts beating you, he's not going to stop.
I don't like it's, I, and it's easy to say that part of it is it's very difficult to untangle yourself from love.
Like it's, it's, it's a very powerful emotion.
And I, I don't any income that a man might bring home too.
I imagine that's a big thing.
Yeah.
After my mom divorced him, she was working three jobs basically until we were out of the house because she had four children.
And she was trying to, and part of it is like this kind of like American, like we all had to be able to do like all the sports we wanted to do.
We all had to be able to do like whatever like class trips.
You know what I mean?
Like she didn't there.
She never wanted to have it, be like, we can't afford to do that.
Right.
Like I had like video game systems and stuff that I probably should not have had.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
That would have been easier.
She probably would have had to only have maybe one job or two jobs.
And it's hard to blame her for wanting to do that.
And, you know, she couldn't get a second source of income because she had four children.
And, you know, it's very difficult to find a man that wants to get involved with that.
Do you think it wanders into dangerous territory here, this like, you know, outsider noticing abuse or whatever?
They don't all just show up with the shiner and you're like, you know, obviously, lady, you've got a problem or the kids have the, you know, the stereotypical bruises, the strange bruises.
Oh yeah, they fell down the stairs.
I guess if anybody knows someone in an abusive relationship, rather than going to the cops or calling family services, I assume that that is probably not the best way to go.
And again, tough question, but just personal intervention and trying to talk to these women or maybe even men to get them the hell out of there.
It's like smack some sense into them, you know, figuratively, of course.
Yeah, I don't know.
I mean, I feel like it's almost, I almost feel like it's like dealing with someone with like a substance abuse problem.
Like on both ends.
I mean, like the person who's doing the abusing, like you're not going to like, you can't like drag him, like him or her.
Cause I mean, women do all kinds of wild stuff too.
I mean, but you can't drag them aside and be like, hey, did you know you're not supposed to do that?
Like, I'm pretty sure they're going to, and because they, because it's always, it's always someone else's fault, right?
And maybe you'll get them to acknowledge that they've like done something bad, but it will only be in the, like a predatory way where it's, oh, I'm the worst.
I'm so terrible.
How could anyone ever forgive me?
You know what I mean?
Like, I should just go.
Everyone would be better off without me.
Right.
And then it becomes, no, no, no, you're not like an evil person.
Like we can fix this, all that stuff, right?
And then if you.
If you talk to the abused person, it's they're going to feel like you're invading in their private life, right?
Like you don't have any right to tell me what's going on.
You don't understand.
It's my business, my house.
Yeah.
Like you don't know him or her or whatever.
Like, um, and people also have different standards of what is and isn't abuse.
I'm not trying to justify it, but I mean, you know, people will say all the time, like, here's, here's one.
One time, my stepdad, I was out on the ranch that he was working on.
I was, you know, very young, like kindergarten, first grade, something like that.
And there was a metal trash can that they put all the hay bale twine into.
Like, you know, they cut the twine off and throw it in there.
He had emptied it out and he said, hey, Gordon, come over here.
And I, you know, trundle on over and he grabs me and he puts me in the trash can and he puts the lid on it and duct tapes the lid onto it and throws it in the bed of the bed, throws it in the bed of the truck and drives down this like bumpy gravel road from the barn back to the cabin.
And he's laughing because like he thinks this is like a funny prank, right?
He wasn't doing this to like punish me for bad behavior.
He thought this was funny.
And, you know, it's, it's sort of funny, like in just in terms of like the visual, but like that's, that's abuse.
Like you probably should not be stuffing a first year, a first grader into a trash can.
But you see what I'm saying?
Like, you could very easily see where someone would be like, oh, he's just roughhousing with the boy or something.
You know what I mean?
And that's why I always try to, what I would say to people is do not try.
And maybe this sounds like libthearted or something, but do not use other people's standards for what happened to you.
Like, I don't know, when I was in school, there was a big thing was this book called A Child Called It, I think it was.
And it was all about this boy who had been very badly abused by his mother.
And she would do things like hold his arm to like the stovetop and like stuff like that, right?
Which is monstrous.
And I think most people that are abused probably didn't have like permanent maiming like that.
Right.
Right.
But that doesn't mean that you weren't abused either.
And I think that's something that people have to keep in mind is just because people always be like, oh, I didn't have it that bad.
Like plenty of people had it worse than me.
It's like, it doesn't really matter.
Like it's it's not acceptable regardless of the level, if that makes any sense.
Yeah, I know.
And now I'm also thinking like the, well, you know, back in the old day, you know, dad getting out the switch and giving you a good lashing for coming home late.
That was standard operating procedure.
And today we are far more sensitive and genteel about issues like that.
And my, you know, guiding lodestar principle for fatherhood is, of course, like the medical profession, first do no harm.
Obviously, do no harm physically and just keep them safe and try to preserve their innocence and beautiful, wonderful naivete for as long as possible.
And for most people listening and parents, that means insulating them from the culture and trying to keep the garbage out of their eyes and their ears for as long as possible.
But yeah, saving kids from physical abuse is pretty damn important.
And I know you did some homework on that.
But Sam, anything else on this before we go to Gordon's research too, please?
Yeah, I think, you know, maybe some listeners, they, they might say like, oh, that's so horrible.
I would never do that.
Well, you know, the thing is you get into frustrating situations and different circumstances are piling up on each other and you might find yourself starting to react in anger to certain things.
And that's how it starts, you know.
And I would say the thing is. you know, not to take things too seriously and learn to laugh things off a little bit.
And I, this for myself, I'm not going to recommend this for others, but for myself, you know, coming home from work and relaxing a little bit and maybe having a beer kind of puts you in a different mood than if you come in and you start dealing with situations that are not to your liking and you get upset about it.
Whether whatever your routine you might develop, you know, you got to find a way just to not let yourself get bent out of shape about things and kind of let things go.
Maybe at first that seems like, no, you should care and things like that.
But no, I think that just in general, you know, I've observed many, many situations, whether at work or personal things where kind of a fast reaction is not the right one oftentimes.
And spouses know how to push each other's buttons better than anyone else in the world and having the self-discipline to, even though it's tempting sometimes, right?
You know, you want to get that good verbal zing in there or whatever.
Oh, that is not actually going to help anything.
That's just going to be like emotional immaturity to a certain extent.
And even if she does that to you, you have to learn how to kind of laugh it off and shrug it off or, you know, you got to be big enough for that.
It's easier to say than to do.
I understand that, but, you know, this is my years have shown me that experience.
Absolutely.
All right, Gordon, you did the homework, so we didn't have to.
Let's go to the tape, to the numbers.
What did you dig up there, big guy, in terms of big picture trends, racial abuse, the status of the most likely situations in which kids unfortunately get robbed of their childhood?
Yeah.
So first of all, it was actually kind of difficult to find like just raw numbers of like the percentage of people that are abused.
Apparently 14% of men and 36% of women that are in prison in America have been abused in some way.
And that is twice the frequency of abuse in the general population.
So that would mean about 7% of men and what, like 16, something percent of women were abused just in general.
And that's all kinds of abuse, neglect, physical abuse, sexual abuse, psychological abuse, medical neglect, that kind of stuff.
The most common kind of abuse is general neglect at 78.3%.
Obviously, I assume that's like filthy homes and kids just laboring around without supervision.
Like food insecurity would probably be considered neglect.
I don't know if it has to be purposeful or not.
And the numbers add up to over 100% because usually there's multiple kinds, right?
Like if you're not feeding your kid or like letting making sure they're bathed, you're probably not nice to them in general, right?
So 78.3% of abuse is generalized neglect.
The next highest is 17.6% is physical abuse.
9.2% is sexual abuse.
8.1% is psychological maltreatment.
And then medical neglect is only 2.4 percent, which i'm not sure what that means.
I guess I don't know if that's like the stereotypical like faith healer, like if I pray to god he'll fix their broken arm or something, or if that's whatever it is.
But um, and then other, which they don't really say what that is, is 10.3.
So obviously the most common form of abuse is just being neglectful, and then the second most common is physical.
Um, an average of five children die every day in the United States from child abuse.
Um, they're usually under the age of three and it is usually because of the parents.
Um, I think it's like something like 70 are children under three and it's their parents that killed them.
Um, if you look at abuse by ethnicity um American, Indian or Alaskan natives are the highest, at 15.5 per 1000 children.
African American is 13.2 per 1000.
Multiple race just call them negative.
Yeah well, I wasn't sure what we were, if we were doing slurs or not.
And and bomber too is.
Uh yeah, i've gotten a little little loose in my old age.
Yeah, Pacific Islander is at nine per 1000, and then Hispanics are 7.8 and Whites are 7.4.
It has Asian at 1.6.
I don't believe that number, just because, from what i've seen of like no, that's right, like I don't think I would imagine it's probably closer to the white average, if any.
But because they're you think they're not reporting it.
Yep, I don't.
Yeah, I think it's just not being reported, it's well, it's like you know like uh, he's not racist, he just wants, he's just traditional.
Yeah yeah right, like that's like the Asian code for when they want Asian kids to marry other Asians or whatever.
It's like a weird thing with them.
But yeah, so children that are abused are nine times more likely to be criminals.
I can't find data that controls for race on this, so it's hard for me to take that one seriously.
Supercharges it for sure, based on the race.
I'm sure little little black kids, I think, probably suffer the worst.
I don't want to, you know, shortchange white kids here.
But uh, everybody has seen or heard the abuse of Shaniqua Shebun.
Uh, just brutalizing their son or daughter.
Yeah, don't need to wrap me while watching my stories.
You made the dog bark roll.
That came through my headphones and it spooked me barking.
I got my dog.
You best begin your right now.
I can't believe that.
I think this is a great song that my dog is racist.
She thought she heard a Shaniqua through the headphones and she's out there barking at patrolling right now.
Way to go, for I did.
I did find stats on sexual abuse which I won't like, so one in five girls and one in 20 boys are victims of child sexual abuse.
Um 20 of adult men and five to ten percent of adult or sorry, 20 of adult women and five to ten percent of adult men recall an incident of child sexual assault or abuse.
Um children ages seven to 13 are the most vulnerable, 28 of youths aged 14 to 17 have been sexually assaulted throughout their lifetime.
Um three out of four adolescents who have been sexually assaulted were victimized by someone they knew, and the reason that I looked into that too is just for the sake of completeness.
But what also is interesting to me is that girls seem to be abused more than boys, and I don't know if that is a true stat.
Um, it wouldn't surprise me, because I I do think that people that abuse are predators, and girls are frankly, easier prey than boys.
Um, But I also have to wonder if, you know, like a man might not consider getting smacked around by his dad abuse, right?
It's like, oh, well, you know, he, yeah, he like, you know, gave me a black eye, but I had it coming or whatever, right?
A little different.
While a woman might consider dad not letting her wear a mini skirt to be like, that's kind of a joke, but I do wonder.
And, you know, there is something culture now where every little thing is like, oh my God, can you believe that happened to me?
How am I even here still standing?
We have grown softer and more sensitive about all this stuff over the years.
Yeah.
And as for the child, because I believe Sam asked in the chat, he was asking about child like death through abuse by race.
I couldn't find that, but child death rates in America more or less match child abuse rates.
So like Indian kids and black kids are the most likely to die, followed by Hispanics, followed by whites, followed by Asians.
So that seems to be, yeah.
So I would imagine that it's probably going to carry over.
But yeah, that was kind of the research I found.
One kind of startling thing was at childhelp.org when they were talking about these statistics.
In 2019 alone, state agencies found over 656,000 victims of child maltreatment.
This would pack 10 football stadiums.
And that was like individual cases in 2019.
All right.
That's enough, Gordon.
Be minus on the research.
I don't want to get too blackfully here, but thank you.
No, yeah.
I mean, it's one of those abysses you really don't want to look into.
And I wanted to look into it because I didn't actually know anything.
I realized, I was like, I don't know anything about this stuff.
Like I knew my own personal situation and the situation of some of my friends and stuff who've talked about it, but I've never looked into it from a statistical perspective.
If you really want to get sad, yeah, look at look at the foster care adoption sites and all the preteens and teens out there who are waiting for their forever home like a puppy.
That one will, if that doesn't bring you to tears, I don't know what will.
I wanted to add a quick addendum or caveat to my previous commentary about keep them insulated, you know, protect them, preserve their innocence.
All true for sure.
But at the same time, I have also given the advice that, yes, depending on the child, you will have to feel your way forward to your listener about the age when you start broaching or having these conversations.
You know, I've mentioned on the show before that Junior is a little bit more advanced, so he gets a little bit more candor about the ways of the world.
But at the same time, however we've made it work, we don't just listen to the radio anymore.
We stream and we shuffle songs.
And if a song comes on with the slightest profanity in it, the kid like, dad, you know, I'm like, oh, yes, good kids.
You know, they have become sort of self-censors where they know that that stuff is bad and they're like sharper about it than my wife and I are.
God bless them.
So you have to really, you know, you know what I mean.
They need to know, they need to have the talk slowly and gradually.
It doesn't have to be a profound, momentary sit-down song.
I'm going to tell you the truth about the world.
But they need to be armed from a somewhat young age so that they're aware of, you know, hey, predators out there for sure.
We're not just talking about the ones at home.
Rolo, anything?
I know that you were mercilessly beaten, which accounts for your brain damage today as a child, but did you have a pretty bucolic, pain-free childhood?
I didn't get anything that's remotely close to the beatings that you give me verbally.
I'm making up for lost time.
Yeah.
You need to, we need to toughen.
Thank you, Dad.
You're my favorite dad.
Those migrants, as far as all the uh, as far as all the abusive dads go, you're my favorite.
I gotta do it buddy, it's a shtick sorry suffer, you know.
Suffer what you must.
That's what I gotta do.
My kids get spared.
So I lash you yeah, and it ages me horribly.
No seriously no uh yeah, anything I I don't want you to be totally on the bench here, ruler.
If you don't have anything, that's well, I have kind of.
He's wearing the hell out of that satin uh robe.
He's got on there.
Hugh Hefner, looking Mf.
Yeah, very much he wears it.
Well, he's wearing.
Yeah, I gave you an opening season.
I I don't interrupt Sam.
Okay, you know what, when I have seven kids, then I can interrupt him.
All right, I don't even know why you do it.
You know like anyway I, I had one of those awkward childhoods where my dad was an alcoholic, but then he got sober at 10.
So he went.
He wasn't a violent one, he was the neglectful kind where he would come home drunk and then he would just go to bed and then he got sober and he just became a pussy and he was just annoying.
Where he was, he would constantly do the.
It wasn't my fault, I have a disease, so I just had to deal with that.
So, yeah it.
It definitely wanted to go back to drinking huh yeah well, it's just like I.
I don't even know what's better, because that was what I had to deal with growing up, so I pretty much never had a dad, even though I always had a dad in my life.
So he he was either.
He went from being absent to just to to just complaining all the time that every mistake he made wasn't his fault, which I would say is a problem in and of itself, because instead of raising me, he was just trying to convince me that nothing wrong that he did was his intention.
Yeah, alcohol's probably ruined more of our people uh, almost as many as have died and God forsake, almost as many as the engines.
Yeah yeah um, before we go to the break, uh Gordon you, I forget exactly what it was and I don't want to reveal your secret plans, but you said something to the extent of you know, if I had this or this is what i'm working on uh, do you want to give the audience a little bit of a vision for, for what you'd like to see?
Uh, out there in Flyover Country, or Americaner.org's?
Uh, bigger goals, up to you.
Well, so it's not really so much Americaner.org um, despite the DOT ORG name.
I have no interest in making a organization out of the website.
Um, it's it.
I plan to keep it solely as a?
Um, a media platform right, um.
But one thing that I feel personally, that the movement needs is a physical presence in the real world, which obviously like I think that's not like a uh, you know, revolutionary statement.
Obviously, I think everybody gets that, but what I mean is that I think that the TWP, despite its many problems, you know, with leadership and everything, I think that it had a lot of good ideas.
One of them was the, you know, we have a physical location.
You can like come talk to us at like our headquarters and ask us what we think.
We will go out into the community and talk to like low income white people and be like, hey, did you know?
you qualify for like this government program and this government program.
And maybe you don't have the time or understanding to fill out the paperwork.
That's okay because we already did it for you.
Also, did you, have you ever heard about Adolf Hitler?
He's pretty cool.
You'll like him.
Like if it works for the Mormons, right?
It will probably work for us.
And my long-term goal is to achieve some base level of financial independence.
And I don't mean like I can do whatever I want, like because I have like millionaire money.
I mean like I wouldn't starve to death or lose my residence if I was to lose my job due to being doxxed or something, which I imagine the easiest way would either be some sort of business or owning rental properties, which is kind of Jewish, but it's, you know, passive income.
And then setting up some sort of, I always call it racism HQ, but in a urban center, because I think that the big mistake would be to do, I feel that like setting up like a, I think that, I think Pierce set up some kind of compound in West Virginia.
Hillsboro, West Virginia.
Yep.
Like, yeah.
And, you know, I mean, maybe that's effective, but I feel like you have to be able to physically interact with people like more easily.
Obviously, there are a lot of cities where this would not work.
You could not do this in Portland, right?
Because you would be murdered.
But one example I always give is like Sioux Falls or Rapid City, South Dakota, because it's the state I'm from, right?
Sioux Falls is on the intersection of two interstates.
It is three or four hours from Omaha or Fargo or Minneapolis, which are the major libtard centers of this region.
There is basically no real organized Antifa presence in that city.
There's like one coffee house that has like a gay flag hanging out of it, but like it gets torn down all the time.
You know what I mean?
Wow.
Like Adolf Hitler said, you must face the enemy.
You cannot hide from them.
And now our enemies have made it very hard, as you just described, to have some kind of headquarters in Chicago, let's say, or something, like you say, Portland.
But that's ultimately what you must do in some kind of way, you know?
Yeah.
And they're going to keep talking.
It has lost, I think, a lot of its cachet and excitement, especially with Trump out.
And there's two paths that guys could take after a dox or getting fired.
And one is curling up into a ball and dying or just disappearing and receding and waving the white flag, even if they don't literally do that, but to effectively do that, or to realize, okay, I've just been attacked and I need to redouble my efforts nose to the grindstone and become more serious about this.
People go both ways for now.
And if you're listening to this, obviously tons of listeners are worried about that.
It's a real risk and a threat.
And you literally have to sit down or stand up and look at yourself in the mirror and say, no, I'm not going to take that lying down.
I'm not going to quit.
I'm not going to freak out.
It's not the end of the world.
And again, for the millionth time, if I had one argument or shred of evidence that our worldview, our outlook, our analyses were invalid or incorrect or skewed or conspiratorial schizo tinfoil retarded, I'd change my views.
But not one iota of doubt has crept in there.
I'm just still wrestling with religion, basically, at this point.
Anyway, a little bit of a tangent.
I know somebody, I can't remember who it was in what chat because I'm, you know, I'm a right-wing dissident, which means I'm on eight different platforms with 300 different chats in each platform.
But there was somebody in a chat that said, I don't understand people who quit after they get outed.
It's like I can understand someone who decides this is too hot.
I don't want to be involved with this.
I'm going to return to normydom before, but after it doesn't make any sense.
And I think that the best example of that is Matt Heimbach.
Like after, you know, and he was never doxed, I guess.
I think he was more or less open from the beginning.
Right.
But, but, I mean, regardless, right?
He, as far as I'm aware, renounced white nationalism and became a communist and started working for some like, what was it?
The like the Bright Light Foundation or something.
I don't remember.
Hope, not hate equivalent.
Yeah.
Something like that.
Yeah.
And even.
How about Richard Spencer?
Well, I was going to say, like, even Nat Heimbach was not allowed to speak at a Medicare for all conference, right?
Once they found out who he was, even though he'd done all of these like Maya Culpas, like, I'm so sorry.
Yeah, you will never be forgiven for this.
Yeah.
So what's the point?
Even if you do honestly decide you were wrong or something, there's no point in bothering to try to do anything ever again because they won't let you.
No.
And that's why I think that quitting afterwards is kind of silly if you're doing like activism and stuff.
Like, I mean, just own it.
Yeah.
Be a man.
Stand up and say no.
That's what I thought.
Now you know who I am.
Onward.
Just in case the audience needs a little shot in the arm there.
It's absolutely necessary self-vaccination against cowardice and turncoatism.
All right.
We got to go to the break.
We've got a little bit over here.
Thank you, Rolo.
Hour six, smartass.
Cordon, you have the wheels of steel for the break this week.
Let the audience know what they're going to hear heading into it.
Yeah, we're going to hear Horse Soldier by Corb Lund.
It's actually my favorite song.
Beautiful.
What's it about?
It is a country song about the history of horses as used in warfare.
Wow.
Good.
Good stuff.
I listened to it before the show.
It got the Coach Vitstock stamp of approval.
And I hope you enjoy it, fam.
We will be right back.
All right.
We'll be right back, fam.
Enjoy this selection.
I'm a hustler, I'm a hun.
I'm a wretched Englishman.
Riding Pona Par at Waterloo.
I'm a dragon on a dun.
I'm a Cossack on the run.
I'm a horse soldier, timeless through and through.
Well, I was with Custer and the 7th, 76 or 77.
Scalp that little big horn by the Sioux.
And the tears and devastation of a once proud warrior nation, this I know, because I was riding with them too.
And I drank mare's blood on the run when I rode of the great cun on the frozen mongo step while at his height.
And as a white guard, as a red guard, as the Tsar's own palace horse guard when Romanov was murdered in the night And I knew Saladin and rode his swift Arabians Harassing Dunes crusaders on the heavy drafts And yet I rode the Persiaron against the circling Saracen And once again against myself was cast Well I'm a hussar,
I'm a hun, I'm a wretched Englishman Routing Bonaparte at Waterloo.
I'm a dragon on a dun.
I'm a Cossack on the run.
I'm a horse soldier, time is crimson.
If you're silent and you'll listen, You'll know that it was with them that I stood When Mayor Thorpe, she cried as her four horsemen died, Gunned down in scarlet, coldest blood.
Well, I was the firstest with the mostest, when I fought for Bedford Forest Suffered General Wilson's Union raid, And mine was not the reason why Mine was but to do or die at Crimea, with the charging light brigade On high from Swiss to Sweden.
Be me Christian, be me Heathen.
The devil to the saber I shall put With a crack flanking maneuver.
I'm a new land alas, striking terror into regiment of foot.
Well, I'm a hussar, I'm a hun, I'm a wretched Englishman Routing Bonaparte at Waterloo.
I'm a dragon on a dun.
I'm a Cossack on the run.
Well, I knew my days were numbered when all the trenches lumbered More modern machinations still.
I get No match for rapid fire or the steelbirds of the sky.
With a final rearguard action, I retreat No match for barbered wire or the armored engines whine.
Reluctant, I retire and take my leave.
Today I ride with special forces On those wily Afghan horses To storm's northern lions give their thanks, And no matter defeat or victory In battle, it occurs to me that we may see a swelling in our ranks.
Well, I'm a hussar, I'm a Hun, I'm a wretched Englishman Routing Bonaparte at Waterloo.
I'm a dragon on a dun, I'm a Cossack on the run.
I'm a horse soldier timeless through and through.
I'm a whore soldier eternal through
welcome back to Full House episode 137.
Cheerier, less grim topics in the second half edition.
And our good pal, Gordon Call of Americoner.org with a K did actually look at the clock as we were getting all chatty at the break and said, ooh, guys, I didn't realize how late it was.
I've got to be up early tomorrow.
So God bless Gordon, all of his good work, his, you know, I'll call it bravery to be willing to come on and talk about painful stuff.
I was worried it was going to get all choked up.
I don't think I heard a scintilla of sadness, emotion creeping in there too bad.
It's sort of like a fact of life that he came to terms with and moved on.
And so many of us can and should do that with the various things that challenge us from the past or in the present.
Let's see.
I wanted to give props real quick to my son who won his age group 5k.
I forgot to mention that on the last show.
We ran a 5k together and was damn proud of him for hustling through.
Didn't stop once, made it all the way, got his medal.
And his old man got one too in his age group.
It was under 14 and over 40.
So a little self-congratulation.
I did post a picture on Telegram of us beaming with, of course, a king or a prince emoji over his face to protect his privacy.
But fond memory of doing something physical with Junior, not in the first half of the show since, and coming out with a little bit of small time glory.
On to New White Life with gusto and joy to Dean and Shelby.
Huge congratulations.
They welcomed their first after what I heard was a fairly drawn out arrival delivery.
But oh boy, is that little boy handsome.
Another one with a full head of hair.
He's like ready to be just for men model on day one.
I don't know.
Awesome.
Congratulations.
Men's hair club.
Yep.
Wonderful.
Yep, absolutely.
Beautiful baby.
Well done, guys.
And we wish you many more.
And just today, that was going to be the only one that I had.
And today I went out, we went out with the family and did a little civic cultural event where a couple of our guys were there where I learned that I'll just say T and his wife are expecting their fifth.
And they already have a big, beautiful brood, and they're going for more.
They're doubling down.
So God bless T and his wife.
Congratulations.
Hope everything goes smoothly on the final approach.
I think there's a few months to go.
And also, as we were leaving this event, another pal was just driving up in the family whip.
And unfortunately, Potato has been under the weather and I don't know what he's got.
It's got a little bit of a GI bug.
He hasn't been too hungry and he's been low energy, which is very rare for him.
So we're handling him with kid gloves.
We had to leave early just as he was pulling up.
He said, hey, did you meet the baby yet?
And I think I had already, but he was just so excited to show off.
I looked in the back.
So congratulations.
We'll say R on your latest edition.
I think that's five for them.
Very impressive.
I may have even congratulated them previously.
So good job.
Without Gordon here, I wanted to draw.
Occasionally, I encounter little pieces of culture that I think are absolutely essential for our people to have under their belts.
And unfortunately, this is a painful one.
And I think it will steal your resolve and harden your hearts for the ages to come.
And that is Queen of Versailles on Netflix.
Rolo, Sam, do you have any idea what I'm talking about?
I do not.
Nope.
Yep.
I had never heard of it either.
It came out in 2012 or something like that.
It's been around forever.
My wife put it on a whim and I just sort of was staring at the screen with that sort of, you know, like a train wreck just occurred in my living room.
Kids were asleep, of course.
But long story short, this is the story of a Jew and his Shiksa breeding stump who were building at the time the world's largest private home, something like tens of thousands of square feet.
He's a real estate developer.
He was a timeshare innovator and a donor to George W. Bush and bragged in the documentary about how he probably illegally tilted the scales for George W. Bush in 2000 and thus shifted the course of history way to go.
I can't even remember his name right now.
And then his technically Aryan wife gave him something like four Michelin babies and was a total airhead, former Miss America model.
And they hit a little bump in the road as they were building this gaudy monstrosity down in Florida or wherever it was.
And the housing market collapsed.
So it's them going from riches to temporary rags and the dogs and the servants and the cranky old Jew and the gaudy wife and the spoiled kids and the dead iguana from neglect.
And it's an absolute train wreck.
I think when they started filming it, it was just going to be this like reality show, you know, lifestyles of rich and famous.
And then when the bottom fell out of the housing market and he experienced financial hardship, they all had to buckle down a little bit.
And I guess they had signed a contract to do this thing.
I won't give any more spoilers and I'll stop there with Queen of Versailles, but I think it was so disgusting.
The Jew actually sued the producers, I guess, for slander and it got tossed out because they're like, all we were doing was filming you guys talking and giving a little bit of context.
So he lost that lawsuit, but it really reminded me how horribly greedy, materialistic, shallow, base, coarse, and just all other negative things come with those people and what they do with their money and how they make their money too.
Timeshare is one of the biggest scams and like least pleasing things.
They're basically bringing in people who couldn't afford vacations and selling them on the idea of having these.
Yeah, you own a little piece of your vacation.
Come back to the same crappy resort every year or every once every few months.
Anyway, Queen of Versailles on Netflix.
If you haven't don't pay for Netflix.
Let me see what else we got here.
I don't know.
Just check it out.
It's a train wreck.
Also, I wanted to, the other night, I did a little bit of homework because I am getting roped back into politics.
Not roped.
I'm voluntarily going along as the midterms approach.
And of course, talk about 2024.
I know it's kind of nauseating even to think about that whole spectacle ginning up again, but it's still, you know, it's, it's, you know, politics is like pro-sports, I think, for a lot of our guys who have given up pro-sports and we can't turn our heads away.
But what I did was I watched Trump's 2015 announcement speech from Trump Tower.
And then I watched Trump's most recent hour and a half, very lengthy, all-encompassing speech that he gave to the American First, America First Policy Institute, some new think tank that they ginned up to give him, I guess, a little base, a little sense of legitimacy heading into 2024.
And the contrast was just remarkable.
And just a couple of takeaways here.
2015, Trump's speech was utterly unserious.
He had brief scripted remarks that only lasted about 15 minutes, and then they played the music.
The plan was for him to just give those very loosely scripted remarks, I think, wrap it up, and then call it a day and go on with the campaign.
And you could see Trump.
I missed this from the first time.
He put his hand.
He said, no, no, no, put the music down.
And then he just sat up there, spoke more or less.
I know, I think I'm cut out there for a second.
He spoke more or less ad hoc.
off the cuff.
And that's where you get sort of the charming Trump and the true Trump and the things that he's saying, what you're thinking for at least most of Middle America.
And that catapulted him.
So the lesson there is that Trump sucks when he's reading from a prepared script because somebody else, and I'm not trying to tell people to vote for Trump or whatever.
I just think that this is a fascinating American phenomenon.
But when other people are writing his words, it's boring.
He's empty.
There's no passion.
And then when he goes off script and lets it fly from his own brain, that is where he ends up saying truthful things, humorous things, charming things that make people think that he's actually a fighter for our cause.
And who knows?
Maybe somewhere in his psyche.
All of the things, the reasons to hate Trump are still very valid.
But from this most recent speech, just like a month ago, I think it's absolutely clear that he is running.
He is doing the old Trump bits of the invasion and trade.
And he's now adding inflation, the horrors of the Biden economy, and a little bit of anti-woke stuff.
He said something like, I don't even know what gender therapy is, but I'm pretty sure it's not good.
There were a lot of, you know, and again, this is Trump off script.
When he's reading the damn teleprompters, you know, he's a little fatter than he was in 2015.
He's a little slower.
He's definitely punished Trump.
You can tell he's more tense.
He's angry.
He probably feels a little bit threatened.
And I suspect that running is about all that he's got right now to get out of trouble.
If he's running, they might be less likely to prosecute him.
And fundraising, of course, to rebuild his coffers.
And frankly, I don't think he can give up the hustle.
And he's probably justifiably mad as hell about everything that's going on in the world and what's been done to him, given the raid and the rest of it.
So I believe that Punish Trump will be running, whether he's going to co-opt DeSantis to be his running mate, or if there's going to be a little bit of kabuki theater where the two of them are duking it out and then the moneyed powers choose or the FBI perhaps chooses who will go forth.
I don't know.
I guess you have to give DeSantis the upper hand at this point.
But what I saw in Trump was a man who's intent on running and winning.
And if he can gin up just some of that magic without Kushner, bringing back the old fire, I think he's got a chance.
Whether you like him or not, that's something that you have to think is in the realm of the possible.
Whether that's good for our people or not, I think it actually would be.
Trump coming back would be such an earthquake and just the slightest possibility of Punish Trump doing more in a second term than he pretended to do in his first term.
It's there.
It's possible.
Biden again or whatever god-awful thing that they would want to replace him with, I think that would just bring nothing but pain.
And I'm not so worried about Normie's returning to slumber under Trump.
I think that's a little bit played out.
Trump getting prosecuted and being punished and being censored has been a good thing.
It's woken people up.
But let's see.
I'll stop there, guys.
I was rambling for a little bit.
Sam Rollo, any thoughts here before we move on?
Or anything in your stacks?
Yep.
Well, no, what you say.
Definitely there's the energy there and everything like that.
Uh, you know, the nation has come along in these four years to some degree.
You know, there's been development in people's minds and all that type of thing.
Um, when I talk to people, conservative minded people, or even, you know, working class guys who, who see what's going on and stuff like that, it's uh um yeah, it's.
It's difficult for me, you know, I feel bad for them in a way, because for a Normie person, Trump is all.
They know that Trump is the only like alternative, that's the only card.
Yeah yeah so so like, in a way, you want to build on that energy.
You know, for me to start talking with somebody like that and then immediately turn to start tearing down Trump is so uh deflating, you know.
So yeah, so it.
It's a.
It's a tricky situation for sure.
How to deal with people.
You know, is it good or anything like that?
That's hard to hard to twist your mind around to say like oh no, it could be good.
You know, the only good thing, if I press, if i'm pressed to say is, just like in the first Trump presidency, the fact that it caused chaos, the fact that it disrupted the narrative and stuff like that.
That's good for sure.
And uh, you know maybe, maybe that would happen uh, again.
And, like I say, people have seen oh, look at how they broke into his house and they're persecuting him, prosecuting him the, the different things.
January 6th, even though that's a big bumble screw, I mean people, you know, people have come along with these things too.
So, um boy, it's.
It's hard to to put any kind of uh hopes into this, this disgusting system we live under uh, right now but but but, but there yeah, but there is the opportunity for not not just popcorn, not just, you know, watching libtards cry uh, but for real.
Uh, I don't want to say destabilization, it's not like we actually want the, you know, everything collapse, even though that might be necessary, but just the disruption and the unsettling, exactly.
I mean, look at like over a majority of American voters now view the FBI as a political leftist arm of injustice.
You've got mainline conservatives yeah, it is so obvious.
And I see I grew up in the Cold War era, you know the the 70s and into the 80s and all the things that were said about like the KGB and all that.
How is this FBI not worse than the KGB, or at least equal to it.
You know, it's the same thing, it sure is.
It's just Neo-bolshevism instead of bullshit.
Yeah yes yeah, it's like people shouldn't wish.
I remember all the, all the things that were said about the oh.
In the Soviet Union, the news is all controlled and people don't have freedom and they can't speak up and there's no opposition.
How, how does that not apply to what we're in now?
Like we have to all use fake names, you know, so we don't lose our jobs or we don't get exactly kicked out of our houses or whatever it is.
You know how?
How is what we have total rhyming of yeah, denied a bank account?
I mean, it's any million different ways you could slice it.
Victor Davison, a very respected conservative commentator.
He even did the bit where he said he didn't say the FBI was like the Gestapo, which you would expect.
He said they were like Eastern European Soviet police agencies, which I thought was pretty nice.
And a little, you know, they're coming around to us.
You know, we've been saying, we've been banging the alarm on this for a long time.
And oh, they're coming around.
They're starting to see that.
The cracks are forming.
And that brings me to the next thing.
Before we were going to tape, the debate was raging on our approach and how hard, sort of three, three parallel things.
How hard and how much to emphasize the JQ versus, it doesn't have to be either or, of course, hostile to Jewish power or a more noble elevation of pro-white and getting people to think in a pro-white way or blending the two.
I forget exactly what the third thing was.
But when you, you know, it's like, Sam, when we're talking about Trump, J.O. always had a good line that he emphasized.
He was like, you know, you say, I was a Trump supporter.
You have to always say, I was on that side.
I did love the man.
I did struggle for the man.
And then here's the reason why I don't now.
Certainly you can understand because I was a Trump supporter.
But when you, when you talk to people, like you were talking, you know, you had a relatively successful red pill session recently, as we'll say.
Did you emphasize white racial solidarity or were you hammering on the JQ?
I know they're hand in glove to a certain extent.
Yeah.
You really do spook the horses.
And then you can make the argument that whites don't relate to racial issues or white racial solidarity as much as they do to having a bad guy who's an explanation for all the bad things that we're seeing out there.
It's just, you know, it's a fun strategy, perhaps.
But I think a lot of people do respond now to this sense of white brotherhood or are identifying with each other as white or admitting good things about whites and things like that.
I think that is a good entree, but then you must go to the Jewish question because that's where everything gets derailed.
And in many ways, that's the most important step in all this.
Yeah.
Getting someone wise on the JQ can simultaneously save their life and also ruin their life, right?
It's like, well, I'm giving you the most important information that explains almost all of the geopolitical development since World War II.
Oh, and by the way, it's the third rail, baby.
I voltage.
Well, no, well, definitely when I get to that point with somebody, and especially once I know that we're on the same page, they are seeing it, we're agreeing.
I said, by the way, now, don't, don't like go and have the same conversation we had just now with your wife or your clergyman or your employer, because, you know, I mean, maybe if in the future you can sense how things are going, but don't you don't just go and tell people these things because you will lose your home, your marriage, your job, whatever it is.
Be careful how you once, you know, and in some ways, when a person is new to seeing how things really are, that's where when they are in the most danger because they don't realize like maybe how explosive it is.
It's like handing somebody a live hand hand.
Exactly.
Yep.
And, you know, to a fault, I project my own experiences and intellectual ideological development onto others.
You know, if something worked for me, then obviously it follows, of course, that it could or would work for someone else.
But what works for the most number of people, or what is, you know, who cares about the masses?
You just want the people for whom this message resonates because they're most likely to get involved and actually step up and do action.
I put that out the other day.
I was just mowing the lawn and having a thought.
It's like, and I'm guilty of this too.
Believe me, I'm not getting on my high horse speaking over.
You got to have different approaches for different types of people.
You know, for some, it's religion, or for some, it's politics, or some, it's like a very basic thing, or for some, it's like you say, the bad guy, you know, you show him the nigger crime statistics or whatever.
For me, yep, for me, it was the guys who went hardest on the JQ with intelligence and with supporting documentation, irrefutable facts, not, you know, the stereotypical knuckle-dragging skinhead.
No offense, Sam.
But you know, you know, the character.
There you go.
You know, just grugs just spouting seeming, you know, baseless hatred, which is what most people think of when they think of counter-semitism.
But the guys who went hard with detail and just cut them right to the bone from antiquity to present day.
Those were the guys who lit fires in my mind, got me righteously angry and compelled me to do more than just consume, but to create as well.
So I would posit that those guys who name them and go into detail and provide the basis are absolutely vital and indispensable.
And you could, I'm not making the argument.
You could make the argument the guys who just go with the white well-being.
I'm not even like throwing what's his name under the bus.
I can't even remember now.
I lose track of celebs.
Jason Cohn, thank you.
Or even, you know, perhaps less charitably, Jared Taylor.
If those are on-ramps for people, great.
I suspect that they're cul-de-sacs for other people.
I think you need a little bit of the fire and the burning desire for righteous revenge and not just this kumbaya, white, white stand together, et cetera, stuff to really motivate people.
No, it's not everybody.
You got to have almost like a religious fervor about it.
There has to be an intensity about not only being white, but about the injustices being done in the name of race against us and things like that.
Absolutely.
Yep.
Was it Rockwell who somebody said something like, you know, love without hatred is meaningless.
There's, you know, you have to exactly.
Yeah.
If there's a some, if somebody is a solid sports ball fan, you know, and they're cheering for their team when the other team hits the field, what do they do?
Boo!
Right?
They boo the other team, you know?
So you can't say you love your team without booing the other team.
Rollo has a giant swastika tattooed over his left pectoral.
So he certainly is a little bit skewed in this one.
But Rollo, do we have to do all of the above?
Like, is the ideal package one that lifts us up and lights the fires?
Or should we, should we do one or the other?
What do you mean, one or the other?
You're talking about tattoos?
Just, you're insufferable.
You know, folk, because, well, because, you know, the source of the problem is obvious.
And you could argue that if you just address that problem, then we wouldn't need, you know, white well-being and white.
Here's the problem that I see.
Sure.
When you don't address the JQ, you turn into the Nick Fuentes type.
Like you, you, you become a liar where you have to find ways to explain why it actually isn't Jews.
And then you're constantly on your back foot about that.
And then when problems start turning up because you have involved with Jews, you have to explain why they aren't the problem.
And there is something to be said about not being explicitly anti-Jewish and being pro-white because it is an easier pill to swallow.
But I think you can do that, but you have to know that the problem stems from Jews.
Because if you're not acknowledging what the actual problem, or at least like, you know, I know, but still, I'm not, I'm not saying it out in public because I know what'll happen, but I'm working towards a way where I can deal with this problem without having to say it.
But if you just flat out, just like, don't talk about Jews.
That's not the problem.
We need to be pro-white.
That I think.
That's true.
Yeah, that's a lie.
We wouldn't have a nigger problem if we didn't have a Jew problem.
Just about every problem that we have.
So I was talking to my wonderful co-hosts off air recently, and we were talking about the She-Hulk show and how it is just and how it looks to be, it is like garbage 2013 era feminism where just all the worst aspects of Jewry is coming out.
Like all of those, the cracks in the dam are there and everything that everyone hates is coming out.
Like they just, they, they can't, they're not satisfied with just here's the current thing that we're going to harp on.
They have to do everything.
And we cannot deny that feminism is a huge problem, especially now, but it is wholly a Jewish problem.
And I don't give a crap about black women or Mexican women in the workplace not forming families or having babies.
Please do it, BIPOC strong women.
You show me, you show me that you can do it.
But it largely affects white women who go to college, take out the stupid loans, and they work 60 hours a week.
And then they go home and they watch these terrible TV shows and that forms their worldview.
And the whole time, they're not forming families because they're told that one, all men are rapists, and two, no man respects them because they just want them for their looks.
And that is, that is not a white issue.
That is a Jewish issue.
Jews did that to them.
And you can't just dislike feminism and be pro-white.
It is a Jewish issue.
Right.
Because feminism would even have some points about it, you know, that were valid in a way.
No, it doesn't.
It has no points.
It's all it is.
No, no, no.
All it is.
This is what it does is all Judaism, it takes a kernel of reality.
Yeah.
And it drops it in the ear of the most impressionable.
Yeah.
And that's how it twists everything.
Yeah, because there's nothing appealing.
Like, hey, do you want to pay double rent?
Do you want to be 60 years old and alone?
Do you want to spend your life working and you have nothing to show for it?
So you're going to have to work more to buy things to give you some kind of purpose.
What points does that make?
Because that's literally what feminism is.
Everything is a lie.
You're going to be equal to men by doing things that keeps you from being happy.
Men don't like men don't like working.
If a man could not work a day in his life, but he's guaranteed a family to provide for, that's his purpose.
The man works so he has, so he can provide for his family.
Yeah.
That's what it's like.
Well, sadly, for the.
For the woman, all of those things will seem so empty once they hit maybe 40 or something.
There is an entire Reddit thread dedicated to women who are 40 years old who are entering the dating market.
And it's all these brutal screenshots of like, now I'm ready for a man to take care of me.
I'm ready to settle down.
And they're like, I think it's, I think it's called like dried up egg cartons or something or empty egg cartons.
It's some brutal name.
And it's, it's all these women and they're not ugly, but it's like you're, you're 44.
The man you want, he's already, he's long gone.
And that there's nothing appealing about feminism.
It is just a satanic Jewish lie.
It's literally woman, you can no longer have a purpose other than making some Jewish man a lot of money.
What's the number one regret I think that we've heard from most white fathers and mothers across the board?
The most common refrain was probably that we wish that we had started earlier.
Right.
Could have had more.
Or kept going.
Kept going because I've also, I remember years ago, I worked with a guy and eventually we started talking and I was able to see that he had sympathies in our direction.
And we ended up, we are, we remain friends to this day, but he's completely agrees, but his biggest regret is after two, they stopped.
And they, I don't know which one had the surgery, but you know, he said, if I knew, if I knew then what I know today, I would have had more kids, you know.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Pablo said it last show too.
Oh, yep.
We got started late and wish we hadn't.
Same for me.
All those wasted, not wasted, but self-indulgent travel and Netflix years of our 20s when we could have gotten started.
Cause I had the stupid idea that 30 was when my grandfather had his first and 30 was when my dad had his first.
Oh, and also I want to add, I've spoken to a lot of women that say, hey, you can have kids at 40.
There's no problem.
Like, yeah.
Like, I know someone who their mom has one out of 10,000, sure.
Yeah.
It's like, okay, that's, but why would you want one child at 40?
Yeah.
Well, but I mean, but yeah, it's better.
I mean, I didn't say, why would you accept it?
I said, why would you want it?
There's a difference between I want a child at 40, my, me and my 40-year-old wife, we will have our first and only child versus let's have like five.
Right.
Of course.
Yep.
The, the, it wasn't even an epiphany when I was mowing the lawn the other day, but it was, you know, the best time for any man to think is either on a long solo car ride or out mowing the emerald seas of green.
And it was just that, and it was, it was self-critical too.
It's that if you have our knowledge, maybe you gained it from the show or from one of our fellow content creators about the ways of the world and race and Judaism, it feels like a special thing.
It feels like you have entered a club of the knowing, right?
And it more and it stops.
It stops with that for a lot of people.
Maybe, maybe they, they, you know, get a little racist group chat online, or maybe they create a couple memes or a sock account online or something like that.
And I see you listening there.
You know who you are, but it is inadequate.
Simply having the information and nibbling around the edges is not enough.
Criticizing myself as well.
I love Full House as much as possible.
And God knows I've brought a lot of men on board and done a lot of networking, but I could do so much more.
Why don't I?
There's all the standard excuses in the book, but they don't really hold water.
So the things that we do to build out and take the next steps and, you know, baby steps and then they grow and they snowball.
And we've had our, you know, waxing and we've had our waning.
It's the sine wave of the movement, unfortunately.
Hopefully it's a trend line moving toward the top right and not the bottom right.
Time will tell is first you get involved.
We bang the drum on networking.
Okay, reach out to join a pool party or a manor bond or even Patriot Front if you're younger and braver.
Then you start, you know, maybe you attend an NJP or maybe you even engage in a little bit of activism.
Put your ass on the line.
You create.
Attend a skinhead gig.
That works.
That works too.
You get involved IRL.
And that has always been sort of the not roadblock, but the barrier, like the radiation belt that it gets difficult to get through.
Where do you go from there?
A lot of groups build up and then they have drama and they collapse or they build up and they reach critical mass and then they maybe fade into obscurity or somebody gets arrested and everybody gets scared.
I think everybody knows probably deep down in our heart that for us to succeed and create the kind of future for our children that we want, we all have to eventually unite under the same movement or banner with organization and leadership and responsibilities and tasks.
This is your job.
This is your responsibility.
If you don't do it, you will be shirking.
Because for right now, and look, here's the psychological sort of cope that so many guys do is that we are virtually powerless aside from the truth of our propaganda and our content.
It's deathly powerful, not deathly like inspires violence or kills people, but it's very effective when it's uncensored.
That's why they censor us.
But because we virtually have no levers on real power, either financial or media or political, our regular jobs and our regular lives, those are the serious things that we have to attend to.
And this other world important essential knowledge that we have is sort of a side project or a little hobby in the background that's maybe displacing stupider hobbies like fantasy sports or, you know, all the other stupid things that soy boys and soy men attach themselves to.
So just reminding the listener, because I know that we have probably a more mature audience other than the 50% single white dudes.
I'm not knocking them.
We've got a lot of married with children, professionals out there who are listening to this and might not do more than listen and get a little, you know, sort of enjoyment from hearing the naughty truth that they can't get elsewhere.
We do need you to get involved.
Start small, start relatively low risk.
Still don't know very many people who didn't get doxxed without attending an IRL activism thing or having a naughty content channel.
So just do it.
Start small, build, and hopefully we'll get through that asteroid belt or radiation belt eventually and coalesce and take this more seriously than perhaps we do right now.
I'm looking at you, Rolo, notorious shirker.
All right, he's smiling.
Got him.
Very good.
Hugh Hefner there in the studio.
Let us move on to the cop question.
I think the three of us can handle that and we have a good cross-section of opinions here.
We might have, there's another guy who wants to come on.
He's very vehemently anti-cop.
And this sticks in my craw a little bit.
You can call me a cop cuck if you want, because I am still soft on the CQ for a number of reasons.
One.
Never cuck.
Yes, I know, right?
Yeah.
Total fraud, total liar here.
No.
Now he looks like Hefner with that pipe.
Now that's Hefner right there.
My experiences with cops, aside from Charlottesville, that was a pretty massive outlier, have generally been good.
They are, whatever you think of them, some sort of barrier between utter chaos and a semblance of safety for your family.
And the other factor is a popular one that, you know, most Americans still don't hate the cops.
You know, they're learning that the FBI is not their friend, but their local favorite policeman is not really the enemy.
They hate the leftist.
All cops are bastards, you know, defund the police thing.
They have a visceral negative reaction to it.
So I think the public anti-cop stuff is probably counterproductive.
And then there's the simple fact that I have known police officers in my life who were good white, upstanding men who wanted nothing else than to enforce the law as it was written for public safety.
And I just can't bring myself.
I know there's plenty of the donut eaters and the corrupt ones and the violent ones and the ones who go off the edge, but maybe I still have a hang up on the cop question.
But I suspect that Sam and Rollo are far more radical than I am on this one.
They do bad things, but we're too rooting for Derek Chauvin to get off or for the guy who shot Mike Brown in Missouri or whatever it was.
It's just, it's a tough one for us to.
Now, hold on.
The Mike Brown thing, that was eight years ago.
I would guess almost everybody who's in our movement now was probably pro-cop at that time, too.
Probably.
I would say Charlottesville was probably the turning point for that.
Yeah, seeing the SWAT team going there to push us out for sure.
But again, they were, were all those guys bad men?
Did all those guys want to be doing that?
Yeah, they were basically told to by the governor and the police chief.
Why didn't they say no?
They should have because most, it's then how good are they, though?
When his salary depends on him not understanding it.
Well, hold on.
Can they illegally, can a cop be fired for being told to break the law and saying, no, I'm going to enforce the law because I swore an oath.
Can a cop be fired for that?
And if, and if, but if he is, do they not have the police union to protect them?
I'm fairly certain that is the point of the police union.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we know how unions are.
And I'm sure, okay, sure.
And I'm sure that there are actual laws in place to protect them from unjust firings because the mayor cannot order a cop to go beat the crap out of someone that called the mayor a big fat slob.
Right?
We assume that.
Right.
So why could the mayor or the governor order them to not uphold the law and actually abuse people that obtained a permit to peacefully protest, one that they obtained lawfully?
Well, like I said, people.
And salary depends on him not understanding that they have in the theory.
I would disagree.
I think they know.
I think they're like, sure, cool.
Yeah, I'll crack some skulls.
There's no way a cop is that stupid that they're thinking, oh, if I, if I, if I disobey this, this clearly unjust and probably illegal order, I'm going to lose my money.
I don't buy it.
No one is that stupid that gets to that position.
And I don't think cops are, you know, members of Mensa.
Sure.
And we have also had this, it's like, well, there's the, there's the argument, okay, fine, stay a cop, but just, you know, let the white guy get off.
And I'll be honest too, the last two times I've been pulled over, white state trooper, one by myself, one with the kids in the back of the car both times.
Technically, yes, I was speeding.
I like to think that he looked in the car.
And the first time when I was solo, I had my USS Liberty cap on.
The second time the kids and I were clearly heading back from the pool let me off with a with a warning.
And I wanted, maybe wishful thinking, I wanted to think that that was the slightest recognition that obviously I don't have a criminal record and I don't have any speeding tickets from the last five years.
Looks like a good guy.
Gonna let him off easy.
And I can hear the audience right now saying, Coach, you stupid, softy bastard, just because, you know, one or two of them let you off easy.
Fair enough.
Sam, I suspect that you have a deep and longtime loathing for the blue and you do not, in fact, back the blue.
But I don't want to put words in your mouth.
You've seen, you've, you've seen more of them in action and probably have been on the ass end of police actions more than even the notorious felon Rollo.
Yeah.
Yes, there is that for sure.
This feeling that our guys have for the cops, this is nothing new.
This is 80s, 90s oughts.
This has been the case.
My entire experience of the movement is being mistreated by cops.
So certainly I can sympathize, go along with a certain, you know, ACAB, all coppers are bastards.
I can see that.
I have a certain amount of agreement with that for sure.
Your neighborhood would be a nightmare if the cops all struck probably.
Yeah.
Well, and so I'll say this in favor of the cops in a sense, in favor of it.
You know, we here on this podcast or on any podcast or anybody who's doing anything, we're kind of just we're voices that are putting out opinion.
Certainly what we do has a certain value and everything to helping people see the truth and all that type of thing.
I'm still working my way through this.
Yep.
But what, you know, and for anybody who's a praying person out there, you know, the day that the cops or maybe some judges or guys in the military or generals or whatever, the day that those people wake up and turn our way, those are people who can really do something in a way we could never do.
You know, any kind of fantasy anyone has about like a revolution or overturning of power or a violent escapade or something like that, that's nothing any of us can do.
That's something that the people who have professionally trained.
Yeah, professionally trained and are in positions to really do something.
So in that sense, what we do here, putting good words out, having community, having, you know, promoting materials and things like that, my prayer is that our ways of thinking reach those who have the power to do things, like cops, like chiefs of police, like people maybe in the military, key people in key places.
And that's so we should look in a way, you know, when our sentiments really reach like a critical mass and are progressing, it begins to affect those people.
And it has been, right?
I mean, Rolo's disparagement aside, they don't have to be rocket scientists to realize that they are going to get screwed royally for the one misstep against the 12-time black violent felon versus, you know, arrested.
But also, there's, you know, it was a real reminder to me of some previous incidents in my life that I can recall.
But I think it was Rollo posted this video of this cop shooting this guy.
It was like in a hotel, you know, the one I'm talking about.
Oh, the autistic kid.
Yep.
Yeah.
And here are these, these, these two people were trying to comply with the cops and the cop was so hyped up and the guy was trying, cross your legs, now crawl.
No, cross your legs, all this stuff.
And then the guy just shoots him.
You know, the guy, whatever, for some reason, he made a move with his hand and the cop shot him.
I guess you could try to say, well, you know, cops themselves, they are trained to recognize certain movements, but it just seems so unnecessary, you know, and I've seen that type of thing.
I remember some friends of mine, they had run in with the cops and they said something like, oh yeah, well, we'll sue you for police brutality.
Well, then later, some days later, cops showed up at their house, knock at the door.
Hey, it's the city police.
Oh, okay.
Well, what are we all trained?
Oh, you trust the police, right?
You let them into your house.
The police come in.
They started grabbing little knickknacks off the shelf and smashing them.
Oh, yeah.
This is what we think of people who say that they're going to sue the cops.
And they just push the people around, abuse their personal belongings, things like that.
So that's how cops can be, you know.
Yep.
And to your point, Sam, too, wouldn't it be, how powerful would it be if every single or the vast majority of white police officers in America came to know the score sincerely, right?
not just to save their own ass.
That would be a very positive development.
And I would posit that all cops are bastard, F the police, screw them all is unhelpful discourse and just makes them perhaps would tempt them to say, oh, you know what?
Yeah, I do.
We need those.
We need them.
But here's the problem.
The problem with that, though, is we were the only ones backing the cops and they gleefully turned on us.
Like they, they, like, they're not allowed to arrest a black.
They're just not allowed to.
Right.
But when has it come like when has have the cops decided, yeah, I'm not going to, these guys are protesting drag queen story hours.
So what?
It's never happened.
It's never happened.
There's plenty of cases where cops did their job.
I was at a protest where I saw the cops more or less do their job and not give us hassle.
There's except there's exceptions across the board, right?
When I was in high school, the first year of the first night of senior year.
62 years ago.
This would have been fall of 1998.
We went out in the woods, 1908, drinking and smoking pot.
And son of a bitch, we see flashlights and we think it's one of our friends coming up.
Oh my God.
It's like three or four uniforms.
This is a different time, though, because cops were not treated then how they're treated now.
Like liberals and blacks, especially are openly saying kill cops and cops are bending over for them.
They're not even looking the other way while Patriot Prayer or even whatever gay stuff people like Vincent James or those people are doing, Dave Riley, whatever.
They're not.
They're not.
They're just on the side of the left every time.
But Rolo, this personal anecdote of mine is far more important than two miles an hour over the speed limit on a freeway and I got a speeding ticket.
Yeah.
Well, these cops, what they did.
Oh, technically, you're speeding.
Yeah.
Well, what they did for us, I thought was very reasonable.
They said, all right, who's got the pot or who brought the pot?
And one of the girls dimed out my buddy and we're like, oh, we all rolled our eyes.
Like, I can't believe she did that.
So the cops took my buddy aside and they were like, you tell me who your dealer is and we'll let you all go.
You get rid of the snitch, okay?
And then I remember who she was.
Yeah, I see you there.
I won't say her name, but my buddy was like, yeah, yeah, this thing that happened, this thing that happened during the Dust Bowl, this thing, it is like a completely different time.
Oh, to be a kid in the 90s in the Clinton years.
Bucko.
So what my friend did was he dimed out like his most hated, you know, connect for weed.
And we were like, thank you.
Right.
Thank you for your service.
We don't like that guy either.
When we were backing the blue like 10 years ago, we weren't having these run-ins with the cops because there weren't a bunch of blacks out there that were being gaslit by Jewish groups, causing mayhem.
And when cops came in to break it up, they weren't having their lives ruined.
Well, what's your strategy then, Genius?
Should we tell them all to resign?
Because that's another can of worms.
Like, do you really want us all resigning?
You want to know?
Well, here's the reality.
You know what cops are doing right now?
And pretty much their only job is protecting black people.
And the result.
That is, that is, no, I'm saying that is their job.
When they go out and they put that uniform on and they go out on the beat, their job is to protect black people, the single most destructive group in the history of the world.
There has never been anything that is so physically damaging to anything it's been around.
Blacks are the Tasmanian devil.
And cops are out there.
Say like, hey, when you see that, when you see that tornado that talks like a retard, you do your darndest to make sure that that thing is protected.
That is their job.
So if all the cops resign, well, you know what?
Blacks are no longer protected.
Because now when stand your ground happens, I mean, I mean, you could say like, well, the feds will just come in and arrest anyone that's standing their ground, but cops will gladly arrest someone that lawfully protected themselves from some Tasmanian devil holding their gun sideways.
Like a black can kick your door down, hold like a gun in each hand and a knife in his mouth and say, I am going to rape and kill everyone in this room.
And it can be on camera.
And like they can be firing their gun everywhere.
And if a white person shoots them in self-defense, yeah, the cop will gladly arrest them, put them in handcuffs, read them their rights and charge them with attempted murder or murder, whatever.
Well, just like, yeah, we do not advise our children to join the military because we know what has happened to the institution and the risk of losing your question, but to answer your question, like, what do you do?
Like, what makes you think that any of us have the answer?
Because it's such a complicated issue that it's not so simple.
Because right now, cops are out there protecting blacks and ruining the lives of white people.
Like, there's literally child sexual predators out there showing their genitals to small children while dressed up as demons.
And people are going out there saying, we don't want this in our neighborhood.
And cops are arresting them.
Sure.
I'm thinking where that, yeah, they, they, and you could say, and you could say, yeah, and you could say, okay, well, well, some of them, oh, yeah, or how about the cop or the, I don't know, I don't know if this is a problem.
This could be a whole show, but Arthur Cauley was taunting Robert Paulson in court.
I would assume it was a cop that dragged him out.
I don't, maybe it was just a bailiff.
I don't know.
I didn't watch enough night court to know if Mole was or Bull was actually a police officer or I don't, I don't know how that works.
You got no sympathy for these white men who every single time they put on the uniform and go out into the streets could be intentionally deliberately shot by the creatures that they're charged to protect.
No, no bonus points.
Okay.
Well, okay.
Well, here's the thing.
Like, how much sympathy do you have for like maybe not an on-the-ground Antifa foot soldier, but someone who sympathizes with Antifa, who is a white person who's like maybe 21 years old that gets shot by a black because they're right.
It's the same thing.
It's like, you know, maybe they haven't attacked one of our guys, but do you think that cop that's like, oh, that nice white man, like when the chips are down, do you think he's not going to kick your door down and drag you out kicking and screaming because the governor or the mayor ordered him to?
Because you're domestic violent extremist.
I was just doing my job.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's at this point, because so many of them kneeled for Black Lives Matter.
And I'm not even going to bring up the thing like where Mike said, like, are you going to kneel for us?
It doesn't matter that they didn't kneel for them.
Fact that they kneeled for a group that open, like Stryker, is very vocal about his dislike for cops.
But black lives matter.
Pigs in a blanket fry them like bacon.
What do cops do?
Take a knee.
I cannot think of anything more pathetic.
And it's not like it was black cops doing it, it was mostly white cops, because that was the point to humiliate those white cops, and they went along with it.
Now a lot of them are resigning there.
There's a lot of resignations happening currently, which which good because it's going to start getting bad, because it's already bad for us.
But when cops resign the the, the people in power are going to start noticing it, because eventually the Tasmanian devil is going to realize, hey, some rich people over there like those are big houses like that, that's a Bentley we can break into.
Like you know, it's jewelry.
That they defund the police was a little tempest in a teapot and now they're back to fund the police and crime is on the agenda again and Trump is talking about cops and all the rest of it.
Yeah, I just yeah.
I tell you know it is a thorny issue.
I, I do agree and I I want to have sympathy for white people that may be trying to do something good but at the end of the day there have not been enough cops that have done good things and at best, like literally the best thing that they do is quit their job.
That's pathetic agents of the regime.
And then we had a lot of guys chime in and say, in these small towns, even like largely white towns, they're just sitting in their car playing on their phone the whole time and just want to go get a speedy ticket or two.
They're not heroes just because they have a uniform.
Best thing they do is nothing.
That's pathetic and like we root for, like maybe one shoots a black who is like undoubtedly I mean it's, it's a black, so of course he's guilty.
But like one is undoubtedly committing a crime.
But even then they're just like, what do I do if I do my job?
I go to jail, so I do nothing.
But they know they do it against a white guy.
Nothing happens.
Then I appreciate you being a hardliner on it Rollo and i'm i'm i'm, i'm raising it, and somewhat deliberately, you know, just thinking this through here.
And I also wanted to give a voice to all those other guys in the cause for whom this also rankles a bit, or it feels a bit off.
It just feels a little too hand in glove with the left's rhetoric and possibly, even if it's valid okay, could be counterproductive and bad rhetoric.
Yeah, you bring up a good point.
Well, hold on.
He brings up a good point of how it's in line with the left rhetoric, but everything the left believes in is fake.
They don't hate cops, just like everything about it is fake.
It's, it's just a talking point from their master.
But i'm only a hardliner on this because it's the same thing with Trump.
Trump could have given us something and we could have said well, could have been worse, but he gave us nothing.
It's the same thing.
We were willing to him a lot of slack and give him a lot of room to run, and.
But the left doesn't.
They have no grievance with cops because cops are only ever on their side.
They hate cops because maybe a cop will say hey, you know you, 30 blacks have, you've beaten on that white kid long enough, you break it up.
And then they, ah oh the, the Military Industrial Complex, empire pigs trying to put down that poor black man.
That's it, it's.
It's never anything based on reality and, like I just have to say like liberals are not smarter than conservatives.
They do not know that a man with boobs isn't a man.
Okay well Rollo, you have inspired me here with your powerful rhetoric.
I'm creating a to-do list here and uh, number one to-do list, learn to not like cops.
No, it's swat.
Rollo is uh number one in the list and i'll i'll build it out as it goes on.
Just Sammy baby, any last thoughts before we land this puppy?
Yeah well, I you know.
When Rollo was saying you know the most destructive force in the world, and all that stuff, it couldn't help but remind me of this meme maybe you guys have seen these where they show like a series of pictures.
It's like okay, here is Hiroshima, you know, after the bomb was dropped down, Classic.
And then, like 50 years later, it's like a gleaming city, everything's nice and all that.
And then it's like here's Detroit, you know, after the Niggers moved in.
And then now, here's Detroit, 50 years later.
It's like you can survive an atomic bomb blast, but you cannot survive niggers.
You can, you can have a country or you can have black people in it.
You cannot have both.
Like look at Africa, the entire continent is the.
It is the richest continent on the planet and everyone knows it's the biggest pile of crap.
Right?
I was reading this political article.
Uh, Mitch Daniels uh, former governor of Indiana, he was thinking about running for president, guy I met and actually really respect here's a fun inside baseball story.
I went to a fundraiser for Mitch Daniels back when he was thinking about running for president 2012 and uh, at in my semi-civic normie, I was reading Samuel Huntington's Who Are We at the time and I brought it with me.
It's a wonderful book about American identity and it means to be an American and how mass immigration has really undermined it, and I gave it to one of his staffers and I was just like I think the governor would really like to would enjoy this book, didn't give it another thought and I put my business card in there.
Six months later, I get a package to my work and i'm like what the hell is this?
I never get mail at the office and it was a replacement copy of Who Are We.
It was a used copy with a handwritten note from governor Mitch Daniels saying, Matthew, thank you so much for this book.
I enjoyed it so much and I marked it up so much it wasn't fit to return.
Uh, so I wanted, Wanted to make sure that you had a copyback.
So, really decent man.
The reason I bring it up is because he's thinking about dipping his toes back in the water.
He's always been a very respectable, decent, and thoughtful man.
I'll put the interview in the show notes.
And, uh, but basically, he's bemoaning the tribalism in America and why can't we all just come together?
And I'm sort of like smacking my forehead, like, oh, governor, it's not, it's not the America that you grew up in.
And you're fantasizing about something that is literally scientifically out the way possible.
You know, yep, I'm sorry.
Yeah, most white people are kind of, you know, at least today, a lot of white people are very hypocritical.
They'd like to live in a community that's like 5% black and, you know, 3% Mexican and Mexican or something like that.
I could go further that it's just, they want perfect representation across the board, not just that, like the 5% and 1%, whatever.
I would say they pretend that they want the actual equal representation.
Yeah.
They want to, all whites want to live in a primarily white community with enough minorities present so they can pretend that they're not racist or whatever it is.
But you can never maintain this perfect, tiny little percentage of representation.
You know, it's just not realistic.
Yep.
It's a fantasy and it's a fantastic better angels of our nature that are simply impossible to manifest in a multicultural polyglot slop heap that we've become.
Thanks to Jews and immigration policy, just in case you didn't understand, dear listener.
All right.
Well, and it's very much a Jewish thing because that whole view comes from watching Jewish media.
They don't see that in real life.
They only see it on TV shows.
As soon as there's 25% blacks in their community, all the whites, or at least the well-to-do whites, start moving out.
So, you know, because they want to have this fake tiny little percentage.
Yeah.
Shaking hands with Steve King at the airport console, getting a book from Mitch Daniels.
Those were the days when we were young once and had hope.
Meeting John Kerry, you know, all the greats.
Yeah, him too.
Shook his hand.
Looked like a Neanderthal.
He had a high Neanderthal DNA, which I guess Jews, surprisingly, Jews have a lot of Neanderthal DNA in them.
I had very low Neanderthal.
I would have thought that Europeans and Aryans had the highest percentage, but maybe not.
Maybe those Aryans coming from the East later on, the Neanderthals were Africans.
Yeah, it's the old, old school Europeans and apparently some Jews.
Anyway, thank you, gentlemen.
This has been a treat and a delight.
Sam, fine job as always.
And kudos to our pal Gordon, too, for taking on a tough one for us.
You got anything cooking this week?
Anything fun?
Talking to me or Sam?
Sam.
Oh, well.
Well, no, no details, of course.
Yeah.
We got a hike with the troops of St. George.
I always want to say Legion of St. George.
I just got to check myself, troops of St. George.
And so, yeah.
Good stuff.
Yeah.
That's good enough.
We still didn't check those two boxes because Potato was sick.
We couldn't go hike the mountain or go to a baseball game.
But some of the things that we're going kayaking down the Chicago River.
Ooh, like through the city?
Yeah.
That's a thing.
Awesome.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
Good stuff.
Adventurous.
Don't drink the water, Sam.
Don't be tempted.
No.
It's like.
All right, my friend.
Rolo, thank you very much for being a good sport as always.
And you bring the fire every once in a while.
I feel the hand of God, and it's going to keep you all away from the fire.
Whatever that means.
All right, fam.
Thank you for flying with us on another special full house recorded on a hot Indian summer, August 20th.
Now, August 21st, 2022.
Follow us on Telegram, Gab, support us at givesendgo.com/slash fullhouse.
Visit us at full-house.com.
And of course, drop us a line with anything on your mind to Fullhouse Show at ProtonMail.com.
And all those links are handily in the show notes for you.
Mr. Producer, please take us out this week to.
I don't know if I'm going to get a chuckle or a delight out of Santa on this one, but Man on the Silver Mountain by Rainbow.
Ronnie Dio up at the microphone on this one.
I never heard a harder rock band with a faggier name than Rainbow.
Only these kids will enjoy this one.
Richie Blackmore's Rainbow.
Let's be fair.
Okay.
Well, Dio, Ronnie was the singer still, right?
Yeah, Richie Black.
Well, he was the first singer, but it was called Richie Blackmore's Rainbow.
Could you?
All right.
Very good.
Yeah, I know.
I don't know.
Yeah, Joel and Turner, Graham Bonnet, all the great singers.
I was going through all the classics and like the top essential hits of the season.
Stone Cold is a better song even since you've been gone.
But, you know, whatever.
Okay, tell you what.
I'm going to listen to Stone Cold after this.
If it's better than Man on the Silver Mountain, we'll swap it out.
If it's not, Rollo defeated BTFO'd again.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Take care, everybody.
And we'll see you.
See ya.
You can't stop me turning.
Cause I'm the sun, I'm the sun.
I can move, I can run.
But you'll never stop me burning.
Come down with fire.
Lift my spear and higher.
Someone scream in my name.
Come and make me holy again.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
I'm the day, I'm the day I can show you the way.
And look, I'm right beside you.
I'm the night, I'm the night.
I'm the dark and the light.
With eyes and see inside you.
Come down with fire and lift my spirit higher.
Someone scream in my name.
Come and make me holy again.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
a man
Someone screaming my name, come and make me holy again.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
Well, I can help you, you know I can.
For me Just look at me and listen.
I'm the man, the man, my hand.
I'm the man on the silver mountain.
Coming down with fire and lift your spirit higher.
I'm the man on the mountain, the man on the silver mountain.
I'm the night, the light, the block, and the light.