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Oct. 30, 2022 - Full Haus
02:21:42
Whitegeist

Everything under the sun is fair game in this tour d'horizon of our zeitgeist: Dating via WN clout, our return to Twitter, the dark Waukesha saga, picky eaters, a high school listener's tough decisions, an epic road trip for brotherhood, and how we've changed over the past half decade. Plus Nike from The Third Rail and The Young Huwhytes lowers our average age. Listen to this one with your parents! HH, and Happy Halloween too. Break: "Dig Up Her Bones" by The Misfits Close: "Brave New Love" by Alien 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 syndicated on Amerikaner RSS: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/rss All shows since Zencast (S) 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
There is a hierarchy of facts that everyone must understand if we are to make sense of this increasingly dangerous global madhouse and learn how to fix it.
First, there is a concerted worldwide agenda to break down all the nations of the earth, not just the white ones, via program of mass migration, family-destroying degenerate media, and drugs.
This is being done to ensure the creation of a neutered, homogenized, servile class of powerless consumers.
This is being implemented to prevent the rise of a healthy nationalism or a fourth Reich and to enrich and permanently entrench the global elite.
Those scant few nations or individuals who challenge this agenda are targeted for destruction.
Second, race is a biological reality rooted in the vastly different origins and environments of the various peoples of the world.
We are not one race, the human race.
We are not equal, and we never will be.
Diversity plus proximity equals conflict, and separate spaces for different races is the best solution to avoid a civilization destroying Third World War and universal slavery or racial extinction.
Finally, Jews are overwhelmingly behind the implementation of point one and the denial of point two.
This tiny, immensely powerful and wealthy people, the most ethnocentric on earth, and with a nuclear-armed ethnostate as their personal insurance policy, are vastly overrepresented in that global elite and have both the means and the motive to be accurately named as the prime suspect.
I'm tired of people being too ignorant or cowardly to say it, and you should be too.
It doesn't matter if they're religious or not, or if they're consciously in on the hustle or just reflexively dancing to their own genetic code.
Jews tell you themselves that they hate white people, hate Christianity, love degeneracy, and then perennially cry the victim while punching you in the face.
Consider the Palestinians as their desired end state for all of you, at best.
It's on you, dear listener, to internalize these facts and to educate those in your life about them.
You can do it gradually, or you can lay it all out at once.
But once we hit critical mass, the sky is the limit and this pig system can finally be brought to heal.
So, Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House episode 144, the world's most spooky show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the ghosts lurking around your property, perhaps.
I am, as always, your radicalized by reality host, Coach Finstock, back with another hour, hour and a half, maybe two of normal guys with unconventional opinions that used to be conventional and are now increasingly normalized.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks this week to Jefferson Freeman, son of Rome, fellow person, and Iron Haas for their kind support of the show.
And Jefferson asked, what kind of motorcycles do ghosts ride?
And the answer was Bucadis.
I think some of these are homemade dad jokes.
Those are the best kind, frankly.
Anybody can pull them out of a book like me or get them sent to him for free.
Anyway, good one, JF. Son of Rome also said, figured it's about time I give back to you all.
Thank you guys for everything you do.
Hail Coach, Hail Smasher, Hail Sam, Hail Rolo, Hail Full House, and happy Halloween.
Thank you very much, Son of Rome.
And if you'd like to be like those captains of kindness, please check us out at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com.
And with that, your long-winded hosts will get on to the good stuff.
First up, as almost always, it was my great pleasure and honor to spend some extended quality time with him last week in person and even hear him give a speech for the first time.
Sam, welcome back, big guy.
Hey, Coach, yeah, tell me about it.
That was a great time.
And really, really being honest, it's a great pleasure to spend some time with you, having a few laughs and just kind of hanging out.
It's always special when the full house guys are together, IRL, and all the guys there too are just special guys.
Maybe we could talk about a little later.
It was a great time out in the country and enjoying ourselves and very active, physically active weekend in a few days.
But yeah, I got my pumpkin out.
I'm ready to carve it.
I'm going to carve it tomorrow morning.
I love these seasonal things that we like to mention in their time, you know.
But, you know, I'm like the standard bearer.
Everybody likes the season, but it's me that does the legwork, if you want to say, putting together the things, getting the pumpkin ready and all that type of thing.
Sure.
Labor of love, I'm sure.
Absolutely.
But let me tell you, one of the things I love most about doing the pumpkin is getting the seeds and making the toasting the pumpkin seeds in the oven, you know, with a little bit of Worcestershire sauce on there, a little, maybe a dash of cayenne pepper.
Yeah, a little bit of salt.
Man, nothing better when those things come out of the oven nice and hot.
I agree.
That's a good snack.
Gets stuck in your teeth like an MF or something.
Sam, real quick, the thought occurred, you know, when we got to give each other a big bro hug.
I was like, you know what?
I see Sam and talk to Sam more than almost anybody else, you know?
So it's like, it's as wonderful as it is to hang out IRL.
It's not like I was thinking about it intellectually.
Sam and I talk and see each other every week.
I can't say the same for almost any of my other friends.
So yeah, we'll get into it a little bit more first half or second half.
Big travels for us.
All right.
Next up, Smasher is literally sleeping on the job tonight.
That's right.
He was too far.
It didn't make sense for him to go home to record.
And wherever he is is a dead zone.
So he's like a little ghost in the chat.
He can get text out and not voice, which means the mostly great Rolo gets bumped up a slot this week.
Rolo, in your Halloween costume that I definitely did not recognize.
How are you, buddy?
You know, I just want to give a special shout out to Son of Rome because he's the first person that's ever given me a shout out.
They're going to start coming through now.
You've been with us for 40 episodes, however many it's been.
I think it was 104.
Yeah.
All right.
That was good.
Hey, look at me.
Yeah.
Anyway, tell the audience about your costume that I thought was Arnold Schwarzenegger in T1.
I'm PC Principal from South Park, and you're probably the only person that wouldn't recognize this.
Did you recognize PC Principal, Sam?
I know our special guest did.
Sam's muted.
Sam is.
All right.
He gives up his chance.
Yeah.
Anyway, all right, come on.
We're at the top of the show.
Yeah.
I'm sorry about that.
When he explained it, when he gave a couple clues, I did get it, but I didn't get it right away.
Sorry.
Yeah, South Park's a very popular show.
It's been on for 25 years.
It's not one of my favorite shows.
It just came to me because I have the wardrobe.
And that's it.
A costume of convenience.
I just saw those big shades.
I have plenty of good costumes that I could run with, but that one was easy enough and simple.
And I didn't want to paint my face for this show.
Okay.
I was never a big South Park guy, but I did watch the pinchy episode of The Simpsons tonight with the kids, Rolo, the lobster, which I think.
My favorite part of that whole episode is when Homer's like, look, and it's like, has like the Disney face.
And then Marge looks at it.
It's like, that's the funniest part of that episode.
Yeah, minor, minor indulgence here at the time.
All right.
Thank you, Rolo.
More soon.
And finally, our special return guest is here on short notice, given Smasher's temporary internet incapacity.
And he is the delightful Greco-Orthodox bro you love to love.
It's Nikkei.
Welcome back, buddy.
Howdy, gentlemen.
It's good to be back.
Well, I'm going to totally surprise you here.
Sneak attack, kamikaze.
And Nikkei you have a girlfriend.
Not that that's like a big surprise, but the last time we spoke to you, you did not.
So right here at the top, we've been teasing this dating show for a long time.
And I do have two or three guys on deck to do it, but it takes a little bit of prep and scheduling to make it work.
So let's tease the audience, brother.
Congratulations, first of all.
Sounds like it's going well.
Thank God.
How the hell did you pull it off?
Well, turns out being a neo-Nazi podcaster on the internet has its benefits.
Oh, you cashed in some clout.
Oh, okay.
I'd like to call this the Borzoi route.
That's right.
That's what I was thinking of.
Yeah, the Borzoi clout route.
We can call it that.
So did she just appear in your inbox then or she knew of you?
Well, we had been friends for a while.
And, you know, we had hung out a few times in person as friends.
And we sort of realized things were really right between us.
And so we made it dating official.
And yeah, things have gone really good, really fast since then.
That's great to hear, big guy.
So you were acquaintances and friends without benefits.
And then you were like, maybe this is something worth pursuing.
Fair characterization.
Yeah, no.
You know, she met my family, then I met her family.
And the two of us had really hit it off very quickly.
Definitely not what I would call a very common occurrence, but I know very emphatically that this came as a result of a lot of people praying.
And I'm very serious about that, that I had people specifically praying for me.
Sure.
For this particular issue, that, you know, I was looking for a good woman and I wanted the help of prayer in that pursuit.
And after, you know, a good bit of people on my side giving me that extra credit upstairs, sure enough, it worked out for me.
Hell yeah.
Congratulations.
It makes me think, you know, in the heydays, 2016, 2017, women were like all over the place.
Like yeah, it's great, you know, we got women hanging out with us and then like, sometime after that, a few of them dox a few people, so then it was all.
Single women are feds and are not to be welcomed anywhere near any of us.
Uh, but it's a good reminder that there are plenty of good ones.
Uh, all the evergreen ladies, and even some single ones too.
Uh, all right, so good luck.
But have you had any bad fights yet?
Be honest no actually, I have not.
Um i'm, that's the one thing I really don't know what to make of yet, because we haven't fought.
Um, all right, and I, I like, for most people, that's that's something that they, they want to figure out.
Uh sure before, like taking their relationship to a higher level.
Yeah, kick the tires a little bit.
Yeah well, yeah it.
It's just.
On the other hand, i'm not trying to like find a fight that wasn't there before.
You know, i'm not trying to cause myself a fresh problem that could have been avoided.
Um, you know it call me naive, but maybe we're just that compatible.
Knock on wood I, I hope that's the case.
I mean, you could always adopt a few bad habits or, you know, engage in some bad behavior if you really want to push the issue.
But i'm sure, or you could also take her.
You could also take her to the mat.
If like, you want to fight some other way, I think you could take her.
Oh I, I mean yeah, send any woman my way, I could take her.
But um yeah, in terms of like verbal argumentation and like just emotional conflict, I I haven't reached that point, which is, you know, it's something you'd like to know how you handle.
But i'm just not asking for more problems in my life.
In some relationships, like one person tends to give way a little bit and where the other person maybe, you know, speaks out a little bit, and so sometimes it could just work out that way, like maybe you give a little bit of space when she needs a little space, type of a thing.
She told me it was actually Nikke's appearance on Full House that put her over the edge and said, I have to be with this man.
So if this goes the distance, we're claiming credit for this one too.
I don't know, you know, I will ask her and I will give you fair credit.
If she's i'm totally lying, don't even bother.
All right buddy, maybe.
Uh yeah, if anything else comes back to you.
I don't.
You know, I don't want to probe too much, but uh the, the guys out there are hungry.
We got a lot of single guys looking to date.
Rollo at the top of the stack.
Ladies please, we haven't had a FEDS being FED connection in too long.
Hit us up.
Uh, wherever you are country, we'll do our best.
Um well, here's the thing for Rollo.
Uh, I had Rollo on uh, uh on my show since we last spoke here on full house and uh, the audience consensus was we sound identical.
Uh, so if I have the voice from radio to find a woman, then Rolo has no excuse.
There's similarities there.
He's shaking his head.
It's not spot on.
I don't think we sound alike.
But a lot of my audience thought that was the case.
I don't know.
Rolo, what was your final verdict on the matter?
I was about to say something pretty doxy, but I stopped myself.
My co-hosts don't see it, but I was on a show with someone else and someone jokingly said Nikke's with us.
And then I started talking.
Really?
They said, and they said, wait, is that Nikkei?
Wait, Nikkei and I was like, I know.
I didn't see it.
And I think what it is, it's not that we sound the same, but we have like a kind of like the same frequency.
Yeah.
Yeah, similar.
That's what it is.
It's not that the voices sound the same.
It's like, I think we talk kind of the same.
We have like a kind of unique dissident voices.
I like having a dissident voice.
Yes, it is good to have a dissident voice, but I could see the audience rolling their eyes.
See, I'm the man of the people.
I listen to a lot of podcasts.
They're like, let's get on with the show.
Enough chit chat here about who sounds like who?
Thanks, Nikkei.
You could be muted.
You sound like a meanie.
We got what we need, buddy.
Nikkei calling in on a landline, one of those self wireless phones with a little steel antenna.
No, I'm kidding.
He's on a Pacific Bell pay phone.
There you go.
Clickety, click.
All right.
Big couple of weeks.
We missed last week because of Sam and me being on the road to Super Secret meetup.
But we're going to start in reverse chronological order or descending order and just the big news of yesterday and today, because it is such a flame to all of our moths.
And that is, of course, Elon Musk closing the deal on Twitter.
There's tons of theories about whether it was just a feint and backing out and getting in.
Regardless, he owns the damn thing, fired the unholy Troika or the Duopoly that was at the top of it, the Indian CEO and chief of content, the chief sensor.
And I put out a poll on Telegram.
Should we jump right back in the pool?
Should we wait until all of the anti-white sensors are fired, which I do believe will probably happen eventually, at least the worst of them.
Or should we not go back to what obviously became a cesspool and stick with our telegrams and our gabs?
And most people, the vast majority, said, yeah, get back on there, but not until you've waited a little bit.
But me and my high time preference, I saw a couple people get back in there.
I already had an account that was on super secret lockdown, so I could monitor goings on and steal content and things like that.
Anyway, I went for it.
I'm back on there as the original coach Finstock.
Not that that means much to some of you guys who weren't on Twitter during the heydays, but I did want to talk about Twitter as a platform and whether it makes sense for all of us, for none of us, for some of us, because it was unquestionably formative in changing my outlook.
When I first got on there, I was following Eric Erickson and Ben Dominic and the Federalists and Sean Davis and Jonah Goldberg and National Review and Kevin Williams.
And I could go on and on.
And those were my ideological lodestars.
And I remember tweeting at them and being so gratified when I got a piece of feedback from these men I thought were quote unquote thought leaders.
And then it only took a short period of time for having that fire hose of information blasted into my brain on a daily basis to realize that, no, there are harder and more important things out there than conservatism as an ideology or race blindness.
And that basically those guys were cowards and they were occupying these sort of positions that we know of conservatism as it is and libertarianism too, that they're designed to lose.
They're not willing to fight on the ground where it's being fought.
That said, question for the panel.
Some of our guys are brilliant OC creators, and I think they should definitely get on.
Some of our guys are great reply guys.
There's some people who are just way better at responding with a zippy response to some airhead that cuts them to the bone and that people love and they get ratioed.
But there are a lot of guys too, for whom being on Twitter maybe is a time suck and it doesn't really go anywhere.
And it just becomes kind of a circle jerk, if you will, of like find my friends and likes and retweets and all that stuff.
A waste of time that doesn't really get too much done.
I'll stop there.
I'm on for now.
Who knows if they're going to, they may have struck me down already.
And that's fine.
I figured it was a win-win.
Jump back in the pool, make a splash, say hello, reconnect with some people, drop some red pills, old school and new school for the, I don't know, lingering conservatives.
And if I get banned again tonight, tomorrow, a week from now, big deal.
My life gets easier and I have one less distraction in my life.
Sam, big time tweeter back in your day.
I'm joking.
Rolo Nikke, you are more of the Twitter generation.
What do you think?
Should our guys get back on there and all the rest of it?
I'll shut up now.
I don't see why not.
Like, it doesn't cost you any money to do it.
And I made an account this morning and I didn't have my phone number in.
Gosh, damn.
I've never been on there, but definitely get on there, I would say.
Sorry.
Sam's name, Nikke now.
Is that what's going on here?
I think it would resist us.
Well, I mean, well, there's a dox risk, right?
Too.
I mean, one little button clicked the wrong way or hostiles on their way out the door.
I don't know of anybody who's gotten doxed.
Well, unless they posted like stupid photos or whatever, deliberately through screwing up on Twitter, but there's that risk.
And I mean, you don't think it's a, it can be a massive time waste.
I know it's been a time suck for me in my past life.
Nikke, you were on there for a while.
You an advocate still too?
Well, in your case, I had my initial reaction of you should go on there for like, you know, whenever you feel was the right time to join.
And that was ended up being right away.
And I said, if you last under a month, never go back.
Okay.
That said, if you can keep an account for more than a month and then you get banned later for some reason, you know, might as well keep up the game as long as you can.
And, you know, there's probably some benefit to reap from that.
But if it turns out that we're still going to be censored and it's going to be right out of the gate, like, let's not waste our time here.
I've been a big proponent of the Fediverse and moving to Pleroma.
The biggest instance being Post.
That's P-O-A.st.
Sure.
And this is a Twitter clone functions the same way, but, you know, it's- And my reluctance to go on there.
Yep.
Yep.
And I want to bump Post as an option.
One of the good points is, come on, guys.
Don't be that, you know, I don't know what the word for it is, but unloyal user, you know, who goes to Gab when he gets censored elsewhere and then runs home to the evil San Francisco corporation just when a little thing changes.
So I never got on post because I was like, eh, I thought maybe on Gab there were more people who could be persuaded to our way of thinking when on posts, I assume that it's almost 100% our guys.
That's a great point.
It is 100% our guys.
I mean, you're not going to reach any new audience.
And if you're hard set dedicated to that being your Twitter mission, by all means, go for it on Twitter.
I like post because I like having the, like carrying on the discourse with our guys.
Because there is some diversity of our ideas, you know, even within our own sphere where like new events occur and we all have our different reactions to it.
And I think there's fruitful dialogue that comes about from having these conversations.
Sure.
And between guys can just let it, they can let it rip their true intellectual id without having to worry about censors, unless they do, you know, obviously something illegal or threatening something illegal.
Yeah.
No, I mean, like everything that's legal within the, you know, the boundaries of American law, it's totally fine.
Sure.
Yeah.
My thing with Twitter always was that there was no better way to keep your finger on the pulse of everything happening in one place, right?
I mean, Telegram is still clunky with the channels and the chats that you have to navigate back and forth.
There's no home to scroll through content that has been sort of curated by audience demand.
And you just, you pop into Twitter and you can see the enemy, you can see the neutrals, you can see our guys, and you can compete.
And I was going to ask the question, are there still people on Twitter for whom you can persuade or win over?
But I'm not even going to ask the question because obviously there are still the biggest social media platform.
I don't know how it compares to Facebook and Instagram.
But if you want to know about the world and what's going on from all the angles and maybe, just maybe you want to inject your voice into it, I'd say go for it.
Just be careful and know what you're good at too.
See, at one point, I drew up this like lengthy list of recommendations for guys for how to grow their Twitter accounts.
Not that I was ever a mega account.
I always got nuked around 5,000.
But the first thing is, if you want to gain reach or whatever, have a cool avatar and a cool name.
I love Charles Martell as much as the next guy.
And Pepe is a little bit stale and Groypers and all that stuff.
But just be creative and be bold, be smart and figure out whether you're an OC guy or reply guy or if you're just using it for intelligence purposes.
And we'll let you know.
I'm on there as full houseman, H-A-U-S-M-A-N.
I'll put it in the show notes, see how it goes.
It felt like a world-changing platform back in the day.
I think a lot of that is imaginary and it's those notification drops that are hitting your brain and giving you satisfaction.
But there's, I would not be of my world outlook today were it not for guys on Twitter who went harder and broke me of my priors.
And I'm forever grateful for that.
And who knows, you might do the same for a young guy out there just starting out or some 30, 40 year old conservative libertarian who hasn't had the sense beaten into him yet.
And also, I did invite Kanye West onto Full House.
Now, now, now, hear me out, audience, before Rolo's got his hand up.
Go ahead, Rolo.
Sorry.
Another good thing about being on Twitter is you will be engaging with liberals that deserve to be told that they're pieces of trash, that you can fight them instead of fighting other right-wingers about stupid things like very specific Bible verses or type of root that you might put in your garments.
I mean, I don't know.
It just felt so much more cathartic today.
Seeing people that say Hassan Piker is the greatest content creator on the internet and just carefully explaining what a giant idiot they are.
Well, just telling them why they're stupid.
I didn't get dogpiled.
No, no, he got, yeah, they got dogpiled.
Yeah, yeah.
You got your shots in it.
Yeah.
And that, and that just feels better than some guy who's like in a chat with you that like says like, oh, the stupidest thing about right-wingers is that they like synth music.
It's like, that makes me want to kill myself.
It's like, oh, cool.
Like, now let's, yeah, let's fight over this stupid thing because you are so insecure and you basically have internet cabin fever that you have to pick fights with your friends because you have nothing better to do with your time.
Cause like, you know, like if someone says something that it's like kind of mildly irks you that isn't like pro enemy, that's just something like right now Sam is wearing a leather trench coat and I think that's kind of weird.
But, you know, I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna fight him over that.
I'll just say nothing other than like people that wear trench coats in general are kind of weird, except for Sam.
Hinted.
No, it's a very good point that what we terry or crab the bucket when we're yeah.
Yeah, because you can just sit on your hands.
Like if there's something like that, that just if it doesn't, because you know you're not going to change anyone's mind over like issues like that.
It's not like someone saying like, let's invite a black person to our next meetup because I think we can convince them and to hate Jews and then he'll convince his friends.
Like someone says something like that.
Okay, you can attack them on that because that's just crazy.
But like personal preferences, like not worth not worth fracturing the movement over.
But now you see a libtard saying something stupid, like, oh, baby, that's, they need to be told that they're stupid because this was an old like conservative talking point.
Like they think everything is a college campus, but it has like Twitter has been that way for the last four years where they've gotten everything catered to them.
There's been no one to push back.
Anyone that would push back gets banned for my like minor things.
It's no longer like hard R's and and circle, but you know, in a New York sense, but just like saying something as simple as like, the vaccine is dangerous or the 2020 election was stolen gets you banned.
So these people have been holed up and no one's been there to give them a proverbial backhand.
And they deserve it.
Can't argue with them and change their mind, but you can mock them mercilessly.
And some people need a good merciless mocking.
Oh, yeah.
One of the reasons.
The opportunity to engage the enemy is incredibly enticing.
And if that's how it is, I will certainly give it a try.
Oh, boys.
In a lot of ways.
You heard it here first, folks.
Well, you know, in a lot of ways, in normal society and normal things like places of work or wherever, it's hard to really find the libtards, you know, in my experience.
You know, you, you really got to go to some kind of special place to find lip tards.
It's almost like they're protected from us in a way.
And the idea of being able to engage them, I mean, you, you'll find lip tards.
I know there's certain lip tards maybe where I work or certain, but they, they will shrink from us.
I want to get where they'll fight with us, you know, and then that's, that sounds very enticing, or even the opportunity to talk to people who are just out there who are not particularly one way or the other.
Amen.
So I might have to get on there.
Rolo made a very good point that maybe we'll stop fighting amongst ourselves so much.
It'll be like the God.
Yes.
This side toward Emmy, not into your little.
Yeah, front towards enemy.
And that was one of the reasons why it felt like we had a much bigger cohesive movement 14 to 2017 was because we were all on the same platforms and shared a common enemy.
And if we disagreed on this or that, it could be glossed over.
It wasn't a big thing because it was such a fertile ground of Hillary Clinton and frankly, all of us being on the Trump train too.
Now, I don't know if that kind of unity is ever possible to recreate, but we'll see.
It's an information battleground.
It's a video game where the objective is to wake up as many white people as possible in the shortest amount of time while having fun and being careful.
And my favorite game is not to not to be crude and post happy merchants in the replies, although I know that temptation, but to just beat them with, this may sound like Ben Shapiro-like, but beat them with rhetoric, with facts, with graphs and things like that, because it's not about them.
It's about who's going to see your reply.
And you can very easily respond to a massive account and get tons more views than just sort of tweeting out into the ether, trying to get your message out with your, you know, relatively small circle of like-minded people.
So it sounds like, hey, if Sam's jumping in the pool, then you got no excuse, fam, because I don't think he's ever been on.
It's right.
Yeah.
Give it a try.
Oh, careful.
Yeah.
All right.
Moving on then.
I think we beat the blue bird to death, rightfully.
Somebody said that Alon should change it to a red bird just to trigger people, but I don't think he's really a radical.
I think he knows the score, but he's more like a little pixie having fun here and there with I think Scott Bayo said that.
I think Chachi said that.
I definitely did not see that take from Chachi.
I think it was.
I made it up.
I thought of it myself.
What did he say?
Pixie?
No, mischievous little wait.
No, no, Twitter should change it to a red bird.
Oh, oh, that I definitely saw.
Somebody else.
Yeah, I didn't make that up.
I'm not claiming that.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure that was Chachi said that.
There's still so much.
And, you know, one of the first things so obvious was all these brave truth tellers saying men cannot have babies.
And, you know, masks are ineffective in containing the virus.
And maybe the vaccine isn't good for us.
I'm like rolling my eyes back into my skull.
That is not brave truth.
Maybe.
No, well, hold on.
For the babies in the audience.
No, it's not brave truth telling, but keep in mind, like these people were not allowed to say it.
So like in their islands, they're not where we are.
I'm not going to defend them or that position.
Right.
They weren't allowed to say that.
So they actually.
Taking a tremendous risk.
Yeah, they think that that is like a frontier that's not allowed to be crossed.
It is.
Yeah, it's not brave.
I agree with that, but they don't know that it's Jews that were the ones that were stopping them from saying that.
I think a lot of them know, but they're never gonna, they're never gonna do and those and Matt Walsh and those types.
They don't have the balls of Kanye.
Yes, audience, before you revolt, before Sam takes off his headphones and marches out of the door.
I had so many people tell me that I should try to get him on the show.
And I was like, get out of here.
Like, never going to happen.
And it's probably never going to happen, of course.
99% chance it doesn't.
But I took a swing for the fences because so many damn people suggested.
And of course, we can, we can hate.
I mean, we could have a civil conversation with him.
We're not going to fawn over him.
We'll treat him with respect.
We'll talk about the issues and try to get the most scoop because to my great surprise, he has not cucked yet.
I forget.
I think it was by the, I put out a poll.
Is he going to cuck by the end of the year or apologize or whatever?
And he hasn't yet.
Two months to go.
But I tweeted at him and it got the nerd hall monitors boosted it.
And a lot of people retweeted it.
So whatever.
There's a minor chance he sees it and says, yeah, sure, you crazy white boys.
I'll come on.
Or maybe he'll be doing his white voice.
We'll see.
Little teaser.
I tried, fam.
And if we got him on, that would be wild.
And we'll pick his brain for what he's thinking.
What I really want to know is what happened.
What triggered him, right?
He knew the score for so long.
What was it that triggered him to finally go death?
I still laughed that he said DEF CON 3 instead of DEF CON defense condition 3.
I doubt that was intentional.
You know, it's just his understanding.
It makes sense.
Yeah.
DEF CON 3 against the Soviets.
Grandmas, I ask you again.
They just can't speak English.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
No, we can get Durrell on.
Where's Durrell?
Can we get him on here to talk about?
If we get Kanye on here, Durrell is going to interview him.
Full time.
Can arrange that.
All right.
He chickened out.
He didn't take the bait.
Okay.
We got to move on.
Also, big in the news.
It was just, Christ, was it just yesterday?
Yeah.
Today got back on Twitter.
Yesterday was the Daryl Brooks verdict.
Maybe it was the day before.
I don't know.
Everything happened so fast.
Can't keep track.
And guilty on all 76 counts.
And I don't have too much to say about it.
I'll start off with a controversial take.
I was kind of sick.
Listen, I laud Potato Smasher, NJP, every single one of those guys, the Justice Report, Spectre.
I invited Spectre on to this one.
No offense, Nikkei, first, just because he was covering that trial like a bird dog.
But by the time I saw that picture, like Brooks trial, day 15, day 16, I was like, oh, oh my God.
All right.
The narrative here.
Yes.
Evil black guy mowed down white Christmas parade in Waukesha and should have gotten charged with hate crimes.
I'm just, I had to say that because by the end, I was like, oh my God, more about Daryl Brooks.
But I did tune in for the for the verdicts being read.
Guilty on all 76 counts made another wager on that.
Somebody was saying, oh, somebody in that Wisconsin jury is going to cuck or be a conscientious objector or whatever, call it a jury nullifier.
And I said, I don't think so from that footage.
He was just too inhuman, too out of control, and the evidence was too overwhelming, even if the prosecution overplayed or underplayed their hand and there was no hate crime charges.
But he's guilty.
He's not going to get the death penalty.
And he really did a monkey shine performance in that courtroom throughout the entire thing, whether it was deliberate or not deliberate.
I'll stop there on my Daryl Brooks assessment.
Oh, yeah.
There's so many object lessons in here that average white people are taking from this.
Like you said, the monkey shines, the mockery of the whole system that was made with all of this.
It's done more work to bring people our way than we ever could.
Yep.
And when you think back to, you know, when you think back, remember all the people you'd hear like, yeah, it was Trayvon Martin.
That's what woke me up.
Or, you know, yeah, all the different ones through the years.
This is going to be even more, I think.
Sure.
Yep.
I remember getting worked up about the Arab or Muslim or North African who drove into the Christmas market in Germany, right?
All that spate of Islamic terrorism in Europe from the time of the invasion and how worked up that got me, how infuriating it was.
And we had the same thing happen here less than a year ago.
And it'll continue to keep happening, unfortunately.
Oh, yeah.
I remember years ago, the thing of seeing all the atrocities in South Africa against white people.
We're having that more, even more, because there's just, it's a bigger population here in the United States.
I would bet if you counted up incidents, we have more atrocities in this country than even in South Africa.
Numerically, for sure.
Yeah.
And it's so bizarre.
It's like the blacks have really picked up the slack from the Muslims.
Remember when Trump was running for president, you had Fort Hood, you had shootout in San Bernardino.
There was stuff in this all the time.
Pulse nightclub.
Nobody.
Remember in Wichita?
It was like, was it a UPS or something like that where this nigger tried to behead people?
He beheaded two people.
And that's when, remember Obama said, well, wrong place, wrong time at the wrong place.
Oh, my God.
I don't remember that.
Oh, yeah.
There were Albanian Albanian Muslims supposedly were conspiring to go shoot up Fort Dicks.
There was a Pakistani or two who shot people outside CIA headquarters in Lang.
Now, that's going back a little bit farther.
But when was the last time we had an Islamic?
Now, before I ask that, I really got to rack my brain.
I wasn't planning on taking this take, but it's yeah, black crime, whatever the Muslim numbers are, has completely overwhelmed things in the public consciousness.
And it's going to lead to the Republicans winning the midterms.
I think if you guys recall, there was some point in June or July where I said, this is the most bizarre thing where they're doing this mass manipulation of the public that Biden's back in control.
He passed the Inflation Act and the Republican red wave is going to be purple slush.
And I said, this seems so fake and manufactured.
And now as we're coming close to the deadline here, it's like, how big is the red wave going to be?
Is this going to be the 2012 midterms?
So whatever that was has receded.
And I think, look, it's inflation.
It's black crime.
It's another thing that used to get me so worked up, immigration invasion at the southern border.
It's worse than ever.
And we barely even talk about it anymore.
And you could, and I noticed it on this long road trip that I took last week, which is horrifying, but there was a lot of good things about it too.
Nikkei Rolo, anything on Daryl Brooks before he goes away for life at least?
His fingernails were clean.
Did you notice he had those long fingernails, but they didn't have dirt under him?
I don't really care about Daryl Brooks, but I want to comment on one thing because you said the blacks have been picking up the slack of the Muslims.
Well, consider all the black Muslims in the Somalian areas, like in Minnesota.
So there's still that because there's still, you know, black Muslims that are probably like trying to chop people's heads off.
Because how many crazy black murders do we just not hear about?
Because like when like how many, how many blacks committed a heinous crime the day Daryl Brooks ran through that parade?
And how many black crimes don't get reported as Islamic because it's a black guy who may not have changed his name yet, right?
Lou L. Sindor shoots up church.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So so like, so it's, it used to be, you know, the Arab Muslims, but now it's, it's the black Muslims.
So like the, the, the blacks have really stepped up their game and they're cornering the market on all the crazy terrorists.
And as planned, as planned by the implantation of Soros-funded, supported district attorneys all across the country.
That is one, that is one.
I'd love to see the right talk about Soros DAs because that's such a short jump from the ultimate question.
Thank you, Rolo.
Well, yeah, I consider it a victory every time I turn somebody on to the everyday channel.
You know, that's a very important channel to visit.
Some guys, they say, oh, man, it's tough to look at that every day.
Yeah, I know, but these people are unmourned.
You know, at the very least, I go on there.
I force myself to go on there.
At least somebody will mourn these victims of this nigger genocide.
Yep, that's something that I would ask Kanye too, is listen, our opinions of your people are formed by experience and statistics and reality.
Yeah.
Nobody goes around hating on trying to think generic immigrant group in the United States that doesn't commit a lot of crime, but you know what I mean.
Cambodian.
Yeah.
Well, it is a tough thing because somebody like him or Candace Owens or somebody might want to agree with us on a lot of things.
But, you know, at the end of the day, I don't care about the so-called good ones because the so-called good ones are such an insignificant percent of the bad ones that it's like it's like saying, oh, I need some money.
I should go play the lottery, you know, because statistically insignificant.
It's insignificant.
Like it's no need.
Right.
Okay.
This one good guy somewhere.
Right.
Okay.
We would say like, hey, guy, go ahead.
You have free passage out of this country.
You know, that's fine.
But yeah, you know, that's he can be the king in Africa.
Yeah, whatever.
We don't mean that one guy, that one out of 10,000 or whatever.
We don't mean him any harm.
If we can get him to believe, if he believes in black Israelites, it couldn't be that hard to get him to subscribe to Marcus Garvey's ideology and, you know, put whatever.
He's probably only got a couple hundred million left.
I mean, that can really fund some action, but it would be fun.
Fun thought exercise.
I know all the questions I would ask already.
Interviews are way easier to do than this pure creation that we're involved in.
Nikkei, how many Kanye albums do you have and why?
Make sure he's not saying that.
When it comes to Kanye, I don't have any albums.
I actually did go see his movie when it came out, just because I was curious at the time.
He had a movie.
I didn't even know that.
Yeah, no, when he came out with his album, was it Afterlife of Pablo?
It was like, Jesus is Lord.
He came out with a concurrent film where he like went into the middle of the Arizona desert and he had this like subterranean choir hall constructed where he just had this black choir sing like songs from his album and other gospel hits.
I mean, it was interesting.
And like I was like one of three people in the theater.
I just wanted to see what it was going to be.
Like I hate going to the movies, but I knew this was going to be like something different because Kanye was on like, well, he was called Kanye at the time.
He was like on such a different like artistic train that I'm like, whatever.
I'll go see.
I don't, I never go to movie, never go to movies.
I'll try this one.
True confessions here, Nikkei.
You know how I know you're gay?
You paid to go see the Kanye movie.
Evicted.
No, it's okay.
But yeah, was it just like schizophrenic mess or it wasn't schizophrenic?
It was just like, okay, I'm not black.
This isn't for me.
Sure.
Like, and I should have known that going in, but I left it, you know, up to us actually judging the material for that to be apparent to me.
Like, oh, I have no connection to like American Black gospel music.
This really doesn't mean anything to me, but I'm sure it means a lot to black people.
Fair enough.
To be a fly on the wall to see Nikkei in the theater watching that.
Anyway, yeah, I mean, look, there's a fine line you can walk.
You know, you're not like fawning or celebrating him for being extraordinarily wealthy and saying the same things that we have been saying for years on a shoestring.
However, you can still be grateful that someone out there, even if he's not one of our own, decided to not just recognize the same things, but to speak about them in a way that gets a whole lot more headlines and ears and eyeballs on it than us.
And maybe just remember, Jews have been using blacks against us in our cities, in our neighborhoods, in our schools as their golem for so long.
And there would be a beautiful poetic justice for their pets to turn against them as well they should, as they would be justified to do so.
So hats off.
We'll give two cheers, two cheers to Kanye.
And we eagerly await his DM saying, let's do this.
We will have to do a lot of prep in advance for that show, Coach.
Sam, we're going to have to lock you up late.
We're going to have to lock you up like Cannibal Lecter in the cage.
Yeah.
I'll just be on mute.
I'll just wave.
You know who you need on for that episode if it does happen is he needs to be.
Larry Ridgeway.
Oh, Darren.
All right.
Darren, yeah.
Larry.
I said that for a very specific reason because I remember in 2019, Kanye West in interviews was repeating verbatim same points that Dark Enlightenment was making on podcasts at the same time.
And I remember so clearly.
Yes.
Trains in urban development and like literally verbatim quoting Dark Enlightenment.
I'm like, oh my God, I heard that on a podcast.
I go back and listen to it.
It's the same exact thing.
I'm like, is Kanye West listening to DE?
Like, like, there's no way he had these thoughts on his own.
He had to hear it from someone else.
And I know who he heard it from.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Somebody said he was talking to Owen Benjamin about this stuff.
I don't know if it was.
Really?
I wanted Benjamin.
That's what I heard.
Sure.
Some say Owen Benjamin.
Owen Benjamin.
Owen Benjamin said that he was proud that Kanye West said Zionist and not Jew.
So keep in mind, Owen Benjamin is a crazy person.
Yeah, he's not.
He doesn't get an invitation.
I think Owen also denies the Holocaust.
So I got to give him some more credit than Kanye.
Well, Kanye hasn't agreed to that.
Owen Benjamin, he affirms the Holocaust.
He says it was nine gay guys in a rollerblading accident, which is very funny.
Ah, that is very funny.
No, yeah, he's done some fun work for sure.
So yeah, I want to, I want to throw it.
We had a little bit of dating commentary at the top from Nikkei.
And we're doing big picture metapolitical current events stuff.
So let me pull something from the second half into the first half if I could.
And that is my own appeal to help, both from the men on the show and from the audience too.
We've talked a little bit.
We never did a picky eaters show because that's a little bit excessive, but our youngest potato has gotten so picky and demanding recently.
And part of that is my fault for catering to his needs.
Now, hear me out.
We do, there's not juice boxes and fruit roll-ups, candy, and crap at the house.
We try to keep it to the basics.
He still eats cottage cheese, yogurt, string cheese, only polio.
He asks to see the wrapper.
And if I don't have polio and I try to fool him, I give it to him.
And he's like, this isn't polio and I have to eat it myself.
But he's, he's seriously, he is, he's revolt.
He's starting to revolt against red meat.
That was always my go-to, right?
Dinner time, just a decent cut of steak or a hamburger that's not on the bun.
And he's starting to turn his nose up at that.
And we've tried a little bit of substitution.
We've tried cajoling, you know, teasing with dessert to come.
If he just finishes this, I'll be like, all right, I'll eat these big bites.
You eat these little ones.
And the little son of a gun is so stubborn.
He will sit there at the table and frown.
He's fallen asleep at the dinner table before.
And some nights I have to just say, all right, you're going to bed and we'll try to get those calories up in the morning because all I care about really is getting quality calories in him.
He's skinny.
He's not too skinny.
But there are times when I worry that he's not getting enough good protein.
Sam, help us out from your distant but voluminous experience with kids.
Tricks, anything.
Well, yeah, this goes to my own childhood, actually.
And yeah, when I was apparently very, very little, there were certain things I wouldn't eat or had trouble eating.
And I could remember my father being demanding and saying, no, you have to finish that.
You can't leave the table till you finish that and stuff like that.
Particularly at breakfast time, for some reason, I had a hard time eating scrambled eggs.
My mother makes scrambled eggs, put it there.
And, you know, there could be issues that you don't realize, like, especially when you're little, sometimes you have trouble chewing up and swallowing certain textures, you know, and somebody could be having a problem with that.
But I remember my mother, she asked the doctor when I was a small child and he said, you know what?
Mealtime should be a happy time and you should not force the child to eat anything.
So it's turned every dinner has turned into stress.
Well, the other kids are eating fine.
It's like, oh, what's next?
How's the conflict going to go tonight?
You need to back off that because as he develops and matures, it could be something like, like I say, maybe the texture of the food, he has trouble chewing it up and swallowing it or certain things.
But with time and maturity, he may grow to love that thing that he doesn't like now.
So if you traumatize him by yelling at him or forcing them to sit at the table, everybody's left.
He's tired.
He's falling asleep at the table.
I think that's a very negative experience that could really stick with him in a bad way for a long time.
So I think, I think you serve him a little bit of food, you put it there.
You know, there's certain things maybe he won't touch.
Maybe you put just a tiny serving there.
If he doesn't touch it, that's fine.
Mealtime's over.
You put, you know, take the stress out of it.
Take the unhappiness out of mealtime and just, he's not going to die.
And, you know, time will fix that.
Yeah.
I mean, and to be fair, he's, he'll, he'll eat hot dogs with no bun.
He'll eat chicken nuggets.
Once in a blue moon, I offer like scrambled eggs all the time.
And one out of 10 times, he'll say yes and eat half the plate.
So good point about dinner time.
Rolo and Nikkei, I know, are both still picky eaters and barely finishing their plates.
You guys have any recollections from this or things you can pull out of your hat?
I know you don't have kids yet.
I actually do remember the last time I complained about food.
You know, in before Nikkei, youngest podcaster joke.
But the, it was like, I can remember this clearly just because of how like so wrong I was about what I had thought about eating.
And I remember my parents' response was, you can't leave the table until you're done.
Right.
And so I like put out for a good like hour and 25 minutes without taking a bite.
And this is when I was a little child.
Just still very obstinate, you know, like, no.
And it was pierogies of all things.
Oh, man.
Give me them pierogies right now.
And like, you know, my food had food.
My food had gone cold.
And I take a bite.
I'm like, wait a second, I like this.
And I just eat it.
I'm like, oh, wow.
This is good.
And so it just, it just came down to that attrition of like, you can't leave the table until you till you eat.
And I eventually ate because I wanted to leave the table.
I'm like, wait a second.
I actually like what I just ate.
And let me finish what I eat.
And, you know, then I can go about my night.
I just would have figured they'd give you gyros every night.
And yogurt and yogurt.
Cheap joke.
Yeah.
Cheap joke.
All right.
So Sam's saying be a softy and the kid had issues.
And Nikkei saying tough love and cold falafel broke him down.
Yeah, it worked to me.
Yeah.
No, there's, I would say like, he likes cauliflower of all things.
I'm like, who likes cauliflower and not like burgers or eggs?
So there's been times where I've just like put a big bowl of cauliflower in front of him and he devours that.
Oh, man.
I love the cauliflower.
Same here.
Well, and the thing is, children are going to imitate.
So if they see you, you know, let them see you have the plate full of food and you're eating it and enjoying it and things like that.
And let give them time to follow.
Sure.
Yep.
And he got a rabbit noodle kick for a while too.
Yeah.
I stopped buying ramen noodles.
Go ahead.
Maybe it was like I was just past the age where I like to imitate and maybe where I like to like do my own thing.
And that could be the reason why I was like so obstinate at the time.
Because it wasn't like early childhood.
It was like before I was 10, but like after I was six, like somewhere in between there.
Sure.
Yeah.
I think letting a child sit there for an hour and 20 minutes or whatever you said there, I think that's too long.
You know, I think maybe there's a certain amount of time you say, hey, sit there, just sit there and pick at it or try it.
You let them sit there.
But then after a while, it's just like the punishment too.
You don't make a child go to his room for an hour.
You know, they say it's like according to their age.
So if they're, you know, six years old, you give them six minutes in their room or something like that.
Oh, man.
I forgot worse than that.
I know.
I think that maybe, you know, a punishment is appropriate, but don't let it be too heavy-handed.
Yeah.
And I'm not completely innocent in this because I did buy one of those giant ramen noodle packets from Costco and he loves those.
And that's just cheap, empty calories.
What do you want for lunch?
Rama noodles, ramen noodles, ramen noodles.
And I think I told this anecdote on the fatherland back in the day, but when I was a kid and we had spinach for dinner, I had never seen or had spinach before and I was horrified of that green monstrosity on the plate.
My parents did the thing.
I love spinach.
I think I remember that actually.
Because I was the same way, man.
I hated that, you know, spinach out of a can, but then I learned like you can make a salad out of it.
And then I learned to really love spinach, you know.
Oh, same here.
Popeye opened this piece now.
But yeah, my parents did the thing where you're not leaving the dinner table until you eat that spinach.
Yeah, no.
So I shoved the spinach in my mouth and I loved milk then, still love it now.
And I poured so much milk into my mouth and it was get mixed up with the spinach, which was getting tangled up in my throat that I basically like half puked up all the spinach and milk right there on the plate at the dinner table.
See what you said.
See what you made me do.
And they never made me eat spinach again.
No.
That's the wrong way.
Good thing your dad didn't throw it against the wall.
No, yeah, those were simpler times, Rolo.
No waffles or it was pancake against the window.
All right.
We are close enough here.
Let's take a break.
And in the second half, we're going to talk about I had a massive road trip last week, the longest one of my life, way longer than DC to Florida for spring break in college.
Met up with Sam, had a bunch of great experiences there on the road and some horrifying experiences from traveling across Middle America and what the elites derisively refer to as flyer country.
So we'll have some fun with that and more in the second half.
But on that epic road trip with about a dozen other guys, I had never heard Rolo's getting excited already.
I can see it.
I had never listened to a Misfits song before in my life.
I knew Danzig, right?
I knew Mova and the 13 and all that stuff, but I had never actually listened to a Misfits song.
So the driver said, I had the Bluetooth at the time.
He said, hey, Coach, put on the American Psycho album from the Misfits in 1997.
I said, all right, enjoy this, fan.
This is Dig Up Her Bones, in my very humble opinion, the greatest Misfits song of all time.
And I recommend this one for long runs or short runs, Halloween parties, and nasty divorces, because it's about dig up her bones.
be right back.
Anywhere is where she's from.
Anything is what she needs.
Anything as long as it's mine.
And the door been open to way back in.
Or this is way back out.
Any place is what you need.
Many place to see it from.
Lives and secrets become your world.
Anytime, anywhere.
Steps me away.
And that climbs up the steps one by one.
To give you the rose that's been burned by the sun.
Point me to the sky above.
I can't get there on my own.
Walk me to the graveyard.
Pick up above.
I have seen the demons face.
I have heard love of that place.
I fell down on my knees and prayed and run.
Horrible things happened to blow away.
And take climbs up the steps one by one to give you the rose that's been burned by the sun.
Point me to the sky above.
I can't get there on my own.
Walk me to the graveyard.
Think of above.
Point me to the sky above.
I can't get there on my own.
Walk me to the graveyard.
And welcome back to Full House, episode 144, part two.
Nikke is still riding with us.
Of course, Sam and Rolo are.
I am now relocated down to, I guess we'll call it the Never Cook Shed because I was getting a little too exuberant up in the house, being a little too noisy, rattling the windows, which is no problem.
I just moved during the break, and these guys talked about misfits, music, and assorted characters that we have come into contact with over the years, lost contact with, stayed close friends with.
It's like any other human endeavor.
Things come, things go, they come back, and all the rest of it.
Quick Finstock whip update after my dear extravaganza two weeks ago.
So I mentioned that my wife went out on a wild goose chase, which of course was not that.
It was a journey into the wild blue yonder to retrieve our old decrepit SUV.
And she knows how to play the long game because after a couple days, she's getting close.
She's, ah, yeah, no Bluetooth in this old thing.
Course it's driving okay.
And then what does she pull up into the driveway with?
But a new used uh, minivan.
She and her father had conspired to go shopping while she was out there and uh, surprise me and the kids with an upgrade on the old minivan which, truth be told, was getting pretty stinky and rattly.
So uh, very awesome, gratified.
And it's got that all-wheel drive so necessary for the Appalachian hills.
So we're back up to full power.
No more excuses for late shows, aside from road trips.
I'm so backed up on dad jokes but I just i'll work them in here.
I got them right in front of me.
Audience submissions, some real classics, but uh we'll, we'll do that.
Uh, I wanted to.
We got a question from the audience.
Oh no, before we do that, NEW White LIFE only got one this week.
Uh, thank you very much to Rust West who wrote in and said, just wanted to reach out and let you know the movement's number one, Egyptaboo Jb and his lovely wife just released their second baby, a girl.
Hail the NJP, hail our folk, and hail victory.
Thank you, Rust.
I have no idea and don't want to know what an Egyptiboo is, don't know why he chose to say released their second baby, a girl.
But i'm going to go on good faith here.
Rust has been a regular correspondent of the show and i'm sure Jb and his lovely wife are good people and our people.
So congratulations guys, congratulations absolutely.
And there's a lot of them out there percolating, including three men who Sam and I met up with uh last weekend, who have new white life on the way, and they said no no no let's, let's hold off.
Superstitious, superstitious out there in the sticks.
No yeah yep nope, mum's the word.
No socks, no.
Congratulations for you, dear fellas.
Uh, but almost in the spirit of new white life is young white life.
Uh, you know our, our questioners are usually our guys, 30s 40s, maybe even 50s.
I see you there, KALE AND BLUE.
Thank you for the congratulations on the uh passing the 16 year mark in marriage.
But uh, this guy's still in high school uh, so let's see what he has to say and we'll see if we can give him some good advice.
It's a little bit long, so i'm going to read it quickly.
Uh, question from all right, here we go.
Hello, birth Panel.
I'm lost.
I don't know what I want to do after I graduate high school.
I've gone from wanting to major in one thing, to another thing, to another, and now I just don't want to go to college.
It's not because i'm a subparse student.
I got a good gpa.
I'm in my second year of community college.
Uh oh okay, after I graduate high school.
But he's in the second year of community college dual enrollment program.
Okay, I missed that detail in the first part.
Regardless, i'm not opposed to going into a trade.
I just don't know if i'll like it because I have zero experience with any of them.
Is there a way I could get an introductory experience in the trades without committing to them to see if i'd like one of them?
The more I think about it, the more I believe that i'm meant to go into the military If our country wasn't gay and I wouldn't be fighting for Jews.
If I were to enlist, would there be a best way to do so in terms of gaining the benefits of the service, the experience, the position, and avoiding dying for Zog?
I remember Smasher talking about this, but I haven't been able to find it.
So that's part one.
Whether he's last year of high school or maybe he's taking community college on the side, I'm also lonely in spite of the fact that I have plenty of friends.
I know this is because I can't develop meaningful relationships with people who think like I do.
I know of no other WNs in my area.
Given the fact that I live in, we'll just say the northwest part of the country, I don't find this surprising.
There just aren't that many white people here anymore.
I know I need to get connected, but I don't know how.
Is there an age limit to getting vetted for a pool party?
I also don't know what my parents would think of it if I did join one.
I haven't told them about my political beliefs.
They're entirely Ben Shapiro and Fox News watching conservatives.
Thanks for everything.
B.
So two questions there.
Young guy getting started off in his life doesn't know what the hell to do trades.
He knows college or at least expensive four-year universities, private ones in particular, are overwhelmingly a scam unless you're going for something like petroleum engineering or something that's going to guarantee a job.
And then he's young and he doesn't have any of us in his social circle.
Sam, what's going to you first on the professional advice?
Yeah.
When my oldest sons were getting to be that age, I said, you've got to work.
You've got to work a few years at least to figure out and understand how the world really works.
So I would say, if you can, work in a field that maybe you're interested in, or even just go work in any kind of plant, manufacturing plant, if you can get in something like that.
And you will, there's many things to understand how the world works, how the day goes and the different functions in the plant, maintenance and the scheduling and the job load and all those types of things.
I would say work for a little while because no 18-year-old that I have seen is mature enough to have a good grasp on where they see themselves going in a career.
So definitely work for at least two years in some kind of business, preferably some kind of manufacturing business if you can get in.
Manufacturing right now is really hurting for people.
You can get in there, work for a little while.
There's nothing wrong.
There's nothing that will hurt you about working for a couple of years before you decide to go to college if that's what you want to do.
And then if you go to college, you got to have a plan.
Don't just go to college because that is the thing to do or somebody told you to do it.
If you have a plan and a reason to go to college, you want to become an engineer, something like that.
Okay, fine.
That's good.
But maybe while you're working in some kind of industry, you might see some kind of trade that you want to get into.
And so no one can tell you exactly what to do.
You have to figure that out for yourself.
And you need to work for a while to do that.
And also by working for a while, you'll have some money in your pocket.
I remember when I was 17, my dad was intent to send me off to college, even before I was 17.
And when I was 17 and 18 years old, I really wasn't ready to go to college.
And It took some real soul searching on my part before I was ready to figure out what my career was to be.
And I recall when my brother, he took a few years and he worked in a factory and he made some money, bought a car, and he was a little more set when he went to college, which he went a couple years later than I did, but he was more ready to go because he knew what he wanted to do and he had some money in his pocket.
If you just push yourself to go into college and to go into debt and you don't have any money saved, you don't have a car and all those things, you're really going in a position of weakness.
I would say try to work, try to talk to people, get into some kind of business, some kind of work that you can do and see how the real world works for a couple of years.
And then you'll be ready to figure out what you want to do.
Solid advice, Sammy baby.
To his specific question about trying out the trades, I don't know if this is good advice, but I know for a fact, multiple guys who have tried out trades.
And I think some of them carried through with it, but I know several who said, you know what, this really isn't for me in welding.
And I know a guy who started to get into welding and I think he could hack it and then decided it wasn't for him.
A guy who went into join the plumbers union.
And that was, he was the one who said, oh my God, they're flooding these unions with blacks and they don't know how to do anything and they're getting graded on a curve.
That kind of horrified him for the future standards in plumbing.
And then there's HVAC and auto mechanics.
There's electrical.
We had an article on the Full House site in March or April from a commercial pilot who said, if you're young and you're starting out, go to pilot school.
They're starving for pilots right now.
It's still a white male dominated industry.
The pay is great.
And yes, you can still have a home life, even though you are going to be gone upwards of 180 days per year.
I think you're smart.
You're going to a community college and getting some cheap credits that could carry over to a four-year university should you decide to do that.
But do not go to a four-year university, one, without a plan, and two, for some BS degree that is iffy at best as to actually get work out of it.
Let me give you a little hot take, if you will.
When it comes to the welding, you can take some classes and you can get a certificate in being a certified weld inspector.
That's big money right there.
You combine that certified weld inspector credential with knowing something about welding and doing some welding yourself, man.
That's a real ticket to success right there.
Yeah.
He's not too far from the oil and natural gas patches in North Dakota, some of those Bakken fields out there.
If you want to go work hard, extremely hard and make big money, that's a possibility.
Like that would be an option for the Sam thing, and go work for two years working in oil and gas.
It's not going anywhere for decades.
Don't let them spook you on it.
Yes, it's cyclical.
As to the military, kind of a bigger gamble there.
Our advice almost across the board in the current year has been from guys who are old enough to enlist to certainly the younger guys and our kids.
Absolutely not.
You've seen the horror stories.
You know who's leading the military that it's just not worth it.
But if you're one of those guys who absolutely want to do it, you decide you need that credential, you're willing to roll the dice on possibly dying in a stupid foreign war, which I will remind you, young correspondent, is far more likely today than it was just a year ago against either Russia or China in the next decade or so, then you have to figure that the Air Force is going to be the whitest.
You're going to be in Colorado Springs and doing technical stuff, and you're probably not going to be a fighter pilot, I'm guessing.
So if you had to do it, it would be that.
We know a bunch of guys throughout various branches of the military who have either gotten out or can't wait to get out.
And that goes across the board.
Rolo Nikke, anything for this young guy on the professional front before we move on to the social?
I mean, when it comes to the professional front, I saw the letter.
I wouldn't say like totally give up on college.
I think there's still a path there that you can have a fulfilling career if you pursue a degree.
Because believe me, there are careers out there that if you have a bachelor's degree, you can get the job.
If you don't have a bachelor's degree, you cannot get that job.
If you are dead set committed to the trade path, pursue that.
If you're not, try to balance your class load between the two until you've figured it out.
If you're doing community college, like it sounds like you are, you can try to manage both.
I don't think it's impossible to pursue classes for a bachelor's degree, you know, at the community college level while also taking like, you know, welding classes at your community college.
It's going to be busy and your workload is going to be intense, but it's doable.
And I know people who have done that exact path.
Now, for the sake of the record, they ended up pursuing the welding.
But, you know, you need to decide what's best for you.
And it's going to be your own perception and your own interaction with that field that will be able to tell you what to do.
We can only give like, you know, generalized advice.
We don't know, you know, your personal experience and how you feel about these trades in particular.
But the best thing you can do is, you know, use your time wisely to experience both the, you know, scholarly pursuit as well as the blue-collar pursuit at the same time.
And doing that will help you make a decision sooner rather than later, which is what you want to do.
Because the sooner you can get into a career, the better.
Yeah.
And to be honest, I can't honestly say that I regret going to a private four-year university as an 18-year-old, but I'm horrified when I look back at how degenerate it was, how expensive it was, and the negligible amount of knowledge that I got out of it as a result of it.
It was fun.
It was a great experience.
I was on my own.
I was in Washington.
I met my wife on study abroad.
But in hindsight, it was not a wise choice.
I should have gone to Rutgers for free.
I would say that most people are not ready, mature enough for that experience at that age.
I mean, if you can, if you are that person, okay, great, you know, but I wouldn't push my children into that thing.
And like I said, I told my sons, you got to work at least for a couple of years before you can think about college.
And then when you're ready to go to college, you got to really buy in.
You got to be all in for that.
Know why you're there.
Yeah.
You're not there to party.
You're there to money's worth and launch your life.
And there's nothing wrong with going out in the oil patch or any other sort of manual labor industry and getting some hair on your chest and getting some calluses on your hands and then showing up to college two years older than all the babyface freshmen.
Oh, that's that's exactly what happened.
My sons, they worked in the plant.
You know, they worked all the different shifts and worked the dirty weekend jobs where they were cleaning out things and all that.
And by the time they were ready to go to college, they were, you know, had the right mindset and they both have succeeded because of that.
That's right.
On to the social aspect of his question.
Age is rightfully sensitive in the cause.
If you are under 18, no group that you want to join is going to want anything to do with you.
And that's not because anything bad goes on, but just because you're still a kid, you're probably still under your parents' roof.
And there's just too much risk there.
And it's even a little bit inappropriate to get involved in the social and ideological development of someone who's not even 18.
If you're under 21, it's different.
And hey, like Thomas Rousseau was what, 16, 17 when he went to Patriot or when he went to Charlottesville and then went on to Foreign Patriot Front.
So obviously, it's not like we want to dissuade young guys and just put all of this ideological stuff on hold until you're 18 or 21 or whatever.
But frankly, if you're under 21, there's often alcohol at our events.
Young men are less mature and a little bit more excited to join a scene like that and may make bad decisions.
And the older guys are going to be a little bit more reluctant to take you on because frankly, there's also a generate, there's a big generational gap in outlook and maturity aspect there.
So I'm not going to speak for the pool parties and say if you're under 21, stay away, but I suspect that they would be leery if not just say, nah, you know, get back to us when you're 21, which is those are the specifics.
But more generally, you are still young.
Young people often change their outlooks often or frequently, or they modify significantly into their 20s and especially in their 30s.
I guess there's some formula where like, whatever you are at 35, that's what you're going to be for the rest of your life.
I don't know what it is.
But I would almost say thank you for the interest and the eagerness and take your time.
Don't write off those friends who aren't there with you ideologically.
Try to, you know, work on them.
Try to build your own tribe at first.
if that's possible whether it's through online contacts who you meet up for a beer if you're of age or if it just happens organically uh in what you're doing so yeah i don't know how old you are but i would probably say wait until 21.
i probably wouldn't want to meet up with somebody at a meetup until they were 21.
sam rollo nikkei am i crazy there am i too uh coming across as old man coach yeah no i i i joined my pool party when i was 18.
Um, so I would disagree there.
I think uh yeah, maybe 18 is the right age.
I think that's a minimum.
Nobody should let yeah, nobody should be.
Uh, I don't even want to say you know what I mean.
You should have your, your full uh, decision-making capacities allotted to you when you join.
Um, you know because uh, on one hand, you want to respect the uh, the place of your parents right, if you are a minor and you're under the care of your parents and you, you find yourself, you know, in in a situation you don't want to have, like a bad action, you know, fall upon them in terms of, like legal responsibility uh,
being 18 when you're involved means you are fully legally responsible for yourself uh, and your decisions are like, you know, they're made as a legal adult, and I, I think that's completely fair.
Uh I, I went through many years of being involved in my pool party and not drinking because I wasn't of age, and that was totally fine.
I, I didn't have a problem with that.
I wanted to be involved uh, and that meant more to me than, like you know uh, partaking in alcohol.
I just waited till I was old enough.
You know, i've been in this long enough where I went from uh not drinking to being legally able to drink and uh, it was fine, good on you and good on them that you were able to manage that.
Yeah yeah no, it was no problem.
I think uh any, you know any young adult like myself at the time uh, you have a good, a good head on your shoulders.
Uh, you can make that call for yourself.
And um I, I wouldn't let the uh, the non-legal age to drink hold, hold you back.
Thank you for the additional perspective.
Nikkei Rollo.
Anything quick before we move on to the parent question and then onward here in the second half.
I don't have a lot on uh joining a kind of group like this below 21.
I mean I, I didn't join up until I was uh well mature sure, and I just I it.
It's kind of an awkward situation because you know, if he's like a good kid and he's got some you know his it's stuff together for his age it it, it's still kind of hard to to want to bring him to something that poses a risk because like, if there's a meetup and like his parents have to drive him there and like there's, there's a, there's a whole lot of, there's a whole lot of complications to it, where I I think you just gotta hang in there,
stay strong and honestly, if just like, make friends with people that have normal hobbies that you have, and then you can probably get them to come to your line of thinking if your ideas are well formulated and you can convey them to people, and then you can just start your own social group of of wns.
Yeah, I mean, Nikkei looked like an aged orthodox priest at the age of 16, so it was easy for them to say, Or the black robe and everything.
It was first pool party.
Everybody thought that was weird, but it grew up.
I was on a place.
You know, I was like the only guy not drinking at Seaville in the aftermath of all that.
Oh, you poor bastard.
I would have given you a cold one after Seaville.
But you know what?
Like Roller said, you probably should be able to drive yourself.
That would be another good point.
Like not all adults have their license.
Have your license and have your own car.
It's about being able to be responsible for yourself and like manage your own affairs.
Like don't drag other people into it because then you get you get yourself into like weird arguments when they find out what you're doing.
Right.
You don't want to put yourself in a situation where you have to like negotiate your involvement.
Like if somebody who's who you rely on is facilitating your participation, like and they're not like on board themselves, you're in a bad situation.
You don't want to be there.
Yeah, if mom can snatch your cell phone and say, what are you doing?
Who are you talking to?
You're a little bit of a security risk there.
It's security risk, but also just like a commitment risk.
Like you don't want to commit yourself to something that somebody else has a veto to.
That's right.
Nikkei, can I mention real quick the thing that you and I went to earlier this year, just vaguely?
I was just talking.
Hell yeah.
Nikkei and I marched together in the March for Life in January.
Possibly the last.
Well, it won't be the last one, probably.
They'll keep marching.
But what a really cool experience.
I talked about it on the show already, but I didn't mention that we were there together.
But to be at the last March for Life before Roe v. Wade was repealed.
Right on.
I'm smiling through the microphone.
Yes.
All you represent credit for it.
A great event.
Yep.
Yeah.
No, you know, there were negatives to it.
You can go back and listen to that show whenever it was in January that I probably talked about a little bit.
But regardless of whatever you think about the various groups that are there and their total ideology, to be.
Basic idea cannot be impugned.
Absolutely.
Amen.
So Nikkei and I are pro-life brothers there.
And then just finally, I don't want to beat this to death, but the parent question here, you know, what will my parents think if I join a pool party?
They are your parents.
They love you more than almost anything else in the world, assuming that they're good, normal parents.
And when you get older, then there's time to berate your old man for being a boomer.
Or in your case, he's probably an Xer, dear listener.
And don't jeopardize that.
You're still young.
Keep good relations with your parents.
Don't get in stupid arguments.
I've made that mistake before where when I was newly imbued with all this knowledge and the ways of the world, that because I love my parents, I wanted to engage them with this new information and teach them about it and show them about their naivete in many areas of the world.
And guess what?
They didn't care.
Maybe they got it in some respect on an intellectual level, but there was just no interest there.
And I learned to shut the hell up about it and that it was more important to spend good quality time with my parents than talk about the Jews or race.
Now, occasionally it sneaks out every once in a while if we're having beers around a campfire, but they have learned to accept my little aberrations and sort of roll their eyes or agree with the points that they could agree with.
And I have learned to not go hard and bring it up barely at all.
And that's, I just have to tell you, it's been the better decision in my life.
Your relationship with your parents is the most important one until you get married and have kids.
So that's the final one.
Go ahead.
Well, I was going to say, at the same time, you also have to be your own man.
True.
My parents are both Gen Xers.
And, you know, I've gone through the whole. conversation.
I mean, they know what I believe.
It's no secret from them.
And I can talk about my opinions openly with them because, you know, they're willing to hear me out.
And maybe they agree on some things and disagree on others.
You know, they don't disown me because they're my parents.
Yeah.
But you can be your own man when you're out when you're out of the house, in my opinion.
If you're still under the roof, you're still playing by their rules, or at least you should to a certain respect.
You're out of the house.
Let it rip.
You're 18 or 21, whatever it is.
You're your own man.
Just, yeah, I don't want young guys getting in pissing matches with their parents over ideology, especially at a young age.
Personally.
As far as my own situation went, I wasn't out of my parents' roof with my involvement, but I was, like I said, I had my own level of functional independence, or I could afford my own trowels and I can afford my own transportation, logistics.
I didn't have to like ask permission to go out, et cetera.
You know, you don't have to like pay rent and live on your own to like make your own calls about who you hang out with, right?
Fair enough.
You don't have to like hang, you don't have to have your token black friend just for your parents' approval.
You can have your own social group that you're involved with because you're a man and you're calling your own shots.
I mean, this is a level of independence that should be expected of you, expected of you as an adult.
You know, once you're 18, you make these decisions on your own.
Yep.
And granted, my perspective is colored by having boomer parents.
Maybe Xer parents are a little bit more likely to go along with it.
And who knows?
It depends on your parents, right?
Maybe a lot of parents already share your ideas.
Sometimes they share your ideas, but they still think you're crazy for thinking you can change the world, right?
Or thinking you can say it publicly.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You're right, but you're a damn fool for saying it out loud.
Yeah, they're they know the rules of what you can say publicly.
And like Xers are young enough to understand what like quote unquote cancellation is.
They get it.
And they can, they can fear for you and have concern for you in that regard.
And not for nothing that they think so, because there's what it's worth.
I'm not doxed.
I don't have my information out there.
I can still operate with those assumptions.
And you have to have that level of info security that you're not exposed to these consequences.
And you have to be smart about it.
Amen.
My final piece of information for this young listener, and I'm happy that we indulge in this one because please, like, what, what gives old guys like Sam and me more pleasure than sharing a little wisdom before we shuffle off this mortal coil?
But, you know, as a young man about to go into work, I highly suggest the United States Postal Service because a good friend let me know that it is a male-dominated industry.
I told you guys I was going to work in dad jokes, but the camera's frozen, so I can't see that.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right.
All right.
Oh, I'm good at this.
Yes.
M-A-I-L for the slow folks.
Yes, sir.
Common Susquehanna.
Very good.
All right.
Let's go on to the great American road trip.
Took me until I was 41 years old to drive this far.
Frankly, I didn't need driving.
I was willing to 24 hours with the stops in a van bus full of 12 hardy fighting age men.
And I'll start with the good news.
Aside from the fact that we had a grand time and listened to tunes the whole way, we sang some part of it, listened to the misfits, tons of shit posting, dad jokes and bono me.
But just on the American grounds, it struck me, even though a lot of it was at night, we were in rural America, interstates, et cetera, there's, this is still such a massive, empty country.
And it reminded me of the time in India when, of course, the cities are teeming cauldrons of humanity, much of it not very pleasant or aesthetic.
And when you left those cities, like driving from New Delhi to Agra, I thought, oh, all right, we're getting out into the Indian countryside.
Oh, no, the teeming mass of humanity continues in the second most populous country of the world.
So there's still a lot of space and open space here for you to find peace of mind.
And I say that because, and Sam, you nailed it when you were talking about your recent road trip probably to a skinhead show.
The rest stops were horrifying, even in rural red state areas.
Yes.
Oh, my God.
It wasn't, you know, it wasn't just like I could handle seeing some fat white people, right?
That sort of standard procedure here.
But it was, it was, I hate to do the Bugman pop culture reference, but it was the most ISIL spaceport.
Very clearly fresh off the boat or freshly coyoted in Mexicans, Central Americans, Hmong, guys who had that vacant stare like they were in Oz all of a sudden.
And it was just incredible.
And a lot of them were coming out of vans.
We pulled into one of these rest stops called Loves.
There's a lot of Loves where we've kind of bad aesthetics, but nice stores inside.
And they were like, oh, look, there's that van of Mexicans that we passed on the highway.
And then we look closer.
We're like, nope, that's a different one.
So, yeah, like just the, I, you know, being ensconced in Appalachia for as long as I have been, you get, you get spoiled and you get used to being surrounded by good white people.
And to hit the road and see these interstate rest stops lets you know just how much is rotten in the state of Denmark.
And we don't talk about it that much on the show anymore because it's just one of those unfortunate assumptions, but they are ramping it.
It's horrible.
And these are not like your Mexicans of yesteryear.
These are straight seasons from around the world.
Go ahead, Sam.
I don't want to.
Yeah, no, no, you're exactly right.
I didn't mean to interrupt there.
Yeah.
No, exactly right.
The good news is that when you roll in a dozen fighting age white men deep, now some of us were in great shape.
Some of us, myself included, are in average shape.
And some of us still have some work to do.
Regardless.
When 12 white men roll out of a van and go into one of these rest stops that is utterly otherwise overrun by the invasives uh, I definitely got some looks like who are those guys?
What are they doing?
Oh yeah, you know tattoos and confidence and uh disdain, probably dripping dripping from their eyeballs.
I noticed that, like I noticed how bad it was, and then also that we were noticed just by virtue of being all white, all male and not like a bunch of uh Master Race not, not Mormon missionaries, you know, with no disrespect to the Mormons, you know we weren't goody two-shoes there with our uh, white shirts and our ties.
Sorry sorry Mormons, I didn't mean to offend you there.
Um, and then also I had waffle house for the first time, which all the guys screamed absolutely incredible that I had never, oh yeah to a waffle house.
So that's, that's really.
Yes, I don't know.
I grew up in South Jersey, I went to school in Dc and now I live in West Virginia.
I there's never been a waffle house near me or i've never been compelled to go into one.
They look seedy, but they were kind of nice.
Well, they are seedy and the seedier they are, the more authentic the experience is, yeah, that's what one guy said, these tables are not sticky enough for me.
I prefer a stickier.
You know more coach uh yeah yeah coach, if I can make you, if I can make you feel uh, better.
I also had never been to a waffle house until until I had really got out of like an urban area and uh, I also feel the same way, like there's something very good about about those and uh like like uh, Nikkei is saying there uh, like there's something essential about the seediness of it.
Um sure, but yeah, it was.
It wasn't that bad.
It wasn't that bad.
No, I thought I loved it.
I've loved it as I, you know it's.
It's been only more in recent years that i've experienced it because they are not in my area.
Yep uh, you know, I just saw that like aged 70s square signs and just figured that's going to be a dive dump.
But what do you know?
The people working here, they may they may not have been high on life to be there, but they were competent.
Yeah uh, you know uh, it worked.
The food was tasty, it was cheap.
Yeah, it was like 13 bucks for you know, fill your belly yeah, you get, you get a lot of food.
Yeah, it was.
It was a little bit of a charming piece of Americana.
I'm a Waffle House respecter.
I've been to, all i've been to.
Uh, what is it enjoyer?
Even yeah, Cracker Barrel.
That's what i'm thinking of.
Uh, i'll be back to the Waffle House, uh.
However, more more important than that was our destination, our cause and the brotherhood it's.
I'll just say it, Sam and I were uh separately inbound to an Assembly OF THE Manor BUND uh, to a really wonderful I.
I can't uh salute the guys who hosted us.
Enough, from the camaraderie to the busy schedule.
We hiked, we had speeches, we had feasts, we had downtime where we could late night talks, bonfires, ceremonies, basketball, you name it, snoring for sure.
But I, you know, and this is just a little bit of a teaser.
You know, Manor Bund is not completely out there as a one of those groups that says, oh, here, here is our website and please apply to it.
And full disclosure, went through a rocky patch, I don't know, half a year ago, something like that, and is carrying on.
And if that, there's pool parties, there's NJP supporter groups, there's Manor Bun, there's Patriot Front.
Those are the ones that I'm familiar with.
And if you're listening to this show, I would, depending on your risk calculus, I would feel comfortable endorsing.
There are other ones that I've heard are bad, other ones that I don't know of.
ADS is a good, good one.
American Defense Skinheads.
There's obviously the Assatru Folk Assembly, which is faith-based.
I can say that one in confidence.
But if you are interested in brotherhood and men of high caliber with purpose and perhaps a lower risk profile, then I would say that the Manor Bund is for you.
And I'll give one little teaser.
You know, I guess technically I give a speech on this show every week, but it was my honor for the third year in a row to give a speech to them.
And I had so much that I wanted to say and speeches can only go on for so long.
But I gave a little bit of inside baseball into my two decades in Washington, what I saw, the caliber of the elites who work there and what their motivations were, because that is absolutely vital information for our people to know.
And perhaps one day I'll be able to give a public speech on that, but that day is not yet here.
And then I, and Sam, we'll go to anything that you want to synthesize or summarize next.
But I told them what my absolute, you know, the call of calls.
We all make predictions about trials and elections and which way this thing or the other is going to go.
And I had to tell the men honestly that we're not LARPing.
It's not collapsitarianism.
I don't think that it's accelerationism to see the trends in America and in many other countries in the West and feel in our bones and also know in our brains and in our heart that it's going down one way or another.
We don't know the specifics.
We don't know the timeline, but it's going to happen because all empires that have welcomed in aliens, many of them hostile, non-assimilatable in large numbers, who have engaged in foolhardy wars, who have debased their treasuries, who have produced their native majority, have not lasted on this earth, and especially not one that is simultaneously making enemies of the two largest nuclear powers.
You know what I mean, Russia and China, massive nuclear powers with historical chips on their shoulder, who we are insanely poking simultaneously.
That is a recipe for disaster for the United States.
And then after that, I talked a little bit about our way forward.
You have to, we don't know what's going to happen, but to do strategic planning, to chart your course forward, you have to at least make certain assumptions about which way the winds are blowing.
So to all of our listeners out there, the bare minimum you can be doing is prepping.
I guess the maximum you could be doing is probably not something that you should talk about.
And the middle of that is getting ready to carve out peace and order and security and safety amidst inevitable chaos whenever it comes.
And ideally, you know, building the ground level foundation for what is to come.
I'll leave it at that.
That is my honest plug for the Manor Bund.
And you're welcome to hit me up.
You're interested in pool parties, hit me up.
Patriot Front, you know where to find them if you're interested in the AFA.
I'm not members of all these groups, but I'm happy to farm you out or help you in good faith.
I don't know.
Oh, yeah, our young listener in his PS, he said, I sure hope you guys aren't feds.
If you're feds, you really are good at it.
I said, don't worry, buddy.
I am not good enough to fake it over three years and 143 episodes.
But I'll leave it at that.
Sam, it was an honor to see you speak to in your striking black uniform.
I'll just leave it at that.
Have out a big guy.
Sorry for going on some more.
No, that's wonderful.
It was an amazing event.
The caliber of men that you are around in such a venue, words failed me to capture it, really.
And I already said earlier, but just to spend time with Coach was wonderful for me.
It just, the time goes by so quickly.
And it's really just, it takes time to catch up with me, you know?
And it was a wonderful time.
But I did have some reflections on the time because our days are so full, you know.
Reveli is at 6 a.m. or 7 a.m.
We're up and we're doing things and the whole day is so full of activity, physical activity mostly, that you're just using your energy and your body in such a way, I can only put it like God intended you to do it.
And I'm a worrier.
I worry about people.
I worry about things.
I'm thinking, I'm almost obsessive thinking about my children, my friends, the family, our movement, our people, my comrades.
But I just found, you know, being so consumed with activity all day that my mind was so quieted early early in the morning and late at night when typically I'm kind of agitated,
you know, and I, you know, I don't know if that means anything to anybody or not, but I just couldn't help but note that my mind was so much more quieted by the being so consumed with activity and energy all day long.
That, Sam, and real quick, I'm sorry for interrupting, but just the, it was the, yes, we had tons of activities, but it was a glimpse of how life could be totally with strong, like-mended, like-minded, trustworthy brothers and not a hostile or a neutral to worry about in the world.
The only thing you had to worry about was measuring up to them and carrying your weight and being a good guest, essentially.
Yeah.
And the guys you meet are just singular, you know, have something to offer, you know, many of these guys are just physical specimens, you know, just fit and stuff like that.
And, and, um, uh, interesting, talented and stuff.
And, and even sometimes, you know, you see a guy like there's one particular guy I won't mention, but he's kind of a kind of a heavier set guy, you know.
And you might think like, is this guy in shape or not?
But this guy, I saw him boxing.
He was boxing guys.
And then, yeah, and then he was, he wrestled another guy.
And then some other guy said, oh, okay, I'll wrestle you.
He said, okay, I'll wrestle you.
This guy was just like, you know, just because the guy was like kind of heavier set, that didn't mean he was not fit.
You know, it's like you have a certain idea in your mind of like what a, what a fit person looks like.
And, you know, you get some of those different types in there kind of kind of shatters your idea of what it's all about.
But it was, it was certainly a blessed time for me.
And this one guy there, you know, at a certain moment, this one guy, he caught me, caught me with a backhand with his knuckles, man.
And I thought, man, he could have caught me with a, could have caught me with an open hand slap would have been a little better.
And, you know, I felt it for about 30 minutes was kind of swelling up there.
Then it went down.
I didn't get any bruise, but I thought, man, it was 601, Sam, and you were still cutting Z's.
Yeah.
I thought, man, that Joker, he could have used an open hand.
That would have been better.
But anyways.
There were a couple of guys there who I had known online for years, but had never met in person.
So I'm gushing here.
Is it a plug?
Yeah, it's a little bit of a plug, but it's also 100% genuine and true to meet a man who you've known online and come to know.
You can come to know a man online.
It's true.
Give it enough time and enough jokes and enough bants and enough propaganda and mutual signal boosting.
So to finally shake their hands and give them a bro hug.
Yeah.
Look them in the eye.
Oh, man.
To see that they're better in person.
The one I always thought was going to be a mean son of a bitch.
He had the look of a guy who would like, you know, shive you if you stepped on his shoes.
And he's, and he did look like that, but he was a big softy.
Oh, yeah.
It was, yeah, it was really cool.
And I also, you know, of course, the physical activity.
And then, you know, by the end of one of those days where we were planning on swimming at the waterfront and everybody's like, you know, you know what?
It's like really hot and we're just going to sit here in the shade.
We spent enough energy getting out there.
You know, it was like, okay, let's just rest and have a have a drink of water.
That's good enough at this point.
The alpha dogs were boxing and wrestling and the rest of us were like, let's have a good conversation.
It's impressive.
I've wrestled before, you know, and I know what that's like to, you know, expend your energy against another man.
You know, you're both putting out your energy and all that.
And to watch that one guy, he was like, okay, I'll take you on.
He wrestled that guy.
I'll take you on now.
And he wrestled that guy.
I was like, wow, you know, just one of those matches would have been enough.
And yeah, just the physical shape of some of these guys is amazing.
And, you know, doing the physical fitness test and just hiking all day and then taking a rest and going for another hike and all that.
That's great stuff, man.
Our guys need more of that.
Amen.
And I only took one nap and I had a perfectly legitimate excuse because my great bunk mate was the worst snorer in all history.
There was one point where I was regaling the audience with some ghost stories around one o'clock in the morning.
And people were chiming in and saying, you know what?
Let me tell you this story.
I thought it was all crazy in BS2.
People love the ghost stories.
We got a lot of feedback from last show.
One, that we were just chit-chatting.
You know me.
I always worry about, oh, we're being self-indulgent.
We're just chit-chatting.
Are we informing enough or are we just entertainers?
I said, no, that was a great show, The Hunt for White October.
And then a bunch of guys chimed in and said, oh, let me tell you my ghost story.
I know it sounds crazy, but this, that, out in the woods, voices that they then acted on, and there was like a bit of a physical response.
I know it sounds crazy, but it happened.
That was awesome.
So there's unexplainable things.
You know, it's not like we have to even draw a conclusion about it.
There's unexplainable things out there.
And bottom line, too, whatever your risk calculus is, whatever your personal interest is, whether it's activism, whether it's politics, whether it's brotherhood, whether it's faith, you have to find your tribe.
I'm not going to beat a dead horse here.
We've been through this before.
But as I said at one point while I was there, the absolute bare minimum that we are is a mutual aid society for each other in very difficult times that are unquestionably going to get harder before they get better.
For our young guy who wrote in, for the Anans who are listening, who have not made that jump for one reason or another, you don't want to be a lone wolf.
You don't want to hole up in a holler with no friends, no contacts.
Make friends with your neighbors.
Reach out in your communities.
Get involved either with our thing or with the safer side of what's left of the healthy civic existence in this crumbling country because the hour is late.
You know, what's the timeline, coach?
What's the timeline?
I give it no more than two decades.
And I think even that is a little bit generous, given the acceleration, the sincere acceleration from both left and right, from BLM Dirty Black Summer to January 6th, to the most contested federal election, at least in the modern era, to the COVID nonsense, tyranny.
It's not nonsense.
It was a program to the invasion, to the debt, to the inflation.
I'll stop there.
But I do want to drive that home just in case you're a new listener and you've made it this far.
Please do that for yourselves and your families.
Start your own group if you have to.
I meant to ask James LaFond about this because he is, some people think he's a total crank.
Other people love him.
Nika, you've been on him on the shows with him on Third Rail, I suspect at least once or twice.
But James is a big fan of no name and small groups for flexibility, for trust, etc.
I get it.
Oh, yeah.
No, he's like, you can totally operate in that style.
You don't have to be out there.
You don't have to have a reputation.
You don't.
You can just have your click, right?
As long as you're involved with something.
The important part is involvement.
It's not about like outward presence.
You don't need everyone to have a presence.
We do this because we have an act for having these conversations and spreading a dialogue and creating propaganda, getting a message out.
And that's our role.
For each one of us, there are five others at least who you've never heard of.
You haven't heard a peep from them that are involved.
And they do more than us, you know, for what their involvement means.
They do even more.
So there are ways to be involved and be very impactful in what we do and not be known.
So just because you don't have like the recognition or the reputation doesn't mean you're not involved and you're not important.
You can have a big role in what we do.
And one of the dirty, untrue slanders that the left and our enemies sling at us is that we're a gang of drinking, woman abusing, vol cells, incels, chicken tendy eating degenerates.
When the God's honest truth, I swear on my grandmother's grave, and I swear on a person of great historical personages' honor that we have doctors, we have lawyers, we have engineers, we have rocket scientists, we have the fittest guys you'll ever see.
Yeah, we got a couple Spergs.
We got a couple fatsos, you know.
That's life.
You know, that's the truth.
But the best men I've ever met in my life, and that includes 20 years in Washington with the masters of the universe, have been the men who know the score like we do and are not afraid to at least network and help people out in a pitch.
And women love us.
Absolutely.
Most of us.
Join the ranks of the elite of mind, body, and soul.
Right.
Yep.
Sam has been at this for decades.
Nikkei and I probably got swept up into the glorious maelstrom of the alt-right and all the rest.
We're going to hit our decade mark sooner than later, you know?
Yep.
Yep.
Again, telling stories here at the end.
2012 when Obama got re-elected was a lightning strike for me.
I was like, this should not, no, no sane, virtuous, healthy country would re-elect that guy, even without any.
Oh, man.
Did you really want Romney in?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
He had a campaign appearance in Leesburg shortly before the election.
Oh, man, I was so excited.
Dennis Miller opened for him.
And remember that first debate where Mitt Romney eviscerated Obama and he was going to cut funding for Sesame Street.
Oh, I was so excited.
And now Mitt Romney is a blue-haired, like antifub BLM tier.
I mean, he probably was all the, you know, all that time.
I was nowhere even close to old enough to vote at the time, but I remember that election and I was like, Mitt Romney's who the Republicans picked.
Like, I'd rather have Obama because at least I know what I'm getting with Obama, right?
Like with Mitt Romney, it's another known, like, it's another like roll the dice on what new war we start.
At least with Obama, I know that we're going to get like more, like, just drone war in the Middle East.
And it's going to be that.
And sure enough, I mean, that's what Obama term two was.
But like, 2012 was like one of the most, I mean, after 2012, I was like, there's no hope for this country electoral.
Yes.
Right.
Yep.
Yep.
And I was like misled by the Trump 2016 into the wait, I was wrong.
You know, there's another hope.
Romney was, what, the governor of Massachusetts or something like that?
Yeah, he was Massachusetts guy.
Yeah.
Because I remember he was horrible as that, you know, from a like a pro-life perspective.
He was, you know, pro-abortion, you know.
Yep.
It's the same thing that's going to happen.
Yeah, the contrary, you seize on the contrast.
Oh, there is a competent, you know, white man who is, you know, he led the Olympics to success and he says the right things and blah, blah, blah.
Therefore, I'm all I'm riding with Romney as opposed to the gay African.
Yep, I felt I fell for it in 2012, 100%.
And I was, I was devastated that he didn't do better, but it was great.
It was a lightning strike.
Then we all went in for Trump.
And God knows what 2024 is going to bring for us.
I did have one last question before we land this puppy.
We'll start with Nikkei and go around.
Nikkei, has there been anything in your ideological or political views that have changed significantly over the past five years?
And I'll give my quick example.
I have absolutely gotten more leftist, not Marxist, but I've gotten more liberal on economic issues, right?
The old thing that Republicans are actually just conservative on social issues and liberal on economic issues or people, white people are generally.
I used to be a free market, you know, no welfare, low-tax guy.
And now I see the absolute folly of that in this oligarchical society.
But has anything like that happened for you?
Well, five years, I guess we're talking 2017, right?
So just before the midterm.
Or call 2016, whatever.
You know, yeah, it doesn't matter.
Well, I mean, in 2016, I was all on board for Trump.
I was, you know, I made all the excuses for Trump once he was in office and things weren't happening fast enough.
It was like, okay, you know, these things take time.
There's political, there's, there's such things, you know, political capital.
You have to spend it wisely.
You know, you have to do these things in the right ways to get them done.
If you really want to talk like 2017, I was completely fed up with the whole healthcare reform, the Obamacare reform, the absolute waste of political capital that was.
Like I became completely disenchanted with political capital arguments after what I saw.
Yeah, repealing Obamacare, the most important thing in the entire universe to every Republican.
And now it's like, you know, it's like Social Security.
Well, no, even at the time, I didn't care.
I just wanted it done.
And they didn't even do that.
They couldn't even do that.
I just wanted it over so we can get to the wall and we could get to immigration.
And that never came.
And we also saw the drone strikes.
Oh my God, the fucking drone strikes in Syria and the cruise missiles in Syria.
That pissed me off so bad because I thought I wasn't voting for that.
When I voted for Trump in 2016, I thought I was getting something different.
That was really what sold me on Trump was like his outspoken stance on intervention in Syria.
That, you know, he convinced me he was not going to do this.
And when he did it, I was mad.
I was, I felt very betrayed on that.
Yeah.
And it was these very Trump bumper sticker the night of the serious strikes.
I got a razor blade out and scratched that damn thing off the back of my car.
Sorry, go ahead.
Yeah, I remember exactly where I was.
And, you know, one of my IRL friends who knew, you know, that I voted for Trump, I told him that he just lost my support with this strike.
This is specifically what I voted not to happen.
And now that it's happened and there's one person to blame, like, that's it.
Yep.
Jake is up.
So five years ago is when a lot of this came to the front where like I became sort of politically despondent and elected leadership again.
And, you know, I sort of realized, okay, it's really just us in our own little niche that are going to like actually have an effect when we can assert power.
And we're not going to be able to rely on anyone else until then.
I mean, this was like a big wake up call in that regard.
Yeah.
I don't want to be totally defeatist on our ability to influence the system.
I think there's a lot of evidence that our presence and our activism and our talking points do make a difference.
But yeah, when it comes down to brass tacks, it's the donors and their puppets who make the calls and the political appointees.
Rolo, I know you came our way a little bit later than others, but what do you got in the hopper?
I got nothing.
Okay.
Sam, you've been at this for a long time.
Anything change in the five, six, seven years?
Ideological stuff.
Well, just as Nikkei was speaking there, I mean, you know, it's just vindication, you know, when people, people, yeah, you can't can't help but pay attention to what's going on and try to take some relevance from it, you know.
But as you see with enough time goes on, this system's got nothing for us, you know, Trump, Republicans, so forth.
Yeah, you, you want to try to, yeah, if they're saying something that's, that's something we can get behind.
But the reality is the, it sounds like a trope, but these Republicans and Democrats, they're on the same side.
They're absolutely, this is the elites and they are on each other's side more than we could ever be on one side or the other.
So yeah, is, you know, should something come on the national stage that can really make a change?
We thought maybe Trump could be that person.
Hey, yeah, at that time, at that moment, sure, it seemed like that's something to support.
But I think that the Trump era gave an impetus for guys like us and disaffected people and people that are waking up to see the reality of how things are going a moment to understand the political scene the way it really is.
And so, you know, our cause has picked up people every year.
And the things that are going on now, like the Daryl Brooks trial and all that, it just can't help but bring people to our side.
Like I said earlier, you have people that, oh, the Daryl, Trevon Martin or whatever things, those things contributed to people coming our way.
And this, so that's where we are.
That's how I see it.
Yep.
And one last thing is that, and I forgot about this, but one of the younger guys at the thing that we were at, who is going to be a young father, God bless him and his wife said, Coach, you seem different from two years ago.
I guess he had seen me two years ago.
To be honest, I didn't remember meeting him two years ago.
And I said, oh, what do you mean?
He's like, I don't know, something changed in you.
And I tried to think, oh, well, what could be different about me two years later other than being older and maybe a little lower energy?
And I realize that it's probably that I've got more scar tissue and I am less trusting and less willing to give the benefit of the doubt to people now seeing a lot of the characters who burned bright and then burned out or turned over the past couple of years.
And that's not to black pill or, you know, leave anybody with a bad feeling here to close out the show, but it's an important point.
And my dad always is.
Yeah, he's like, my dad always said, people will disappoint you.
And also people don't really change.
So if you see bad behavior or dishonest takes or a little bit of skullduggery here or there, don't be a sucker.
I wasn't a sucker.
I'm not, you know, I have some street smarts, but I was willing to grant more good faith to people who didn't deserve it for too long.
And I'm overall a little bit not longer in the tooth, but I'm just a little bit jaded about some of the people who come into our area of the thing.
Hey, you know, it's just a fact of life.
Any movement is going to have the best people, mediocre people, and rotten people.
And unfortunately, you're going to run into those rotten people and it's going to leave a little bit of scar tissue.
That's that.
Yeah.
I did have one last spooky story just because people love the spooky stories at the end of last show.
And the other night I heard a weird sound that was coming from my printer.
You know, I'm in the house and we've had a couple odd experiences there.
And it sounded like the printer was playing music.
And I knew the kids were asleep.
Wife was asleep.
My Bluetooth speakers weren't on.
So I thought maybe, maybe, you know, this was a little bit of ethereal music coming from beyond the grave.
And it turns out that from that printer, it was just the paper jamming.
So the paper guys.
Yeah.
Grateful dead, fish.
It was Leave's most recent open mind.
Oh, yeah.
That would be an awesome ghost.
Yes.
Here are some Hawking cruises for you from Antarctica across the town.
Yeah, right.
That was great.
I tried.
I tried.
All right.
There's more of that to come.
Cringe and I don't know.
Maybe I can sometimes scratch it.
No, yeah, the best dad joke is no, the best dad joke is when you get it.
Nobody likes to feel uncomfortable when they're like, what?
What?
Oh, okay.
I'm building them up too much.
All right.
Nikkei, thanks so much for coming on on short notice.
Wonderful guest.
As expected, my pro-life brother.
And God bless you and your girlfriend.
Thank you.
Third rail on anything you do.
I appreciate it.
Anything else you want to plug?
The young whites.
I never listened to young whites.
No offense.
I'm an old white.
I'm an old white.
I don't.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You should listen to me.
I don't have to listen to you.
Yeah, you can still find the young whites on the rightstuff.biz.
And you can, if you want written takes from me and anything I have to post, you can find me on the Fediverse on Plaroma.nobodyhas the dot biz at Nikkei is my username.
You got to send that to me.
There's no way I'm going to write that down.
Put that in the show notes.
Yeah.
Yeah, sure.
I'll send it to you.
Rollo, you scoundrel, revealed that he, like another person who will not be named from an old father show, plays video games.
I thought he was sitting there dutifully at the control panel moderating.
That's why our levels are all jacked up is because, you know, Rolo's playing Smash Brothers or Mario Kart while we're here struggling in the trenches.
Playing Donkey Kong.
Come on.
More like Pong, probably on your.
Yeah, play Pong.
I play it because it's the only thing as old as you.
What are you playing?
Tell me.
Tell me the truth.
I can handle the truth.
What were you playing tonight?
I'm playing Final Fantasy.
Oh, God.
You know, I've talked about doing it.
And then I said to Smasher, I said, how do you feel while you were on the, while you were on this thing?
I said, how do you feel that I was playing Final Fantasy while you're recording?
He said, I feel good.
See, this is what I was talking about with, you know, never grant too much good faith towards someone.
You always assume something lurking.
Battery died.
Does that make you feel better?
Yes, it does.
Anyway, Rolo, thank you, my friend.
My pleasure.
Final Storm.
You got a Halloween show that just came out?
No, the Final Storm.
Oh, no, you couldn't.
You recorded a whole show and then you lost it.
We recorded a full-length commentary for Halloween ends and it got messed up.
Very sad because we cannot recreate that.
Sorry, brother.
I need a new computer.
That only happened to us once, the second half of our Blind Dad episode.
And fortunately, we got the gold in the first half and we just lost the second half.
And I think we actually recreated it.
Sammy, baby, you're not here, but you're here in spirit.
Great to see you, Land.
Yeah, great stuff.
Great stuff.
Great show.
And my new computer is performing so far.
I had to put a new computer in tonight.
Nice.
Yep.
Good start.
My Telegram has been frozen this entire second half.
Still, yeah, some glitch with the live recording every single time.
Draw your own conclusions.
All right.
Full House 144 was recorded on a cold enough October 28th that I decided to go indoors instead of braving the gazebo winds off the pond.
Please follow us on Telegram, Gab, and now Twitter, at least for me.
I'll send Rolo and Sam's out and about.
You'll see that I'm following them.
And of course, visit us at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse if we gave you some information, some smiles, some laughs, or some cringe dad jokes.
So to all of our old friends from the halcyon days of free speech in the digital public square and who we got separated from so mercilessly, so cruelly, so unfairly for humble end towers and green frogs and speaking truth to power.
We salute you.
And who knows?
Maybe this Twitter thing will work out version 2.0, 3.0, 4.0, whatever it is.
Give it a shot.
I am for the last time this calendar year giving Rolo free reign in the DJ booth.
Sam is definitely up next week for the break music.
Rolo, it's all yours.
Let us know what we're listening to in this season.
This is Aliens, Brave New Love, which is played over the end credits of the 1988 remake of the blob.
Better be good.
Doesn't matter.
It's your last shot anyway.
Hope you enjoy it, fam.
We love you and we'll talk to you next week.
Thank you, Nikkei.
Thank you, Sam.
Thank you, Rolo.
No thanks to the no-good slacker smasher.
No, it's all right.
He sent me a picture of where he was sleeping.
It looked like a dungeon in Tel Aviv and the Assad had finally got him.
We will see ya.
See ya.
By the plan, she took the part.
In her eyes, I could see the flame.
She hurt my silence for the day.
Everything I held to you.
Wilder be the same.
Look at the mirror to believe in our shadow dance with a breakthrough.
She gives it up like it's never been known.
Break through love.
And there's a darkest toughest thing.
She touched the place I tried to hide.
From the way that's the warning sign.
There's a battle defending me.
But her surrender's not victory.
I'm a woman to the tidy.
She could just please me.
I've never reached my life in a time to set me free with a breakthrough.
She gives it up like it's never been known.
Wait until she's tough as being cold.
She's the toughest thing for me.
Inside my head, I hear her calling me.
I feel the need.
I'm going to be there.
Oh, I'll be brave to love.
She gives it up like it's never been known.
Wait until dark.
She's the toughest thing.
She gives it up like it's never been done.
And it's the darkness.
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