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The following is a narration of a handwritten letter that we received last week and which has been only lightly edited for privacy and brevity.
Hey, coach and the gang.
Yes, even Rolo.
My wife and I met in our 20s.
We both came from dysfunctional, broken, boomer homes and were of the mindset, if this is a family, count us out.
Both being against abortion, we made the worst decision of our lives, and I got a vasectomy at the age of 22 with the assistance of, you guessed it, a very eager Jewish doctor.
Through the years, we enjoyed a healthy, happy relationship, which we never saw from our parents.
As the years went by and the world started to change, I went down the path of many, and we learned the score thanks to poll and other rabbit holes, eventually stumbling onto the fatherland and full house.
We want to make it clear the positive pro-white family content you have delivered has forever changed our lives.
Now in our 30s, we saw the mistake we had made and began the process of trying to reverse it.
We ended up flying across the country to one of the best vasectomy reversal doctors.
After a year of trying without success, we began costly fertility treatment, five failed IUI attempts, two failed IVF attempts, three egg retrievals, one which nearly took my wife, countless nights of crying and thinking we were just too late.
And then the most amazing miracle of our lives, a positive pregnancy test.
Over the years, there were times in the journey we both felt so hopeless, and tuning into Full House and hearing white life stories put wind back into our sails.
It is no exaggeration to say the show is directly responsible for us going from no child to one.
Now in our late 30s, we realistically won't reach the impressive family sizes of the birth panel, but we just welcomed a beautiful blonde-haired, blue-eyed baby girl.
We have two more embryos on ice, and we will be trying again shortly.
From the bottom of our hearts, thank you.
She is so amazing, and we both deeply regret not just making babies when we first met.
Often I think about how our enemies call us hateful and terrorists.
With that in mind, I look at how this ideology and movement has changed my life, lifting weights, eating better, embracing my heritage and traditions, bringing this angel from heaven into our lives.
It is the very antithesis of hate.
Again, sincerest thank you, guys.
If you decide to read this on air and there's anyone listening going through infertility, do not give up.
Or if you're in a relationship with a good woman, start making babies ASAP.
You won't regret it.
So, mr producer, let's keep going.
Welcome everyone to episode 147
of Full House, the world's most important show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bit fight and the whole family.
Sorry, I'm not crying.
Rolo's crying.
I am, as always, your Croatia proud host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of uplifting commentary for this glorious time of year.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, huge thanks to all of our supporters over the past couple weeks.
I know it's been a while.
So to DO and the Texas crew, Chuck Finks, Zach, fellow person, Haywood and Alaska Dad, thank you guys so much for the love and support.
And Alaska Dad said, I owe a lot more than this.
When I last wrote, it was to the fatherland and I had one kid.
I now have three healthy blonde babies.
Coach is great.
Sam is the best.
Thanks to Smasher for Operation White Christmas and Rolo is certainly present.
Just kidding, Rolo.
Keep up the good work.
He says, thanks for all the content.
It's greatly appreciated.
And I also loved Sam's autobiography.
We salute you, Alaska Dad.
And there's a couple more here.
Be patient.
It's that year, fam.
We're expressing our gratitude to the world's best audience.
And to Goyd George, that glorious bastard sent us four copies of Europa The Last Battle on Blu-ray.
So I'm going to get those in the mail to the guys shortly.
And then finally, to our pal, Brian.
He sent my family a big, beautiful coffee grinder so that I could stop being a high maintenance, above time coffee roaster customer.
Brian must be a shareholder in that startup.
And Brian said, thank you for the effort you put into the podcast and into the community overall.
In this world pervaded by mendacious anti-white entertainment and advertising, it is refreshing to know men who are unafraid to speak the truth.
Thank you again, buddy.
And on that high note, let's meet the birth panel.
First up, if being racist were cool, and it is, he'd be Steve McQueen.
Sam, welcome back, buddy.
I don't know how you come up with these, Coach.
i'm only ashamed that i haven't like written them all down or just kept those a little bit there i mean those are my pleasure uh what What a, first of all, what an absolutely incredible letter that you read there.
We read that when we first received it.
I'm sure you can't do it.
You can't post that baby's picture.
But if you guys listening, if you saw this, I mean, this would absolutely melt your heart.
She's on the fridge.
I'm looking at her right now.
What an incredible thing.
What can you even say to that?
That is great.
And, you know, whenever you figure things out and start doing the right thing, you'll be capable of this type of a heroic thing.
And these parents have, you know, you can just get the sense of that letter that he is on fire, you know, with discovering the truths and things we know, getting in touch with us and with other nationalists.
And I mean, sure, yeah, we all 180.
Can you imagine, Sam?
Like, you know, man, like they're, they're really dedicated, right?
They're like, no, we're not going to do it.
We're going to stop it, cut it off at the root right there.
And then they and then they came to the.
Oh, my gosh.
And, you know, whatever day that you decide to make a change in your life, that's the best day.
And there's no such thing as being too late or anything like that.
Whatever you should be doing, start doing it today.
And then those other beautiful comments there, I can't tell you how much that means to us to hear that the show touches people like that.
Without bragging or anything, I would say we get a lot of incredible feedback from people.
And when we are somewhere and we can crack some jokes with people and get to talking to listeners and that, there's nothing better.
It's an instant bond.
And what we're talking about on this show is very important.
We're lucky to be on here and we're the guys doing it.
But it's like a whole community of people that are all united to save our people in the most real way that you can, which is families and marriages and births and all those things.
Amen, brother.
I know.
Just for just a podcast, we got some pretty concrete, beautiful credits out there running around.
I always say it like, if this was the only letter we received like this, all of it would be worth it.
All of the risk and trouble.
But we've had so many stories like this.
It's really incredible what people are doing out there.
And we can all take a lot of encouragement from that.
Amen.
I hope the audience doesn't mind us doing a little bit of slapping on the back here.
It was such a beautiful letter.
And it did say, I assume these are sucks.
They said, you know, if feel free to use our names on the air.
So that's from Casey in April.
Casey in April, God bless.
Thank you.
Good luck with the other two.
And she is, she is beautiful.
She's right on the fridge smiling at me or, you know, making that newborn baby face.
And we've been off for a couple of weeks there, or at least since Thanksgiving.
I wanted to mention, you know, we got, this is, we're in our second week of Advent here.
I didn't get to talk about it, you know, when, and even my son said this the other day.
We were somewhere and and, you know, somebody's got all their Christmas decorations and wherever we were.
It's like, it's like we're skipping a whole season.
To go straight to Christmas now means you're skipping an entire season, the season of Advent.
And Advent is like some people call it a little Lent, which is a little bit of a little bit of contemplation, a little bit of getting ready, a little bit of maybe setting aside worldly things and lighting the candle each week.
You know, I gave you a picture, Coach, if you could put it in the show notes for people to enjoy.
We have this beautiful Celtic knotwork Advent wreath.
And we're on the second candle, which is the first two candles are purple.
So the first week and now the second week, two purple candles.
Next week will be the pink candle.
And then the fourth week will be the purple candle.
And then Christmas will be here.
So I love it.
The sense of anticipation that builds when that last Sunday of the regular year comes and we get to have the first Sunday Advent.
We get to bring out our Advent wreath.
So I know some people, they don't care about all this stuff I'm saying.
But anyways, maybe somebody else might have a feeling like, I want to put my Advent wreath up.
So definitely go do it.
I'm a bad student.
Every year you talk about Advent and female plumbing and it just goes right over my head.
If you gave me a quiz, I would totally fail.
No, I'm mostly, mostly kidding.
Element of truth there.
In that spirit, Sam, the good news abounds.
I put out on Telegram the other day.
Good news.
I was just like bombarded.
I was like, holy cow, like something bad.
I was literally driving and I was like, I'm going to crash or something because I'm so happy right now with all the things we're getting.
But a good friend of ours moved in the past year and he said he found a new church of his preferred denomination.
And he said, it's all white and it's all huge families.
And he even sat down with the priest and had a conversation about our issues.
I don't know what to which specificity you could be nervous about it.
And he said it went great.
So thank you.
All right.
Yeah, I know.
I was so happy for him.
He sounded like so delighted that he found his little, his new spiritual home physically at least.
I can remember doing that.
As I've said before, you know, I came to the Trad Catholic thing in about 1995, 1996.
And Up to then, I had been following a lot of this extreme right, you know, white Christian, Christian identity stuff, which is like not exactly a whole religion that you could follow exactly on its own.
And when I first sat down with the priest, you know, I'm sure I did not make a good impression.
You know, I was very earnest and thought I knew everything, which I did know a fair amount by that time, you know, but yeah, it's it's good to come through that with a good feeling because it can go wrong for sure.
But good.
Yeah, good.
If you could find some place where you can, you can do the thing and all that, that's good.
But also, I would, as we've said before, it's not a panacea.
Don't think that you're just going to be able to go into some kind of church where they are worshiping the Jewish Jesus and get away with the talking points that you might hear on this show.
Yeah, he said the only negative thing was that there were so many like young, big white families.
He's like, I didn't see any single women there.
You know, it's like everybody hitched up.
So, you know, dark side to every moon, if that's a thing.
And I'm looking at our giant Christmas tree here in our small house because we went to cut Christmas trees just like we did.
We looked around our property and it was all junipers and the kids are like, they're too prickly because we did that the first year.
We cut a tree on our property.
I was like, it's soft to me as I'm trying not to cry as the needles are going into my hands.
It's kind of tough to size it up.
I was like, oh, that looks like a beautiful one.
We'll go for it.
My wife agreed at the time.
And then we got home.
We're like, holy cow, you know, it's a Griswold Christmas tree.
So we had to cut significant amounts off it.
This still looks beautiful.
Keep it in the house till February.
Just kidding.
February 2nd.
Yep.
No, I know.
Yep.
I do listen.
I do listen.
So we, all right.
So too much good news.
Let's give you some bad news.
Smasher is not with us this week and he will probably not be with us for the foreseeable future.
He said he'd definitely come on in the future, but he's burning the candle at both ends between work, family, the cause.
And he's also developing a new podcast with Jack McCracken on not crime and punishment, but I guess military and law enforcement issues.
I just saw that.
So three and a half year tour of duty.
Smasher, not bad.
Thank you, brother.
Yes, there's no drama between Smasher and us.
We are still bros till death.
And he said, I'll come back on sometime, but it's just too much.
He was dialing it in anyway.
So, and the flip side of that, of course, we're coming up aces here is that I did call audience members ask occasionally, where's Jayo?
How's Jayo?
What happened to Jayo?
I'm like, Jayo's fine.
His hours are not conducive to ours when we prefer to do the show.
But with Smasher leaving, I did go to the deep full house bench and I said, come on.
I begged like a dog.
I said, Jayo, come on.
We need you back.
He said, all right, I'll come back.
He's going to come.
He's going to come back to the show.
I think we're going to, yeah, we'll record on a different night to accommodate him.
Old Grandpa Sam's going to maybe have to have a cup of coffee that night instead of the next morning.
Sorry.
And we'll get him on because I went back and listened.
I don't listen to old full house shows like a creeper, you know, like self-obsessed person.
But like I went back to listen to get the Gringa a couple times just to see how we handled that one versus the dating.
And I was like, man, he's got game and we'll give him a free interruption pass for his return.
Yeah, he can interrupt people.
I won't interrupt people.
Speaking of interruptions, next up is, of course, our great and wonderful producer that everyone tells me to be nicer to.
So in the spirit of the season, my dear, good, competent, handsome single friend Rolo.
How the hell are you?
I have to clear one thing up for everyone as Alaskan dad wrote in his nice letter.
Now he spelled my name with two L's.
And for everyone out there, there is only one L.
It is Rolo, like the rich chocolate creamy caramels with smooth caramel centers wrapped in classic gold foils.
Now, the one with two L's, that is Royo Tomasi.
That is my non-union Mexican equivalent that is a different person, just to get that out there.
So Rolo Tomasse was really with two L's?
I don't know.
I don't spell it with two L's.
Okay, so I said Royal Gums have gotten nothing.
Nobody cares how I was flapping my gums about nothing.
Nobody knows how well I was.
Yes, I was just clarifying to everyone because people, even in chats that they're in with me, spell my name wrong, like as a response to what I just said.
I'm like, you know, there's like one L there, right?
Like right above that thing you just said.
This is why you're still single because like some beautiful woman's throwing herself at you and she spells your name wrong and you're like, she needs to know how to spell my name.
Okay.
Now, when official documents are going to come up like deeds to houses and cars, I can't have her spelled my fake name wrong.
That's right.
Oh, man.
Well, welcome back.
Rolo and Sam are always ready to go.
The reason the show was late, not that everybody cares.
We had Thanksgiving and I just, you know, we were having it.
This is the first Thanksgiving that we stayed home in forever.
We didn't hit the road and we didn't host anyone.
Usually if we stay home, we've had a couple, you know, not lost souls, but just people who were too far away from home and didn't have any other options.
Come on over.
Like, no, this year we're keeping it simple.
And I had a moment of total bliss on Thanksgiving, just sitting around the campfire, having a beer with my little buddy Potato as the sun was setting.
And I looked around and I said, yeah, this is all right.
And the other reason is last weekend, I flew for the first time in over three years.
It was before COVID in a different life that I was still flying.
And I guess I'm on the speaker circuit now because a group invited me to speak to their beautiful Christmas party, upward of a little less than 100 people.
Everybody dolled up, suits and ties.
There were kids there.
Wonderful event with catering and a series of speakers.
And they must have been hard up because they had a big name speaker last year.
So I did my best to fill his shoes.
But what I'm getting at, that's not important.
Well, I guess the first thing that's important is that much to my surprise, I was a little bit anxious going to an airport for the first time in so long because I was sure that the system Cretans were going to flag me as a quadruple S necessary passenger.
Now, Sam gets four S's all the time when he flies.
He's that badass.
So I was a little like disappointed, like, oh, I guess, I guess I'm not as important or as dangerous to the system as I thought I was.
But in reality, I was greatly relieved to not have to get extra searched.
Four S's is select security screening something.
And good buddy who is.
A strip search.
Isn't that what a couple of the S's is for?
Well, I got that digitally.
I did have to put my arms up on the scan my dingling.
But no, you know, a couple of people said, thank you for sharing that because I haven't flown in a long time either.
And I was anxious about whether I was going to get extra screening at the airport.
And a good buddy who's a fellow Charlottesville veteran who's been doxed, he said, wow, I am surprised because I thought that everybody who went to Charlottesville and was publicly known was getting that now.
So knock on wood right now.
They're going to be like, oh, oversight.
Check that.
Check him every time henceforth for flying.
But just a little heads up that who knows whether that was a bureaucratic oversight or whether they can actually discern between dissidents and real threats, people who would do something stupid at an airport or on an airplane.
But more importantly than that was the topic of my speech.
I didn't really have a title, but it was green shoots.
As listeners to the show know, I can blackpill with the best of them.
I can be moody.
I can look around at the world and say, this is seriously messed up and I don't know how the hell we're going to get out of this through to the other side.
And that may still be the case that I don't have the answer for how exactly we are going to proceed from point A to point V or point A V. However, there's a ton of good things.
You know, just what we talked about, getting this letter was a huge shot in the arm from Casey in April.
And there are a lot of things I think that we either overlook or we forget or we take for granted.
Now, I'm not going to give the speech again, rehash the speech, redictate the speech, because that would be kind of lame and Sam and Smasher get impatient quickly.
But I am going to go through some of the things that I talked about just in case it's that time of year.
Cantwell's out of prison.
That's another very cool thing.
And he's like right out of the gates, storming, ready to go.
So here goes.
Let's have a little bit more shots in the arm for all of us.
And I started with our cause.
That was what brought us together.
That is why, in theory, you are listening to this show.
And I define our cause as the advancement of white racial interests, ultimately toward sovereign white states.
And, you know, I always thought that the 14 words were a little bit basic or least common denominator, right?
We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.
We don't want to just exist.
We don't just want our children to have a future.
We want to thrive as a people and even aspire to come closer to the creator in William Luther Pierce's words.
And we want our children to have a glorious future, an optimistic future.
So that's just my concept of what the cause actually is.
We have to move toward a place where we are in control of our own destinies without essential component.
You can't just do that.
You have to absolutely eradicate Jewish influence from your lands because you just can't have nice things when they're running around.
And again, guys, feel free to interrupt.
I won't be pissed off at all.
Please.
I defined or I the reason that I said that white nationalism was ultimately inevitable is because tribalism is one of our most fundamental human instincts.
We eat, we breathe, we sleep, we reproduce, and we're tribal.
Goes back hundreds of thousands of years for us.
And we are only temporarily lacking that racial tribal instinct because we've been worm-tongued for so long.
Right.
We've been through worse things probably in the history of the world.
And like you say, there's a force within us that is operating far beyond, above, however you like to say it, what our conscious minds can even comprehend.
So definitely take heart.
You know, we're white after all.
You know, we're going to get through this.
We will.
And the more they flood our countries, the more tribal we will get.
Right.
Worse is better is a very difficult calculation and thing to look forward to for sure.
But that's why we're tribal right now.
If it were still 1980s America, now Sam knew the score well before we were so demographically enriched.
But if it was still those Halcyon days of the 80s and white suburbia, what's the problem?
I don't see a problem here.
Right.
Yeah.
No, that's exactly it.
I can remember having arguments with people like, okay, here you're telling me about the niggers and everything.
We're in this all white area where we live.
I mean, the white man is firmly in control.
Don't you see it?
How can you, what are you trying to tell me about?
You know?
Yep.
Yeah, for sure.
And now it's, it's the worse is better in a sense, because think of, I mean, 100 years ago, we had or 100 and a little over 100 years ago, we had World War I, followed in another two decades by World War II.
These were all white nationalist, racist countries, all killing each other, hundreds of millions of people.
This is driving us now to something better.
We're not going to have World War III amongst white countries.
Amen.
We're not going to have religious sectarianism, ethnic nationalism that puts one white nationality against another.
That's what we're learning as a race from this time.
And what a great time to be in.
That's right.
And to that point, Sam, too, think about how much worse our people have faced and come through.
Oh, from, you know, from the Black Death to the 30 Years War, World War II, World War II.
Yeah.
Like I always say, imagine being a man of fighting age in World War I time or World War II time.
I mean, in a certain sense, the country was better at those times because it was not so cooked.
There wasn't all this fag shit and niggers everywhere and everything else.
But I mean, yeah, it was better in a sense, but could you imagine getting on a ship to go kill Germans or Italians or whatever it was?
I mean, it's, you know, I'm glad that I don't live in those times or my sons don't live in those times.
That would be the worst possible thing.
Now is a good time to be alive.
You know, our people are coming together.
Our people are overcoming these suicidal tendencies that they've had.
Absolutely.
They're going to try one day down the road, if Russia cannot be subverted and gay opt into oblivion, they'll probably try to have our white men fight their white men.
But they're going to have to do it with a lot less competent and far more diverse.
A lot of trannies and a lot of people.
They're going to have our black gay women fight their strong white men.
Yep.
Not, you know, and hey, I'll admit, I've been surprised at how slow the progress for Russia has been in Ukraine.
I think actually everybody has been surprised by that, but nobody really thought that we were going to pump a half of our treasury in weapons into Ukraine either.
So this winter will be very interesting to see what goes on there.
But aside from tribalism as a natural, healthy instinct that's getting reawakened in us, I also do sincerely believe that this evil system has a sort of self-destruct mechanism inescapably built into it.
Oh, yeah.
You know, they think that they can go around and smash everything and poison everything and pollute everything and still maintain control, but it will start to break down.
We are fighting on the side of nature.
We are swimming with the current.
They are swimming against the current.
They are against nature.
So it's inevitable that we win because we're going in the right direction.
It's inevitable that under its own weight, the system must crumble and fall.
That's right.
And I just finished Mein Kampf the other day, Sammy Baby's second time.
And I forgot toward the end of the second volume.
Some of his closing words were a racially stronger state will reign supreme in the end.
So all these countries are weakening themselves by importing Africans and people from all over the world, Real Tower of Babel hours.
they are essentially hastening their demise, building up their own funeral pyres, as the great British Enoch Powell said.
And then just finally on our cause, I told the audience the story of when my family, our family went through a little bit of turbulence three years ago or so.
And, you know, it was a bit of a stressful time and things were changing.
And at the end of the day, there were a few things that kept us not just together, but strong and confident.
And the first one was the, if the Jews always ask, but is it good for the Jews?
I always ask, but am I wrong?
I and many of us, not everybody can suffer probably some of the worst things in the world so long as I'm confident that I was right, that I was acting in accordance with my beliefs and in service of truth and good and not in service of lies and evil.
And that's a very powerful thing to never forget.
They say that might makes right, and that is true in a sense.
It doesn't bestow any moral authority, but obviously having power leads to influence.
But don't forget, and this may sound like a Michael Scottism, but right also makes might.
We are actually the good guys.
Our potato has taken to every movie that we watch, he asks, who's the good guy?
Who's the bad guy?
And that gets kind of complicated when you're watching like a movie with the FBI and the mafia.
You know, it's just like, well, it's kind of tough to say who's the good guy, who's the bad guy.
It's not always that clear cut, potato.
But yeah, sometimes our people have to remind themselves.
But some people really get it and they don't need to be reminded.
Other peoples really do need to be reminded.
And there was a dad in the audience with his kids nearby.
And I checked with him.
I said, I'm not going too hard here.
Am I pops?
And he gave me a big thumbs up from the back of the audience, which was awesome.
Yeah.
You know, that he wasn't afraid about his kids hearing some unvarnished truths.
Yeah.
Well, it's the person who fights with right on their side has a different quality to the effort that they can make.
You know, our enemies are not virtuous.
They are fighting for selfish reasons or sick reasons or whatever it is.
That's right.
Our motivations are pure and good and praiseworthy.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
You know, prove me wrong and I'll change my opinions, but you can't do that or you haven't been able to yet.
So I've got that very sharp, powerful arrow in my quiver.
And so do you, dear listener.
I moved on.
By the way, I started off with 14 ideas, right?
Ha ha.
I was like, yeah, I got to give 14 reasons to be optimistic.
And then I practiced the speech once.
I was like, oh boy, they will be sleeping or going back to the dessert table.
It went way too long.
So I paired this back, guys, to some of those important things.
Number two, our ideas are more widespread around the world than ever in recent history.
I would say at least until the 1930s, not since the 1930s has the idea of white identity, that race matters, that Jews are trouble.
It's unquestionable and it's a worldwide awakening.
It's not just a little flash in the palm in America.
Oh, yeah.
I remember back in the 90s before the internet, you know, you guys don't know about that time.
I remember before the internet.
Before the internet, it was a P.O. box.
And so I operated a P.O. box and, you know, we send out flyers.
We used to have a magazine even.
In fact, I should tell you about that sometime.
It was kind of a novel concept.
It was a one-page magazine because show me where in the dictionary it says that a magazine has to be like so many pages, right?
Sure.
So it was a one-page magazine.
So it was easy to mail out.
You know, it was, you know, just one piece of paper and it was what we could afford.
It was, you know, and anyways, the fame of it spread kind of far and wide.
And when the internet finally did become a thing in the mid 90s, we were one of the very first like racial type websites out there.
That's a whole story unto itself.
But we received a piece of mail from, this was somewhere in, I think it was in the, maybe in Singapore or something like that.
It was like, yeah, we're a bunch of white guys that live here and we are Aryan nations far east is what they were calling it.
And yeah, and we're a, so like when you say it's a worldwide thing, I mean, yes, literally, like including in non-white countries, there are white people who are racially aware.
Absolutely.
You know, so yeah, this is, it's, it's never been better.
I got tons of evidence.
We got, we've got boomers and normies are starting to get it.
We've all heard the stories.
Our chats are occasionally flooded with stories of like, I was talking to this guy and he said this, that.
Some of them are Fed posting.
Some of them are not getting the entire story, but they're getting part of it.
And the sheep are finally starting to march to the sound of our drummer.
The kids are getting it.
Our own kids, for sure.
Hopefully you are having at least those introductory talks with your kids.
But I can't help but remember our good buddy's teenage son.
And I asked him, I said, what's it like in high school these days?
And he said with a straight face, he said, in my school, at least, you're either a Nazi or you're a commie.
And total sincerity.
Those lines are getting drawn.
You can either be Chad bully and look like Rolo, or you can look like, you know, a sack of crap with purple hair and a nose bull ring, whatever they call it.
And that's, that's a wonderful thing.
Like our people are getting stronger and choosing to reject that lifestyle while their end of the aisle is starting to wallow in it at really starting to not even look human in some cases.
Yeah, the things that they promote are in fact just like degenerative and damaging to the organism.
You know, whether it's drugs or being a homosexual or whatever the things are, the things that they promote are literally destroying them.
I know.
The contrast could not be greater.
I actually talked about that a little bit later, but it's somebody said we're in an evolutionary bottleneck.
I think Sewell is talking about this.
What are we saying?
Get stronger, eat healthier, have more white babies.
And what are they saying?
Like, tie your tubes, indulge yourself.
Don't worry about the gayer.
Be a homosexual, the better.
Yep.
Exactly.
Isolate that, Rolo.
Rolo's advice for the show.
He's not spying.
Come on.
That was a good natured jest.
Geez, I can't be super serious.
No sense of humor.
I thought that was just a suggestion.
That was a good suggestion.
I didn't think it was a joke.
I'm going to isolate that.
You asked me.
I'm going to do it.
Okay.
Yes.
When we're addressing the enemy, just cure that one.
Be homosexual.
Even our parents are starting to get it.
Yes, it's true.
This kind of fits in with the boomers and the normies, but Tucker, for whatever you think about him, spews watered down versions of our talking points to three to five million people through the YouTube every night.
Yes, he takes two steps forward and always comes with a little bit of cuckoldery to keep himself on air.
However, NetNet, he's doing a service by spreading our ideas, even if he waters them down.
Just remember that the average person is already beyond his points.
When he's making those points, the average person is already.
Yeah, exactly.
Good buddy of mine, his parents were lifelong liberal Democrats and Tucker was formative in, well, they're at least on the Republican reservation right now, right?
And they don't roll their eyes quite so much at their son's crazy kookery about great German statesmen and the truth about World War II.
It helps.
It helps.
I mean, come on.
Do you want your parents to be like conservative Republicans who listen to Tucker?
Or do you want them to be listening to Rachel Maddow and Chris Cuomo and Anderson Cooper?
It's a no-brainer.
I thought you were going to say, or do you want them listening to us?
That took us.
Yeah, that was a different direction there.
Okay.
Yeah.
Haven't listened to us.
Yeah, absolutely.
I know a buddy who listens to the show with his dad and they enjoyed it.
And I just, I have some quick quantitative data.
That's all qualitative stuff that I said to date.
But in June of this year, the SPLC published results from a survey of 1,500 Americans.
And it found that nearly seven in 10 Republicans surveyed agree to at least some extent that demographic changes in the United States are deliberately driven by liberal and progressive politicians attempting to gain political power by, quote, replacing more conservative white voters.
So if almost seven in 10 Republicans agree with that statement, by my count, about 54 million people voted Republican in this past midterm election, that means if you take their numbers at face value, you've got roughly 36 million, mostly white people, not all white people.
Some people can see the truth, even if they're not white.
36 million people on our side.
And if you think they inflated the numbers, fine, 32 million, 30 million, even 25 million people who know the score and understand that what we chanted in Charlottesville in 2017 was the truth.
So the points that we have been screaming from digital rooftops, podcasts, Twitter, Facebook, any platform we can get our hands on, speeches, those points are now widespread and commonplace.
It's a massive shift and enormous progress.
We always said that we had to do a little bit of metapolitics first.
We had to spread the message, question the system, and raise awareness first before kicking it up a notch in Emil Legasi, LeGrassi, LeGrassi Jr. High, whatever.
You know what I'm saying?
Next, I wanted to talk about our people, and I don't mean white people or the white race.
I mean our guys, you listening in the audience, our gals.
I've been in this thing for a long time now.
Seven years feels like a lifetime sometimes.
It feels like the flash of a second other times.
But in those precious years, I have met doctors, lawyers, pharmacists, rocket scientists, biologists, special forces combat veterans, master gardeners and farmers, builders, hunters, pilots, nuclear engineers, ham operators, Olympic tier athletes, crypto and finance gurus, extraordinary preppers, mailmen, master mechanics, retail workers, musicians, plumbers, electricians, welders, truckers, gunsmiths, barbers, nurses, and teachers.
And I've even met candlestick makers, but no butchers or bakers yet.
And that is all 100% true.
And the best part is that they all know the score.
They are all on our team.
They all want to share their expertise for our benefit.
Trust me, because sometimes they won't shut the hell up about it.
It's an amazing, wonderful farm team bench, a talent pool that we're building, that we're cultivating, that we're making friends with, that we're starting businesses with, that we're networking with, that we're getting our families together.
We're hopefully arranging marriages.
It's a tiny, for now, it's still a tiny little nucleus of our cause that is growing bigger.
And the enemy likes to think that it's all the tendy eating basement dwellers who are online internet poll Nazis, but they know it's not the truth.
Professionals, maybe even a diplomat or two knows the score now too.
So whether it's the parallel economy that's going to lead us to victory or national level politics or local politics or even armed struggle or just simply being the white nationalist from the onion article, kicking it at home on the couch in our skull masks as America burns, we are building the talent pool to do our very own great replacement.
They have the great replacement.
We have to do a great replacement of our own once the current order crumbles.
All true.
I could have gone on, Sam, with more impressive jobs that all those people hold, but I guess we have producers too and goat farmers.
I forgot to include them.
I can bake.
You can bake?
All right, we got a baker.
Damn.
Butcher is kind of tough to come by.
That's a very, you know, Hispanic-dominated industry now.
I have not been.
No, Angry Butcher is going to write in that.
No, that's all correct, Coach.
I mean, and that is one thing why I enjoy meeting our guys, so to speak, out there, is literally to a man, they are noteworthy, impressive, talented, interesting, informed, you know, all those things.
It's this, these times have bred this, this absolutely superior type of person and certainly the type of person I'm trying to be myself too.
So it's something to be very encouraged about, you know, and it's, it's like we went to a gig one time and my wife even said like, like literally down to a man, every single guy is a chat.
You know, it's, yeah, it's, it's, it's impressive.
And that's, that's, we have to each live up to that ourselves too.
And I did not even look at my Rolodex or the chats to be like, oh, yeah, that guy.
I just did that all from memory.
I was like, oh, yeah, these are, oh, yeah, I just read through.
It was just off the cuff.
Yeah.
All of professions.
Sam, this is a good, this is a good one for you.
The, the host originally wanted me to give a speech on family.
And I said, kid, you're trying to pigeonhole me just because I have the dad show.
You know, I don't want to talk about that just for half an hour or 45 minutes, whatever it was.
But I did, I did put this little section in here and I noted, and Sam, you may want to distill something.
I'll filibuster here for you.
But I said that the question that we get asked probably most often on the show is that I want to do more to support the cause, but I worry about getting dox and losing my job, or I also worry about my marriage.
Those things kind of go in tandem for the married men and women listening to this and for the professionals as well.
And what I said was that your wife or your husband, your kids, they're your core.
They're your foundation.
They're the permanent center of your Venn diagram and you should not knowingly with excessive risk jeopardize your careers or your marriages out of guilt that you should be doing more because there's a lot more of us now than there were before.
Now, that is not a de-radicalization message.
That's not to, you know, I could see somebody saying, well, coach, in the big scheme of things, your marriage or your family don't matter compared to the survival of the white race, right?
It's all about sacrifice and all that.
True in a sense, but we're also normal, healthy human beings and we've made solemn vows and fatherhood and motherhood are the absolute core foundation.
We don't need more poor households or divorced households and single parent kids going out there.
So I even hesitated to say that because that's a little bit, it was maybe preachy for the audience because they all look like they had their things locked down type, but I'm sure there's a lot of people in the audience who may be thinking about that.
I should do more, but I'm nervous.
You should do more, but you also shouldn't jeopardize your family.
Yeah, we do hear that from time to time.
And, you know, definitely if you're waking up to all this stuff and you are married, you definitely need to take care to bring your wife, husband, whichever one you are, to bring her, let's say most of the time, it would be a wife, bring her along, show her the way.
You know, it has to be done sensitively.
And when I talk to somebody, if I spend a minute talking to somebody, I can kind of size up that person pretty accurately what's driving that person, what kind of person this is, what kind of they believe in and motivates them.
And certainly you could spend a lot more time than one or two minutes with somebody and figure that out.
And then those are the things you have to tie in what they believe in and show that that's what we care about too, whether it's your religious person or you care about being fair or you care about aesthetics or whatever the thing is, you have to find those things and key on those things because the person might feel threatened about the things that are that they really care about.
So you got to show due concern for those things.
And what we believe in is, you know, I like to distill things down to the most basic possible tenet.
Life is good.
Death is bad.
The smallest bug lives to reproduce itself.
Okay.
That's that's really what this comes down to for us is our survival and not only our survival, but our thriving, as you said earlier.
So when you can make people see it in those, in that type of a light, then, you know, I think just about anybody, because now things are so bad that anyone can sense the attack of the enemy.
So it's, it's easier than ever to bring people along those lines.
Amen.
And to that point, Sam, you know, for a long time, we love getting the new white life announcements.
The audience loves hearing them and it inspires them.
But I'll admit to being a little bit of a negative Nancy.
And I thought, well, this is wonderful.
It's great.
I'm proud of it and I'm overjoyed by it, but it's just a drop in the bucket.
But then lo and behold, we talked about this, I don't know, maybe a month ago on the show, at least for the previous year for which data was available, the white mini baby boom, it's not just us.
It extended across the country.
Total births in the United States increased for the first time in seven years.
White births were up 2.2% over a year, beating out Hispanics at 2%.
Blacks and Asians both witnessed about 2.5% declines.
White births were in the majority again.
Remember that talking point right now.
Any white child born in America now is born into a minority in that age group.
Well, last year, that was not the case.
We exceeded 50%.
There's a little bit of life left in this jalapi.
We kicked the tires or maybe it was, you know, maybe, what do you know?
You pay people to stay home and give them free money and they fool around a lot, you know?
Well, and, you know, yeah, you could take however big of a number you or big of a group you want to take and try to make it sound negative.
You know, whatever the whole group is doing, those are good numbers that you report, but we often hear like bad numbers.
Yeah, but when you take out, let's say, like trad Catholics, white nationalists, Mormons, maybe there's a few other groups like that.
We are far above replacement levels when you take those groups by themselves.
So our pal mail found something on Twitter where somebody ran the even more updated CEC data and total white fertility outpaces total black fertility rates in a ton of states, including in the deep south.
And I'm looking here.
I didn't have time to collate all this, but the most fertile in terms of white birth states in the United States is South Dakota beating out Utah, surprisingly.
Some of the other good ones, Iowa, Arkansas, Mississippi, Kansas, Nebraska, Idaho, all doing well.
And here's a couple of the stinkers.
California is in the red.
I won't give you the actual numbers.
I'll share this perhaps.
Washington State, Massachusetts, Colorado, surprising a little bit about Colorado, Oregon, these like still white but lefty states.
The cat is clawing at me, Rolo.
I'm sure that's up your alley.
New Mexico and Vermont.
Yes, a lot of old white liberals up in Vermont driving those numbers down.
So there's a lot of good things happening out there, guys.
It's not just us.
Okay.
Even, you know, whether it's the super religious or people who are simply like, yeah, let's screw it up.
Let's have a kid.
Well, keep in mind, like I said earlier, our enemies are not virtuous.
You know what I mean?
So like that blacks have a lot of children or something.
It's just because like birth control.
It's just because they rape so much.
Yeah.
Well, there's that.
But, you know, like when their women figure out like, hey, I need to take birth control so I could, you know, have this high paying, you know, state job or whatever it is.
You know what I mean?
They are not virtuous like whites will be to say, hey, having a good big family is actually good.
That's the right thing to do.
Blacks don't think like that, you know, and the non-whites in general, I would say, they don't think in this virtuous way.
So yeah, it's like their high birth rates and high all those things is just like kind of like just because the conditions favored that.
But once the conditions change and like birth control is free to them and the abortions are free and they've all been brought up now for a good generation or two with that mentality, that's what they're going to do, you know, because they're selfish and they're not virtuous like whites tend to be.
So it's the conditions definitely favor us.
And I floated this one too.
This is a little bit controversial.
We, you know, we all know good men in our lives who have died due to deaths of despair or drugs.
But, you know, whether it was a generation ago in Vietnam or two generations ago in World War II, three generations World War I, in the past, we lost millions of our bravest and most virile white men to these bloody wars.
And who are we losing?
I recognize, audience, that we've lost good men to drugs and despondency, but there's also a culling effect that's going on here where some of our weakest are succumbing to the evils and the strongest among us are rejecting them and deciding to go on to have big families.
There's some negatives there and some real positives.
I just wanted to point that out.
I thought about it.
I was like, yeah, you know, we're not getting tossed in the meat grinders anymore.
We're drinking ourselves to death or, you know, taking opioids to kill the pain.
Different kind of culling.
Next, I moved on to our spirit.
Don't worry.
I won't go on too long here, fam.
I hope this is giving you a shot in the arm.
And By our spirit, I meant our cause and our guys' refusal to quit despite the system's clear intent.
You know that they wanted to crush us after Charlottesville.
They saw this unexpected, organic, alt-right thing rise up, culminate in terrifying images of white men and women with torches saying Jews will not replace us.
And did we bend a little bit?
Did we fracture a little bit?
Yes, absolutely.
Did we go through some rough years?
Did we get censored?
Did some of us turn?
Did some of us go dark?
Absolutely.
Did some of our groups fall apart?
Did some of them reform?
Absolutely.
Did new ones spring up?
Did shit posting stop?
Did networking stop?
Did everybody go, oh, I'm too scared.
The feds are going to arrest me for my opinions and for posting on the internet.
Hell no, we did not.
We're still here.
There's more of us than ever before.
I told the audience that I was like a grandpa.
I was like, they've got these things called active clubs now where they go and fight.
I don't know what that's about.
You know, I used to feel like I was right at the cutting edge of the movement.
Now I'm like, all right, there's stuff going on there, Sam, under the undercurrents, the next generation that I'm not even hip to.
I wasn't a Nazi in high school.
I thought Hitler was bad men and Jews were poor, persecuted people.
Today, the teenagers know the score left and right.
And I was listening to the Russians with Attitude podcast recently, and I think even they're getting bored of the war.
They're like, yeah, we're not going to do any sit reps either.
They're black pilled or they're like, you know, it's kind of a stalemate.
So they did a special on Pyotr Stolipin, who was the premier.
He was like the prime minister of Russia pre-USSR in the sort of difficult period when they were democratizing a little bit under Nicholas II.
And the quote is too long.
I won't say it.
But Stolipin was a true nationalist reformer, and he was constantly threatened by assassination.
There were probably at least a dozen attempts on his life before a Jew finally cut him down.
And his wonderful quote was, every single morning when he was in the middle of this struggle to help Russia to save it, reform is not a dirty word.
Russia did need a little bit of reforming.
He was fighting to keep it together because he knew that those Bolshevik hordes were out there.
He said, every morning that I wake up, I aim to live my life as if it is my last one on earth to do my duty, to do it diligently.
And eventually they will get me.
And that will be fine because I will know that I tried my best.
Now, that's a real American paraphrase of what was a much more elegant, powerful Russian quote.
And I also thought of Uncle.
He said, loyalty is great.
This is another very rough paraphrase, but he said, loyalty is not enough.
Loyalty without hard work and dedication and diligence is its own form of disloyalty.
You can't just know the score.
You can't just, you know, agree with people and post on the internet.
You actually have to put in work and do something.
You know, there's something you can do.
Whether you're just going to throw shekels at somebody, whether you're just going to create propaganda, whether you're just going to be a networker or you're going to actually join a group.
Don't let anybody tell you joining a group is ipso facto bad.
It can be bad.
You have to do your homework first, but there's strength in numbers.
And when you have numbers, you need a little bit of organization.
You need a little bit of leadership.
You need a little bit of coherence.
So I don't expect everybody to be a Hitler or a Stolipin, but you do have to live boldly and you have to look at every day.
You never know.
In this country, it could be your last day.
Go out on the roads anywhere, could get T-bone.
Good friend of ours, his daughter got, I don't know if it was a T-bone or head-on, almost killed by a car of at least Mexican driver.
Don't know if they were drunk, but thank God.
They were drunk and other kids in the car died.
Is that right, Rolo?
No, no doubt.
The driver lost an eye.
And the drunk driver died.
Is that right?
Yeah, the drunk driver died.
I met no one of note died.
Good.
Yeah.
All right.
Happy ending there.
Yep.
But imagine that.
Your teenage daughter, however old she was, out cruising with her friends and almost gets killed by a drunk driving Mexican.
Happens all the time.
Live every day as if it's your last.
The system wants you to do one of four things if you're a white, normal, non-self-loathing person.
First, they would be happy if you died.
If not, they would want you to be a self-loathing leftist with no children.
If not that, they would want you to just become a disaffected apolitical loner, one of those guys who's above it all.
Can't, you know, I can't be bothered with what's going on out there, man.
Got a life to live.
And they would take you as a cookie Republican two.
So the last thing they want you to do is to continue to network, spread our ideas, build businesses, protest dissent, and agitate.
We are making their job of destroying our homelands more difficult.
And that's a good thing, even if we're just buying time for now.
So always do the opposite of what Jews want you to do.
And remember my favorite quote from William Luther Pierce that courage is contagious.
Keep spreading that fire.
Finally, we'll say finally, maybe one or two more.
We should not believe in fated decline.
That's actually a line from a video that played at MPI 2016, right after Trump was elected.
We all tend to think that the trend lines will just continue on their current path on the downslope.
If you look at the World Cup soccer teams, it was just 20 years ago that almost all of those European teams were white.
Now France is the negrified monstrosity that Hitler foresaw.
He saw that the French were bringing in black workers to the Ruhr to work security, and he said they're going to lose their national vitality.
Lo and behold, 80 years later, French team is almost entirely black.
But we never think that things can be turned around in a similar timeline.
Of course, we know the good story of Germany from 1933 to 1933 or to 1939, a miracle, six years, country that went from hyperinflation, near civil war, collapse, to being able to almost take over the entirety of Europe in a few years.
It's not just that one.
I saw it with my own eyes.
I've said it on the show before.
Russia, 2001, drunken, unsafe, corrupt, dirty.
Went back five years later after Putin had a little bit of chance to turn things around and it was glistening.
It was safer.
It was less drunk.
It was less corrupt.
And there was not a single doubt in my mind that that virtual magical transformation happened as the result of the leadership of one good man with the courage to do the right thing, to crack skulls metaphorically, perhaps literally.
And he also arrested a lot of Jewish oligarchs who were robbing the country blind.
It can be done, fam.
We are not fated to decline.
The great Peter Brimelow of Vidair likes to note that no one foresaw the collapse of the Soviet Union.
So true.
How many thousands of people were analyzing the Soviet Union and continued, expected it to continue on with its superpower status?
And it crumbled in the span of a year or two.
Same with Yugoslavia under Tito.
You can call it black swans lurking out there.
Nobody saw COVID coming.
Nobody, well, race riots, perhaps not too hard to predict in America.
Anytime a good cop, you know, detains a black guy high on drugs.
And with COVID, for half the country to erupt into race riots, we've seen the most disputed national election of the modern era, a patriotic mob storming the Capitol to disrupt the inauguration process for an incoming new president.
And now, of course, we have the biggest war in our cradle continent since 1945.
Do not give up, fam.
Even if the news is blackpilling, there's green shoots everywhere and there are wild cards out there that go beyond our ability to agitate and what our opinions and takes are on the thing.
There are bigger things than white nationalism, believe it or not.
Sometimes we can be solipsistic and we think that our inner thing is what really matters.
We're either winning or we're losing.
But there are big forces swirling out there beyond our control and that I think will have probably a major impact, not just on this country, but around the world before things go too long.
Also to the point of never believing in faded decline.
Remember that just six months ago, the Supreme Court overturned Roe versus Wade after what, 50 years, almost 50 years, Sam?
We forget what nobody thought.
I mean, you got to give it to them.
They worked for that.
They made it happen.
It always seemed impossible, you know, and there's a million arguments you could make to say, no, it will never be overturned for X reason.
Right.
But they did it.
And now affirmative action is possibly the next shoe to drop.
And there's speculation that even the Voting Rights Act, or as a lawyer told me at the party, he said, actually, I think the Firearms License Act or Licensing Act is something too that Clarence Thomas and Alito and some of those guys would love to take a red pen to.
So even though we are deeply and justly skeptical of the system that we currently live in and under, it can still throw us some surprises here or there that then in turn have a sort of cascading effect, right?
They make leftists angry.
They perhaps embolden even them.
All right, if this one is bad and was bad jurisprudence, maybe this one is.
Maybe this one is.
Maybe this one is.
To the point where, nope, those fissures grow.
And what I like to tell people when they're being blackpilled, yes, it's true.
The enemy does grow stronger, but we grow stronger too.
Yep.
Amen.
Who would have guessed that a gay black rapper was going to go 1488 to a global audience?
Rollo.
He knew Kanye was coming.
Yeah.
We talked about the weakness of the system.
I will skip that one, but I basically was, you know, if one of us was to sit down and try to write the Declaration of Independence, I actually went back and read the Declaration of Independence and Thomas Jefferson sort of enumerated reasons for leaving or rebelling against the biggest empire on earth.
And I was like, oh, TJ, a couple of these, they're a little iffy to inspire revolt.
But if we sat down to try to do that, the list would be endless.
There's so many injustices from the obvious ones, flooding our country with hostile aliens, poisoning our people with drugs that were licensed by the government to USS Liberty, you know, anti-white crime.
The list goes on and on.
It would become a Christmas tree, as we used to say in the business when people just kept adding things onto your paper.
So never forget that our cause is just.
And good God, do we have a litany of deliberate and authentic grapes worse far more than grapes?
And then finally, I'll close here at the top of the for at the end of the first hour of the show with our advantages aside from the moral authority, which you ever taught, which we spoke about before.
And the first one, of course, is that we have truth on our side and we are in an information world that war.
That makes a huge difference.
We see the world as it is, not as we want it to be.
It's like our own head start on societal trends.
It's like knowing that Vesuvius is going to blow a week or two before that.
We have a head start.
You may think it's too late to do something, like the trend's already out of control.
It's too late for me to move, or it's too late for me to prep for this, or it's too late to plan to even get a second passport and things in case things go really pear-shaped.
It's not too late.
We still have a big head start on the herd of people.
And I think you saw that during COVID too.
We were all over that, like wait on rice, going and prepping and getting stuff.
And then later on, the system started to, you know, restrict.
and make things more difficult.
Sam, the second one, I gave credit to you, and that is our ease of engagement today compared to past years.
And I met you talking about how, yeah, you basically had to duck yourself to like totally unknown organizations just to get a magazine or something.
Right.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, for sure.
Well, maybe I'll say for a moment here how we started our one-page magazine.
I mentioned off air to you guys back in the day.
Well, a very dear friend of mine was locked up doing a hard time in prison.
And this man really educated me a lot in my beliefs.
And he was locked up in prison, but he showed, even if you're locked up in prison, he put out a magazine from prison, one page.
And no one, you know, there's no dictionary definition anywhere that says that a magazine has to be any certain amount of pages before it could be called a magazine.
So he would, he would put, put a few pictures or write a few paragraphs or something.
And then he would sell advertising space on the magazine, one page, front and back.
And for $5, you could take, if you have a business card of your organization, something like that, he would photocopy that onto the thing and put out from prison a one-page magazine.
And eventually being on the outside, when he was doing it, and then he said, well, I said, I'll help you.
Okay, great.
So I could run off copies that worked for free and stuff like that.
So I was able to assist getting it out.
But we got quite a following.
And eventually when the internet rolled around some years later, we were one of the first racist websites that was out there.
And I'll just give you an idea what it was about.
I know that's not what we're talking about now, but it was about a girl that he was infatuated with and she was a skinhead girl.
And she embodied what we loved about the skinhead scene and really what drove us to be nationalists, which is that white girls are prettier than non-white girls.
And that justifies anything else, you know, any of the other arguments that you can make.
If nothing else, our women are more beautiful than non-white women.
And so we should love them and we should that that's our cause.
That's our reason to fight.
And so he would put out the magazine.
He would get a few business card size ads that people would put in there and that would pay for it.
And you know what?
You put out a magazine from in prison too.
So, you know, and then, of course, now we have far more resources to do this exact same thing to have telegram channels and websites and all the things we do, podcasts and everything.
There's never been more bands putting out music.
There's never been more books written.
We have books being published.
We have podcasts.
We have websites, anything you could name.
There's more records being recorded, t-shirts you could buy, anything you could name.
So I liken it to like at a certain time, if you wanted to hear music, you had to maybe go listen to an orchestra play music, or once there was radio, you could listen to it on the radio.
But once the electric guitar was invented, now one, you know, a handful of guys could make more noise than an entire orchestra.
And then with recording, music recording, and then even things like the Walkman, right?
Remember the Walkman from the 80s?
You could make your own tape and listen to your own mix of music.
And then you had the CD and things like that.
And so I like to point out that just like all the history of mankind is divided up by advances in material science, if I could put it that way.
We had the Stone Age, and then the Bronze Age, and then the Iron Age, and then maybe the Silicon Age, right?
And then the Internet Age and the Digital Age, however you want to divide these things up.
Total Aryan victory age.
Yeah, totally.
Well, because just like in the Soviet Union, right?
The photocopier and the fax machine is what brought down the Soviet Union.
And in the same way, the cell phone and the internet is going to bring down the Jew.
Yep.
Yeah, that was my point.
It was that dissidents throughout history, even probably in the Soviet Union, they would have killed to have the access that we do to instant dissemination on a wide scale.
Yeah, they censor us.
Yeah, they surveil us.
They use the same tools to harass and oppress us.
But any Tom Dicker Harry can basically get up and running with virtually no money.
You think about how much buying a printing press.
They would be like, we have to make a newspaper.
We have to create a whole damn daily newspaper to like build this thing out.
Now, we probably should have something like that too.
But we've gotten a little bit lazier than those ages too, to be honest.
One other thing, a little bit morbid, but also true is that we are in the midst of the greatest wealth transfer in human history.
That's right, the passing of the boomers into the sunset.
I know some of them are spending all of their fortunes on cruises and flights and second homes and stuff like that.
But it remains true that a lot of us in the audience of my parents, I don't want anybody's parents to pass prematurely, live long and prosper boomers.
But when they pass, you're going to be getting, in many cases, an inheritance that will enable you to do possibly big things, possibly little things to improve your life.
It's something that's going to happen absent, you know, hyperinflation or some financial crisis and collapse.
Something to keep in mind for your future planning, not to squander stuff that may fall from the sky, as it were.
And this one got a laugh from the audience.
I had to tickle the boomers a little bit after joking about their demise, but we do still have the Constitution.
That's right.
White people around the world would be, are still envious that we have a First Amendment and a Second Amendment, no matter how tenuous, how hanging by a string they are.
Our ability to say no, point to that line over there.
Don't make me point to the Constitution again, sir, on point one and point two.
Yeah, I know it's a piece of paper.
Yes, I know it's been enervated over the years and warped and twisted, but it's having a little bit of a rejuvenation with the Supreme Court right now.
And that is something that we should not take for granted that a lot of white dissidents in other countries do not enjoy.
And then finally, just the absolute plethora of new blood.
You were talking there, Sam.
I was like, yeah, you want to do public activism?
There's a group for that.
You want to go and get fit and train and tribe?
There's a group for that.
Are you a little bit longer in the tooth, more professional?
Want something for a little bit more established guys?
We got something for that too.
Take your pick.
It's almost like a menu.
The only audience members I'm looking down upon askance are those who are still stubborn individualists.
It's okay.
I get it, guys.
I was there at one point and I was like, ah, into the pool I go.
We are Hydra.
We are right.
We refuse to quit.
Our numbers are increasing.
Our spirit cannot be destroyed.
Yes, I do think that we have very hard years ahead of us.
Don't let my speech be pollyannish or whispering past the graveyard.
We have tremendous problems.
It's like that scene in network.
Everybody knows things are bad.
The crime, the inflation, this and that.
We know that.
But take that to heart and don't overlook the very many good things that are happening because with spirit and determination and hard work, we just maybe, maybe, just maybe could pull this thing off and come out stronger and healthier and more sovereign and safer on the other end.
The most precious possession you have in this world is your own people.
And for this people and for the sake of this people, we will struggle and fight and never slacken, never tire, never lose courage and never lose faith.
I close with that one, Sammy Baby.
So it was wonderful.
Great crowd.
I was so happy to do it.
I was good at public speaking when I was young, like too young to realize that you're supposed to be nervous in that situation.
And at some point in like high school and early college, I used to get totally nervous and sweaty palms.
And then I took a public speaking course and that actually beat it out of me.
And like anything in life, the more you practice it, the better you get.
So it was fun.
I'm so grateful to the guys who sponsored my flight to go down there.
Had a blast.
Wonderful after party.
Good, beautiful white families.
Can't say enough nice things, but I've gone on long enough.
Rolo, did you disagree with anything that I said there?
Or is there anything that you have in your bag of tricks to supplement?
You don't just get to sit there and play Magic the Gathering and press the button.
You don't know that.
All right, I got him.
I got a genuine smile out of him.
No comment.
And no.
Okay, very good.
Not Sammy Baby.
Okay, good.
Yeah, he was listening with it.
If you have one eye and half a brain, you see what's going on out there and you have to get involved.
But anyway, that's a little bit of a cock.
Cocky for me.
That's what I got.
Yeah.
Actually, it was so funny.
I don't know if I got that from Mein Kampf, but Hitler called him Cyclops.
He was like, even Cyclops can get it because he's got one eye.
I was like, holy moly.
Like, there's so much stuff in there.
That guy was one of the kinds of people.
See the problem?
Yeah, yeah.
He was so sui generis, sui generis, unique, I should say, rather than using the fancy Latin word.
Most guys that are that driven and that pure ideologically and so committed to their, to the cause, they tend to be a little bit of, you know, megalomaniacs or narcissistic psychopaths or sociopaths.
But in his case, it was all that magic rolled up into one man and committed to the event.
If anything, he's quite humble.
The only thing, well, I had one quibble.
Maybe I'll save it for the second half where I was like, Hitler, I think you might be off a little bit on this one, but it's relatively unimportant.
All right, fam, thank you for hearing me out.
I didn't want to rehash the speech as much as I did, but I thought those were good things.
Some of them we've talked about on the show before.
Some of them were new.
And it's that time of year.
We're going to go to the break.
And if there's one artist my wife hates more than anyone, it's Phil Collins.
I don't know why.
She has a very irrational hatred of Phil Collins and Bruce Springsteen.
Really drive her up the wall.
So I'm not going to play Phil Collins in the air tonight, but I am going to play a wonderful remake from the Miami Vice soundtrack.
This is in the air tonight by nonpoint.
It kicks ass.
the break music fam and we will be right back
Oh Lord, And I've been waiting for this moment for all my life.
Oh Lord, oh Lord, You told me you were drowning.
I would not lend a hand.
I've seen your face, before my friend, But I don't know if you know who I am.
When I was there and I saw what you did, I saw it with smile with your eyes, So you can wipe off that grim.
I know where you've been.
It's all been all packed of lies.
I can feel it coming in the end of night, Oh Lord, And I've been waiting for this moment for all my life.
Oh Lord Oh, I remember, I remember, don't worry.
How could I ever forget?
It's the first time, The last time we ever met.
But I know the reason why you keep your silence up.
No turns on me, Cause the head doesn't show, But the plane still roars.
No stranger to you and me.
I can feel it coming in the air tonight.
Oh Lord, And I've been waiting for this moment for all my life.
Oh Lord, I can feel it in the end of night.
Oh Lord, Oh Lord, And I've been waiting for this moment for all my life.
Oh Lord, oh Lord, I can feel it coming in the end of night.
Oh, And I've been waiting for this moment all my life, Oh Lord, And
welcome back to Full House, episode 147.
Second half went a little long there in the first, maybe we'll keep it to 50 minutes here in the second so we can all be dutiful, good citizens tomorrow and not stay up too late.
Thank you for indulging me on my rehash the speech.
I hope you enjoyed it and didn't find it too repetitive from things you've heard on this show.
Certainly, if you're in the audience, you're like, oh, I don't need to relive that twice.
But Sam said he really liked it.
And Sam's, you know, it's like your mother when your mother says, I think you're a very handsome young man.
I'm joking.
I know you actually enjoyed it, Sam.
I forgot other good news that I did flag on Telegram and I did not in the first half.
The great Nathaniel Scott of Navigating the Collapse Segments.
I didn't have to get down on one knee.
We were just chatting recently.
I said, come on, buddy, do him again if you're game.
I didn't have to get down on one knee like for JO.
And he said, oh, yeah, absolutely.
I will.
Like everybody always thinks if somebody falls away from a show that there was perhaps drama or a disagreement.
And you have to remember that we've been doing this for three and a half years.
And the personalities, the talent are going to come and they're going to go.
They may come back.
They may not come back.
If there's actual drama or interpersonal conflict, I probably wouldn't say it on air.
But in this case, Smasher and I are still bros.
Nat Scott's coming back.
Alex Ramos of Charlottesville Heroism.
He's a guy who's a lot of time in a penetration for defending our men, I believe, in that garage.
My wife, who is a veritable saint for our prisoners, I think she wrote to almost all of them.
And the ones who wrote back.
I was in touch with him myself a bit there.
Good stuff.
When he was in there, yeah.
He's almost out.
I think he's in the process of getting out.
There's a little bit of fundraising going on for him.
I don't know if it's public or private, just to get him some threads and a little bit of shekels to help him fix up where he's going to be moving.
I will put Cantwell's Give Send Go in there.
I think he's about almost 40% to his goal.
He's trying to get a used car and an apartment.
So I will post these Give Sen for Cantwell, for Ramos, if that is allowed to be public.
And I told Cantwell, I was like, yeah, Give Seng Go is a delightful new development.
Sincerely, a company that seems committed to what they actually say and not just shutting things down because leftists complain about it.
So actually think about giving Give Send Go a little tip, whether you donate into this show or Cantwell or Ramos or anything like that.
And I mentioned Croatia at the very top of the first half, but I have to say, I know neither Sam nor Rollo are soccer guys and the World Cup turns a lot of people off.
I don't blame you given that most of these countries are totally corrupted.
I mean, even Saudi Arabia has a ton of blacks playing.
It's just, you know, it's like Africa versus Africa.
Every game.
Talent for a hire.
Yeah.
But it was interesting.
It's like Compton Swap meet versus Compton Swap meet.
It's not even.
Saudi Arabia was not all Arab and nor was Qatar, Qatar, Qatar, Qatar, however you want to pronounce it.
There's multiple variations.
Like they had hired, I guess they have a lot of blacks, you know, Muslim blacks who move to Saudi Arabia, mikaj, and then just stick around like a, like a bad penny.
But Croatia, they were one of only three 100% white teams in the World Cup.
The other ones being Poland and Serbia, of course, go figure, the countries that were not under the Western yoke fared best demographically for all the evils attributed to the Soviet Union.
Poland's out, Serbia's out, and Croatia defeated Brazil tonight, Sam.
The number one team.
Brazil only has one player so far as I could identify who's white, and that was the goalkeeper.
And Brazil was leading in overtime, 1-0.
Croatia came back to score.
It finished, tied 1-1, and then Croatia won in shootouts.
It was so awesome.
Great.
Just Junior and me here.
We had a couple burgers and we sat on the couch.
Wifey and the other two kids are on a secret mission this weekend.
So I'm kicking it here with my oldest son.
It's actually really nice and I'm excited to do it.
We don't get a lot of time together one-on-one.
God, the last time we probably spent extended time together one-on-one was our Asatru Folk Assembly death life march of 14 miles back in the summer.
Regardless, I have spoken enough, but before I turn it over to the other two gentlemen on the show, I do have to give big new white life congratulations to, well, actually, this is new white life in utero to our good pal Haywood and his lovely wife.
They have their second due sometime in 2023.
He was so delighted to share the news with me.
And he also said the only thing he's asking for is good wishes for a healthy and safe pregnancy for his wife, like a true, humble gentleman.
So if you're a prayer, please pray for Haywood and his life.
If you're a good wish sender, do that as well.
Congratulations, buddy.
And this one is a little bit overdue, but Mario and his wife welcomed, I believe it's their second, possibly their third.
I don't want to get in trouble.
I know it's not their first, but you may have met Mario, Sam, or Rolo.
I don't know.
Maybe, maybe not.
Regardless, congratulations, Mario and your lovely wife.
He's that guy.
He was the plumber, right?
Yeah, he jumps around a lot.
You know, he's got a Lewis or Lou.
That's his brother, you idiot.
I guess they were brothers.
Do you remember how bad the Mario Brothers live action TV show?
Rolo's too young.
Don't don't tell.
Yeah, no, I know that.
The Super Mario Brothers Super Show.
Yeah, Captain Luella Bonner.
Yeah, I know that show.
Okay.
All right.
That was a cartoon with the live action segments.
Yes, I was going to get to that.
Nicole Eggert was on an episode.
Oh, really?
No, maybe not.
Oh, yeah.
Go back and watch.
You know, as a child of the 80s and 90s, I mean, those Baywatch blonde bombshells, that was what set teenage hearts apart.
Yeah.
The Aryan ideal.
Anyway, congratulations, Mario.
I'm sorry.
Very disrespectful to get sidetracked with Rolo's video game reference there.
Godspeed and congratulations.
We should have more.
Send us more.
I've been nice so far, Rolo.
Don't test me.
Don't push my buttons.
You were asked to be nice.
So, you know, you keep it up, okay?
I got one month.
Did I ever tell the story about the time I was almost smashed over the head with a snapple bottle on the DC Metro?
And I said, no.
All right.
Sam, that doesn't ring a bell.
All right.
No.
This was before I was red-pilled, but when I was starting to turn conservative and like start thinking like dirty Harry, you know, look at the look at the crime in this city.
Look at the filth on this metro.
So riding the DC Metro home one night after work, and I was seated either behind or in front of a black man and his black girlfriend, clearly, who were having a very loud argument.
Now, these things happen, but he was being particularly profane.
So I, everybody, I'm looking around the train, like, is somebody going to say something?
Please, I really don't want to be the guy.
I wasn't stupid.
I knew that like saying something to an angry black man was going to be risky, but he just kept running his mouth.
He's jibber-jabber.
And I thought maybe he might hit her or something like that.
So I just said, hey, buddy, can you keep your voice down?
Oh, boy, he didn't like that.
Well, his girlfriend got off at the next stop.
And after she did, he kept yelling at her and he ignored me.
I'm like, oh, that did a lot of good.
So he got, girlfriend got off.
And then at the, then he stood up to find out who had the temerity to dare challenge him while he was busy F-bombing and everything else on the train.
And he found me and he saw that I was like a shirt and tie white guy, probably not too imposing back in the 2010s, whatever.
And he had an empty snapple bottle in his hand.
And he said, Honky, I'm going to smash this MF and bottle right over your crack ass head or something like that.
And I was seated right by the little intercom button to talk to the train manager.
And I was like, don't you dare.
I will push that button.
I will push that button.
Even at that time, before I had kids, I was like a father with a very difficult child.
I was like, don't make me push the button.
He's like, push that MF button.
So I was like, conductor, we have a violent passenger in train, whatever.
You know, send a cop.
He's threatening to assault me.
And the guy backed off and then he got off the train.
And about two stops later, the Metro police got on.
I said, sorry, you're too late.
He got away.
And that actually happened again two years later.
I had a different run-in, but I'll save it for another show.
So that was little baby coach making his first forays into enforcing societal norms on our Bantu population, as James LaFon would say.
Don't forget James LaFond this Christmas season too.
I'll add him in there.
Buy one of his books.
Please.
All right.
That's all I got.
I'm tired.
My throat hurts.
Sam, carry us, baby.
Carry us.
What do you got?
Well, I just, you know, I make notes to myself.
I fill up a couple of pages and I just think, you know, maybe I'll bring these things up for turns to that on the show.
But have you checked out this Brittany Griner story here?
Yes.
It is a very, very interesting one.
Oh, my God.
Yeah.
There's so many points about it.
I mean, first of all, I don't know where I saw this on somewhere on the- Do you know what Brittany Griner's middle name is, Sam?
Va.
So if you say her full name, it's Brittany Va Griner.
Well, this Victor Bout that was the trade, you know, they call him the merchant of death.
But, you know, really, isn't he just promoting Second Amendment rights throughout the world?
Oh, we have a content thief.
We will, we will, content thief.
You stole that from JO.
Yeah.
I had to pick that up there.
Yeah, I got to tell him not to break that out next week.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I mean, but seriously, that's, that's what they always say, like promoting all this homosexual shit and everything.
Like that's promoting American values, right?
Well, isn't this promoting American values?
This, You know, this, this guy, but uh, no, but my, my point I wanted to make about her is I, I just remember in the Bible where the fallen angels mated with humankind and then they produced these giants.
Look at her and tell me that's not a devil.
You know, that is a devil.
You know, that's exactly what the Bible is talking about when it, when it's talking about those things.
It's so incredible, Sam.
Is there a better illustration of the West versus Russia's priorities?
You know, it's the trade meme that I asked somebody to make, you know, you receive tall cannabis consumer lesbian sports ball player.
Russia receives base merchant of death.
Right.
Yeah.
No, no doubt.
No doubt.
But yeah.
But, you know, it's been a couple.
Did you see?
Sorry, real quick.
I mean, on that one, there's, there's lots to talk about.
Of all people, Cantwell got out recently and is getting back in the swing of things.
He's got, he's writing for his website again.
I reached out.
Somebody gave me his contact information just because, you know, I wanted to help give him a boost.
He's, I met him not at Charlottesville, but after Charlottesville when he was on house arrest, and I was a little bit reluctant because of his reputation, et cetera.
But my family actually went over to where he was staying for a Christmas ham that he baked.
And let me tell you, you have not lived until you are spending, it was either Christmas Eve or Christmas Day with Chris Cantwell with an ankle brace on as he's baking in the kitchen.
Talking a mile a minute.
Ah, the ham will be ready in five minutes, coach.
It's going to be great.
But, you know, he was clearly under stress, but he was a very kind and normal host at that time.
And a lot of people have said this, like, yeah, I know Cantwell's done some stupid things in his past or said some stupid things, but I really have a soft spot for him.
And I always felt the same way too.
You know, obviously we have saints, we have devils, we have dirtbags, we have the best people on earth.
And Cantwell is a brilliant provocateur writer, analyst.
He puts a ton of effort into it.
When I read, he just rattled off some post about Russia and the Kremlin and Weave today.
And I was like, man, he still got the fire.
But where I was going with that was, did you see that Cantwell was sell neighbors with Victor Bout at USP Marion?
Oh, wow.
No, I didn't see that.
So he said, so he said that we'll have Cantwell on the show and we'll talk about it.
So I don't want to spoil it.
That would be awesome.
You know, he would talk to Victor Bout and he would get Victor Bout to translate Russian news for him and get the whole backstory.
And Bout was saying that the intelligence services were both very Jewish, but also infiltrated with Russians, all sorts of fancy stuff.
So it's just amazing that like this trade happened a couple days after Cantwell was coming back online.
So like the two of them, you know, they're like buddies and they both got their freedom now.
Just an amazing story.
Yeah.
Awesome.
Yeah, that's good.
That would be, I would look forward to that show to have him on.
Man, that would be incredible.
He said he will.
I think he's got another week or two before he has to get statements cleared by the Bureau of Prisons and then he's free to speak freely, more or less.
God help us.
Chris Cantwell with a freshman.
Yeah.
We gotta write a lot of time stamps down for that one.
Oh, my God.
We can take our time because we always had to, we had to rush with those interviews because he was in the clink in Charlottesville and we were on 15-minute timers and I was paranoid that the record button wasn't going to work on my stupid self-I like pitballs.
Oh, yes.
The only line I remember from that.
I like pitballs.
Maybe at the end of the interview, we'll ask him again about pitbulls and whether he's had a come to Jesus moment.
Anyway.
All right.
Brittany Vagruiner is free or whatever her name is.
Yeah.
Well, I was also going to mention, Coach, you know, it's been a couple of weeks since we all talked.
And the last time was Thanksgiving was just coming up.
And so Thanksgiving happened.
And I just had a couple of things I was going to mention about that because I always think of when there's a holiday or something.
And we've talked about before, like what are our own personal traditions we have connected maybe to a holiday or something like that.
And Thanksgiving for us is no different than maybe one of the most tradition laden holidays that we have.
And for myself, I have always, even from a very young age, I like to get up early, not extremely early, but to get up early enough to watch the Thanksgiving Day parade.
And so there's one in New York City and there's one in Chicago that are both pretty famous and they're always televised.
So I always get up in time to park myself in front of the TV and watch that.
And so I enjoy watching the parade.
And there's something charming and antiquated.
Yeah.
I never really liked parades as a kid, but the idea that people like parades and still enjoy them is not.
Well, and in Chicago, they go right down State Street past the old, it used to be Marshall Fields.
Of course, some years ago, I don't know, maybe 12, 15 years ago, it was taken over by Macy's.
So in New York, they always have the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade.
And in Chicago, it was always Marshall Fields, but now it's also Macy's in Chicago.
Different era.
Yeah.
But even so, there's, you know, there's a lot of things about it.
I like to see the marching bands.
I like to see the large farm equipment.
I worked for a large farm equipment manufacturer some years ago.
And I enjoy seeing that.
But this year, maybe it's just my own imagination or my own wishes, but I didn't see any pause stuff, like the gay stuff I've seen in years gone by, you know, really some kind of gay pride something or something.
And I didn't see any of that this year.
So is that, did I miss it?
Or was there some other?
Yeah, it's hard to believe.
And mainly I focused on the Chicago one.
But I like to flip back and forth a little bit between them.
But the one thing I had to laugh at, there were at least what I saw four different Chinese entrances into this parade.
You know, here's this, some, you know, people dressed in Chinese, traditional Chinese dress.
And here's another Chinese group.
Dragon marching or not that far?
Sagan.
Did they have one of those dragons dancing?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
And it's just, okay, there's four Chinese floats.
Of course, being Chicago, there's a lot of ethnic things and all that, but four different entries into this parade.
So you mean to tell me in China somewhere they're having a parade and there's like four American floats or whatever going down the street in China.
You know, it's just, it's just ridiculous, you know, but but I do enjoy watching that.
And that's, that's, that is one of my personal traditions.
I enjoy watching the parades on that day.
Did any of the family sit down to join you or was this like, oh, that's dad's day?
Well, you know, everyone tends to sleep late and then they get up and they're lethargic and they do other things.
No, this is kind of a solitary thing that I enjoy doing.
I certainly would like it that with somebody would enjoy it with me, at least to have somebody somebody to, you know, to convince about it.
Sad no.
Yeah.
But Thanksgiving is a wonderful day.
And that whole weekend is a wonderful weekend just for family stuff and fun and parties.
And it seems like it to me anyways.
And you know, I, but since this entire year, you know, I mentioned earlier in some shows about that I had got this water rower.
And this whole year, I've been doing the water rower exercising.
I've been made exercising a real priority this entire year.
And I really recommend it.
You know, it's something you can, you maybe listen to some music or even a podcast.
And it's kind of gentle on the joints, but it's still very vigorous.
And even my wife has commented a couple of times that she could see the results in my body, you know.
Yeah.
So and the only reason I mentioned that is I don't skip that on a holiday like Thanksgiving.
After the parade was over, I went and I did my workout, which involves the water rower and I do a couple other things, a little bit of weightlifting and a little bit of a few different things, but that's the main part of the workout.
And so finally, by the time I'd done all that and I went and I took my shower and all that, my, my, uh, uh wife had gotten up and she was doing things because for the first time, we actually went to some comrades' houses, a house to celebrate Thanksgiving.
It was, you know, for many years, I would always go to my mother's house.
And then when she got a little bit, you know, just because of her age, she didn't feel like she wanted to have Thanksgiving anymore.
And, you know, a few different things.
And so eventually we were having Thanksgiving in my home for a number of years.
But this year, some of our compatriots invited us very graciously for Thanksgiving.
And I was honestly hesitant to do it because I always like being at home.
I don't like to drive on that day, but I was talked into it.
But so anyways, I was getting ready.
I had finished my workout.
I went and I took a shower, got cleaned up.
And I was coming out of the bathroom and my wife, she was getting some stuff ready that she was going to bring to the party.
And here she was holding something with two hands, you know, and I walked by and I took my famous thong underwear and I did a slingshot and I slingshotted it right in her face, my dirty, my dirty thong underwear.
And her hands were, you know, like her hands were full.
So she couldn't do anything about it.
So that was my little Thanksgiving prank.
I just, that was a little parenthesis in the whole thing.
Probably, you know, it's like she has no sense of humor.
She didn't see how that was so funny, you know, as you did and as I did.
That was funny.
But to her, it was great.
To her, it was not funny.
But anyways, that was a little moment there.
But then we did go to Thanksgiving at our dear friend's house.
And I brought some of my kids with me that were with me that day, as well as my wife and I.
We went to these dear friends of ours, and they had an absolutely smashing Thanksgiving meal and Thanksgiving party, let's call it.
And, you know, I couldn't help but think like you hear these stories coming up to Thanksgiving about like, oh, here's how to avoid having an argument about politics with your relatives at Thanksgiving.
And I just.
How do you avoid that?
Don't have gay relatives.
Well, there it is.
I mean, I don't have that problem because I don't have anything to do with those types of people.
And so it was whether you're at my house or I went to this family that's our comrades that invited us over.
That's simply not the case that that was going to happen.
But the thing is, you hear a lot nowadays about like political parties or joining political parties and things like that.
And I couldn't help but think about like when we are together as comrades, we don't really even talk about politics because we already know each other's politics.
You know, so like, so like being political is not even like a thing.
And so a lot of us, there's no tension.
Yeah.
A lot of us don't believe in a political solution to our situation.
So therefore, we don't even talk about, but, but what people want is not a political party, but what, but a sense of belonging, a sense of purpose in their life.
You know, and I think that's what we give each other.
You know, it sounds corny, but I think of that show, Cheers.
Remember this sitcom cheers?
I can't say that ever.
Kirsty Allery just died.
Right.
Yeah.
Another one suddenly died, right?
That's what we always hear, the suddenly died.
You know, she had colon cancer.
I don't think you can wrap that one up to colon.
No, I know.
Well, except that the vaccination activates cancers and things like that in people.
But anyways, neither here nor there.
Yeah, like, and you said it exactly.
I don't know much about the show because I don't think I ever watched an entire episode, but the song, you know, cheers where everyone knows your name.
And that's your husband wants to be a girl.
That's a line from that song.
And, but, you know, that's, that's what our little groups, whatever you want to call them, local guys, that's what we give each other is that sense of belonging that sometimes you don't even feel with your own so-called real family.
But that was certainly a blessed time together.
And, you know, when I think of this thing of like politics or political party and things, I remember earlier this year when we were in NYC and a dear comrade of ours was showing us around, took us for a ride and stuff.
And we went and saw some things.
And like he was saying, like even in his own local chat, like they like to talk about food and things like that, you know?
And, you know, and I really, that's just what kind of struck me.
But when our guys are together, you know, we talk about music, we talk about gigs or bands or just jokes or work or our houses and things like that.
And I just, I guess I'll just conclude this idea I was having, like, you know, understanding where we are on the timeline of things.
Like, is it our time to make a big thing happen, like in a big geopolitical way?
I kind of don't think so.
This is the time of like solidifying community and a sense of solidarity with each other.
And really in a practical sense, like I know that if I needed some kind of help, I could contact people and help would be there, whether it was something as simple as, yeah, it was something as simple as, hey, I need a ride or something like, hey, I got to move or something.
You know, there were people and I would do the same thing.
If my comrades ask, I would look at it as my patriotic duty to be there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, assuming that you can at the, you know, if it's a time thing.
Yeah.
It would be an absolute wonder.
And I forgot to, you know, Sam, you jog my memory.
I don't know if I said it in the speech or I overlooked it from my notes.
I definitely said it in the speech.
But aside from the moral confidence of knowing that you're right about things and you have never been disproven about the great replacement, the Jewish question, racial differences, et cetera, was by God, support, both moral and material that we got from our friends, exactly like you're talking about.
And the other side of that, the love that we received and the burning, righteous hatred that we have in our hearts for the enemy, because they deserve in spades.
If anything, we have been far too kind and restrained toward our enemies and allowed that we've basically turned the other cheek in confidence, knowing that they're still playing little game like, ooh, I'll get you fired or I'll put your, you know, your face all over the internet.
Okay.
You know, they want to do more and they would get away with it.
Yeah.
That turn the other cheek thing, that's for our neighbors, you know?
That's it for what, like it says.
That was not that was not a knockoff Christianity.
No, no, no.
I'm not saying right now.
Okay, yeah, go ahead.
Yeah.
Expanding and amplifying, which is the love your neighbor is supposed to be for your neighbor.
And if you read back in the Old Testament, it would say, who is your neighbor?
Your neighbor is the sons of your people.
So we turn the other cheek.
Yeah, we're generous and long-suffering towards one another, but not towards these devils.
Definitely not.
Yeah, if you read between the lines.
Absolutely.
Another, I hope he doesn't get pissed off.
Another good thing that I forgot.
See, sometimes I don't know if everybody who listens to the show also subscribes to the Telegram channel.
I assume it's maybe 50%.
And God knows if you see a post.
But major announcement here deep in the second half, halfway through the second half.
Our old pal Jim from the fatherland, the man who created the white nationalists or at least the white racialist dad podcast is he's going to come back on.
I laugh only because I didn't think it was going to happen.
I had asked him a couple times before and he said, you know, you know, like Jim's like a curmudgeon with a golden voice and he's actually really nice in person.
He wasn't interested before.
Jim, the audience has actually asked several times how cool it would be to have you back on for a comfy Christmas show.
And he accepted instantly.
He prefers to do weekends.
So we can't, well, we'll figure out the scheduling.
That doesn't matter to the audience.
But Jim is going to come back on.
We'll play the old fatherland music.
We'll trade old stories.
Check in on him and chicken and new white life in Jim's life.
I don't know if he was still on the air when he and his wife welcomed the second.
Really, really good stuff.
I'm smiling through the microphone, thinking about the very many good episodes and discussions and things.
Fatherland was probably better before I came on.
I came on to FedPosty and Wignatty, I think, for some of the audience.
But yeah, Jim will be coming back on.
Yeah, I look forward to it.
I've met him in person a couple of times.
And of course, I remember those days where we were all kind of getting together.
Maybe he wants to be, maybe he's going to be a regular.
Yeah.
Full fatherland.
Yeah, we'll rename the show full fatherland if Jim comes back.
We'll see.
We'll handle him with kid gloves.
He's he's big, big old school talent fam.
Let's see.
I wanted to give a quick update.
Oh, did you, sorry, Sam, I didn't mean to cut you short there?
No, that was it.
Those are just some thoughts I had on Thanksgiving.
Yeah, I think next year we definitely want to spend it with family or friends.
We did not at all not enjoy just being here with ourselves.
But there's a certain, you know, there's a like we're amongst each other all the time on a special day like that.
You want to have some other life.
But yeah, just kicking it out by the fire, having a couple cold ones from the kegerator with my little buddy playing by the fire.
That was my favorite thing.
And I always feel so sorry.
My wife spends so many hours in the kitchen.
And then the raccoons and the squirrels and the wolves of this family sit down at the table and scarf it down.
Or in the case of my little buddy, he's still, we've gotten some good ideas from the audience on the on the picky eater stuff.
Our old pal Mangerian came up with this one.
He said, well, what you should do is find out what, you know, because kids always like fast food, or they at least like chicken nuggets or a burger or something from McDonald's, wherever.
He said, you take the dinner and put it in a fast food wrapper from wherever he likes to eat.
And then you put it on the table and you say, here, we got this from McDonald's or Arby's or Chick-fil-A, whatever it is.
I appreciated it.
He does not have kids yet.
I was a little bit skeptical.
I don't know if I'm going to keep a McDonald's or a Chick-fil-A wrapper around.
It's also, I think some kids are perhaps a little bit simple and they're like, oh, okay.
Yeah.
And I could see him looking at me like, you think I'm retarded?
I know that's not from Chick-fil-A or McDonald's.
But hey, at this point, it's, it's so, it's, it's out of control.
Like my wife and me and the two kids are looking at each other like, what the hell is his problem?
Like he should be hungry.
We like gave him a simple starch and a simple meat, no spicy stuff, glass of milk.
And he's like, no, I don't want it.
And so I sometimes channel you, Sam.
And I'm like, all right, just go to bed.
Like if you're not going to, if you're not going to sit here and eat, I guess we'll double down on the calories at breakfast.
But that's been very difficult.
And then, so we're going to wander here into the very dangerous content territory of dreams.
Not dangerous in terms of Fed posting or sensitive content, but only because I can see half the audience out there rolling their eyes right now.
Oh, God, they're going to talk about their stupid dreams.
Nobody cares about your stupid dreams.
But sometimes we agree.
We agree.
Dreams.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
You had a you had a wacky dream last night.
That's really cool.
But I think sometimes they are actually relevant to our psychology.
And sometimes they're just so plain wacky that they deserve getting aired.
And our taciturn video game playing producer, I don't know if he wants to share his first, but I'm putting him on the damn hot spot.
Rolo, you started this conversation about dreams.
Sam and I have a couple to talk about.
Let's make it tight.
Make it snappy.
Punch it up.
Well, as all dreams, it was very truncated and full of nonsense.
But the interesting thing of note about it was that Bane from The Dark Knight Rises and Abraham Lincoln declared war on whatever nebulous thing I was involved with.
And then that like that was just very youth.
Like you had a cause and Bane and Abraham Lincoln teamed up.
It was just that specific thing.
It just made it.
It was very funny that it's just like, wow, those two of all the things to my dreams and be my nemesis.
You know what it was?
I think the potato was in the room when perhaps the Dark Knight rises.
We were like, you can't watch this.
It's too violent.
But he like, you know, snuck out while we were watching it with Junior and he was like, who's the good guy?
Who's the bad guy?
And the Dark Knight Rises.
And I'm like, am I really going to tell him that Batman's the bad guy?
Black person.
Bane is the good guy.
You know, that was a tough one.
That was exactly one of those instances where I didn't know how to tell him who's the good guy, who's the bad guy.
Well, Bane was a simp.
Bane is the bad guy.
No.
He had me tell the end.
Bring power to the people.
Hell yeah.
He was just doing it for some hope.
Yeah, he was simping for Marianne Cotillard.
Bane was a simp, right?
Don't mute yourself.
Don't just shake your head.
I was shaking my head because that was the sad reality is that after all of his bolster, he was another, he was just another right-wing simp.
I know.
I mean, yeah.
Anyway, that's good.
I will give this the psychologically significant one here and then the wacky one that I thought was so off the wall.
And Sam's like, oh, no, that's a thing.
Like people have that dream and it means something.
So and he didn't tell me.
I told him not to tell me.
So I'm, I'm going to get, I'm going on the couch with Sam, the dream doctor here in a second.
But my, my perhaps white nationalist recurring dream, we all have recurring dreams, right?
The themes, you know, I'm trying to run away from somebody, but I can't get away.
That's the big one.
Or I'm going to class and I don't have to.
Yeah, back in school.
You're back in school.
That's a very common one.
Or you're underdressed or even nude or whatever.
Those are common.
I'm late for my second job.
That one happens a lot.
Yeah.
And mine is always like, oh my God, I haven't gone to this college class all semester.
Did they, you know, did they kick me out of the class or am I going to get an F?
Yep.
That's a, that's a that's a common one.
But this, this one that I think has to be ideologically driven is that my family and me are living in a bigger, cooler house than we are now.
Like there's different wings and there's like indoor pools and there's sub-zero refrigerators and stuff like that.
And we're like, wow, like, hey, this is a really cool house.
But there are strangers wandering in and out like throughout the day.
And I'm like, who, what are you doing here?
And they just look at me.
They're like, I'm just going in your fridge to get a sandwich, bro.
Or I'm just going for a swim in your pool, bro.
Or yeah, I just, I, I walk in and out the door.
That's what I do, bro.
And like, this is not normal.
So I have this conflict between material coolness and absolutely no control over my domicile, more or less.
They're not like robbing.
They're not like kicking us or murdering us or whatever.
They're just like abusing our hospitality.
Perhaps this is a metaphor for our hospitality to white nationalists over the years.
Just kidding.
But when I wake up, I am, it's amazing because I've just been living in this grand house with all these interlopers.
And I wake up and I'm sincerely like, oh, thank God.
Thank God I'm in this small house with just my family and nobody walking back and forth.
Take that for what you will.
Is that mass immigration?
Is that lack of control in my daily life?
I don't know.
You don't have to psychoanalyze it if you don't want to.
Yeah, that's.
I think those are things that are maybe straying into your consciousness from you know, things you are seeing in the news or reading about, thinking about.
I guess what I thought you were going to talk about was the common dream of having your teeth broken or falling out.
That's the other one sam, I had never had this dream in my life and I had it the other night and and I mentioned it to my wife because I was like holy cow, I had this, and she was like oh, that's a common thing.
But I was like gum.
I was just walking down the street, sunny day, such a perfect day, lou read.
I'm chewing gum and i'm like what the hell is in this piece of gum?
It's really hard.
And I look and it's like my molar, and then another molar comes out and then another one and i'm freaking out what the hell is happening my teeth and then I, and then I woke up.
Yeah, if you read about in dream books or whatever, that is a common thing and that's uh, a sense of that.
You don't have control over things in your life.
Maybe something or in general, could mean anything like that, but that's surprised by that.
I wouldn't think missing teeth.
No, there's right here.
Yeah, that it's common with people with depression or anxiety.
I'm trying to boost the audience's spirits.
Don't give my dark secrets.
Hey, it was the first time I had a falling out dream.
I I would say that you know like anyone could have that dream in this modern age we're living in, where there's so many things, that scary things in the news or whatever you know.
Try having Rollo as a producer on your show and tell me you're not going to have teeth falling out dreams yeah, or Sam does have Rollo as a producer on his show.
Sam, how often do your teeth fall out in your dreams?
He has those dreams too.
I have had those dreams, but not in a long time.
I I can remember having that back and that's why I know about it, because it had been a recurring dream for me in in a different time of life.
But uh, you know, I mean it could be coach.
You know, with your personal story and everything like that, you know just that you're, you or your family, are thrown into a certain degree of precarity and things it could be.
Arise from something like that I think yeah, I mean, and that's the funny thing too is like I things are less anxious now, at this time, wonderful time of year, but go yeah, go figure, you know it could be.
You know something rattling around in your brain there.
Right, I think, like in a certain way, you should pay attention to your dreams but also, like in a judicious way, not overreact to it.
Yep, the.
The other one that was so vivid and so disturbing was that uh, my little buddy was up on the high dive.
And that's kind of relevant, because dear daughter went off the high dive for the first time this past summer at the local pool and she did great, she did perfect.
I was so proud.
I was waiting there at the edge, like ready to jump in, before the lifeguard.
She was like that that i'm fine, you don't have to stand there uh.
But uh, potato was up there horsing around on the high dive and maybe somebody pushed him or maybe he fell off.
So i'm like holy cow, he just fell into the deep end and i'm i'm sitting there on the edge watching him and i'm waiting for him to rise to the surface and he doesn't.
He's just down there like a rock.
And then I I literally like go to jump in the pool.
And then I woke up like that second yeah wow, and I think part of this.
I don't know if we talked about this maybe in the past, about taking uh, zma or magnesium zinc and whatever.
You don't have to get the perfectly formulated thing, but there is a phenomenon, what's gabba?
I saw you talking about gaba before.
I don't know what the hell gamma butric acid, something like that, but that does help you sleep and it's not.
It's not like yeah, it's a supplement, but it's not like melatonin, where it just like knocks you out.
It just kind of like helps you.
It's like, you know, like magnesium.
I thought you were some help Gabba bars or like a Gabba cafe, or would you mix that into like drinks or something, or are you or yo, gabba gabba gabba, gabba.
Hey yeah, We accept you, one of us.
No, seriously, is there like Gabba bars or something where you get drinks with GABA in it?
As far as I know, I don't know if there's drinks.
I don't know.
Maybe it's just a pill.
Okay.
As far as I know.
Yeah, you get it at Amazon, Walmart, whatever.
You take magnesium and zinc before bed.
You are going to have wilder dreams.
That was an absolute rock solid psychological, physiological phenomenon that I noticed, if you want to kick it up a notch.
Now, when I started taking it, I noticed that I felt good after six hours sleep as if I had eight hours sleep and down the line, like you could just wake up with more energy, but that kind of wore off over time.
But yeah.
Sam, any other dreams in your dream stack in your dream journal?
Or tell us about your dreams.
I dream of pusky all the time.
Sorry.
No, I am not a big dream person.
You know, my wife will frequently, she'll wake up and she'll say, oh, I had this dream, you know?
And so I, you know, I have had some of those common ones that people talk about.
You're back in school.
I can remember some of those or the broken teeth.
But those are things that I dreamed about in the earlier part of life.
I don't have those types of dreams now.
All right.
Fair enough.
Don't be afraid of your dreams by Go West.
I have to listen to it first, Rolo.
Rolo's will love it.
I already have a special surprise for the closing songs.
I've been listening to a lot of music lately.
My classics downloaded songs.
And I'm not just going on good faith.
Oh, also, Rolo, I have to say that my wife does not like your musical selections.
She's like, you can't let Rolo keep voicing songs on you without you here.
Is it true?
You usually listen.
Well, I usually go along with them.
Yeah.
No, you listen and you say, yeah, I like that.
Not great, but it was good.
That's generally what you say.
My wife loves you, but she does not like your musical taste.
I live up in my own songs, okay?
Yeah.
No, I know.
No, I, hey, the Judas, you changed my life with Judas Priest.
Come on.
It was good enough.
But yeah, I don't, you know, to be honest, I don't have too much else.
We're coming into Christmas.
We got a lot of special shows coming up.
We don't need to gild this lily unless Sam or Rolo have anything else.
We'll get out of here at a reasonable time.
We'll let the audience get out without having us ramble on or try to chew up time.
Well, I could tell one more quick little story.
I was debating whether to bring it up or not, but I was contacted recently.
And by recently, I mean, you know, we haven't been on in a couple of weeks and stuff.
So it's going back some weeks.
But I was contacted by university.
And I'm not sure what the exact, how the connection was made with me, but they said, oh, do you want to participate in this study?
This is about people who are involved in caregiving for maybe, you know, a relative or somebody in your household.
And it's more to talk about like or to find out from you, like the, you know, what are, what is your accessibility to different programs, Dem programs, you know, or, or, you know, like the ease of access to care or transportation or whatever things.
And then, but, and here's the part that got me.
You'll get, if you participate, you'll get a $25 gift card to Whole Foods.
Oh, I said, well, $25 gift card.
Yeah.
I'm like, wait a minute.
I got to be in some stupid meeting.
They're going to give me $25.
Yeah.
I'm no problem.
No problem at all.
So I say, yeah, okay.
So I get the invite.
It's a Zoom call.
You know, it's going to be a Zoom call.
And this graduate student, this, I looked her up.
She's like 39 years old.
She's like a Arab, but she's doing some kind of graduate school project in this thing.
And that's, that's the genesis of it.
And so I'm all right, fine, whatever.
So I get on this call and there's three niggers on there and this Arab.
So I, okay, let's see how this goes.
And so yeah, yeah, sure, yeah.
I'm like, well, for 25 bucks, you know, no problem.
So I'm on there and it's funny because, and then, so they're introducing themselves to themselves.
And so the one woman and these other, these three, they're literally from the exact area that I'm from.
And they're introducing their whole name and that they live in this area with the addresses and everything.
And I said, well, I'm not going to give that amount of information on this call.
Sure, the organizer of this call has my information.
So I do want to be a little careful, but I'm not certainly going to divulge this.
So she starts interviewing him.
And it was funny because I live in a nigger area.
So, but to hear them talking about it, oh, I live close to such and such shopping.
It's so nice.
I live on near a park.
And, oh, yeah.
And yeah.
And my, it may have even been grandchildren or something, go to the school here, this and that.
And they went one by one talking about it like that.
And oh, yeah, there's bus service, you know, right here.
And I could go.
And so here I'm like literally from the same community and I have exactly opposite every single thing they say.
So I come on and I don't, but I don't say I'm like from that exact area.
So I just say I'm from more of a general area.
But I said, no, it's bad because it's a very high crime area.
So you have to be careful.
You can't go shopping at night.
You better be careful that way.
And not only that, but the housing, I mean, there's, there's literally vacant houses in the neighborhood.
So it's not like you can even sell your house and move because there's vacant houses.
So if you finally are, you know, so fed up that you got to get out of here, you're looking at like abandoning your house, which people do too.
Right.
You know, they'll, they'll just like, they'll just move and stop paying the mortgage and move.
And so that's a real thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so like, and I said, the schools, you wouldn't send your kids to the schools.
They're so dangerous.
And it was just funny.
Like there was two women and they were like just expressionless, you know, while I'm talking.
But then there's a nigger man there.
Like I'm completely upsetting their narrative.
And then the nigger, man, he starts laughing, you know, like, because I'm saying it in like a very dramatic way too.
And I pause and I say, I'm not even kidding, you know, like I'm not laughing while I'm saying it.
Sure.
Yeah.
He's a joke.
And he's laughing.
And then I, and, and I know what I'm saying is in fact funny the way I'm saying it.
But so I even paused.
I said, I'm not kidding, man.
Yeah.
So that was kind of the end of it.
There was not much more to say than that, except they wanted me to come on to another one, you know, another call.
Hell yeah.
Well, I don't know what was involved for the next, would I get another gift card?
I don't know.
Yeah, you could be shopping bougie.
Keep training your time for overpriced groceries from Amazon.
It was just funny, you know, because I was like such a black, black pill, you know, and saying how it really is to these, sure, to these niggers, the way that they're, oh, they live on the outskirts.
I know where that park is where they're talking about.
You can't, there's no white people that live on that park.
Every weekend, there's some big, you know, 50, 50 nigger reunion party, just totally, well, like with speakers blasting rap music.
And, you know, you wouldn't even want to live on that park if the house was free, you know, and it was just, it was, it was funny.
Like I was shattering their, this fantasy that they were weaving.
But I did get, you know, you know, I got the $25 gift card.
I gave it to my wife.
She was able to go to Whole Food, which I refuse to shop at just on principle.
But she's so, it's so overpriced.
Yeah.
Whatever your principle is.
It's awful.
Yeah.
It's so expensive.
Whole paycheck.
Exactly.
She did go there and was able to get whatever a couple of fancy items she liked or whatever.
But so that ultimately Walmart.
Get some lamb sausage there.
Yeah.
I should really be patronizing more local.
Like there's like, there's like a mom and pop meat shop, but it's, it's way out of the way.
And I'm like, am I really going to drive all the way over there just for like, you know, pay a little bit more for local stuff?
I should.
I do the same thing, Sam, when it comes to donating blood.
I've donated blood on and off throughout my adult life.
I think I started in high school when they brought the little blood truck to the high school.
And it was, you know, some of the girls were like passing out or like, they were like, oh, they couldn't find a vein.
And I was like, oh, well, I made it through.
You know, that was a big thing.
And then I did it a lot in Washington, D.C., but I stopped for a while because I kept getting Nigerian or deep sub-South sub sub-Saharan African phlebotomists who were pricking me two or three times.
I was like, I don't remember getting pricked two or three times in high school or in other places.
So eventually I just stopped going.
I was like, it's not worth it.
Like donating blood to a DC ghetto blaster to keep living.
And then when we moved to West Virginia, I was like, I mean, wherever my blood ends up, whatever.
I figured there was a better likelihood to get a good white phlebotomist out here.
Yes.
And possibly that the blood was going to go to a white person in need instead of ghetto denizen.
And that's been the case.
That's what I always say, especially in this like holiday gift giving season where people are supposed to be charitable.
Absolutely do not give any money to charities unless it's one of our charities.
Do not help.
This all goes to help niggers and Mexicans.
Do not give to the Salvation Army or anything like that.
Yes, absolutely.
Now Boys Town.
I gave money to Boys Town one year and then I looked at this is all just like, you know, I thought there's a good, you know, homeless white boys in Nebraska or something.
Oh, no.
No, no.
Smasher, speak of the devil.
Of course, they do have Operation White Christmas.
I should have mentioned this in the first half, but go to Smasher's Telegram channel.
You know, as in previous years, they put the lists up and they sell out as quickly as they're posted.
So keep an eye on that.
Thank you to everyone who paid or bought stuff from Cantwell's Amazon wish list.
I said, Chris, this is like the broke ass Amazon wish list I've ever seen.
He's like, well, there are only certain things that I can have in here.
You know, I'm still on a halfway house.
It's like, okay, okay, but don't, you know, shoot, shoot for the moon.
People love you.
People want to support you.
That sold out rapidly.
That was our good full house deed for Cantwell.
And oh yeah, back to the given blood thing.
So I moved out here and I was like given blood fairly regularly, but I was the one time I did it on schedule, you know, I think I waited the exact eight weeks.
I was like, all right, I'm going to donate blood again.
My iron level was low.
It was like barely above the level required to donate blood.
I said, okay, you know, I don't want to be artificially lowering my iron levels too low.
So I stopped that.
And now when they come out with like, if you donate blood, you'll get a $10 gift card.
I'm like, okay, Red Cross.
I will, I will bite on that as long as my blood has rejuvenated itself well enough.
Thank you.
I had donated.
Oh, a wild Rolo appears.
Go ahead, brother.
I had donated blood once and the lady that was taking my info, not my blood, just like my regular info, she said, never donate money to the Red Cross.
Interesting.
Whoa.
Did she look crazy or she looked like she was abused?
I know.
She looked like someone that probably saw something that she wished she didn't.
And said, I guess this money is paying bureaucrats and not people.
Oh, probably.
So she looked genuinely upset.
Big overhead by that.
Because she brought up like, oh, you've given a lot this year.
And I said, yeah, I like to donate every eight weeks.
And she said, just never give money to the Red Cross.
You know, in my tea party days, I used to donate to Numbers USA.
That was in my like very basic bitch awareness that our country was being invaded, but I still was not racial or JQ oriented about it.
And I met a young woman who is at, we did a, I did street activism before street activism was cool.
We protested outside a congressman's office on like a Saturday afternoon and like nobody was there.
It's like the congressman wasn't there.
There was no media.
We were just holding up signs, like no amnesty.
And I asked the young girl there who worked for numbers USA.
I was like, should I donate?
Should I give more money to this?
And she was like, no.
Now, that's not to say that Numbers USA is bad.
They have like a new executive officer, but it was just a different life.
You know, I used to fax through Numbers USA to say like, oppose amnesty, oppose amnesty.
I was like, these jerks don't, they're not going to listen to this.
They don't care.
Yeah.
You know, if you want to do that activism through Numbers USA, please don't, don't let me besmirch Numbers USA.
But that young woman said, don't, don't donate to them.
Similar to Rolo's Red Cross story.
If you know somebody in need, help that person.
Bingo.
Yeah.
Keep it.
At this point, fam, we have to be extremely tribal.
We're not aping the Jews.
We're not, you know, being cheap or shallow or narrow-minded.
But we do have to keep it inside us because they're milking us.
They're robbing us blind.
They want us dead, raped, brainwashed.
They think it's funny.
Yeah, you know the line.
All right, Sammy baby.
Thank you so much.
Last words before we take this puppy to the end zone.
No, it was a great discussion and, you know, keep it white.
I'm going to see you in the new year at some permanent.
And I can't wait with the whole family.
We won't give any more details about that when, where, how.
I'm sure we'll be up to no good.
Rolo, my friend.
You're always welcome to contribute more on the show.
Most of the time, I like your takes.
He's just thumbs up.
That was almost a nice.
Backhanded compliment there.
Yeah.
You know, all the bosses I had in my life, people would say, oh, man, you should have seen him 10, 20 years ago.
He was a real asshole.
And they mellowed as they got older.
They got kinder.
Sam, you agree with that general assessment?
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure.
Yep.
Like real, real piss and vinegar movers and shakers in their 30s, 40s, maybe 50s.
And then by the time they were gray and a little overweight, they're just like, hey, whatever.
So just stick with the show for another decade or so, Rolo.
I'm not going anywhere.
Amen.
Just to spite you at this point.
Bless you for that.
No.
Who did you replace?
Jack?
Was Jack right before you?
I think so.
Or was it Mr. Was it old Mr. Producer, old best, worst Mr. Producer?
I don't.
I don't know.
I think it was Mr. Reproducer.
He came back.
He made a second run at it for a while.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
We had Larry.
We had a sock name.
Yeah.
Yeah, Ron.
We said his name on the air.
Larry, Ron, Mr. Producer.
Then we had Jack for a while.
Then maybe Mr. Producer came back.
And now we're at our endgame Rolo game.
All right, fam.
Full House episode 147 was recorded on a just past prime full cold moon.
That's right.
That's what they called it.
Full moon in December.
Makes sense.
Even the Indians had some wisdom there.
It was December 9th when we started.
It's December 10th now, 2022.
Follow us on Telegram, Gab, drop us an email, fullhouseshow at protonmail.com.
It'll be in the show notes.
And check us out at full-house.com for occasional writing updates, but more importantly, givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
Don't let our generous grandiosity to all these other people distract you from the essential nature of keeping the lights on here.
So to all of our listeners, more tempted to despondency than optimism, keep those damn chins up.
The world can turn on a dime at a moment's notice.
That's true.
You know it's true.
Hang in there.
And I'm in an abeliant mood.
Have been for quite some time.
Good news all around.
And I'm going somewhere that's going to make Sam very mad this week.
We lost Smasher.
Might lose Sam over this one.
And I'm going to play.
I'm going to play.
Sam, I'm going to play an old school hip-hop jam.
I'm doing it.
I'm doing it.
Just, Sam, just close, you know, ear muffs, ear muffs and say serenity now.
Yeah.
If you're going to quit the show, don't tell me until next week.
No, this is, this is truly a classic in the pantheon of Western music.
This is called Play as Club by Rap and Forte.
It's completely clean until like the last line.
So if you got kids listening, it's only until the very end of the song.
It's actually catchy.
There's a good guitar hook in there.
Sam will deal with later, and we're gonna rename the show Players Club.
Full house doesn't work out long time.
I had to do it, guys.
Bear, you know.
Let me live a little, if you will.
We love you, fam, and we'll talk to you next week.
Rolo, as promised, take us out.
See ya.
Me and my homies, we tied it in the club.
Topping out her whole name real to real She She got a buddy named SP12.
Now you know the deal.
We get freaky in the studio late night.
That's why the beats that you hear coming real tight.
Something to roll to, something to stroll to.
If you're a player in the game, this will hold you.
More money, more money for the bankroll.
Stick to the script, don't slip in the 9-4.
A lot of fools put salt in the game to where these women get the notion that they running the game.
Huh?
I run my own and I'm my own self-person.
No respect, make the situation worsen.
Feel more HP and Sunny Deal.
There's a players' club everywhere you dwell.
Lake View, PH, on the street.
A different part of town, a different kind of freak.
I just work on my toes on a mink rug and press play on remote at the Players Club.
Me and my homies, we tied it in the club.
We chop a lot of games, how we do it at the Players' Club.
Drop the pool, or keep it in the tub.
Cause you keep much ass at the Players Club.
More champagne, Mr. Forte.
From day one, I had to get my money right.
Me flying, Frankie J.
We took an airplane flight, huh?
They wanted to hear a rap.
I said, I bet.
We dropped the beat, I grabbed a mic, and then they wrote a check.
A few G's for the pocket, no hesitation.
Took a flight back to the Golden State.
And shops made orders from a whole new capital.
The word was getting out, folk ta's out rappable.
Don't need a Glock, but I bought one just in case.
Sucker try to stop me from pursuing my paper chase.
Throw the chases on because it don't stop.
I got the beat, I got the rap.
You make the Glock pop.
So treacherous, the suckers could be sweaters on a bad date.
By the way, just in case you never heard of rapper float, I'm on a smooth tip.
Never tripping on them, suckers, popping off of the lip.
I pop the top off the drink and we can roll some damn bro.
Leave the gap at the house, bring some dominoes.
Kick off your shoes, relax, and get a body rub.
And shoot your macin at these women at the players' club.
Me and my homies, we're tidy in the club.
We chop a lot of games, how we do it at the players' club.
Dribble food, or kick it in the tub.
Cause we keep much ass at the players club.
You can't resist it, but don't get it twisted.
VIP, that means the numbers not listed.
Membership is based on clout and how you carry yourself.
Now, homie, what you all about?
I stack paper and kick it with the OGs.
Some got a nine to five, some chick a lot of keys.
You can learn a whole lot from a player.
A lot of these players make a damn good rhyme sayer.
A lot of people get a messy conception and start drifting in the wrong direction.
Miss Goody Tushu, I'll see you later.
I ain't got time, you ain't nothing but a player hater.
I'd rather kick it with the crew in Arizona.
They chop game like we do in California.
Another show, another floor, a new bank account.
But cash money comes in large amounts.
So get your membership or never slip the lane as fast.
Or else fly, have to tap that ass.
And drop it to the ground and make your knees scrub.
Just an everyday thing at the Players Club.
Me and my homies, we're tighter than the club.
We chop a lot of games how we do it at the players' club.
Drop the food, or kick it in the tub.
If you keep much ass at the players club, me and my homies, we're tighter than the club.
We chop a lot of games how we do it at the players' club.
Drip the pool, or kick it in the tub, cause we keep much ass at the sungler free club.
I like to send a shout out to all the players' clubs throughout the world.
I know they got a players club in Chicago.
What about that one they got in Philly, folk?
You know they got one out there in Atlanta.
The way they be chopping the early stage.
Shit, Detroit, New York, Texas.
Yeah, but we gon' move on down to these players clubs closer to home like Seattle, LA, Bakersfield, San Diego, PA, V-Town, Richmond, Sacramento.
Yeah, but a special shout goes out to them players club right across the water in the biggity biggity oak.
Yeah, and last but definitely not least, yeah, them player clubs they got right there in the San Francisco motherfucking bag.