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Sept. 2, 2022 - Full Haus
02:12:06
Big Energy

The great Lauritz von Guildhausen joins us from Norway this week for a full two hours jam-packed with commentary on the looming energy crisis, American political tyranny, New White Life, questions from the audience, and a lot more. Miss this one at your own peril! Break: Rolandskvadet by Hard Look Close: "O Valhalla" by Skald Ourguy clothing recs: Midgard, Will2Rise, RedIce, Thor Steinar, European Brotherhood, and Helly Hansen  The Biden speech Why is Sweden Multicultural? Nordic Resistance Movement 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 Odysee for special occasion livestreams and back library being uploaded! Full Haus on Amerikaner.org RSS: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/rss All shows since deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week!

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Time Text
The world is on fire.
Not in any climate change since, and we're still in the very early innings of the game.
You know the litany.
Open borders, black crime, rampant deaths of despair, declining white birth rates, lingering COVID tyranny, political censorship and oppression, a raging war in Europe, with one in Asia on the horizon, inflation, and now an actual looming dark winter in our cradle continent, but with energy supply concerns proliferating around the globe.
Except in Russia, of course.
This week, we welcome a long, overdue and astute guest who's been banging the drum about Western insanity from immigration to energy policy for a long time now.
And tonight, we give him his deserved top billing.
So, Mr. Producer, sound the Gjallarhorn again.
Welcome, everyone, to episode 138 of Full House, the world's most learned show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
I am, as always, your trusted host, Coach Cringe Stock.
Yes, my family has had a little fun with nicknames recently.
Back with another two hours of the finest in transatlantic commentary.
We put the trans in transatlantic here.
Thanks, the Rolo.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Frog, Zach, Iron Haas, and Rusty for their kind support of the show this week.
Or should I say our bye week?
We're on that schedule again.
If you'd like to be like those paragons of paternity, however, please visit givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
And also, huge thanks to a good friend who recently visited with his family and brought along his high-pressure canning equipment.
He saved my marriage by helping to handle some of this year's surplus potatoes that were driving my wife crazy.
Thank you very much, buddy.
It was a great time.
And now I got a lot of potatoes and cans for the hard times to come.
All right, enough of me and on to our beloved birth panel.
First up, he never worries about energy crises because he survived the big one from 1973 to 1974.
he was driving a pontiac bonneville the whole time to boot sam well i may have been a passenger you know with uh with no seat belts you know when we're looking yeah nobody nobody wore a seat belt but i remember those times I remember the long lines and the people bitching about it and everything like that, conspiracies.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
It's really true.
But yeah, my daughter's over there in Europe.
She's in Spain right now.
And yeah, she called and she's telling me that she's over there.
You know, my first thing was, how were you able to go over there?
Apparently, there's some sort of like foreign exchange program where she's over there working at a hotel, like doing building maintenance.
So I said, Yeah, what kind of building maintenance could you possibly be doing?
This is like a young girl.
And I guess she's painting and stuff like that.
And then she could stay there for free.
And then she's been touring around.
She went to Iceland, then she went to Sweden, and now she's in Spain.
And I think then she's going to Ireland.
Nice.
Lucky gal.
Yeah, I got a family member who's in Greece, somewhere in one of those islands right now, sending teachers.
And I'm like, oh, man, I haven't been over there in many years.
Welcome back, Sam.
I didn't throw you under the bus for being sick last week.
It was that plus schedule.
Oh, yeah, man.
We got to hit hard.
We got to hit hard.
You know, last weekend, I was expecting to go.
We were going to go hiking with the Legion, or shall I say the troops of St. George?
And then we were going to go kayaking and it all just got canceled.
We were sick.
And then there was a storm and they canceled the kayaking and it just turned into a big nothing burger.
Looks like it made you stronger, though.
And I have to say that Rolo thought I was going to say that, Sam, you're not worried about energy crises because you live through the ice age.
Very rude, Rolo.
Very rude.
Anyway, next up, the prodigal twin producer, the man-at-arms of the NJP and the brawniest street activist you'll see this side of Venice Beach.
Smasher is back finally.
Welcome back, brother.
Really, really happy to be back.
Things are returning to normal.
I've caught up in pretty much everything.
I'm not going to have three or four jobs going at the same time anymore.
And so things are back to normal.
And I'm really, really happy to be back.
We feel the same way, buddy.
A couple people did ask, where's Smasher?
Did he go the way of JO?
And I just told him honestly, long hours, long days.
So yeah, I haven't had a real day off in months.
I mean, even the birthday party that you guys were at, like that wasn't really a day off because we went and did a protest and then had a birthday party.
And it was a super long day.
And that was the closest thing to a day off that I've had.
And I couldn't even tell you how long.
I did gloat that I mowed your lawn, but I did note that you were assembling a trampoline at the time.
So big deal.
All right.
Great to have you back, brother.
Let's see.
Next up, there's Rolo.
Welcome, Rolo.
He smiled.
Thanks.
Hey, I do want to thank you sincerely for starting to get our library up on odyssey.com.
That new link will be in the show notes and also proliferating us on Americoner.org.
All thanks to your elbow grease.
Well, it's the perks of having greasy elbows, I suppose.
All right.
Good one there.
And Rolo has some really hot content to mock our special guest who's up next.
Rolo, you have free license to play that whenever you like.
Finally, I see when you talk, my dog barks.
Our very special and very patient guest.
He is the brains behind the iconoclastic podcast, The Third Rail, a longtime truth teller, heartbreaker, accent expert, and all-around great guy.
We are not going to comment about his height nor his latitude this show.
So help me, God, Loritz von Guildhausen, truly a modern day Quizling.
And that's not even derogatory.
Welcome, buddy.
Well, thank you for those glowing words, Coach.
I am thrilled to finally be here, albeit at five in the morning.
Amen.
You're such a gentleman for waking up that early.
It doesn't even sound like it's 6 a.m. there yet.
So how's everything?
Everything is great.
You know, I'm slowly watching the slow collapse of polite European society, and I couldn't be happier about it, frankly.
All right.
We're going to get to that later about why you're happy about it.
We know it's richly deserved in a dark sense.
But before we do that, let's get the pleasantries out of the way, my friend.
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
Okay, well, I'm pure stock Norwegian.
I am, I guess, culturally Protestant, but maybe economic.
Purestock Joten.
Purestock Joten.
Yeah, actually, my 23andMe is a wild read.
It literally just says 99.99% Norwegian.
It's crazy.
And I am working on some kids.
All right.
Good stuff, brother.
My wife asked me to ask you sincerely, do you believe at all in Norse mythology?
No, I wish I did.
I really wish I did.
I think it's very interesting.
It has very, very good lessons to teach us, but I'm not a religious guy in general.
Sure, but I'm not even going to return to those pagan values for our society.
Although I'm also quite happy with that good old time Christian religion.
Very good, brother.
Yeah.
And where did you get the name?
I may have asked this years ago, but I forget by now, Loritz von Guildhausen.
What's the origin of that?
Actually, it's a little bit, if I dare to use Zoom or speak, it's a little bit cringe.
Because it started out as I was playing World of Warcraft back in the day, as you do.
And I started up a guild.
And I never had a Facebook account under my real name.
So I just picked out like a random sounding name, added a little bit of German to it, and called him, we called myself Guildhausen.
And that was my Facebook profile.
I'm sorry I asked.
Yes, we're all very sorry about that.
Hey, all right.
Now the audience knows.
In all sincerity, though, you have been providing smart and hard-hitting commentary for years now.
And before we get to that, though, I did want to comment.
I lied.
I have to comment about your height because it's a cute story.
It was my family's pleasure and honor to meet you a couple years back.
And for years after, you left such an impression on the kids that they used your height as their metric for whether things were high or medium or low.
I swear to God, they would say, would Laritz hit his head on this ceiling, Dad?
Or is that tree taller than Laritz?
And then finally, the coup de grace, which my wife reminded me of tonight, I didn't know this one.
They were sitting out on the trampoline looking at the stars.
And I think it was daughter asked, I wonder if I'll ever be as tall as Laritz one day, looking up at the great unknown.
So you really did leave a wonderful impression with the family, certainly.
I honestly have to say, I have to say, meeting your children has been one of the greatest pleasures of my life.
They are an absolutely adorable bunch, and I really hope I get the opportunity to meet them again.
We'll make it happen for sure, brother.
I'd love to visit you up there.
I do have some Norwegian blood, more Swedish than Norwegian, I'll ask you.
You are welcome anyway.
God bless.
All right.
Enough small talk.
Let's get down to business.
Laritz has been banging the drum about Europe's looming energy crisis since it was last fall or last winter.
Buddy, I remember you were doing the math and you were saying, we're all, you know, well, maybe I'm exaggerating.
We're all going to freeze.
It's all going to get really expensive.
I said, nothing ever happens.
You're going to be fine.
I may have gotten the better of that one there, but now the bill is coming due and it does look serious this winter.
So go ahead and spurg a little bit, if you would.
Tucker's done a segment.
It's all over the news.
Long-witted question.
What's it like at ground zero there in Europe right now?
Right.
So regarding last winter, I was saying it was going to be expensive.
I didn't think we were looking at shortages, although this year we certainly are.
Living here is kind of a weird experience because everyone's trying to get on with their day while the electric prices just keeps climbing higher and higher.
We're somewhat insulated from the consequences of this in Norway, though, because The Norwegian government has put in a, I mean, the Norwegian government is the owner of all of our hydroelectric, which is the energy that we're exporting to the rest of Europe.
Sure.
Which means that they're making money hand over fist.
Like they're making ridiculous amounts of money in the hundreds of billions of dollars, you know?
And what this means is, since it's the government, they can just give it back to the people.
So they've implemented a scheme now which says we're going to cover 90% of the electric costs over, I think it will be the equivalent of 10 cents per kilowatt hour.
Wow.
So I've heard that Norway has like the most expensive electricity in Europe, but 10 cents a kilowatt hour is along the lines with the cheapest U.S. states.
So you got a lot of hydro, you got a lot of oil, and the government's going to even subsidize you guys if it gets too high.
So you got nothing to complain about.
Well, exactly.
This is kind of a tricky, a tricky topic, though, because on top of that, you have the grid rent or line rental, and you have also taxes, which are pretty high.
So the final math comes out to still pretty expensive.
But I mean, obviously, the most important thing is industry and private companies are not covered by this at all.
So our industry is really tanking as we speak.
I mean, we have aluminum plants and things like that who can only, sorry, I have to kind of rewind myself.
So the reason why Norwegian industry can compare at all, because we have very, very high salaries, sorry, compete, is that obviously we have low production costs because we have cheap and plentiful, used to have cheap and plentiful electric.
But now that that's no longer the case, like our industry is going belly up.
And that's a huge problem, obviously.
When it comes to the highest prices in Europe, that's really, it's a game of, it feels almost like a game of whack-a-mole if you're looking at the, so what we have is like an electric exchange called Nordpool.
And that's, that's common for all of Northern Europe, where the, like, is basically our stock exchange for electric prices.
So you can always see what the day ahead electric prices are going to be.
And every day, a new country like takes the top spot.
So yeah, we've had quite a few days where Norwegian electricity is the most expensive.
Other days it's Germany.
Yesterday was France, I believe.
And it's just going up and up and up.
And I can't help but notice that the way media is talking about this is they don't mention the height.
And then three days later, they're going to say like, oh, electric prices subsides.
So I've seen maybe 12 or 13 articles in the newspaper going, you know, oh, the electric prices are finally going back down.
And every time the number that they're mentioning that they're going back down to is just getting higher and higher.
Sure.
And your petrol, your gasoline too, has always been high.
And I assume that that has climbed as well with global prices rising.
Or does the government cover you on that front too?
No, they refuse to cover us on that front because they want us all to be driving electric vehicles.
But it has normalized here, which I was not expecting.
Like for a while there in the, you know, back in March and April of this year, I was like, you know, gas prices are going to get really expensive.
But they've kind of normalized, which speaks volumes of just how quickly Russia managed to adapt to the sanctions regime and just started pumping in oil through different trade routes, you know, going through India, going through China, going through Asia generally instead of going through Europe.
So they're more or less normal now, but the electric prices are just galloping away from us as we speak.
I have reason to believe Norway is not going to be hit as hard as I initially thought though, because we're actually starting to hold back some of the electricity, Which obviously has had a bad impact on the prices, but uh, it looks like we might actually uh escape rationing this winter.
That will not be the case for Germany, France, and Finland as far as oh, and also the Baltic countries.
They are absolutely going to be rationing uh electricity this winter.
And keeping everybody shut down their nuclear plants, yeah.
And then that's that's kind of the wild card in here has been was Germany going to prolong the life expectancy of their nuclear plants or no?
And it turns out not.
And that kind of took me by surprise because I figured most of this crisis was caused by shearing competence or people actually buying into this whole climate change green shift kind of kind of politics.
But when you have the sitting government in an electric crisis looking at the possibility of just getting a few extra terawatt hours out of their nuclear power plants, going, no, we're not going to do that.
I mean, that's leveling on malice.
Sure.
And yeah, I was going to say, because this can't all be blamed on Russia, Russia, Russia, because this has been building for years.
It was acute last winter.
So, yeah, go ahead.
No, I was just going to say, I wrote an essay about this in November, which the third rail graciously covered, where I was already warning about this happening.
So this crisis, even though everybody, every politician, every news outlet is like, this is Russia's fault.
This is Russia's fault.
This crisis was happening, was on the horizon, was always going to happen regardless of the Ukrainian invasion.
Obviously, the Ukrainian invasion kind of put it, escalated it and put a fine point on it because now Russia is just openly price fixing.
They're like, oh, you know, our gas pipelines are not working.
Oh, we're just going to do 20%.
Oh, we're shutting it down for maintenance.
And this is just blatant price manipulation.
They're like, okay, we want the prices to go up even further so we can make even more rubles.
And then I feel that's perfectly valid.
I mean, the way Europe is treating Russia at the moment is outrageous.
And if they're going to play, you know, if they're going to do some shenanigans back, I totally understand that.
Yeah, it would be cocky to not, honestly.
Right.
Exactly.
It's like, oh, Europe's going to sanction us and we're just going to do whatever they say.
I think not, especially considering Europe has literally zero ways to impact Russia.
I mean, as these sanctions have shown, it hasn't done anything to the Russian economy, basically.
But if I recall.
Oh, no, please go ahead.
No, I was just going to finish my point, which is this crisis was a long time coming.
It was a problem last autumn or last fall, as you Americans would say.
And was always going to happen because for some reason, the politicians on continental Europe figured we can take all the nuclear energy, we can take all of our coal plants, et cetera, and replace them with windmills and not windmills of friendship, which is just, it was never going to happen.
There's a great quote from an author named Robert Bryce, if I recall correctly.
He wrote a book called Lights Out or Blackout.
And he said, you can be pro-coal and anti-nuclear, or you can be pro-nuclear and anti-coal or fossil fuels, but you can't be against both of them because then you're pro-blackout.
And Germany in particular, which is really shaping up to be like a new sick man of Europe and arguably the worst situation, maybe the UK competes with it.
I think at some point, I mean, they shut down the nuclear plants and they were in the process of decommissioning all of their coal plants too.
And in a heavily industrialized country, now, Laritz, can we blame the Jews for this?
Or is this a little bit of homegrown echo green insanity or both?
Well, frankly, I'm having a very hard time spotting the Jew in all this.
Now, I'm sure there are quite a few Jews in the wood pile, so to speak.
I would argue that the kind of meta-political environment that Jews have set up is what has led people into making these absolutely retarded decisions that they make,
whether it's based in fake ideological garbage like green energy or purely capitalistic selfishness or whatever.
Like all of that stuff is downstream from Jews.
So even if a Jew didn't design this particular climate that we find ourselves in, it's still their fault because without them, we'd be using nuclear energy and flying in spaceships.
Oh, you're absolutely right.
I mean, that's a great point as well.
And it was actually the one I was kind of leaping to make myself, which is they've set up the system.
And the question is, is this an unintended consequence or is this something they intended to happen all along?
But ultimately, the problem is one of the system of governance that we have where politicians are only accountable to themselves and other politicians, and they can make retarded decisions without having any consequences.
And as such, they just go with whatever's popular among their own class, and they get rewarded for doing so, which leads to amazing quotes like from yesterday, German minister wows to back Ukraine no matter what voters think.
So Annelena Baerbach says, foreign minister, Green Party.
Foreign minister, Green Party in Germany, and also, you know, one of the one of the main one of the main causers of this sick man of Europe condition Germany finds itself in.
If I give the promise to people in Ukraine, we stand with you as long as you need us, then I want to deliver no matter what my German voters think.
Okay, so that's how democracy works, huh?
And it seems, yeah, absolutely, you know, disgusting.
But real quick, Smasher, if I were the man behind the curtain and I want to destroy Russia, I am not that man.
Of course, it would seem that having European citizens cold and sad and scared going into a winter while there's a war waging in Ukraine would not actually be the best thing for the system.
It seems like that would almost be designed to do something like we see in Hungary, where Hungary just signed a new big gas supply deal with Russia.
It's going to come down through Turkey to Bulgaria, up through Serbia and Hungary.
Boom, no cold Hungarians this winter.
So I would err on the side of green lunacy instead of man behind the curtain.
I think that's a wonderful point there as well, Coach.
It's like you have to run the key quibono analysis on everything.
And then right now, I just don't see the long noses profiting from this.
I mean, sure, you could argue they always want to destroy Europe and certainly Europe is hurting right now, but it is leading to a surprising uptick in nationalism, a surprising uptick in, you know, self-sufficiency kind of thinking outside of the political mainstream, obviously.
So it's hard to say, but I'm with you on this.
I think this is literally just a symptom of having a system where no politicians are actually rewarded for their competency, as much as their ability to network and to toe the globalist line.
Witness the European Union of the past two or three decades at least.
Smasher, go ahead.
I know you're champion at the pit.
Please have at it.
Oh, I was just going to make a joke about democracy.
Oh, good.
Lara, Laris was like, you know, because it's, you know, so this is how democracy works, but you got to remember that democracy is just Jews getting what they want.
Correct.
For sure.
Well, I don't know if you guys have seen this cute meme that there's the endless line of rail cars full of coal, and then the caption says electric vehicle fuel on its way to the power station.
Yeah, polls queuing up for coal.
Yeah.
And hey, let's be serious.
The polls have to burn the coal if they're going to pay their winter tolls this year.
Well, I don't know if you guys heard, but they're allowed to burn bundles of sticks now.
They've changed their law so that people can collect their own faggots and burn them.
The headlines in wild is how we can fix this.
Most definitely.
In California, though, they are now saying that they are not going to allow the sale of any new combustion engine vehicles.
So they're going to this all-electric vehicles.
And like I started off by mentioning that meme there, I mean, it's just insanity, you know?
And also, I've heard that in Europe, everyone's chopping down trees in anticipation of this energy shortage.
Have you heard that, Maritz?
Right.
Well, that's what I meant by burning fags.
Like, they're preparing for that.
But it's funny you mentioned that because I also saw that headline and it just dovetails completely with another headline out of California yesterday, which was California electric companies are issuing a grid warning asks you not to charge your EV vehicles.
You can't handle the loads.
It's insane.
It's insanity.
It's crazy.
Except you're a lunacy.
The audience might be asking, oh, come on, what's up with all this European energy content coach on the dad show?
And it's like, well, well, my son, it is a portent of things to come here.
And we're going to get to that in a second.
But I did just a little bit of desultory or desultory research.
And what you're looking at in terms of electricity prices in Europe real quick is 1,100 euros per megawatt in France.
So that's the big stuff coming out of the plant.
A thousand megawatts, roughly 1,000 euros per megawatt in Germany.
And the Euro and the dollar are roughly close enough.
So we're going to call that a wash.
In America, the average cost is about $154, $155 a megawatt.
So you're looking at roughly 10 times more expensive electricity in Europe right now.
Now, that could come down shortly.
But if your average electrical bill in America is 100 bucks or, God help you, 200 bucks a month, just imagine that being $1,000 or $2,000.
That's a little higher.
Yeah, I know.
And this is a good point as well.
It's like it doesn't hit evenly because Germany, for example, uses a lot of gas for their for their electric or as a stand-in for their electric, for cooking, for heating, et cetera.
And gas prices are running away even further.
I mean, they're just absolutely wild at the moment.
But I will make this prediction, and that is I don't think the electric prices are coming down.
Winter is just around the corner here.
So I think they're going to go up further.
I think a tripling or even a quadrupling of today's prices is not beyond the pale here.
Actually, I've seen analysts making this point as well.
We couldn't very well be looking at four to five bucks per kilowatt hour.
And then won't national governments caring for their poor, cold, and starving citizens just subsidize electricity.
I guess the UK raise their caps.
of these countries have caps on their electrical bills i guess for residential consumers uh so at a certain point that sort of creates a moral hazard all right if i'm over a thousand megawatt or a thousand kilowatts in a month then i can eat for free after that but uh again won't governments rise to the occasion here laritz and figure out a way to fix this even if russia were to completely shut off the spigots We're going back to sort of the core issue here,
and that is they're treating symptoms and not the cause, right?
Like we're running out of electricity.
That is the problem here.
We don't have access to enough gas.
We don't have access to enough power.
And their whole way of trying to deal with this is continuing to shut off power plants, as we've seen in Germany, and subsidizing the cost of the electricity.
Now, I am no libertarian, but there are some free market principles at play here.
You can price the electricity to whatever you want it to be.
If the government keeps subsidizing it, then people are going to continue to afford it, which is not a bad thing, obviously.
But sooner or later, you're just going to run out of energy and the costs are already spiraling and will continue to spiral hyperbolically to the point where it just gets ridiculously expensive.
I mean, it already is, but like we could easily be seeing 10 bucks a kilowatt hour when we're really near zero.
And none of this is fixing the core problem, which is there's too many people and not enough kilowatt hours to go around.
And even if the Russians completely shut off gas or were forced to shut off gas by a complete Euro ban on imports, could a lot of, I mean, France is heavily nuclear.
The UK, I assume, still has a lot of coal.
But I mean, could a lot of these countries, if push comes the shove, just fire up those old nuke or coal plants?
Technically, it's probably feasible, but so far they've signaled that they're not game for that.
Well, I mean, France is going through its own unique set of problems right now.
They're having the worst drought that they've ever had in recorded history.
And this drought is leading to twofold issues with their nuclear reactors.
The first one being where they have access to water from their rivers, the water is too warm to use to actually cool the reactors.
And secondly, in many rivers, they no longer exist.
I'm not even joking.
Like some of their biggest rivers are gone.
And the pisser, too, is on the gas front.
You know, you have everybody saying that there's simply no way if the Russian gas was severely curtailed or, God forbid, cut off, that there's not enough LNG in the world to keep Europe going.
Absolutely.
Well, I mean, not enough LVG.
Oh, that was a good one.
No, the LNG has its own unique set of problems.
Like, there is enough LNG, but we don't have the terminals to accept the LNG, which is the problem.
There's a total bottleneck there.
Like, these terminals takes years to build.
I know that they're building a new huge one in northern Germany, but it's not going to be ready till 2025, 2026.
So there's no way to actually get all that liquid natural gas to Europe, unfortunately.
LNG is, of course, liquefied natural gas for the Rolos out in Rio Grande.
Yeah, I was going to say, you know, I've been tramping it a bit to make a point about the Rhine right now.
Obviously, a lot of people say Rio Rhinelander around in our circles.
And the Rhine is now so dry that there is no Rhine to speak of.
Therefore, there cannot be a Rio Rhinelander anymore.
Is this horse your theory or more Russian meddling?
If climate change is real and it's our fault and all the ice in the world is melting, shouldn't our rivers be running like super crazy?
Yes.
In theory, one would think.
Stop asking questions.
The elites would be selling their beachfront property, of course.
Yeah, the conservatives are not always wrong.
Their skepticism on the climate change hustle has always been well placed.
Even, you know, I was a severe climate change doubter before I found online racism and hostility to Jewish power.
But mostly it makes sense on a certain extent.
We don't have to go into a big climate change thing that putting up greenhouse gases is going to raise.
But yeah, yeah, go ahead.
I was just going to say, I kind of agree with you because we're seeing some really unnatural climate taking place.
Now, obviously, the climate's always going to change, whether that's human-caused or not, I don't want to get into, but it is kind of interesting because we're having a drought on three continents at the same time.
Many of them are history breaking.
At the same time, Pakistan is literally drowning.
Like they've had flooding they've never seen before.
So there is some third of the country.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That doesn't.
It's not crazy.
It's not crazy to assume that humans have an impact on that.
It's just always been over.
Well, I mean, in ancient times, they made wine in England.
You know, the world was a lot warmer earlier, you know, like a couple thousand years ago.
Yeah, the Vikings had settlements in Greenland where they actually were able to farm.
It was arable land.
Right.
So absolutely.
That's true.
Well, wasn't the Ice Age a thing?
Is that fake?
Is that made up?
No, that wasn't.
Ice Age, white men.
Yeah, yeah.
We had like a mini ice age, you know, within the last, you know, 800 years or so.
Thomas Jefferson's notes on the American details.
Go ahead, Luritz, please.
No, please.
I love Jefferson's notes on America.
Please continue to that point.
Oh, yeah.
No, there's a very vivid climate section in there where he's basically, he's not freaking out.
He wasn't a freak out kind of guy, but he's just going through his painstaking, methodical way of detailing the local climate and just the, I mean, it was much, much colder in America in the late 1700s than they were accustomed to, and before you could blame the Industrial Revolution.
Like these things do happen.
Oh, we're humans.
We adapt to it.
Yeah.
It's important not to treat outliers as signs of a new normal before you can check if they are in fact outliers.
I will say this, though, like let's turn to, I think it's wrong to speculate on the causes of these things and instead try and speculate on what the results are going to be.
Whether or not these climate changes, if they are climate changes, are anthropogenic or not, how are we going to adapt to them?
I think is a more important question to be asking.
Amen.
And speaking of adaptation, how about you, big guy?
Are you prepping more?
You're in a better situation than most Europeans, but have you engaged in any sort of capital investments or other activities to get you through hard times?
Well, I mean, speaking for my financial side of things, I was already deeply invested in oil and I have been since the collapse there back in 2014.
I've just kind of kept expanding on that, especially after Bitcoin tanked back in 2018.
I was like, okay, it looks like this cryptocurrency isn't going anywhere.
Boy, was I wrong.
But I do hold quite a significant amount of my investment in oil or oil service related shares.
In terms of personal prepping, what I did was when I realized back in November that this was going to get bad, I bought a ton of long-lasting foods.
So we're talking, you know, dried pasta, flour, you know, oils, not to mention seed oils, because I knew Sneedley.
For a moment there, like a gallon, oh, sorry, two gallons worth of, I think it was sunflower oil was selling for something like 50 euros over here.
So that got pretty bad because Ukraine was responsible for the production of most of that stuff.
I'd say I'm, you know, if, God forbid, the society stopped functioning tomorrow.
I think I think I have food enough for about three months or something like that.
So I'm pretty good.
in that regard.
However, you know, I'm not, I don't have any sort of alternate source of fuel or energy or anything like that lying around.
And I don't think that's going to be necessary here either because we've started holding back our hydroelectric, like I said.
So I think Norway is going to be just fine, barring some sort of one thing that I posited the other day was that people should look at publicly traded companies that manufacture or sell wood-burning stoves.
And a couple guys kind of chuckled at it.
I said, no, no, no, I don't think that's actually crazy.
I mean, you literally, I mean, I'm not taking one news story out of Germany about people chopping down wood trees in their backyard.
But in a cold winter and for future cold winters, you're going to see a lot of wood-burning stoves sold.
So do your homework, fam.
Sort of a speculative, I am not an investment professional.
This is not professional advice, but it's an idea that I don't think is crazy.
Let's see, Laritz, anything else in your stack on European energy before we pivot back to the home front, our home front, which you actually watch shamelessly closely.
Yeah, it's American policy stuff is great.
No, I don't really have much more to say on the energy issue.
Just, you know, I just feel like this winter is going to be one for the records, historical records, because it'll be so interesting to see how the populace, especially in Germany, is going to start reacting when they start getting cold.
Do you know what I mean?
Like there is going to be rolling blackouts in Germany this year.
That's a given.
And what a cold and angry populace is going to do against the people who are allowing this to happen is going to be an interesting social experiment.
And what an amazing phenomenon that the continent that brought forth such amazing minds and such globe-dominating technologies and energy in all sorts of arenas is the one that's going to be physically pained this winter, almost certainly.
My how things change and what liberalism with Jewish influence does to a civilization.
It's really something to behold.
And of course, it's happening here too.
And I think, of course, to there's really been an amazing sea change in the American media pivoting back to our politics and the upcoming midterms and everything.
Just two months ago, maybe three, it was all doomsday for Democrats, for Biden.
Biden's not going to run again.
I myself thought that he looked so sickly.
His numbers were so bad.
And then it was literally like the manufacturing consent switch was flipped.
And you had Joe Manchin get a couple concessions on what was really the build back better plan of conservatives' fever dreams, the new world order, the Davos elite plan to destroy America.
I'm saying that mostly facetiously.
And they called it the Inflation Reduction Act, asterisk inflation reduction not included.
And now all of a sudden, you have news stories about how, oh, Biden's back up in the polls.
It's not going to be a red wave.
The Republican candidates are terrible.
There have been a couple of elections that have borne that out where the Dems won where it was close toss-up.
And to me, it's just amazing.
I do think that it is overwhelmingly manufactured.
Don't know that they have the power to turn things on a dime like they claim to have.
I think a lot of this is like future gaslighting.
They're saying they just decided that things are better now for the Democrats and for the agenda.
And of course, just tonight, Joe Biden lectured half the country for 30 minutes that if you're a MAGA Republican or a white supremacist, you need to basically take a knee and get on board with the system.
It was really something to behold.
I recommend that the audience will put it in the show notes.
It was 28 minutes or something like that.
But this all comes full circle with Europe and what they want to do here.
You know that they want to shut down every last coal plant in America.
Nuclear, maybe they will let go forward for a certain extent.
But what was in the Inflation Reduction Act, a huge ton of it was climate change BS and new money or continuing money for windmills and solar panels.
And they want to shut down the old stuff so that we suffer the same as Europe.
I'll stop there.
I don't know if you can hear the crickets through the windmills and solar panels are such garbage.
Anyway, it takes something like 2,200 windmills to equal the power output of one nuclear plant.
And that's if all of the windmills are like perfectly functional for the same.
If you ever see these windmill farms out here in the Midwest, I mean, it looks otherworldly.
It's like, as far as you can see in any direction, it's nothing but windmills.
And this is like all of them together don't equal like even a percentage of a fossil fuel plant.
You know, so even kids notice terrible.
Kids notice.
There's windmills in the environment.
We're talking thousands, thousands, and thousands of yards of concrete.
They have to dig up massive areas and pour so much concrete.
And concrete is horrible for the environment.
It off-gases for something like 20 years.
Like it's so bad.
Not only that, but then these things have a lifespan and then that entire thing is like hazardous waste when it's got to be taken down.
Right.
And they leak oil constantly.
They kill wild.
It's like, yes, yes.
They drive neighbors insane with the hum.
I was up on a windmills multiple times.
I wanted to say that it's so dumb, even kids notice it.
Like, you know, I always explain to them, oh, yeah, those make electricity by the wind spinning the blades, and that turns a generator in there that creates the electricity or a turbine.
And they're like, well, why, why aren't they running?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
If it's too windy, they don't run.
If it's not windy enough, obviously they don't run.
It's like, well, when do they run?
Yep.
And America, of course, like Russia, has a wealth of energy abundance.
Oil, gas, coal.
We would could be fine.
Like Europe to a certain extent.
Yeah.
Europe didn't even want to do fracking.
They have the ability, not as good a resources as we do, but they were like, oh, no, too dangerous.
The earthquakes.
The construction of a fifth, just real quick, I'm still thinking about concrete.
The 15 to 20 foot deep concrete foundation to support a 328 foot high turbine requires 30,000 tons of cement.
That's sustainable.
It's so ridiculous.
Right.
That's so much.
That's so much better than burning coal.
Yeah, no, I mean, the amount of times that I've read the phrase, not a lot of wind blowing or some kind of variation on that in the last two years is just off charts.
And here in Europe, actually, we have, we are, especially in Norway, we've gotten a long way towards not building these windmills on land because we did build a few of these windmill farms and they look just dystopian as heck.
Yeah, they're bizarre.
Yeah, like when you, when you're driving among them, you're like, oh, wow, something it's like a scene taken straight out of the matrix, you know?
Yeah.
And exactly.
And the moment government offshore.
Windmills are good, like for milling grain, I'm thinking.
Or something like that.
And tilting it.
Yeah, tilting.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sure.
That's right.
The moment governments even float the idea of rescinding or cutting back their tax credits and rebates and subsidies, they cry bloody murder because they know that they'll be dead in the water without the government basically funding their own country's destruction of their energy security.
It's something to behold.
Laritz, you someone told me I didn't realize that you had this nickname yet, but that you were the captain of the longboat black pill, which I thought was nice.
Black pill, longboat.
I like longboat black pill better.
Anyway.
And you took, we can come back to energy if we want.
I want to tell Smasher about the structural reinforcement I did today too, a little side note, but you took, I don't know how long it was, but you basically ghosted from the scene for an extended period of time.
Again, I don't remember when it was.
And I think either you admitted or people speculated that it was because you were like, this is kind of hopeless, guys.
What are we doing here?
We're just, you know, commenting on things that we don't have power on and putting ourselves at risk for it.
So what happened there?
And why'd you come back?
It was a twofold kind of event.
to kind of uh work the synergies of one another and just kind of spiraled me into a very dark hole indeed uh one part of it you say it was the working synagogues Yes, it was two working synagogues in concert.
One part was the external things.
Things were not looking good for us.
We were completely unable to organize.
It seemed like we were literally just reading and reacting every week.
There was nothing.
I mean, this was before the time of the organizations that were starting to form.
We were just basically floundering after Charlottesville.
So on that side, I was like, what's the point here?
Where are we going?
We're literally just painting big bullseyes on ourselves and waiting to be picked up by the feds or whatever for doing no crimes at all.
On the other side, doing minutes from the deaf camp, doing third rail, doing all these shows where I had to actively go in and dig through all these terrible, awful, disheartening, grotesque stories of human suffering and misery and evil week after week after week was just getting to me mentally.
Like I was noticing it in my daily life.
I was starting to, I was starting to hate, frankly.
I was starting to hate everything and everyone around me, and I just couldn't live in that space anymore.
So I just had to step away, take a little sabbatical for two and a half years, and focus on my own life, basically.
And the reason why I decided to come back is the gloves are off now.
Like there's no way of putting this genie back in the bottle.
I know I've been saying that in 2018 as well, but now it's more true than ever.
Like we are approaching an endgame here.
And whether or not I disengage from it is not going to change the fact that it's coming.
So I might as well be on the winning team.
Hell yeah.
So if I'm hearing you correctly, it was sex tourism in Botswana that occupied you for two and a half years.
Look, some people, oh man.
Hot and tots.
Got a north sweat.
Very, no, really well put.
And of course, nobody was like, you fag, you know, get out.
You're not welcome back.
You took some time off, which I think is a lesson for a lot of the guys in the audience.
We have a question in the second half from a young guy who wants to get involved, but he's got a promising career ahead of him.
And he's facing that whole dilemma of do I focus just on the professional and possibly be more use that way, just a teaser for the second half.
Or do I do what maybe my soul is telling me and plunge headfirst and throw caution to the wind?
We will get to that.
As of right now, Laritz, you pay a lot of attention to American politics and Trump and everything.
Again, Biden's speech was very spooky, as spooky as a Septogenarian, you know, rambling, doddering old man can be, because it was hyper-partisan.
It was angry, and it was basically a threat.
He was telling MAGA, he said MAGA Republicans repeatedly throughout.
And then he sprinkled white supremacists and the specter or the evil, the darkness of Charlottesville in there at the end.
Specter was to me.
He was too scared.
He was too heated.
He didn't make the height requirement.
No, but to me, I almost took it as a positive in the sense that it's unequivocal.
Now, whatever, whatever we're thinking.
Whatever we think of MAGA Republicans and whatever they think of us, we are the same in the eyes of the system.
And I saw this as a gauntlet being thrown down, almost like a warning sign or a red cape to Trump the bull.
You better not come back in.
The indictments will be waiting for you if you decide to.
Take that where you will about whether we're on the same side with the other mostly white Americans who don't necessarily agree with our views on race and the Jews or Trump or both, whatever you're thinking about our political scene now.
Because I know you sincerely do pay a lot of attention to it and have good analysis.
Yeah.
What I really love to say back in the day after Charlottesville and all that is like, you know, we're not trapped here in there with them.
They're trapped in here with us.
And that's just becoming more and more true by the day.
And as I was just mentioning, you know, we're leading up to an end game here.
And yeah, they're stuck with us.
And in a way, Joe Biden should be thanking us because he ran on Charlottesville.
I don't know if you remember his coming out, his candidacy speech.
He was like, oh, the whole racism of Charlottesville.
I'm like, I did that.
It's amazing, right?
Yeah.
All right.
So do you think that there's, because after January 6th, that was my takeaway was, well, welcome to the club, guys.
You are now, if you like Trump, and God knows if you went to January 6th, you are now in the boat with us, like it or not.
Is there some fusion or, you know, having the same enemy or the same oppressor likely here?
Or is that a fantasy?
Because here's what he said.
He said something like, MAGA Republicans do not respect the Constitution or the rule of law and are working right now in state after state to give power to partisans and cronies and election deniers.
I mean, he's throwing 35, 40% of the country.
He's spitting in their eye right now.
Do you think Trump is going to win?
Or do you think Trump is going to run if he does run?
Does he have a chance?
Or is this all just like a foreshadowing of gulags to come?
Well, I wanted to sort of rewind like 20 seconds on that and just say, I think this is a result of Joe Biden facing internal pressures.
Inasmuch as that, I believe in electoral politics.
All of media and most of his own party speculating he's not going to be running again in 2024.
And I think his increased militancy is just his way of saying, I'm not going to get a single one of votes from white people, white Republicans anyway.
So I'm going to use them to light a fire under my own base and show them that I can still be militant.
I can still be tough.
He's taking a leaf out of Trump's book, really, is what I think.
I think Trump is going to be trying to run again, and I don't think he's going to win.
All right.
Rolo, I missed your hand up, you sensitive polite soul.
Well, I think that this is more state miscalculations, out of touch, whatever you want to call it.
Because I was talking to my co-hosts earlier about this, because it seems like this is what you would do to set someone up to fail because everything about it is so unlikable and so nasty.
And I don't think it's anything other than the system using Joe Biden as their vehicle to say, we've had enough of your crap.
You are not to go against us.
You fall in line or we're coming for you.
I think that's all it is.
I don't think it's anything other than that.
Joe Biden is, he doesn't know where he is.
He has things fed to him in an earpiece.
He has to read a teleprompter and he often reads everything that's on the teleprompter, even things that'll say, now smile.
He has no idea what's going on.
Merrick Garland has been very open about prioritizing white domestic extremists as the only thing that he cares about.
Earlier this evening, the Shibun press secretary said that anyone that doesn't go along with what the rest of the country wants is an extremist, as if those people have any idea what the country wants as far as a plurality or majority.
The system is scared of us, and they're tired of people coming over to our camp because every day, more and more people realize that the deck is stacked against them and they're bringing in people to replace them.
And the financial system is set up to destroy them and make them tax slaves.
I don't completely disagree with you.
I think you overestimate their fear or concern about us.
I suspect that, you know, Biden got a little bit of a bad thing.
I think it's more, well, I think it's more, it's hubris.
It's them trying to be the adult saying like, okay, you know, you had your tantrum and they're saying like, we, we have the guns and we, we got the fighter jets and the bombs.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's floating.
Joe Biden did.
He did threaten people with like tanks and fighter jets.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You need an F-15 to fight the government.
By the way, I also am coming to take your quote-unquote assault rifles.
I saw it as when somebody is like, you can't fight the government with your AR, you just look at them and be like, but you're my neighbor.
Yeah, I saw it as his advisors sort of riding or trying to build a wave like pure politics.
Like, all right, you got a little bump in the polls.
The midterms are coming up.
You got your Inflation Reduction Act passed.
Let's hit the gas a little bit and have this big speech in Philly, which, by the way, was wonderfully serenaded by Philly PD sirens in the background multiple times.
You know, just a little American serenade.
Go ahead, Larita.
I mean, this also comes right on the eve of this student debt forgiveness as well.
Right.
So it's obviously some sort of electoral push, I think.
And whether how much of it is that and how much of it conforms with Rollo's theory, I guess time will tell.
I did notice one thing, one interesting thing, though, while we were talking.
That is yesterday, Trump apparently vows to pardon everyone who was involved in January 6th, which he's not going to do.
But the fact that he's saying, hey, hey, hey, he'll win.
He should have done a wall too.
And then he's going to bring back the industry.
He's going to do it this time.
Let's go.
Let's go.
Now, Vincent James did say that you actually can't pardon anyone who hasn't committed a crime yet.
Let's go.
Jimmy Carter and Vietnam draft evaders and Gerald Ford.
Let's go.
I don't know.
I mean, it's kind of a pipe dream.
Like, MAGA has the numbers, obviously, compared to us.
We have the truth and the fighting spirit, and not some of these, I'll call them foolhardy priors about fascism and race and anti-Semitism.
And it's really hard to see a marriage come along.
But a speech like that, where they keep getting demonized and basically taunted and told to get in line, is going to contribute to some sort of convergence to a certain extent.
Charlie Kirk's and Nick Fuentes's aside.
Laritz, I wanted to ask you real quick.
Obviously, I think I busted your chops on air.
You didn't think the Russian invasion of Ukraine was going to happen.
I thought it did.
I won.
After this, you know, we'll keep going.
What do you, yeah, what do you think now, Laritz?
Do you, um, sincere question?
Do you think that net net Russia is in the right here and it's only a matter of time and they're basically bleeding uh Europe dry?
Sorry for the really long-winded questions this week.
No, no worries at all.
First of all, my utter absolute cope on that was like, I just want an excuse to send you guys a care package and to see you try and drink that god-awful chocolate for the kids, and I got some flowery uh mouthwash.
Yes, yes, botanic aqua beat, terrible, terrible stuff.
But you drank it though, kudos to you.
Um, I love aqua movie, I love it.
Aquabeet is good, but I bought in botanic.
Oh, all right, Sam, get in on the wager game with Laritz.
Come on, he's a sucker.
Yeah, yeah, get me a bottle.
Yeah, no, I have to say, I was, I was completely wrong, and it turns out like I'm not very good at reading Russia whatsoever because my next step was like, okay, now they're just gonna strangle Europe by immediately throttling the natural gas exports.
But they haven't been because it seems like they've preferred to go like a sort of a slow bleeding sort of route instead, where they, you know, like the Nord Stream one, which is the big gas pipeline to Europe, is like instead of going 0% immediately, they went 60% and then 40% and then 20%.
And now it's down for maintenance.
And I'm sure they're going to bring it back up again to continue to squeeze money out of Europe.
Ratcheting.
Yep.
Yeah.
So it turns out I don't have the mindset to properly read Russia as has been shown time and time again by my predictions being either completely wrong as in the case of the Ukraine war or just completely off also in terms of these things.
So I can't really like, I can speculate, obviously, but I can't say I hold any particular insights into Russia.
But I will say this, I don't, like, I'm completely neutral on the war.
I don't think they have a, I think they do have a good argument for the NATO encroachment sort of theory that did seem to be happening.
Gay Ops was popping up in their border countries just prior to this.
Like you had Kazakhstan uprisings, you had Belarus election meddling.
That's right.
And not to mention Ukraine.
I still think Russia is going to win, but unlike a lot of people who are very, very optimistic about this.
And Dharma King, I'm looking at you specifically.
This is going to be a long-winded process.
This is going to take years, not months.
I think so too.
I made a wager with a buddy that we're certainly going to see hostilities still on January 1st, 2023.
They're not wrapping this up this year.
And they seem content.
We're really robbing you of third rail content this week.
Laritz, thank you for indulging us.
All right, before we go to the break, I'm so happy.
I'm all smiles here through the microphone to have my good pal on.
But what's your favorite or what is, yeah, what's your favorite childhood memory, my friend?
Don't think too hard about it.
On the spot, what comes to mind from far up north?
Oh my God.
That kind of puts me on the start.
I was like, ooh, childhood memories.
That's the idea.
What comes in mind?
It doesn't have to be special.
Well, the first thing that left into my mind, and I swear to God, this has nothing to do with what Rollo is about to present, is I remember a winter's day as a child.
That must have been seven or eight.
I was walking and it was kind of cold where you can see your breath.
The snow crystals are sparkling.
You know, you have some snow falling off the pine trees, etc.
The sun is out, but you can't feel the rays.
And I just finished reading Lord of the Rings.
And I don't know, that was just such a magical moment that it stayed with me for the rest of my life.
So, and I felt bliss in that moment.
I don't know why, but amazing.
All right, Rolo, play the clip.
No, Amazon Studios will not be including elves of color in their upcoming Lord of the Rings television series.
Referred to as an easily debunked hoax by the Daily Dot.
This rumor was started by an intrepid member of the anime right before spreading like a firestorm through both left-wing and right-wing communities equally.
Now, the interesting thing about that is it's how wrong I was.
Well, no, well, I mean, that's the funny thing about it.
But the interesting thing about it was that was an episode where you were a guest on.
So you were listening to yourself, listening to yourself, and now you're listening to yourself, listening to yourself, listening to yourself.
This is morphed from a Laritz love fest to a roast here at the end of the top of the first.
All right.
And I did mention just to break you down.
That's right.
Got to do it.
It's not just.
I don't want everyone to think we're gay for you.
Come on.
Rolo's mother.
If I came on here and didn't get my chops busted, something would be terribly, terribly wrong.
So true.
Now, Laritz, I did tease the audience with a specter of your accent talents.
So before we go to the break, I would like you to tell us in an Indian accent what your recipe would be for European energy security and independence.
Oh my God, this is not very difficult, guys.
You burn the core.
You don't pay the tour.
Oh, so simple.
So elegant.
So wonderfully delivered.
Lurits, I know you're still wiping the cobwebs from your eyes.
You down to play too?
Oh, absolutely.
All right, God bless.
Well, the break music is all yours, my friend.
Let the audience know what they're going to hear before we refresh our beers on this side of the Atlantic and maybe our coffee on that side.
Oh, absolutely.
So, I've picked a remake of a very, very popular medieval song called the Rulanskvadet, which is the story of Roland, one of Charlemagne's paladins, made by none other than Hard Look.
So please enjoy that.
We'll be right back.
welcome back to Full House, episode 138, part two.
We are down an Irishman, but still up a Viking.
And as we all know, the Vikings truly founded the identity and the history and the reality of Ireland in one way or the other.
I don't know if that's true.
It's probably true.
That is completely true.
Dublin is a Viking port.
Waterford, Wexford, these are Viking places.
And the surname Lachlan means it's from Vikings, actually.
Well, thank you, Lolt.
I just wanted to bust Smasher's chops, but I knew that there was Viking influence there.
This is the building up and then breaking down or conversely breaking down, building up a show.
And I just wanted to say, in the defense of the Irish, the Vikings could never conquer it because they were too hard bastards.
Not unlike Scotland, which we rolled over with relative ease.
There you go.
Ulster Scrot put on notice.
Sincere apologies to the audience.
If you can hear my dog barking outside, I have closed all the windows and the doors.
I had them open intentionally a little bit of the last lingering sound effects of summer with the crickets and the cicadas in here.
I asked the bros and they said, yeah, it sounds good, coach.
It's crickets after you give a long stem winder and nobody has anything to say.
But anyway, she's still out there barking at a raccoon up a tree or something.
We will soldier on.
And the teaser that I had, just I have so few opportunities in life to gloat about a hands-on physical mechanical accomplishment.
But the main recording studio down in the valley is, of course, the gazebo, which has been sagging down at one end in the middle.
You can just see the long board, not long boat, but long board running, was literally turning into a U instead of a straight plane.
So my dutiful, loving wife bought on her own volition.
We talked about it.
She got a 40-ton flapjack, cracker jack, building jack.
But I can't remember what kind of jack it was called, but just the Home Depot brand Husky, I think.
And got, and I had to dig under there because the thing was about almost a foot tall.
No, not a foot tall, whatever.
It was tall.
And I had to dig out enough under the gazebo to get it down there, find the right spot, jack it up.
And you could literally see the thing rising up.
I was half concerned it was all going to collapse with the pressure, wedged a cinder block on one side of it and a sturdy log on the other.
And then I couldn't get the damn thing down.
I released the pressure with the little knob in the front and a little bit of the gazebo sagged down, but I couldn't get the jack out of there.
So I thought, oh, maybe we're just going to eat that 70 bucks and leave that sucker down there for eternity.
But no, went to the bros to get a little professional expertise.
And it turns out they were all wrong.
I didn't need to hammer it down or to pry it down.
I actually had to get my hand on there on the steel rod and give it a little bit of downward pressure.
Reminded me of my time as a teenager in my bedroom.
No, sorry.
I did have to manually adjust it down before it declined.
I got that sucker out of there, replaced it with another, some sort of support prop steel thing that was left around the property here from prior owners.
And the gazebo is now not likely to collapse in the next two days or so.
So that's the end of that.
Thank you.
These are my minutes from trying to be handy when I'm not handy.
Moving on, of course, to new white life.
Our audience always says it's one of the best parts of the show.
So here we go.
First up, I don't know if this is an order of importance, but the first one certainly is.
Our old producer, who we rightfully called Mr. Reproducer at one point, welcomed his fifth child into the world recently.
And everybody says it used to be, oh, I'm ahead of Smasher.
He had a gamble with Smasher and whether he was going to win.
And then Smasher had two twins and blew him out of the water.
But everybody always compares themselves to Sam's lodestar.
And the listener, let me know that he's going to exceed you soon, knock on wood.
I can't say anything.
I don't want to jake somewhere.
Just, you know, you set the benchmark there.
But congratulations to Mr. Reproducer and Wifey.
And it was not an easy arrival.
I think little guy needed a little bit of O2 there.
And anyway, that is four in four years for that fecant couple.
Truly impressive.
Congratulations, guys.
We see you there smiling.
We miss you.
Don't be strangers.
I'm just waiting for the opportunity to fire Rolo and bring back real talent onto the show.
So say the word.
I have babies, schmabies.
Come on back anytime.
Even if you just want to be a special guest sometime.
All right.
To our other good pal, Dio Vendiche.
He said he welcomed another one to his brood, and it sounded like he's got a lot.
He didn't compare himself to Sam, but he was very proud, Papa, that the boy or girl weighed in at eight pounds, eight ounces.
And you could see someone from on high smiling down on that little lad or lass.
Dio Vendiche and wife, thanks for being good online pals and congratulations for sure.
Yeah.
Great.
We got a third party note here.
People are coming out of the woodwork to congratulate their friends, but this guy is, he's connected.
Hello, sir.
I have never reached out before, but I love the show.
It makes my days at work great when I see a new episode is out.
He capitalized great.
Anyway, one of my buddies, you can call him Jay, just had his second child and his first daughter.
I haven't gotten to meet her yet, but I'm very excited to meet her soon.
The new white life segment is one of my favorite things you guys do on the show.
So I just wanted to share.
We've had quite a few births in my area recently, and having all of the kids around at cookouts and everything else we do now, it always reminds me we all need to do our best every day to make sure they have a world with a future.
Thanks for everything you've done.
And that's from BD.
Thank you, BD.
And now be gone with you as I congratulate Jay and Mrs. J on their wonderful new daughter.
So exciting to have a boy and a girl and to see the differences right off the bat.
I know Sam always says you want to have girls first so they can help out with those little boys and their messes and their cantankerous natures, but you can't lose whatever it is.
Congratulations, Jay and Mrs. J.
And what was I going to say?
Oh, yeah, the thing about birth rates and deaths of despair and the black bodies all moving into the sparsely populated, white, rapidly diminishing areas.
Every new white life you bring forth in this world, every attempt you make to do so is a revolt that says, no, we will not go quietly into the night.
No, we will not accept your programming of birth control, abortion on demand, small families, my career, muh feminism, mu sports ball for the dudes there.
So we true, truly salute you guys.
And I'm jealous, right?
Yeah.
As the kids are getting older, Sam, I was riding the UTV.
I was cutting some trees down on the property, dead ones that look like this winter they might fall on the road and leave a nasty surprise, you know, like, oh, you cannot get out unless you fire up the chainsaw.
And just for no reason, all potatoes started running down the road.
We had already cut down the trees and he was running down the road ahead of the UTV.
And he was still little, but he was running like a competent grown human being.
And I thought, oh man, I took a picture of it and I almost got choked up.
I'm getting choked up now thinking about it.
Just I'm losing the access to innocent young little life.
You know, my kids are growing up.
Yeah.
It's precious.
Yeah.
Appreciate it, guys.
Jealous and overjoyed for all the new parents out there and the ones welcoming new young ones into their homes.
Larites.
Oh, go ahead, Sam.
Please first.
Well, you hear about, you know, bad birth rates and this and that.
I don't think that applies among our guys.
No, absolutely not.
It's technically circumstantial, but our circles are not so big that you can say that this is an aberration or whatever.
I mean, it's just left and right, almost a daily occurrence, even if we don't know about it.
Loritz, I didn't probe in the first half and I'm not doing so now.
But time horizon, what's going on, big guy?
You're not exactly short in the tooth.
Well, it's just a matter of life situation, I guess.
I think we're looking at a couple of years just.
So it's coming up.
Okay.
All right.
Hope she's young.
Just kidding, ladies, it's okay.
You can still have them.
They're a little bit older.
Younger than I, in any case.
Very good.
Good men.
Godspeed.
And I will go buy a bottle of botanical Aqua Veet on the show that we do new white life for our good pal, Laritz.
You know, I've really enjoyed out of our local liquor store here.
I can get the Linney, the kind of the bulwark brand of Norwegian AquaVeet.
Delicious, you know, and the price is right on that stuff, too.
Hell yeah.
Can't get Ruski Standard or any Russian spirits anymore.
They are banned in West Virginia and so many other states, which is so silly.
So silly and stupid.
So if you're listening to this, please, no, that's okay.
Don't send me vodka.
I don't need that.
All right.
Yeah, right.
Please.
Yeah.
Trafficking in like state sanctioned spirits back in Prohibition era, Russian style.
It's insane.
I got a bunch of questions from the audience.
Before we do that, though, while we have the most ears in the second half, we got a sincere feds meeting feds.
Rolo, you need to come up with like the, I don't know, what's the Tele Savalis crime?
Players club.
Okay, Beverly Hills cop.
Dude, dude, dude.
Anyway.
Telly Savalis.
I'm talking of Kojak.
Kojak.
Wanted to say Wojack.
I was like, all I could think of was Wojack.
That was Night Stalker.
Anyway, that's Kolej, the Night Stalker.
Kojak was telling you all.
Do I go to the oldest birth panelist or the spurgiest one on pop culture?
Always the spurgiest one.
Come on.
The oldest one doesn't know the difference between the night stalker and Kojak.
And then the memes got in my brain instead of actual knowledge.
Kojak.
Anyway, Feds Meeting Feds, nice lad who is well known to us.
He's not some stranger off the street.
Wrote in and I told him, just give me the basics.
And he says, handsome dour bachelor seeks his Miss Bennett.
Now, that must be a literary reference.
Is that like Pygmalion or George Bernard Shaw?
Anyone know Miss Bennett?
Over my head.
Laritz has only got Norwegian Knut Hampson and Ibsen.
He only knows.
Thank you.
It's hard to get things over his head, though.
My wife is going to be so upset that I didn't know that that was Jane Austen.
Anyway, he's 6'1, college educated.
He's bilingual, also knows German.
He's got good bench and squat numbers: 300 bench, 450 squat.
All right.
This guy's really peeled up.
Yeah, what's it?
Well, what's his body fat percentage?
Oh, Jesus.
Stop.
All right.
And he says he is actually from a wealthy family, enjoys board games, working out, being outdoors, hunting, fishing, hiking, et cetera, as well as reading and writing fiction in my spare time.
And he is in his mid to late 20s and sent me a pic, no homo.
And he was definitely more handsome than our previous two top feds meeting feds contenders, Rolo Tomasi and Gordon Calls.
So anyway, ladies, he is in the south of the United States and seems like a very good dude.
No, he is well respected.
And he just wanted to give it a shot.
So thank you, buddy.
Full house show at protonmail.com or hit me up on Telegram or whatever.
Tell your friends and let's make a love connection.
Let's get this fired up again and make it happen.
All right.
Good luck, brother.
Thank you for writing in.
Here we go.
Easy question first.
And this is from Pistachio Deschise.
I think he's written in before, but he says, Hey, boys, big fan of the show, longtime listener, first time caller, so to speak.
I was curious about something and I don't know where to begin.
So I reached out to you.
Do you know any of our guys who make clothes, not graphic tees?
I'm not looking for merch.
I'm looking more for general clothing that's high quality and fashionable, sort of like dissident soaps.
Another plug there.
Also, don't forget Mighty White Soap Co.
They're on our side.
The product can stand on its own merits.
Shoes in particular.
I'm in the market for this and that.
And I have no desire to give my money to people who want me dead when there might be people who share our beliefs who could use support from a brother in arms.
Please let me know.
Keep fighting the good fight.
You're truly doing God's work.
Hail victory from Pistachio Discheze.
Only one thing came to mind, but for me, but I will turn it over to the birth panel for real clothing.
Doesn't have to be our guys.
Well, at least give them a start.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, Lana Loctas famously offers this, you know, pure clothing.
You know, it's not blended or anything like that.
You get pure cotton shirts and pants and stuff like that.
So for men too, Sam?
Yes.
Yeah, I believe so.
Lana Lakta from Red Ice.
You know, I don't know much more about it than that.
I watched her talk about it one time.
Redice.tv.
I remember it was called Lana's Llamas or something like that.
Yeah, check that out.
But also THOR Steiner, THOR Steiner, they have a very kind of fashionable stuff and kind of sporty type clothing and stuff like that.
Check that out and uh Thorsteiner, our guys, or just uh yeah oh absolutely, absolutely.
And you know, I i'm not sure exactly what you're looking at, but uh, if you're looking for, like you know, nice polo shirts and stuff like that, I mean uh, Midguardshop.org uh has uh stuff and there's a lot of stuff out there, you know.
But start with a couple of those and uh, I think you'll find stuff.
Uh, a European Brotherhood label uh brand, European Brotherhood brand.
That's a good one.
Yeah, I shouldn't be surprised.
Yeah yeah there's, I think.
Yeah yeah, there you go.
Yeah there's, there's all kind of stuff.
Yeah, what do I?
Got new balance and then i'm going to leave one for Laritz, which I have quite a few items of their clothing in my club.
Well I, I seem to remember there was a guy that we all know that it did like appeal to heaven polos.
Uh yeah I, I honestly I, I know, I know the guy and I don't know if he wants me to say that it was him, so won't, but I don't remember that company.
You know what i'm talking about.
I know what you're talking about.
I'll check with him after the show and I will put these all in their own special segment of clothing.
Plugs, pro bono from FULL House for people looking to stay up with the cold winter approaching.
Uh, possibly keep the money within ourselves.
Parallel, absolutely separate economy and all that screw parallel, so perpetuate.
We're going perpendicular, not parallel.
Uh, Laritz likes Tommy Hilfiger and Ralph Lauren.
I know uh, roughly my age.
Actually, I used to like GANT a lot, but then I realized uh, you know, GANT was Jewish.
I was like, oh no, I never even heard of GANT.
Really, it's America geez, go figure.
Yeah, what a chart have you ever done?
One of those?
What is it?
I missed that one.
A GANT chart?
Oh yeah, that that rings a bell more than their clothing.
But uh, in all seriousness uh, give us the scoop on the good old Double H Laritz.
Well yes, they're actually a good company or, if it's just a funny meme no, it's.
Uh, i'm very, very fond of the old H. Uh, it's a little pricey.
So if you had something on sale, you know you should always keep a lookout for a good uh, a good deal on that.
You know, all Jewishness aside um, they make extremely, extremely good UH, Hardy clothes for, for for adverse weather, I guess you could say.
And UH is absolutely Goish, Norwegian in origin.
I do have many of their items of clothing and it's mostly made in Asia.
Unfortunately, a European I don't know if I heard this through the grapevine or not, but I did hear that European pro-whites or nationalists it's.
It's funny how we're.
We're just calling ourselves nationalists, now we drop the white, which I don't know if that's too cutesy or not, but that they would actually wear helly handsome gear to signal to each other.
I would guess up by you, that's neutered a little bit just by saturation.
Yeah, there would be some dilution from the single effect up here, considering the weather and whatnot.
But I mean, the clothes were made by a Norwegian fisherman of the same stock as the two guys who rode across the Atlantic.
So, you know, you're getting a good deal.
Hell yeah.
And the stuff that I have, my wife got almost exclusively on eBay for way cheaper than sticker price.
So if you still have an eBay account that you haven't dusted off in a while and you want to rock some HH gear, that would be the place to do it.
All right.
Good luck with that, Pistachio.
Again, links in the show notes if I remember.
No, I will remember.
Question two.
Dear coach and associates, I am a young man currently facing a difficult choice about the future and my life.
The fundamental problem comes from the fact that if I pursue the kind of IRL activism that is so necessary for our people, I will without a doubt lose the chance of pursuing my chance at joining the ranks of the kinds of high-skilled professionals that our movement also so desperately needs.
I cannot go into the details of my situation, but suffice it to say that I have the means, ability, and drive to achieve either a bar license, a PhD, or an MD.
I suppose my question, however poorly worded, is would the race be better served by a street activist now or a doctor, lawyer, academic in 10 years?
Hail Columbia, hail Europa.
And that's from WK.
Thank you, WK.
Serious question.
Plenty of young listeners debating and older listeners too.
Is it worth me getting involved, putting my skin in the game and either losing my job or losing my future professional prospects?
Over to you, gents.
Well, I would say you can definitely do both.
As far as being this completely self-sacrificing person that's doing nothing but political activism and fighting on the streets and all that, I think it's not that time on the calendar for that.
So I think you can really do both.
There's a lot of us without going into details that in fact do both things.
Indeed.
The first thing that came to mind is that it does not have to be an either or.
You can get involved with those groups and not necessarily go out on the street.
Because what are you going to get dox from?
You're going to get doxxed from your face being at a enemy surveilled event or you're going to get doxxed from having a spicy or even remotely followed social media account.
Right.
So you can get involved and meet those guys and contribute and work behind the scenes and then cop out when it comes to showtime in terms of performing, not performing, but engaging in activism.
But it's definitely not either or.
And we're building our communities all over the place.
There's more things that you can take part in than ever before.
I mean, you just go to any one of our channels.
I myself have posted so many flyers of things that you can go and be part of.
There's a lot that you can do and you don't have to take foolish chances or be doing something stupid.
Definitely develop your career, develop as a person.
Definitely be part of our community and do the good things that make sense to do and building community and just bringing more people in.
Yeah, we know tons of guys who are accomplished and working and contributing and still are engaged and aren't like living in fear of the docks over their heads.
Yeah, to steal a phrase, you know, those who those who can do and those who can't contribute.
That's always a vector for you as well.
Like if you don't want to get your face out there and do the IRL activism, then there's always the option of supporting either financially or morally or just being an online presence as well.
I mean, more and more of our everyday lives are happening online.
And just as important as having a presence in the real sphere is also having an online presence, especially now that we're being shown from everything that exists.
Yeah.
Do everything possible within your capacity minus the highest risk docs vectors would be my advice.
Rollo, hand up.
Unfortunately.
Well, go ahead, please.
I want to hear what you want to say.
Thank you.
No, you don't, but thank you for teacher really loved your manners.
They all did.
So the real question is, what do you does this guy think this online activism entails where you cannot have enough OPSEC to protect your identity?
Because some guys do get doxxed, but how much activism do you think goes on every day where the guys are safe and they're protected and they take enough precautions to make sure it doesn't come back to them?
Well, he's talking about the opportunity.
If he says street activists, yes.
And how often do Patriot Front go out there?
Like we always see it on Telegram.
There'll be like 150 pictures like Patriot Front this weekend.
It's all across the country that doing that.
And how often do Patriot Front people get doxxed?
The Cordeline thing happened, but apart from that, when was the last one?
And how often?
Any kind of dissident, well, hold on.
Any kind of dissident.
It's not European winter approaching.
It's Rolo's commentary.
Go ahead.
Any kind of dissident activity is going to carry risks, whether it's street activism or any kind of like flyering or podcasting.
There's going to be inherent risks.
So nothing that you do is going to be perfectly safe.
So your option is you got to take a risk and put yourself out there if you think that this cause needs more men in it, or you can listen to podcasts and stay home and watch men do banner.
Well, no, you should do that regardless.
But watching men do banner drops and saying, oh, you know, I wish that were me.
Like, these are your options.
Well, yeah, if you're going to do it, you're going to be doing activism a lot and you're not allowed to be a shirker.
So if he's worried about that, to answer your question, right?
That's not my question.
Well, I mean, it was a hypothetical.
It was, it was really like, what do you think?
Like, do you think Patriot Front is like, you know, Goyam TV where you're out there with your face exposed and you're just like screaming gamer words?
So slightly lower risk, but yeah.
Yeah, slightly lower.
But everything that you do in this sphere, there's going to be risk.
You got to be smart.
Just be smart.
That's the main thing is.
Don't be rash.
Your face is going to be covered if it's something that has a lot of heat on it, you know, and you don't feel comfortable with it.
Maybe talk it over with everyone.
Say, like, hey, what do we do to take a precaution here?
Because this seems like this could be a trap.
So you just have to, you got to weigh the good with the bad.
And yeah, we're going to talk to Sewell about active clubs too.
That is the new proliferating thing.
I feel a little bit like Grandpa here, like, oh, active clubs is the new thing.
And I want to ask him about it because I know he's a big proponent about it.
We almost had Tom on last Saturday, but he had something going on last minute that we couldn't make it happen.
But I suspect that for some of these groups, you're not allowed to join and shirk to a certain extent to avoid the docs risk.
Others, you are, and it's more casual and it's fine.
I would also ask the listener to say that he's like thinking either bar or MD or PhD.
It doesn't sound like he has it all figured out yet.
So I appreciate the confidence, but it's also that's a long road to get there for you.
There's another angle is you don't have to be the street activism guy.
There's there are plenty of other things that you can do.
Like if you really, really want to do the street activism and like you think it's your duty, maybe you got to do it.
But there's other ways to be involved.
And nature's calling him.
He's a young dude and he wants to answer.
Regardless or not, if you want to actually participate in these events, you should always send money to full house.
Go ahead, Laritz.
I heard that baritone trying to sneak in there.
No, I just wanted to sort of, I mean, I'm sure I'm preaching to the choir and I'm sure this guy is already sort of involved, but just as a general, flip the question on its head, like not, you know, what risks am I taking, but what benefits am I getting out of this?
And the question is, can you really afford to be without a social network of fellow white men in the times coming up ahead?
My answer to that is a clear resounding no.
You cannot afford to be isolated and alone in this.
You have to have a network.
You just do.
Absolutely.
The thought just to keep your sanity and your well-being.
Imagine getting doxxed and imagine getting doxxed as like a one-off solo online lone wolf and not having a group of friends that you at least met a few times or been over to their house for a barbecue.
That is an unpleasant prospect.
With friends, anything is possible.
And it's been shown time and time again that we do actually support our own people and it's not all and BS.
So go forth confidently there, WK, Andrew WK, I'll call you.
Keep working.
I would say we probably need more lawyers than we need professors or doctors, doctors in particular.
That road seems like a really long, painful and expensive one compared to the others in terms of why get an MD when we have so many quasi-MDs in all of our chats telling us about COVID.
Or yeah, I'm just going to adjust COVID.
There's plenty of things our unlicensed medical professionals tell us about.
Loritz met plenty of future doctors from Botswana who are just aching to get into the United States to get that's the main thing.
You don't need to be a judge.
Bank of America.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, yeah.
But I think to answer this guy's question is if it's such a risk, don't be a street activist.
Get involved in something else.
There's plenty of other things.
Yeah, there is a big menu now.
Yep.
It's not one, this or the other.
Or, you know, hey, you want to be balls out?
I'm not going to criticize you either.
And just on the medical thing real quick, I've had so many people over the past couple months.
I am grateful and honored to have access to a lot of information from a lot of different people, both public and private.
And good God, the horror stories I hear from non-white doctors, either not being able to follow simple questions in English to giving what even to a layman seems like bad medical advice to, of course, just being difficult to understand and everything.
So please, fam.
Oh, yeah.
Non-white doctor, that's the worst, worst thing.
I mean, there's so much involved.
Like when you go to the doctor that he, that he needs to read your body language, right?
You know, like if he asks you, how are you feeling?
You say, ah, I'm fine.
Well, maybe if you're if you're a white person to talking to a white person, you know, there's something more there.
But maybe to the Indian, that's like, okay, you're fine.
All right.
Next question.
To the Indian, it's like, oh, no, that's no problem.
I'll write you a prescription for some codeine.
Right.
Yeah, there's that.
Yeah.
There was a cartoon show in the 90s.
They have no empathy or anything like that, or they have no insight into our, the way we are.
There's whole classes in international relations about cross-cultural communication and how difficult and fraught with hazards it is.
And then especially something like a medical doctor.
I mean, it's a wife or situation.
Yeah.
If I could paraphrase this whole situation, you know, it's like, okay, Mr. Thompson, I have heard about your symptoms.
And since you are feeling okay, I will be doing the needful and closing ticket.
Have some codeine.
That was a softball.
I'm glad I didn't have to remind you, Loritz.
Thank you for professional.
Hey, Dr. Nick, Dr. Nick in The Simpsons didn't have a foreign accent for no reason.
Yeah, well, there was a cartoon show in the 90s called Courage the Cowardly Dog.
And the doctor in that, his name is Dr. Vindalu, is an Indian guy.
And whenever anyone had some obvious like malady where there was some kind of fester all over their body, he said, nothing to worry about.
Nothing at all.
Just keep soaking it.
Yeah.
And here coaches Tucky Corner, a new segment here where I like mint my words.
Are there good non-white doctors out there?
Of course.
No.
They exist.
East Asians.
There are a few.
The Koreans whose family have been here for three generations or that's it.
That's why I said three generations.
That's why I said for three generations, the ones that speak English.
Yeah, I've been in this boat and you have to, this is like unsolicited advice.
Nobody asked about non-white doctors, but we're doing it anyway, damn it.
You have to do the homework.
And for most of your insurance plans, you have to go on to the site, find a provider and go through all of the doctors within whatever mile radius of your home is.
And then you have to play the game.
Ah, that one looks like a normal American name.
That one does.
But then you have to verify it and go to the provider's website and see if they have a picture of the doctor.
A lot of the times they have pictures.
Yeah.
I can't remember whether it was a dentist or general practitioner that I had to do that for.
But in Northern Virginia, it was damn difficult to find just a regular white doctor.
So many of them go into specialties where they can make more money, or they retired and were replaced.
All right.
Take that to heart.
Last question from the audience before we kick it back to Loritz and have a little bit of fun here in the second half.
Not that we're not having fun now.
And this brings up the NQ.
And you know what NQ I'm asking about or I'm mentioning.
Hi, guys.
My child has a NF for a teacher and the F is for faggot.
Due to you could just say gay black.
Thanks, Rola.
My child has a gay black for a teacher.
Due to custody issues, I can't pull him out of school.
And the mother hates me and has threatened me already before.
I spoke to the principal to no avail.
And he sent me a link about this, but I don't want to talk about the specifics.
I'm sure there's plenty of gay black teachers in America.
Can you at least spread the word about this?
I am sick to my stomach whenever I think about this.
It's like my kid is in drag queen story every day.
So it's not just that this is a gay black teacher, but that there's documented evidence that this gay black teacher is spreading both anti-white and homosexual or worse propaganda.
And then he closes with, I've realized that I will need to talk to my kid about things that he shouldn't need to worry about yet.
What would you do in this situation?
And remember, he's divorced and doesn't have custody over the kid.
If Smasher were here, we know what he would say.
But we can't say it.
We can't say it leads.
Yeah, well, it's a tough situation.
I answered it in the chat, you know, earlier, just amongst us, what I would do.
If you have any faith at all, you know, these devils can be suppressed with prayer if you know how to do it.
You have to be careful.
You have to be yourself in a proper state and disposition in terms of faith.
But I find that these devils can be suppressed.
You know, they can't be destroyed necessarily, but they can be suppressed with prayer.
And I would invite you to try to learn about in precarity prayer.
And if you have that type of faith, that's one thing you can do as far as you don't have the custody and your child is involved in this disgusting system.
Other than pray, you have to wait for that right opportunity to calmly talk about this with your child.
Most don't know, but Laritz was exclusively educated by gay blacks in the new Norway up there.
And that was actually the origin of his red pill story, which I forgot to ask at that point.
That's on my festival.
Yeah, that's full circle too.
I do want to get Laritz's take.
Rolo's not at all, but if you are relatively powerless, you tried with the principal, got nowhere.
Mom is a dead end.
I wouldn't take mom being hostile as a total dead end.
I think a sincere and balanced and level approach to your genuine concern for your son's well-being might just play on some rusty cobwebbed heartstrings that divorced mom has.
I don't know, but it's worth a shot.
Unless she's a liberal, in which case you're going to set off all kinds of alarms.
I would tread lightly there.
Tread diplomatically, for sure.
Choose your words carefully, but sincere concern for your son, maybe, maybe might just awaken some Kipling-esque animal spirits in her soul.
But at bare minimum, whatever age your son is, you have to be the inoculation, the vaccinator of him and take him for a long walk the next time you got him, take him to the park, take him for a car ride, and age appropriate, tailor the information to him that this is bad news.
And, you know, it's a really hairy situation.
You don't want to get into too many details about what they want and what they're trying to do, unless he's older.
If he's in high school, for sure, lay it out bare.
But warn him and let him know that if anything really physical happens or over the top to let you know.
And don't forget, and don't forget, too, that you have an army now of relatively siv-nat, quote-unquote, respectable normies out there who love to make stories out of horrific left-wing, anti-white and gay propagandizing public school teachers.
That is an arrow in your quiver that you would have to play carefully.
I don't know if you're a public dissident or not.
But that is something that you can go to.
If it's really as bad as you suspect, and he sent me a link, I didn't click on it, then you can make hay on it.
Well, possibly get some care.
He also mentions here that the mother hates him.
So, you know, I don't know that you can bring this up to the mother.
Indeed.
Yeah, that was a little bit of a Hail Mary, talking to the kid for sure.
And then you got to develop a good rapport with the child and start to have conversations that are, hey, this is just between you and I now, you know, type of a thing.
Go to a school board meeting.
Don't say anything at first.
Just lurk in the background, just like in any good chat, get the lay of the land.
Hopefully you have a network already.
Maybe when you feel like it might be worth raising with evidence to the school board of what's going on, you make sure that you have five or 10 or as many as possible friendlies with you in the crowd to give you a little bit of moral support.
Maybe even come up to the mic and speak as well.
We are powerless in the big picture, but we are not powerless on the ground and in the little fights.
Somebody was talking about a similar situation earlier today and whether he should make a stink.
It was either Boy Scouts or Girl Scouts and some new rule that they had instituted about, you know, it was gays or trannies or something like that.
And the only people who weren't welcome in this Girl Scout troop, I believe it was, were straight white kids.
Anybody was able to be a Girl Scout troop leader and all the rest of it.
And he's like, what should I do?
And everybody was like, well, you have to do something.
Like, this is your kid.
This is your neighborhood.
This is your local Girl Scout troop.
And if you don't do it in that case, then you're really shirking responsibility.
Sorry, Laritz, long diversion, but you're not even a dad yet.
I should give you more guff than Rolo.
Yeah, I don't want to weigh in on this because fatherhood is a realm I've yet to inhabit.
And any advice I could give would just be purely theoretical and not related to life experience.
All right.
He's passing, Rolo.
Over to you.
I think do what Sam said.
I think do what Coach says.
We'll call that even.
No, you are mean to me.
First time for everything.
All right.
I hope I did the audience justice there, or we did the audience justice there.
We don't answer every single email, but the good ones that pique my interest and seem like they're good content, we certainly do go to.
Please keep them coming, fam.
Laritz, serious question.
Why is Sweden such the horror story of Scandinavia instead of Norway and Finland?
Is it just media attention?
Why are they so worse off in terms of DNA?
To be honest, my working theory is that they didn't undergo the horrors of World War II.
They were a neutral country.
And basically, the distance you have to some terrible hardship seems to correlate quite strongly to just how shit libby you are.
That's why America is so far down the path.
And that's why Sweden is so far down the path.
You guys have not suffered privations and bombings and genocides.
And that's why you don't feel the consequences of shit liberty quite as neatly.
Most European countries had to suffer through rationing all the way to the end of the 60s.
And so there are still people alive who remember that.
And that leads to more of a conservative bent, if you will.
I did not see that coming.
I would have thought that Norway being quote-unquote broken after World War II, being part of NATO.
You guys never signed up for the EU, I don't think, or you skipped out of the currency union.
But it's not Norwegian versus Swedish outlooks on the world.
It's really that Sweden was neutral and therefore had a more childish view of the world and a more liberal one.
I would have thought, you know, because you look at the Soviet bloc countries are like better off than the West.
It's just an interesting theory that the neutral ones would be more prey to open borders bullshit to begin with.
Well, again, yeah, like just distance from discomfort.
I think is what he's trying to say.
All right.
And so Norway is better off than Sweden because the people are more resistant to this stuff.
Are there fewer Jews in Norway?
Or why have you not suffered such actions?
They're more nationalistic.
I heard the people were more depressed in Norway.
A lot of theories.
We have a subject matter expert on that.
Just kidding.
That's a black belt joke, not a Laritch joke.
Go ahead.
There we go.
You know, two more clips like that.
I'm going to go outside and kill myself.
But finish the show when you come back in, though.
No, I mean, there's a lot of historical things you could kind of grip a hold of for why these things played out differently.
My theory is, as I said, the neutrality of Sweden, the distance from discomfort that they've suffered has left them more open and vulnerable to bad ideas because comfy countries are lazy countries and lazy countries make mistakes.
However, there's also a good argument to be made for the nationalist resurgence in Norway in the early 1900s.
We're quite a recent nation.
We got our independence from Sweden in 1905, I believe.
So that's just over 100 years.
And as part of that transition, there was a massive upswell of nationalism being proud of where you're from.
In Norway, we call it the national romance because they taught you to fall in love with your country, your culture, your history all over again.
And even growing up in shitlib schools, I was taught that love of country as well.
And I think that's a very, very good vaccine, if you will, against globalism.
There you go.
Do you actually harbor some antipathy towards Swedes in your heart?
The first Nord or Norwegian I ever met, I was on vacation in Belize, young, straight out of central casting, blonde, blue-eyed Aryan, and he just wouldn't stop bad talking Swedes.
He was young and maybe blue-collar.
Is that like a commoner thing as opposed to a widely held sentiment there?
Well, I mean, Norwegians have a public position and a private position on this, if I can borrow a quote from Hillary Clinton.
The public position is, I hate Sweden and everything it stands for.
And they're a bunch of feminine, prancing Lala homo men who can't do anything right and their language is funny.
That's what I heard.
That's what I heard.
The public position in private.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
The private position is, honestly, Swedes aren't all that different from us.
I think it's an overly feminized society.
But if you meet any male Swede, by and large, they're going to be on the level, all right, guys to hang out with, and not at all as shit libby as you think.
And really, the distance between us and Swedes isn't that big.
That's my private position.
But it's more reflective of the government versus the nation whole paradigm is like, because America isn't Joe Biden and Rachel.
What's that guy?
Levine.
Yeah.
Take your picture.
No, well, that too.
Sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'd say most America is like white working class, like, you know, regular people, not a bunch of weird die-hard Zionists and homos and Negro worshipers and Trannies.
So like, I would assume Swedish people, there's a lot more normal ones than the awful government.
Right.
Well, it goes back to the fundamental principles of power, exerting power, and whether or not a nation or at least its government is representative of the will of the people.
And I guess you could say under democracy, that's less true than ever.
Like the interests of the elite are presented and the interests of the people are presented not at all.
And the same is true in Sweden.
Like in the 60s and the 70s and the 80s, you had these you had this upswell of particularly, I think feminism has ruined that country to a large extent.
And what happened was like they got through all these all these laws, all these rule changes, all these incentives to absolutely destroy any form of political organization for men, for conservativism.
Well, for any sort of nationalist feeling, I hate to even use the word conservativism there.
I use it in the classical sense, not in the Republican sense.
And as a result of that, you know, the only organizations that are around now are Jewish-funded NGOs or government-funded NGOs who still call themselves NGOs, funnily enough, and feminist societies and immigrant societies and these power groups.
Well, any sort of nationalist or even just a grouping that speaks on behalf of masculine values or even Swedish values is just utterly destroyed.
So they have no avenues to get into power at all.
And so what you have on the top is a government that represents absolutely nobody, but who will not be supplanted by anyone because there is no alternative because they've been very good at weeding that out.
Sure.
Speaking of it's like on both sides, right?
Because Finland is also kind of a similar story, very nationalistic type of a country.
Both Norway and Finland took the side of the Third Reich in World War II.
So you can see that in the character of both countries.
I mean, we got invaded by Germany and occupied.
So we didn't exactly take their side.
However, I will say that that comes with an asterisk because in the days leading up to Operation Vesselibo, which was the German invasion of Norway, we were all sitting there waiting to take Germany's side.
So in spirit, you're right.
And actually, historically wrong.
We were simply sure that Britain was going to invade us by sea.
And we were just waiting to go, okay, that's going to push us into Germany's open arms.
And then suddenly we have German warships sailing up our fjords.
And we're like, what the?
Go ahead.
I will just say this.
If you ever experience, you know, a battle class, sorry, battleship class military vessel sailing up your fjords coming to take you out of power.
You're allowed an expletive or two.
Indeed.
Not on this show, Mr. This is a dictatorship role, not a republic or a democracy.
And when it comes to editing, I'm the dictator.
I'm the Fuhrer.
I'm the emperor.
I'm the president.
I could listen to the whole file and turn it back, but that just makes it a lot longer.
And then I have people saying, Where's the show, coach?
And I'm like, all right, let it go.
And I did want to add that the Jews were absolutely active in Sweden and their subversion.
I can't remember the documentary off the top of my head, but there's a wonderful one, very thorough.
And there was literally one Jew who held an audience with the prime minister or the king, whoever it was, and basically started the ball rolling with the need.
New blood.
Not to mention the Barba Lerner Spectra quote is about Sweden, which we're all familiar with.
Indeed, from Sweden.
But the reason why I put such a heavy emphasis on feminism is because, anecdotally speaking, females from Sweden are the only people I've ever heard in my entire life who uses the words patriarchy unironically.
Like they live in the most feminized, most woman-ruled country in the world.
And they're like, oh, yeah, patriarchy is an absolute fact of life that we're just dealing with.
I'm like, that was an old talking point back in like 2012, 2013 is the feminist Swedish government turned Sweden from like an economic powerhouse into a third world.
It's like it was on track to be a third world country by like 2032 or something.
More windmills need more windmills.
Yeah, because they had the most liberal policies and it was an objectively feminist government.
Yeah, they're like they're not just like they're literally on paper as calling themselves feminist party, for example, which has a gets quite a few votes up there.
But yeah, they have an explicitly feminist government.
It's true.
They are the nation of feminism.
And now it's so bad that the Jews are leaving.
Too many Melmos, too much anti-Semitism from the news.
Well, you know, when you get regular grenade and acid attacks, it might get a little too hairy for the average.
There's over 100 grenade attacks per year.
Over 100.
They don't even have grenade attacks in East St. Louis.
That's how terrible it is in Sweden.
That's because they don't have access to all of those Yugoslavian military surpluses.
And the Douglas Murrays of the world, which he's a great writer.
He does good work.
They look at this situation.
I did read his sad fate of Europe, whatever it was.
Like sort of, how does a sharp, insightful researching writer like this not really get down more to brass tacks and root causes of civilizational, racial, and national suicide?
It's a total mystery.
It's like there's one thing they can't mention.
I had to ask Claritz, how did you become one of us?
I have no idea.
I must have asked you at some point in the past, but process singular event.
Yeah.
It's almost as banal as my known the shit post.
Unironically, all I wanted was ethics and video game journalism.
Oh, you're a Gamergate guy.
That said it all.
That's how my show started in 2015.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, I remember I was around for the Zoe Quinn thing.
Like I was in on the ground floor day.
I think it was day one of that breaking.
Like I was a big 4chan guy.
I guess you could say I came in through 4chan.
Like I've always had certain leanings towards the blacks and the Jews because of that.
But that really much the same way that I remember you and me feeling back at the hotel after Charlottesville, seeing the media make up the narrative.
Fox News of all of nothing.
Yeah.
Spun out of nothing and just rolling with it and so powerfully that I was sitting there going through the events in my head.
I'm like, did that really happen the way they say it did?
Because that's how powerful media is.
But on the same token, that is how jarring it is when you see one of these events where you know what happened and you were on the other side of it.
And you can see just how much of the things that we believe of, the things that happen in society are completely made up out of whole cloth.
And seeing Gamergate unfold in that way, seeing organizations, outlets, even governments react the way they did to something so banal and something so patently wrong is what awoke me to the fact that we're being lied to about everything.
And the lies are so powerful that they can just make up a story and make it more real than almost your lived experience.
And from there, you know, I followed a link to Meraki's Merchant Minute number 16 or something like that.
And from Morocco, I made my way onto TDS.
And yeah, I was a longtime listener.
I was listening through the refugee crisis.
And I remember I reached out to Sven to do a contribution to one of the Halloween shows.
I was going to do like my own take on standard heck party, standard and standard F party.
And he was like, no, no, I already got it covered.
But I hear Jazzhands is looking for someone to do a bit about European news.
And at the time I was in Belgrade and I was watching the way they were shuttling migrants over from this park, I'm sure you're familiar with it, near Kalamagdan.
And there was just thousands and thousands of tents being pitched, refugees everywhere, just brown men as far as the eye could see.
Temporary for the blessing of the Serbs.
Right.
There were just these signs around the station and train station that just said, you know, go to this tall booth, sorry, go to this booth, pick up a two Euro ticket to Vienna, get on the train, get out of here.
So they were just, you know, they were just funneling them in.
And I remember talking to Jazzhands and he had an opening for a skit.
I proposed my merchant, sorry, I proposed my minister from the deaf camp.
He was in stitches and the rest, as they say, is history.
It was classic.
If this were a myth of the 20th century, I would have just cut it there, Laritz, with your wonderful closing thoughts.
Really nice.
And yeah, to think about some of the based Eastern, Southeastern European countries who were looking out for their own, but also perfectly happy to ship those invaders onward.
And yeah, and for me, seeing that footage from 2015 of that human invasion, I call them invasives.
They're not invaders because it gives them too much credit.
They're not fighting their way across the border.
They're being coaxed.
Yeah, they're pawns.
Yep.
In the pause of you know who.
All right.
I can't top that.
I'm not going to talk about the Northman or the Nordic resistant movement.
We'll save that for a future show with Laritz.
We are hoping to have Tom Sewell on next Full House.
And he's got a tough act to follow, as opposed to the usual after old Tommy Boy.
And Smasher will be on for that one to talk about all the various goings on down there and over here.
So to our special guest, Laritz von Guildhausen, thank you so much, my friend.
You did a wonderful job.
No surprise.
Thank you for having me.
I've looked forward to this for a long time.
God bless, friend.
And I can't wait for my now growing up kids to see you again and see how much you've grown.
You'll probably be tall.
Well, maybe you won't be as tall now because they've grown up so much.
I'm certainly looking forward to seeing a running potato.
That's going to be Will climb you.
He was a potato.
Yeah, he was probably a potato back then.
He will try to climb you like the tree person you are.
That's right.
Rolo knows from experience.
Yeah.
Oh, now Rolo is the kid's new favorite.
I mean, Laritz is like yesterday's news.
Rolo, my friend.
Thank you.
Now, please don't play the Lord of the Rings roast of Laritz a second time.
That would be too much.
Well, now I got to.
No, no, no, no.
We're not doing that.
Thank you.
Whoever that intrepid member of the anime right was, he was absolutely correct.
And I apologize to him for that statement.
I didn't think it would go this far, but it has.
You've been right about way more than you've been wrong, Laritz.
Don't let us give you any guff.
When you're wrong, it's really funny.
It's recorded for all time, indeed.
We'll see if my prediction that Biden resigns and it's Gavin Newsom and Trump runs again.
Those are some big ones that I called in the ground has shifted.
Hey, it's still early.
Still early.
A lot of baseball still to play.
Thank you, Rolo, my friend.
Any last thoughts?
No, no, no, no.
Thank God.
Sam, my friend, we pushed the show late tonight.
You didn't beef about it whatsoever.
So glad to have you riding with us in the top slot as the most prolific father and silver dog that you are.
Thanks, coach.
Yeah, it was a great talk there with our guests and with everybody.
Amen.
Well, audience, if you didn't like that, screw you.
Full house episode 138 was recorded on, I'll call it a perfect September 1st.
August is done.
Oh, God.
Kids are back to school and brings to mind the Green Day song, Wake Me Up When September ends.
Going back to school was always miserable to me.
And I hated the fall for many, many decades.
Well, maybe two decades just because of that fact.
But it is a beautiful time of year.
And we hope that you and your loved ones enjoy it.
Before we close out, I did want to raise a very sad and tragic note that two of our good, kind-hearted, and new friends who I alluded to last show with their new baby boy who arrived far too early into this world and who we shook the trees for and for a little bit of love and prayers to them, he did succumb to his struggle.
They are dealing with it.
They are holding each other, I hope, and sticking together and going to get back at it.
And it's going to be my personal honor and pleasure to meet them one day soon, as soon as the time is right.
So hang in there, guys.
We don't always, these things happen.
They don't always work out the way that we want them to, mysterious ways and all that.
But don't beat yourselves up about it.
And you know that there are listeners to this show and in our cause who have suffered through it as well.
So we love you and stay strong.
To all of our listeners in Europe who are facing sincere hardship as a result of your own government's arrogance, idiocy, Jewish influence, and russophobia, we salute you too.
A lot of times we sneer or joke about the end times coming and hardships and it has to get worse before it gets better.
And we lose sight of the fact that a lot of people are going to be sincerely suffering for the treachery of their own supposed leaders.
So hang in there and same to Laritz and all of our friends in Norway, the Nordic resistance movement and around the world.
With that, Mr. Producer, please put on, I had to do it.
This is a powerful and moving song by a group called Skald.
We've done one of theirs before where they redid Seven Nation Army, but this one is Oval Halla.
And if that doesn't put a bookmark on this one, I don't know what will.
So thank you, Laritz.
Thank you, Sam.
Thank you, Rolo.
Thank you, Smasher.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
Laritz, go ahead and give us a see ya.
See ya.
You don't know him with the father with me and burner.
Story figure in the fire O'Connor in this new time.
The first king of the fear.
Joshua Miguel Sitja Mu Sandy Soma So may they stand on Lord is there, you keep that light, and the light of the world.
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