Full Haus would not exist absent multiple factors, but the primary one would be a priceless show called The Fatherland that aired from roughly 2016-2018. After many requests, we settle into our comfy chairs not to sip scotch while listening to The Nutcracker Suite while reading A Christmas Carol in front of a roaring fire and next to a glistening Christmas tree, but to catch up with an old friend, reflect on family and the spirit of the season, and, as always, to encourage our listeners. Merry Christmas! Bumper: "Louisiana Fairytale" by Fats Waller Break: "Oh Holy Night" by Sam & The Fam Close: "A Winter Wassail" by Faith & the Muse Go forth and multiply! Support Full Haus here or at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2 Twitter: twitter.com/FullHausman Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows Gab.com/Fullhaus Odysee for special occasion livestreams and back library in the process of being uploaded. Full Haus syndicated on Amerikaner RSS: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/rss All shows since Zencast (S) deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week!
This humble program would not exist absent multiple factors, but the primary one would be a priceless show called The Fatherland that aired from roughly 2016 to 2018.
Yours truly premiered there after Charlottesville to tell lurid street war stories and then was allowed to hang around for a while to add some dubious value.
This week, after many requests and on the cusp of one of the most joyous and magical nights of the year, we are settling into our comfy chairs not to sip scotch while listening to the Nutcracker Suite while reading a Christmas carol in front of a roaring fire and next to a glistening Christmas tree, but to catch up with an old friend, reflect on family and the spirit of the season, and as always, to steal our resolves and encourage all of our listeners out there.
So, mr producer, hit play.
Welcome everyone to episode 148
of Full Fatherland, the world's most syncretic show for white fathers, aspiring ones and the whole bio fam.
See also the tagline, four fathers and men.
I believe that was the old fatherland tagline.
But before we meet the birth panel and our very special guest, huge thanks to Jacob Redbeard, Greg, Fritz, Cody, Mitt Gartner, and the Autistic Anglo for their generous support of the show over the past two weeks.
Also, big props to Nate from Wellington Arms, who sent me a couple of their CDs so I could play them in the minivan and not have to fiddle with Telegram file downloads.
Mr. Reproducer sent us a beautiful painting in the theme of the Full House logo that his delightful daughter created and is now over my bedstand.
And Max Headroom, the madman and the most handsome man in white nationalism, sent a care package for my family full of soaps that he made, jerky, a life straw, and other cool stuff.
God bless our audience.
Thank you guys so much.
And after all that, let us indeed get on to the birth panel.
If I forgot you, I'll get you next week, guys.
First up on the fatherland, he was cruelly pigeonholed into the role of this special appearance 1.0 horn dog who could counsel you on fondling boobs and exacting street justice all the same.
We have censored him in some ways from the olden days, but we've also freed him as well.
Sam, welcome back.
Thanks, Coach, for that wonderful introduction.
Merry Christmas to all.
Indeed.
Yeah.
And so Christmas is coming.
Family's home.
Some of my kids have come back home.
And of course, my mother-in-law has been staying with us these last few weeks.
So we got a house full here, full house, you might say.
Hell yeah.
And the other night we were sitting up doing some drinking.
And, you know, we like to have three Floyds from the Three Floyds brewery over here.
Maybe that's a brand that might be familiar to some.
And anyways, I appreciate their brews.
And we were setting up doing some drinking.
And my mother-in-law, she just calls it Floyds.
Give me a Floyd's.
And so we were sitting up.
And then my wife comes in the room and she says, what happened to my mom?
I look over there.
She's passed out.
And I said, I think she had one too many Floyds.
Yeah, four Floyds, maybe five Floyds or six Floyds.
Good stuff.
So you're still pals, though.
You get along.
She doesn't get too.
Yeah.
Feisty when you guys talk and have beers.
No, not at all.
All right, Sam.
I am excited for this one, but before we get to our special guest, next up, he was still trading Pokemon cards and practicing his Ollie, whatever that is, while we were bleeding in the streets and toiling in our special guest salt mines to craft mostly family-friendly entertainment.
Rolo, welcome back.
The amount of embellishment of my life.
My goodness.
Did you trade Pokemon cards and were you a skater?
You must have been both.
I skateboarded.
Okay.
No, I was too mature for Pokemon.
Okay.
I know you're not that young.
Batting 500.
What's up, buddy?
Doing good.
Great to be here and excited as always.
Thank you for having me.
All right.
Well done.
And finally, and I am smiling through the mic with all sincerity, our old friend, the patriarch of patriotic paternal podcasting, the cantankerous misanthrope with a heart of gold and the golden voice minted for radio.
And of course, the creator and host of the fatherland.
It is Jim.
Welcome back, brother.
Thanks, coach.
And I wish all of you many sons and a lot of guns.
There it is.
You still got it.
I totally forgot about that until a couple of weeks ago, and it suddenly hit me when I was driving to work one day.
I was like, that's what I used to say.
Sure thing.
First question, Jim, do you miss the hustle or does it feel like a lifetime ago and you're relieved of the duty?
Both, actually.
I think about having a show, starting a new show every day, actually, but I have no idea what I would do.
I can't redo the Fatherland.
It's very of its time and could not be redone again.
I wouldn't want to anyway.
I'd want to do something new.
But also at the same time, I'm trying to think about how I would fit it into my life.
It was a lot simpler when I started the show years ago because I just had my one child and my daughter, that was it.
And now I've got three kids, you know.
And so now two of them biological and one is like a rotating guest guest on the show, I guess, because I do foster care.
And so, yeah, it's just my life is just so much more complicated now that I'm not sure how I could do it.
But yeah, I do think about it a lot.
Were you guys in a white pride single-wide or double-wide back then?
I couldn't remember what you called it.
It was a single wide, single-wide trailer.
Yep.
That is cozy.
Who's talking about it?
Intimate.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's not small.
It's cozy.
Yeah.
Especially with the mother-in-law living with me, too.
Which that's a good tip, Sam.
I like that.
I need to basically have her drink more.
I think that would help a lot.
She does like to drink, you know.
So every time I'll go to the store, if like we're having a special dinner, like for Thanksgiving, I'll go get a bottle of wine.
And then, of course, I have to put out a glass for her and then she'll put it away.
You know, it's the classical gentility.
Yeah.
You want your kids down early and you want your mother-in-law down early too.
You know, different tactics, melatonin.
Oh, holy, I'm tempted, but I'd really, I really try not to.
I really try not to do it.
I'm mostly joking.
Jim, I got to ask, you know, first time guests, we always do the bit.
I'm sure a lot of people know this, but ethnicity, religion, and I'll ask you about the kids.
Know that you were a father of two and that you're fostering now, but share your, your ethnicity and religion, please.
I uh, I guess technically i'd say Scots Irish uh, but I also have a healthy amount of German um, obviously white uh, unless you know.
Some people argue about the Germans uh, but but um, and i'm Catholic, trad Catholic, i'm a set of a contest, so i'm the real deal Catholic baby, and uh, And yeah, so that's right, Sam, I forgot you were too.
That's right.
And what was the other question?
How many kids?
I have two kids.
Yeah.
It's 10.
My son, who I still did not have a nickname for, is three.
And like I said, I do fostering.
So right now I have got a newborn baby.
He is white.
In my house, he is about two and a half weeks old, three weeks old.
Wow.
Wow.
Born with a Jones.
Born with a Jones.
It's very sad.
Let's dig into that while it's right here at the top, Jim.
I mean, one, how did you decide to do it?
Two, you know, I can understand fostering, maybe a little bit older, but newborns, too.
That's really tough.
The fostering thing was brought to me by my wife who said she felt like our family wasn't complete.
And I kind of understood.
I mean, our son came kind of late in terms of her childbearing years.
And so she kind of knew that it was going to be the last shot for her to have one of her own.
And so she said, well, let's do this.
And I said, well, I don't know.
You know, you hear a lot of horror stories.
Sure.
And she said, well, what if we just did babies?
And I said, well, I mean, they can't get up in the middle of the night and cut your throat.
So.
Well, raid your liquor cabinet.
Right, exactly.
So what's the worst that can happen?
And so we did the bit.
I actually, having gone through the experience now, this is my second foster only.
So I don't take it like I'm an old hand or anything.
But so far, it's been pretty positive.
And I felt like I made a huge post about this on the Fediverse a while back.
I don't post much.
So if you go through my posting history on there, which I believe I'm at Jim Flanders on there on the Fediverse, just look for me.
I'm on nobodyhasthee.biz, the patrician instance, as opposed to post, which is the plebeian instance.
But I did a huge post about it.
And there's a lot of side benefits to it.
You get money, you get benefits.
Like I just went and signed up my kids for WIC today, and that's awesome.
Free food.
The dream of my life.
Only problem is they will not pay for you to get whole milk.
You can only get 2% milk on WIC.
That's nonsense.
Is it foster to possibly keep or is it absolutely no, you're just taking care of these young babies?
That's always in the cards, especially with the babies.
Like that's always in the cards.
Our first one, actually, it was funny.
I said we were only going to do babies, but one of the first calls that we got was they were like, do you want this eight-year-old girl?
And the little information that we got, I just had a good feeling.
So I said, you know what, let's roll the dice.
And we did it.
And actually, it ended up being great.
And the other thing was we only had her for three months.
And then her uncle came out of the woodwork and said, I'll take her.
And so then we handed him, handed her off to her uncle.
But we still keep in touch and we still visit.
And it's nice.
We're an extended family for her now.
But yeah, there's that's always in the cards that you're going to end up adopting.
A lot of people do that with the babies because, I mean, usually the family is such a mess.
So we hear horror stories about, you know, the waiting list for adoption or I can't, you know, the white kids are in the greatest demand.
But it sounds, I mean, how long did it take you from, you know, wife has an idea to getting the first one?
I think we've been doing this now, let's see, call it a year and a half, two years.
That sounds about right.
Yeah.
The babies, I will not lie, the babies are the hot, the hot commodity.
So, you know, you have to wait a while.
But we didn't think we were going to get this one and we got him.
So, you know, it happens.
How have chicken and I'll call him Viking?
The last time I saw him, I was, he really looked like an Aryan.
Yeah.
We had to cut his hair, sadly.
But yeah, he they both actually, he has jumped into it with both feet.
He loves the baby.
He says, this is my baby brother and all that stuff.
Chicken actually also has kind of leaned into it.
With the first, she didn't.
It took her a while to warm up to the little girl, but eventually she did.
But with this one, she has been really getting into it partially because of, well, she wasn't too happy about having a baby brother.
So I think this is for her a second chance to do it right.
And so she's been, yeah, she's been great.
It's been, yeah, I haven't had any problems with on that front at all.
Jim, I have a question for you.
It was about three years ago you and I happened to meet up.
We were at a thanks for the magazine, by the way.
I loved it.
Barnes Review.
Oh, yeah.
If you're an old guy, anyway.
Yeah, that was, I think, four years ago.
But then I saw you at the Oktoberfest picnic.
And that's when the Viking was a newborn at that point, I think.
He was.
Yeah, he was like about one.
Yeah.
Because my and my kid, he's the same age about the same time as Warren's kid.
Yeah, right.
And at that time, I remember you saying that because there's a bit of a years of differential between chicken and Viking, that at that time you're having a little bit of discomfort with it.
And so as we were preparing to have you on the show, I was thinking I was going to ask you, how are you doing with that?
How are you feeling about that?
I think you're kind of saying in a joking way, you know, having, I'm too old to have babies or something funny like that, you said at the time.
But how are you doing as far as just, you know, having babies and now giving us this news of having an even younger infant there, plus your young son?
How are you handling all that?
It's exhausting.
I'm not going to lie.
I mean, I really am.
I really am too old to be having a newborn and so is my wife.
But we're doing it anyway.
And, you know, it's, yeah, it's just what you have to do.
I mean, you just got to deal with it.
It's, yeah, it's rough, though.
It's been like, I actually, the only reason I'm able to do this is because at my job, thanks, thanks, Gays.
Thanks, Homos.
I get eternal leaf.
So I am off work paid for two weeks.
So that's been enabling me to catch up on my sleep and also keep up with dealing with the baby and, you know, wakes up in the middle of the night constantly and all that kind of thing.
Yeah.
And is there some, you know, when it's your own newborn baby, there's probably some biological function.
Do you ever find yourself like, you know, you're not even my son or you're not even my daughter?
Or are you a serious question?
Are you able to, you know, mentally overcome that minor detail?
No, that's a fair question.
In fact, actually, it's something a lot of foster parents worry about.
And my wife also worried about it.
I did too.
And, you know, actually, I found that because it's just a baby and it can't talk back to you and it's also still kind of like a larval human.
In a way, you can kind of project onto it and it kind of just becomes a member of the family.
So, yeah.
Now, it is a little different in that my, you know, like when in waking it up, waking up in the middle of the night, we're a little bit slower than we were with my biological kids because we don't, there's some kind of psychic young connection that you have with them, but that you don't with the fosters.
But otherwise, nah, it hasn't been, it hasn't been a problem.
Even with the older one, the girl, like we, you know, eventually said, you know, think of us as another mom and dad.
And she accepted that.
And like, it's, it's really, I would have told you this is complete bullshit, but actually it really does happen that they just become part of the family and your family just gets bigger.
You know.
I had no idea that you were fostering when I asked you to come back on.
And we have done shows about adoption in particular, but absolutely, we've got a lot of audience members out there who are struggling to conceive and possibly considering giving up.
We always say keep trying.
If you want to adopt, I will tell you, fostering is a well-traveled and pretty reliable on-ramp to adoption.
Because frankly, now it depends on where you live.
Where I live, there's a lot of heroin and a lot of white people.
So those two things combine to where you're going to have a lot of opportunities to adopt a white baby.
Sad, but true.
Yep.
Appalachia, a lot of white babies to foster or adopt.
We spoke a little bit before the show, Jim.
Chicken featured prominently in the fatherland.
She was your only child, only daughter at the time.
And I guess precocious would possibly be the one word to nail her, at least from those days.
And I don't want to, you know, it would be too personal to say, you know, how is your daughter?
How has she developed?
But she has, she's in double digits now, right?
She's a real, she's a real young lady.
And of course, my, my real young lady, a little bit younger, is starting to come into her own and she wants to get earrings now and things like that.
So daughters getting older, daughters transferring from the sweet, innocent little daddy is always right.
Give me a hug to, you know, pre, preteens.
Give us a little tour of the horizon of that, if you could, please.
Yeah.
See, I know that I fear that too.
I'm sorry, man.
Yeah, you're right on the cusp.
And she's going to take a turn.
One day you're going to look at her and she's going to say something to you and you're going to be like, wait a minute, like this is suddenly that they become complicated.
I mean, this is how they proceed from being girls to women, right?
And in a way, at first, it kind of felt like a betrayal.
I'll admit, I was a little, you know, I was, I couldn't believe it.
I was like, this isn't fair.
You know, because I used to love, I mean, I would go everywhere with her and she was the only child.
So she got all this attention.
And we had a great relationship.
And, you know, she was like, I love you, daddy.
You know, you guys, if you heard the show, you remember her coming on and talking.
Sure.
And now she's complicated.
She has complicated emotions.
You know, sometimes I'll be like, hey, what's wrong?
She'll be like, I don't want to.
I don't want to.
Yeah, I'm fine.
I'm fine.
I'll be like, oh, shit.
Really?
I got two of these now that I have to deal with.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Not my daughter.
My daughter certainly won't go through any of these phases.
I've made her promise that she won't.
So, you know, I'll give you the good news.
The good news is that if you put in the work, which I'd like to think that I did, hopefully I did.
If you put in the work, you lay a foundation, it's still there.
And so as a result, like, even though you might have some rough patches, she's still my little girl.
And I kind of feel like maybe she always will be.
I don't know.
I mean, I don't know anything about it other than friggin commercials and Hallmark movies, but apparently that's a thing.
So, okay.
Hopefully it's true.
Yeah, there's sometimes they go away and then they come back.
You know, my daughters did not exhibit any of that type of behavior as preteens or teens, but as young adults in their young 20s, I do experience a little bit of that.
You know, the silent treatment and things like that.
So, yeah, that's just how it is.
And you can't attach too much meaning to it.
That's just life.
You know, this is just how life goes.
Yeah.
I try to remind myself that I am her model for men in general.
And that's a heavy burden, man.
But I do what I can.
I probably don't succeed as much as I should, but I try.
That's all I can do.
Be the man.
Be the kind of man you want your daughter to marry is an old chestnut that holds us.
Yes.
Go ahead, Sam.
Jim, I don't know if we ever talked too much about this, about homeschooling.
All of my children were homeschooled.
Are you doing any of that?
Or are you?
Oh, yeah, I'm still homeschooling.
Technically, I'd say we're probably unschooling.
But yeah, we're still doing that.
We're sticking with that.
Even though I live in a great school district, I'm not, nah, I can't.
And, you know, five years ago, six years ago, it was one thing.
But these days, man, I just, I mean, we just had a friend of the family.
I don't know.
I promised myself I wouldn't overshare.
But these stories that you read about with the kids and they get messed up and they get into the trans scene.
Yeah.
That happened to this girl.
And it's like, it's just too, it's too messed up.
It's too dangerous because the whole system now, I mean, they will, they will hide it from you and they will tell the kid to hide it from you.
And they will, you know, these kids, they'll go to school and then when they get to school, they change their clothes and now they're wearing a dress.
Or, you know, actually, these days, what's crazy is it's more girls that are doing this now, which I find bizarre.
Like, why, if you're, why would you want to be a man these days, frankly?
Like, it's not easy to be a girl, but they do.
We know somebody who's a school counselor and the big problem is girl with girl romances, you know, in junior high, and they're all fighting over each other.
Girls.
Oh, yeah.
It's, it's bizarre.
So it's frankly just too, in my opinion, I don't care how good you're too dangerous.
Jim, this unschooling thing is, like, I guess I could have said that too.
Really, it was just, you know, until the kids got to be like a high school age, I didn't really invest in any kind of school curriculum, because it's just there's just too many of them.
You know, seven is a lot and uh, and these curricula are not cheap either.
So you, you really have to be careful.
Uh, with that I mean, you could just see how this whole system is rigged against the, the traditional family like okay, so we're Catholic oh, we should send our kids to Catholic school right well, how are you, how are you going to afford to send seven people?
You know what I mean?
You'd have to be like a millionaire to be able to send seven people to this good Catholic school.
So the Catholic schools aren't even 100 reliable no, and they're not, and and I wouldn't send them there either.
But you know, just just looking at it like that, if you're going to say well I, I got to send them somewhere well, I wouldn't say that that's an option either.
So what we're doing, what you're doing, what we did is uh, it was kind of like the only thing we could do, which is yeah, we had a couple workbooks, we read to them, we did things, and when they got old enough.
Then we put them in a curriculum that is uh, accredited to produce a real high school diploma, and there's only well, I don't know how it is anymore, but when I was more earlier in the game uh, there's only.
At that time.
I remember when I first got into homeschooling, there were only five curricula in the entire country that resulted in a high school diploma that would be accepted by, let's say uh, universities or a CT or SAT or or whatever you know, employers probably.
So you got to be careful about that too.
I think that think, say what you may about it, but your, your kid, has got to come out with a little bit of a credential that will open other doors and at least not close other doors uh, by having it.
Oh sure sure absolutely um, go ahead, coach.
You were no no, I didn't want to cut you off.
I was just going to ask you to expand on unschooling.
I had heard that before.
But so does that just mean you're you're schooling at home without kind of like child directed, like following the child's interests and stuff?
This is one of those things.
If you, if you google it, you're gonna want to um, come to my house and drag me behind your pickup truck because there are a lot of people sound a little hippie dude.
Yeah, it is, and it and it can be.
Uh yeah, and it's really one of those things where it's like there's no guardrails.
You do what you want now.
So someone, some people they're like we unschool and like their kids are retarded, just wild yeah, just wild.
They don't learn anything and and they're awful um, for me, for us, you know, my wife and I, we're both educated, we're both intelligent.
So you know uh, I feel like we do a little bit better where we take, you know, the kids to the museum.
You know, for a while it was just chicken, so we would just take her to the museum and I can tell her about this and that, and you know, she can ask me questions like daddy, why is the sky blue?
And i'll be like well chicken, actually it's because of the way light passes through the atmosphere, and you know, we can discuss, we can do these things um so yeah, it's kind of what you make of it, as opposed to following, like Sam was talking about a set curriculum, which there are solid curriculums out there that i'm not, or curricula, excuse me, i'm not gonna gain say, but it's just what we ended up doing.
I mean, of course i'm at work my wife is the one who's the main um the, the main instructor, most of the time, and this is what she wants to do, but it seems to be working okay so far.
I'd say, just read to her, you know, but just reading to to your kids.
They learn a lot.
That way they learn language, they learn whatever the subject matter you're reading to them about.
There's a lot of things you can read.
Right now we're almost done with Chicken.
I'm reading to her.
We're almost done with Narnia.
Oh that, nothing better than that.
It is so good.
I've read those so many times.
Real quick, on the Catholic school discussion, there too, this is a bit dated information, but when I was growing up as a teenager uh, the Catholic school kids were actually faster and into drinking, drugs and sex before us lowly public school, because their parents knew if they had a sort of troublemaker on their hands but they still cared enough.
They're like, all right, we'll spend the extra money to send this kid to Catholic school and that'll clean him up.
And you know, they have more money and I don't know.
I'm sure that you know there were public school kids that were faster than the high school, than the Catholic school kids, but the castle cautionary rot goes back a long way.
It's nothing in the last 20 years, or anything like that.
Oh yeah yeah, it's um, I don't know what it is.
You let your guard down.
Maybe and I think that happens a lot with parents is they just they, they want that easy.
They're like, i'm gonna put them, i'm gonna do this and then I don't have to worry, nuns will take care of it all.
Yeah right, that's all gone.
Whatever you think there was, that's all gone a long time ago.
Move into the good school district where you're like, oh yeah, I don't have to worry about it now.
Wrong wrong, let's not give Viking.
Oh, go ahead Jim, please.
I'm just gonna say bottom line, they want your children, they want your children, they are coming for your children.
Yep correct, go ahead, coach.
Sorry sure no, not at all.
Uh, I didn't want to give Viking short shrift.
Uh and, by the way, you can come up with your own sock name for him, of course, but that's a pretty cool one.
You know it's, it beats Potato or Junior, you know, accurate too, but you know you had him.
Uh six, six years after chicken, so decent space there.
It sounds like he is a high energy troublemaker in the good sense of the word.
But uh, you know, having a young uh, energetic boy under the roof who doesn't want to go to sleep, is that a fair characterization?
Yeah, you know, it's funny.
Uh, that just started recently with the addition of the newborn into the house, and I think that's part of it.
Uh, it used to be.
I didn't have as much problem getting him to go to bed um, like I did tonight, holy crap.
Uh, and the last couple of nights he's been like this, where he just will not, and it doesn't matter how much exercise he gets, doesn't matter if he has a nap or not.
Um, he will just fight.
It's awful.
I'm just kind of figuring, you know, this time of year is messed up.
It's, you know, it's like holidays and people are off school.
People are off work.
It's everything is crazy.
The weather is terrible.
It's a huge, you know, it's a transitional time for all kinds of things.
Change, kids hate change.
So that never helps.
You know, they like consistency.
Things the same every day, every day of the week, same schedule.
The more you can keep them on that, the better.
And when if there's too much change, it just messes them up.
And so I think that's part of it.
But yeah, he's very high energy.
And I, I don't know.
I mean, I want to be like, I'm excited about it, but at the same time, oh, what a challenge.
I wish I was 10 years younger.
Really cool strategy.
We were talking about how this time of year, too, they're not outside running around getting as much natural exercise as they would at other times of the year.
And you have a, I thought it was a pretty cool idea for winter getting the zoomies out of your youngest.
Not too far away from me, there is a mall that is in advanced stages of being abandoned, but it's still operating.
The lights are still on.
The heat is still on.
There's still a couple of stores there.
And all the old people will go and walk around the mall.
So I brought him there and it was amazing.
Like, because all I had to do, I mean, I just let him go and I just let him run.
Where's he going to go?
There's nowhere for him to go.
All the stores are closed.
He can't do anything.
He can't cause any problem.
The food court empty.
Like, there's nothing.
Like, it's amazing.
He's just running and running and running.
He got to the point.
He ran so much, he laid down on the floor.
He's like, dad, Daddy, I need a break.
It's like, well, there was that one Night of the Living Dead movie that was shot in a mall.
I'm thinking of that one.
But yeah, there's plenty of good, lots of feels from the American Mall.
Yeah, and there is some of that too.
It is a little sad, but that was the thing is, is if I was walking around and I had that thought and I realized I was like, I didn't feel sad.
I didn't feel depressed.
Like, oh man, the mall, because it's now a place where I can, and you know what?
I'm not the only one doing it.
There's other families there.
Other white, white families there with their kids.
And there's a playground that had been put in the mall as a place to park your kids back when it was fully operational.
So you take your kids to the playground.
Now the kids, they're playing on the playground.
There's other children there.
Amazing.
Oh, I just, I just took him there the other day and ran him around and ran him around.
He still didn't go to bed until practically midnight.
Yeah, good, good spirit in him.
Well, it is here.
When I was on the fatherland back in the day, I still said Appalachia, Appalachia.
I don't even know how I pronounce it because now I pronounce it the right way, the way Jim told me.
It's Appalachia.
But regardless, here in Appalachia, it is 12.01 a.m. on Christmas Eve.
So I guess Merry Christmas Eve, gentlemen.
It's a special time of the year.
Jim, what are you doing for Christmas this year?
You strike me as a midnight mass aficionado, but maybe not with the kids.
What are your plans?
No.
Too late.
No, we're not to.
You know, some people make it work because they say, oh, the kids sleep through it.
Well, I've just, you know what?
Maybe we could do it, but we've never had the, never had the courage to try.
And so I think, yeah, we're just going to do Christmas morning, Mass.
That's what we're going to do.
The only hard thing about that is that we don't open presents until after Mass.
And that always crazy, especially when it's not.
You know like, oh man yeah, I mean some people just open them on on christmas eve, of course, you know, after Santa arrives they get up.
But uh man, to make the so so chicken will come down and see Santa's gifts under the tree.
And then you're like no no no, we got to go to church first.
That's pretty smart, i'll do you one better.
Actually, on that um, you don't even let them see the, the tree and the presents.
We like yeah yeah, because we know Christian Sharia yeah well, I mean, we just understand that it's too difficult, that if they saw all of that it would just drive them crazy, so we just don't let them see it.
And then we come home and then it's like, here they are, you know um, and that has not been easy but uh, we'll see.
I mean this is going to be our first christmas with uh, my boy being old enough to wear.
It's going to take more.
You know what I mean.
Like when they're one, it's like uh, it's so easy to do so many of these things yeah yeah, now he's like three years old and he's also got the language skills of better than most teenagers, so like it's going to be a lot harder uh, but we're going to try it again.
And you know, but that's the thing, you got to roll with the changes.
We may do things differently, but the plan right now is to do things the same is.
We're just going to lay it all out and then you know in the morning it's like no no no, you know, we're not, we're not looking over there, we're going out the back door and we're going to go to mass, that we're going to come home, and then we're going to find everything you know ah, cool and uh, have you had the same issues that Sam has had out where he is with uh, the trad Cath community being in, in a sense persecuted or suppressed by the the, the big wigs in the in the organization?
Oh, that's right, I heard about that.
Uh, what's that fella's name?
Who's the bishop there?
Nominal Supician?
Oh yeah no, it's.
It's worse now because so Institute OF UH Christ, THE KING, Sovereign Priest, their North American headquarters was in or is in Chicago, that's right.
And so Supic finally told them, uh okay uh, taking all your faculties away, you can't uh have mass or anything here.
And so all those people got sent to uh.
And well, maybe i'll fill you in Jim, I haven't talked to you about this certainly, and I haven't talked to you much in the last couple years but um uh, back a year and a half ago, where we were going in Chicago, they shut it down.
Where we're, I heard about that yeah, and and coming up to that time in the last uh year to a couple years uh, both my youngest son and I were serving uh the Latin mass there, and so they, they decided to shut it down, which they used.
The excuse.
This is before um the uh uh well, it was during the colonial time, but they didn't, they didn't use that, they didn't use that excuse or anything about the modo proprio, all those things with the Pope.
This was, they just said, oh, enrollment is too small.
We're shutting it down.
So then we switched over to in Hammond.
They have the Institute of Christ King has a priory there.
So we switched over there.
And then the Institute got shut down in Chicago.
So they sent all those people to Hammond.
So the church is absolutely packed.
And then the bishop of Gary said, okay, now I'm going to move you out of that church.
And so they're sticking us in a further away, very early 8 a.m. Mass starting the first of the year.
And it's really, you know, you're a trad guy.
So, I mean, they stuck us in the most modern looking modernist altar.
And it's bad, but it's good because it's making all these people mad.
And, you know, dealing with trads, like a lot of them are good, or a lot of them are great even.
And you'll find our people among them.
However, I'd say the majority of them are kind of cookie, you know, and you know what I mean?
Their heart's in the right place, but they're like naive and things like that.
So this is making them really mad.
So in that way, it's good.
So we're getting stuck out there.
And I'm sure you've heard what's happened to Father Frank Pavone and stuff like that lately.
So, I mean, it's ridiculous.
Okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's a mess.
Yeah.
Our not insignificant Tradcath listenership is eating this up.
The rest of them are like, oh, everybody.
It's my fault for asking.
It's okay.
It's an interesting dynamic.
I have to give a lot of background to really, you know, fill in the listeners.
So I don't want to dwell on it too long.
I'll give you a goof.
Where I am, so far, so good.
Our bishop here has been very hands-off on it.
There's the usual stuff that they pull to kind of try to make your life miserable.
However, I'm not too worried about it because I'm also not too far away from a set of acontist church.
Yeah.
Well, that's the thing.
That's like we have Society of St. Pius X in Chicago, not too far away.
It would be a little further than where I'm going to be going here.
So we haven't made that jump yet, but we could always do that.
You know what's funny is I've had the experience of doing both.
And I found when I went to the SSPX, man, people there were weird.
It was like, it was like, and then the set of Acontist church, everybody's super cool.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
I think it's like when you finally, you know, it's like the difference between being a Nazi versus, I don't know, being in the MAGA guy or something.
Like a MA guy.
Yeah.
Those people really weird.
But like once you go full Nazi, everybody suddenly chills out and just becomes, you know, I mean, there's always those one or two, you know.
Unfortunately, they were, some of them were fans of my show.
But like, just how it is.
So yeah, so far, so good.
Good to know.
Good stuff.
Good to hear you.
I didn't know if Sam's experience was unique to his area or if this was a like nationwide sort of Catholic schism going on.
I believe, and I've heard stories about this happening in other parts of the country, but I believe Chicago is being used as a test case.
And Supici.
Oh, yeah.
He is.
Well, he's the head of the UCCSB, whatever the United States, yeah, the council or whatever they call it of Catholic bishops.
And one more detail, just to get you a little more fired up.
So they moved us out here into the outskirts and put us in this extremely modernist church.
And by the way, no baptisms, no confirmations, nothing.
Just they can have mass and they can hear confessions.
That's it.
Sam, remind me, I don't want to say it on the show just because it's a little identifying as to exactly where I am, but I'll do you one better on insults, subtle insults that they give to you.
And when I tell you, you'll laugh.
But yeah.
What are you going to do?
I mean, frankly, I'm glad to hear people are being radicalized.
These people, they're making a big mistake.
And they think they're going to kill it and really mean everywhere you go that has one of these trad masses.
Yeah, absolutely.
Good stuff.
Hopefully I'm sure on Christmas it'll be out through the back doors and into the into the yard.
By the way, all you got Yule people, you need to give that up and get with you.
You guys were doing fine until then.
All right.
So this Christmas Day will be our last mass in this church.
So it's kind of a melancholic.
I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Well, you know, just you got to go get in where you fit in, man.
That's all I can tell you.
No, we're going to stick with this group.
Yeah, the group is moving to another place and we'll just have to fix that place up.
All right.
I'm sorry I asked.
Moving on.
No, I'm joking.
I'm joking.
We got to do a little bit of trip down memory lane, Jim, because tons of people love the fatherland and you got the, don't worry.
It's going to be coming.
You know that there are white children out there running around causing havoc as a result of the fatherland.
And a lot of people, people say, hey, whatever.
Just take people what they say.
They literally say, like, yes, there are more kids out there thanks to your work on that show.
And we've gotten the same things.
And who the hell are we?
We just got a letter.
Coach, you should read them that letter you just got.
I've got that one and the hopper to back it up.
But regardless, thinking back on it, Jim, what was, you know, what makes you happiest or proudest about doing the show?
It was roughly three years, two and a half, three years, something like that.
What brings a smile to your face?
Yeah.
If anything, hopefully.
It's, what do I say?
It was probably, no, definitely the greatest achievement of my life.
And I mean that sincerely.
And I feel like I didn't really deserve it, but it was given to me.
And I think about it almost every day, actually.
It was so incredible.
I was just this guy and I remember Mike Enoch said, we need more podcasts.
We need more podcasts.
We don't have enough podcasts.
Because at the time, it was just them and FTN had just started up.
Yep.
I remember hearing that too, back in 2015.
It probably was.
Yeah.
I was like, I'm going to start a podcast.
And I was like, well, what do I want to do a show about?
And I said, you know what?
I love the Daily Show, but my favorite parts are when Sven starts talking about stuff that's not about being a Nazi, where he's just talking about like finishing his dyke.
And I was like, I'm going to do a show about that.
I had no experience, no equipment.
I had the voice, of course.
I'd like to think it actually got better.
I didn't really even feel like I had the same voice I did.
And it was, it was really like I just touched a live wire and all of a sudden everything just everything just went my way.
I had the most incredible guys sign up to be on my show.
I mean, I, Borzoy emailed me.
He was just this kid and he's like, yes.
I don't want to take too much credit, but he sent me this email.
He's like, hello, sir.
I would really like to be an intern.
And here he sent me his fucking resume.
And like, he was so, and he's, he's going to survive all of this years and years from now, I think.
He will be remembered, even if everybody else is forgotten.
And, you know, so I'm just saying, like, all the guys, and that's not to take anything away from everybody else.
And it was just, and now some of it was the work that I put into it where I said, I like this guy.
I want him on.
This guy, I'm not a big fan of.
I don't, you know, I'm not going to.
By the end, you said if you were Stalin, you would have me whacked.
I remember that chestnut from the old Slack.
Well, I mean, I took it as a compliment.
I wasn't, I wasn't, I was not at all.
I was a dutiful soldier.
You were a little too spicy.
The show was supposed to be comfy and you're very gradual.
So that made it interesting, but a little too much of that ruins the feel of the show.
See, again, fair enough.
This is what people I think didn't understand about what I was doing was we were all sincere.
I know I was.
But at the same time, I treated it as this is entertainment.
It has to be entertaining.
You have to want to tune in every week.
You have to really enjoy listening to it.
And then also we give you information and we give you motivation.
But at the same, it's still entertainment.
It has to be entertaining.
People were like, well, this guy's really cool.
Why don't you let him on?
It's like, because he's boring.
His voice is like, hi, you know, it's terrible.
I can't do it.
And that's cold and that's mean, but that's how it has to be.
And I took a lot of heat for that, but I stand by the product.
That's all I can say.
No, it was its own very unique thing.
And, you know, me, everybody has different tastes, right?
For like when I would listen to it before I was on, I was like, oh, these guys are a little ponderous, right?
You were just taking your time and wandering through fatherhood and manhood.
And I wanted like, you know, punchier, spicier, but try to get it.
Every, every other show was like synth way, like, no, you know, like very high energy, which is cool.
But I was like, yeah, you know, what if we just wanted to sort of kick back and take it easy and act like we won already was my attitude.
Like, let's just act like we won already.
We're not, you know, now, admittedly, like, like I said, it was very of its time.
You can't do that now.
You really can't.
Like, ridiculous.
You can't do it now.
Everybody is radicalized.
There's really, I don't think there's any place for it now unless I were to be on, you know, like Fuentes' channel or something.
Well, in a sense, Jim, I agree with you there.
And I think our show kind of still maintains that ethic a little bit.
Like, as far as like really talking hardcore politics and all that, I think of our own guys when we hang out and all that.
We hardly talk about politics because we know each other's politics already.
So what, you know, like, yeah, maybe a little bit something, but yeah, we crack nigger jokes, we, we drink, we laugh, we tell jokes, you know, I mean, yeah, we have fun together being white men and thinking and talking and acting as white men.
And that's, that's, maybe that's just another way, another angle of saying what you're saying.
Yeah.
Like you said, acting like we won already.
You know, I mean, yeah, we're, we're, we're just being ourselves, you know, and, and for crying out loud, it's like you can't be yourself anywhere in this world.
You, you got to say the right pronouns or whatever the thing is, you know, so, so I, I agree with you on that.
Very true.
Yeah.
It's, um, yeah.
Ah, man.
And, you know, it's, it's in a way, um, the way it ended, uh, I don't know.
It was poetic in a way.
Those guys just all faded away.
And that's, um, I'm going to say this here for anybody that doesn't know.
This is my posted pinned tweet.
I'm still on Twitter, by the way.
And I do not have archives.
Don't ask me for the archives.
Because out of respect.
SPLC has them.
Just, yeah.
I got to get the SPLC if you'd like to hear out of respect.
Out of respect to the men who participated, but wanted it to disappear so that they could go and live their lives.
I'm not handing these things out.
I'm sorry.
Just how it is.
Anyway.
No, I don't have them.
No, I don't.
That's just, yeah.
I do think they are out there.
I won't say where they are, but.
Yes, they are.
I got a DM the other day from a guy who was busting his ass finding these things.
And he's like, hey, man, you say you don't come.
Here they are.
And I was like, God.
The dark web is where you find the fatherland now.
These are men with families and jobs, and I respect them a lot.
And they wanted to leave it behind.
And, you know, like I said, it was a different, that was five years ago.
I'm making it sound like it was 20 years ago, but it was a different time.
It was a different crowd of people.
And now, like, I'm not even sure that I fit in anymore, honestly.
I want to ask about that too.
But hey, just look at me.
I mean, I was on the show and I didn't suffer any consequences from being on the fatherland.
But, you know, when I joined the show, Jim, I thought, you know, you were, of course, you were and are racially aware.
You know, the JQ.
You're devoutly Catholic.
But politically, you definitely seem to have some reluctance or distaste for the harder core white nationalists, national socialist stuff.
And the last time that I saw you, IRL was right before the 2020 election, and you were still very pro-Trump.
And I mean that with no disrespect.
Have you have you have you radicalized more?
Obviously, a lot has changed since then.
How have you changed, at least ideologically or politically, if at all?
I've really come to understand myself better.
First of all, I'm going to say I thought about that when you messaged me.
And I was like, I remember you were like, you and I had this just a contretemp, let's say, about it.
And I still think I was right.
I do think it's, they stole it from him.
However, I also agree with the fact that Trump 2020 did not show up with the same army that he showed up with in 2016 because of all the aforementioned failures of his.
So I still think I was right.
But anyway, yeah, I've come to understand that I'm not a radical.
I'm weak.
I'm cowardly.
You know, I don't have the stomach for this stuff.
There's an old Nazi propaganda meme of theirs where there's like a guy and you see he's like this fat burger and he's like drinking a beer in his house.
And outside on the street, there's like a young fit, whatever, you know, one of those guys marching.
And their meme, of course, is like, you want to be the young guy on the street, not the old fat guy.
Well, I'm an old guy.
I'm not.
Yeah, you didn't get fat.
You can't get fat.
You probably couldn't get fat if you tried.
I've gained a little bit of weight, actually.
No, not too much.
It's mostly middle-aged spread type shit.
But yeah, I just, I was never that hardcore about it.
Well, I was not, I'm not, you know.
I think that there's room for everybody in this big tent white nationalism we have.
You know, as I talk to people, I could kind of size up where they are, where they are on the spectrum, so to speak, and what do they know and things like that.
And I think that there's nothing wrong with that.
But on the other hand, I will also say that people that are getting attracted to our message are not coming here to be Boy Scouts.
You know, they want to feel the edge.
And, you know, I hate because hate feels good.
It feels right.
So there is that part of it.
You know, but I think that at the same time, I could appreciate where you are and what you're saying and stuff like that.
And you can appreciate what I just said, that people are coming here to feel the edge and to find the edge.
So there's room for all that.
I will say that in my personal opinions, I have become much more strident.
Like, for example, I was thinking about like my, I call him my son because he is my foster baby.
Yeah.
And what do you do?
What do you do with a woman who takes a list of drugs as long as your arm while she's pregnant?
I mean, heroin, Suboxone, fentanyl.
I mean, some of these drugs, the, you know, like ecstasy.
And it's like, you know, a swift trial, opportunity for confession, and a speedy execution.
And that is the compromise position because I know, and I think I said this on the Fediverse too, is talking, and people were like, just take them out back of the hospital and shoot them in the head.
And I'm like, yeah, okay.
I mean, that's, we can debate that.
The parents, not the babies.
Yeah.
Oh, no, of course.
Yeah, no, no.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, I would just chain them up, you know.
Ah, no.
Here's your three meals of food per day.
And if you're going to make white babies, fine, but you're going to be like a slave or a prisoner.
See, that's where I would differ in that I feel like Western civilization long when we had, once we started having fewer executions, because we used to use it.
Yeah.
We used to understand that there was something beyond this world.
And so therefore, it didn't matter so much if we executed you for your crimes because you would face judgment in the next world.
And now, because of that lack of that spiritual dimension, we treat it as like, well, once we kill you, you're annihilated, you know, and that's the end.
And so therefore, that's the ultimate insult.
We can't, we can't do that.
You know, I totally disagree.
But again, this is all just a guy sitting in his basement.
I'm, I'm not, I don't have anywhere near the bravery of the NJP guys to go out there and put it on the line.
I'll vote for the NJP candidate when it shows up, but, you know, donate money if I can.
But that's.
It's funny that you mentioned that you're more strident in your views, but that you've come to more self-realization because back then in the fatherland days, it was still the alt-right days.
It was like, hey, Ashbury, 1968, but for Nazis, anything went, you know, the future was ours, baby, you know, and that encouraged a lot.
It was an amazing time.
I don't regret it for a second, you know, but like we had the naive and the naivete to think that, you know, we were changing the world.
It was, you know, not flower power, but Stahlhelm power or something like that.
And now we're older and wiser.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No briefs on this train, right, Coach?
Remember?
No brain like me.
There's no briefs on Mr. Trump with the Trump Pepe and all this stupid.
And now we've been, yeah, now we've been through the censorship, the imprisonment, the Antifa attacks, the January 6th, and all the rest of it.
So we're like, ooh, this is really a long, a long haul, a long struggle.
Some guys fade away from it.
Some guys go soft.
Some guys get harder.
And we're still, you know, I mean, frankly, we're waiting our way through.
Yeah, go ahead.
I just feel like I have nothing to contribute.
If I thought I'd have something to contribute, I would do it.
And yet here you are contributing.
Yeah, he's always been too self-effacing, yes.
Sad Eeyore, Jim was sometimes before a show.
We're like, come on, Jim.
Come on.
I'm going to get pep talk.
What guys need right now is young guys, fighters, radicals, willing to get out there and really put it on the line.
I'm not that.
They need guys with money, lots of money.
Give them the money.
They need the money to do the things.
I don't have a lot of money.
So I've got nothing.
That's all.
I've got a voice.
You got your prayer power.
Okay.
Prayers, sure.
Okay.
They'll be like, they're going to love this.
Whatever guy.
But voice, I have this voice God gave me.
I don't know how to use it.
Do we need another podcast?
I don't think so.
No offense, Coach.
You already have a podcast.
I need to start a new one.
I don't know what I would do.
You could be like Sam was to the fatherland and be our special heavy hitter.
I'm just thinking out loud.
That's not an offer, but crossed my mind.
Getting on here tonight was hard enough.
I also kept us.
Kept us waiting, just like the old days.
Jim always showed up last to the fatherland.
We're eating dinner.
We're ready to record.
Confidentially, I didn't tell my wife I was going to do this because she's, you know.
I'll say it that way.
This was rough on me, and I made a lot of mistakes, a lot of mistakes.
And yeah, so that's part of why I had to hang out.
I listened to that last show, and I remember Don't Send Flowers being one of the songs.
That was actually a really no flowers, please.
Yes.
Sam will remember Naked Eyes.
Naked Eyes.
Yes.
Great band.
Well, Jim, let me boost you here.
Oh, sorry.
I don't want to cut you off.
Go ahead, please.
You're fine.
Go ahead.
All right.
Got this in the email box quite fortuitously.
I teased that you were going to come on last week and boom, listener came out of the woodwork.
Don't fret, my friend.
This is positive.
Coach, I've wanted to tell a story on a call-in show for a long time.
I am a red pill story enjoyer.
Here is one.
I grew up as a conservative-minded kid on the prairies.
You'd assume it was a white utopia, but I was actually one of two white guys in my small high school class.
There were also two white girls.
They were my first cousins.
Obviously, I was aware of race as a young child.
That said, I had never even seen a black in person until I was 17.
Blessed man.
Luckily, I had many white cousins close to my age to grow up with.
I moved away from the farm, but was back there almost every weekend.
I was a normie conservative as a young adult and considered myself very informed.
In the spring of 2015, I was back home branding calves with my family and a cousin who was a couple years older than me.
I was running calves up the chute and he was running the head gate.
We were having a political discussion 10 seconds at a time and the conversation was typical until he asked me a crazy question.
He asked, why is Israel our greatest ally?
I thought for a second and had many things come to mind.
As I thought of my response, I realized all my answers would be stupid and he'd call me out on them.
Democracy in the Middle East, blah, blah, blah.
So I started snooping around on Twitter and checking out various hashtags.
I decided I was going to come up with some sort of answer.
And it turned out that the answer was even more insane than I could imagine.
I started following certain people on Twitter and eventually came across a link to a podcast.
I did not realize it was a link to the number one podcast on the TRS network at the time, The Fatherland.
It was that show that brought a guy into the circle.
I didn't pay him to do this, and I did not get Rolo to draft this either.
I will always have fond memories of listening to Jim and the gang.
The show opened my eyes, and Jim is the reason I became committed to those 14 words.
I'll stop now.
I could have gone much longer.
I kept it as short as I could.
And Jim, let me tell you, this guy has a big, beautiful white family of six children in the photo, maybe five in the photo, and he just welcomed their six or six and he welcomed his seventh.
So there you go.
You, big guy, not the fatherland.
I can't take any credit.
No, I really, I can't accept it because this guy, I don't know, maybe a little bit.
That's amazing.
Number one show.
Okay.
Clearly there.
Yeah, he's roasting the other ones.
Yeah.
You know what?
That's really gratifying.
You know, over the years, I got it reminds me of Glenn Campbell's song, Rhinestone Cowboy, where he said, I'm getting cards and letters from people I don't even know.
And, you know, that was what it was like as I was, I opened a P.O. box and people would send me letters and postcards.
And it was just, I really, I don't know, I really don't feel like I deserved it entirely.
It was like I was, it was like I was borrowing somebody else's halo, which I think is like a 90s line.
You know, it was, it just felt like almost stolen.
Something to be said for the courage of the person themselves, right?
The seed was planted, but those seed has to be watered and it takes courage to take the risk and all those things because we get those kinds of letters or even in-person conversations.
People thank us for the show and things like that.
And it's extraordinarily satisfying to hear something like that.
But at the same time, it takes a person themselves to be that brave.
It's very humbling.
I mean, I would go to events and I would meet people like I went to Amran 2016, 2017.
And now it must have been 2016 because it was before Trump.
And people were like, you're Jim?
Like they were, they expected me to be this like square-jawed chad, like in the cartoon, right?
That was our icon for so long.
And it's like, no, I'm just this skinny nerd.
Sorry, very awkward.
And I'll meet you and I'll forget you five minutes later, not because I don't care about you, but because I'm not neurotypical.
That's just how I am.
I mean, you were, you know, even though I get overwhelmed by these things, these events.
And I just, yeah, I can't, I don't know.
All credit to this cowboy who raised this family.
If I was any part of that, I'm proud.
But at the same time, like, I can't, I'm just a guy.
I'm just doing a show.
That's all.
Yeah, I heard a speech from our good buddy Theo at the Manor Bund Assembly two months ago, and the speech was actually about accepting help and accepting compliments from a theological perspective that you are denying people their positive energy when you say, no, no, no, I didn't do that or I don't deserve that or you're too kind.
You know, I could, I don't know if it's, it may be public.
I don't know.
But regardless, take the credit, big guy.
Take the love.
You deserve it.
Thank you.
Now I'm now screwing up by refusing.
Yeah.
You can't.
You're in it together with us.
Without the fatherland.
God bless you and your wife for fostering.
That is a greater deed than most men ever undertake in their lives.
You got two other beautiful children.
And I, yeah, I don't know.
It almost cost me everything, honestly.
Like I said, I made a lot of mistakes.
But, you know, yeah.
So you're right.
I mean, I can't, I want to brush it off because I don't feel like I'm worthy of it, frankly, is what it is.
I don't feel like I'm worthy of these people.
And they're like, man, we love you.
And I'm like, you shouldn't love me.
You don't know me.
You don't know how much of a loser I am and how I am.
You know, like, but I don't know.
At the same time, it was like maybe, like I said, I touched this live wire, this bolt of lightning that just went straight all the way to heaven.
And like, I, I got a little piece of that.
And well, now you're being too grandiose.
No, I'm shutting that down.
You're being flowery in your language.
No, I'm not taking any credit.
What I mean is it was all I did was I was like, I'm going to do a podcast like millions of white people do every day.
Correct.
And it goes nowhere.
And meanwhile, I did it.
And it became this thing where I was like, what?
Like, and then, I mean, do you remember, Coach?
Do you remember Mania?
Of course.
The first one.
That was the first time I met you.
Yeah.
The Mania.
I know you were the only one.
That was wild.
You were the only guy wearing a friggin' blazer, which I thought was hilarious.
Try hard.
I know, really.
I was like, this guy's from DC.
You're in a Hawaiian shirt and a ponytail.
Asshole.
The people were coming up to me and I was just like, why are you what?
Like, I just do a show.
Why do you care?
Like, why does anybody care?
Well, we all have a part to play.
Yeah.
What's the point of doing a show to make a difference, to touch people?
Yeah, it was.
I'm just glad.
I was glad to be there.
Glad to be there.
It happened.
It was amazing.
I will remember it till the day I die for sure.
Jim, what's your favorite childhood?
I have a ton of questions.
I'm happy to go longer if you got to run, you got to run.
But I do have to ask you, what's your favorite childhood memory, either from Christmas time or the first thing that comes to your mind?
That's hard.
That's hard.
Favorite childhood memory.
I have a lot.
I remember actually, okay, I'll do this one first.
I got saved by a skinhead.
I was a little kid.
And some bullies were chasing me.
And I'm running down the street.
And these bullies are running after me.
I must have been, I was like 10, 11.
And this huge dude in car hearts just, I don't know where he came from.
He steps out of nowhere and he comes up and he's like, chases.
And he's like, you kids, get the out of here.
And they run off.
And I'm frozen.
And he looks at me and he's like, hey, man, hey, hey, little man, you okay?
Those guys are bullying you.
I don't like that.
And he had like a knit cap on.
He pulls off the knit cap and he's bald underneath.
He's like, I'm a skinhead, but I'm one of the good skinheads.
I'm here to help.
I don't like seeing kids get bullied, man.
Skinhead Batman, it sounds like.
Yeah.
No, really.
That was a great memory of childhood.
I think about that guy a lot, especially since I became a Nazi.
I kind of wonder, you know, this was years ago.
So I kind of feel like I might meet that guy one day and he'll be like 60 years old.
And he'll be like, that was me.
You know, and I'll be like, wow, cool, man.
I'll give you a hug.
But like Christmas time, my favorite, one of my favorite Christmas memories was going to visit my grandparents.
And they're from, let's just say, the Northeast.
So they're all like, oh, yeah, you know, and sitting around the dinner table.
Everybody's drinking wine, except me, of course, because I'm a kid.
But I'm still got my big mouth.
And so we're all just cracking jokes.
And my mother could not handle this.
Is my dad's side of the family?
My mother could not handle it.
So we are all firing jokes back and forth, just insults.
It's, I wish I could convey, we're all laughing ourselves to death.
And my mother is just gradually getting worse and shriveling up into a ball.
And it was amazing.
It was one of my favorite things.
We're all, everybody's laughing, drinking wine, and we're all, you know, insulting the president, insulting each other, insulting anybody.
It was, it was amazing.
It was so much fun.
And that was like the last time we went there for Christmas dinner.
Big family Christmases are always special.
Yeah.
You know, absolutely.
I'm sad that I am not really able to do that for my kids.
It's just, I don't know.
I could go into the details.
I don't really want to.
Yeah.
But it's just, yeah, I'm in the same boat.
You know, just not enough siblings and not enough kids that they have produced.
Zero.
My kids only have cousins on my wife's side.
Yeah.
Shout out to Brayden O'Fay, by the way.
I finally moved into a place where I can smoke a cigar while I podcast.
No more vapor.
No more vaping.
So that was me lighting my cigar there, getting it tuned up again.
Good for you.
You deserved it.
Now, I have to ask, Jim, we do have to go to a break.
Do you want to play two, or do you got to go?
Be happy to have you.
I don't have coming after me, so I could take a break.
I need a break anyway, frankly.
I don't have a sample bottle.
Awesome.
All right.
Let's have more fun in the second half.
Jim, thank you so much for coming on.
It's been a delight for me personally, for Sam.
I'm sure Rolo's like, who is this guy again?
No, but for the audience in particular, I swear, there was a guy who had this same handle that he either hung out in my chat or he followed me on Twitter.
I remember this and he's denying it, but like, did I, maybe I'm being a jerk because I really do meet people like Larry Ridgway.
I love Larry.
I met him at Mania.
I don't remember it at all.
And he was very hurt by it.
And I tried to tell him, I was like, guy, like, I got to meet you like five or six times.
I don't care who you are.
I'll forget you.
It's just my brain doesn't work right.
My wife would, of course, be like, that's because you are drinking.
Like, no.
This is before I even had drink one.
And like, you know, it was just terrible.
But anyway.
Maybe it was the Rolo Tomasi of the Rational Male and all that Manosphere stuff.
Unlike no, because your producer, I see him on camera.
He's, I love Rolo.
He looks like him.
I love his books.
This guy doesn't at all look like the douche that the actual Rolo Tomasi looks like.
The guy's a mega douche.
He's got the ponytail.
He's like bald.
He wears the beanie.
Oh, no kidding.
I've never seen a picture of him.
You're not fooling.
Yeah.
If you look for a picture of him, you'll find out.
Like, he's like, you're not fooling anybody, guy.
Like, take, you know, see, Mr. Producer, he knows exactly what I'm talking about.
He and Sam have been frozen on my screen from like minute 10.
So I have no idea how they're reacting.
All right, Jim, excited to have you back in the second half.
We'll keep it looser.
Sam's probably got some questions still on the hopper.
No promises to hang till the end, but I'll hang as long as I can.
Promises, promises.
Another good naked eyes song.
Very good.
Thank you, fam.
Hope you enjoyed this full fatherland remix, remake.
I don't know.
It's all in good spirits.
And since it is now Christmas Eve here, at least, we are going to, I don't know what the band is called.
Is it Sam and the Fam?
The Fam and Sam?
But Sam, introduce our break music this week, please.
Yes.
Back in the 90s, we would do a Christmas song every year.
And sometimes it was a classic, like what we were going to hear in a moment.
Or I also wrote some originals.
And in the last few years, every Christmas, we've played on this show.
So listeners, longtime listeners will recognize the songs.
But I thought it was time to bring out Oh Holy Night with me and my family all singing on this and all playing all the, I play all the instruments.
There's guitar and bass and there's some brass instruments in there.
I play all the instruments and all the family sings on the song as well.
Enjoy.
Merry Christmas and we'll be ready.
Christmas.
The stars are brightly shining.
It is the night of the deepest boom.
Long live the world.
It's true, it's true.
Glorious morning divine.
when Christ was born
Oh holy night The stars are brightly shining It is the night of the deceased birth
Long may the world and sin and never calling till here the song The weary world rejoices for yonder breaks on the one glorious morning
And welcome back to Full House, episode 148.
That's right.
We did call it Full Fatherland.
We went there.
Huge thanks to our old pal, Jim Vicker, for not just starting the show, but for coming out of semi-retirement to join us and give you just a little glimpse of what it was like in the olden days, the good, the bad, the great, the positive, sometimes self-reflective and all the rest of it.
Jim did have to go.
We took a break.
He was going to come back in the second half.
He said, time's up.
Maybe he'll come back another time.
I certainly would be honored and happy to have him back.
It was fun kicking around the old stuff.
And he has a different perspective that perhaps is needed or still relevant in this thing.
And God bless him and his family, of course, for doing one of the most noble things in the world, which is fostering white life, not just creating it, but fostering it.
This is unquestionably as well the coldest night of Full House in three and a half years, over three and a half years.
I'm down here in the Never Cuck shed with the electric heaters running, and I went to check the temperature of the thermometer at the break.
The battery-powered sensor outside here had apparently frozen up.
It's no longer sending a signal, but we're at negative one or negative two, if you trust the internet.
And that's what Sam calls balmy, balmy August day from where he's at.
I mean, it's actually very cold and brutal there, right, Sam?
It's not, you don't just brush it off like it's nothing.
No, this is just cold and it's high winds and snow.
So yeah, it's definitely dangerous, I would say.
White Christmas for a lot of kids out there who aren't used to it.
So that's one positive for sure.
I will never hate Rolo was talking at the break about an ice storm.
You know, it was just freezing rain and just hazards everywhere.
And I said, hey, if it gets you out of school, it's still cool, even if there's no snow on the ground.
Take that one to heart.
Before we do new white life here, we have a ton of great stuff coming up in the new year and hopefully before the new year.
We are still on for JO to come back, make his triumphant return.
What we hope will be the new regular slot for not Smasher Fed posting, but Jo's style of commentary.
His schedule is difficult.
And I was sick and tired last week when he was set to come on.
So shame on me.
Cantwell, of course.
Get Cantwell back on.
Get Cantwell back on.
Of course.
Chris has said he is more than happy to come on and we will do that.
We're going to have Alex Ramos on to talk about not just Charlottesville, but his time behind the wire and life going forward, sort of starting anew there.
And just today, I talked to one of my USS Liberty buddies just to call him to wish him Merry Christmas.
And we had teased that either he or a couple of them were going to come back on a while ago.
It kind of just got messed up with scheduling, but he said, absolutely, we'll come back on.
So more USS Liberty content and others out there.
Still got to get Hammer on.
He's still finishing his studio up there in the great white north.
And if I forgot you, don't worry.
We'll still have you on too.
So with that, new white life, big one this week is to Sigis and his wife on baby number five.
Replacement level, hell.
They're going beyond to replacement level and beyond.
Sigas said that he gave his wife, the baby gave his wife a hell of a battle on the way out.
He said, or I was surprised by that myself.
I figured, you know, the more babies you have, they just sort of roll down the chute like a skee ball or a pinball.
Each one is different.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Sam.
Did you have heart, difficult later ones?
I assume.
Yeah, I know you did.
No, no, they were, they were none of them had to.
The first six were born naturally, you know, and the seventh one was by C-section.
All right.
Yep.
Shame on me for their ignorance of what goes on there.
But the first one is almost always the toughest one, I think.
Yes.
Yep.
And we recently had our Christmas party with our local guys here.
And one of the ladies who showed up, I hadn't seen her in a little while, but she showed up with her husband.
And I saw the little bulge going there.
So we got another one coming in our own little circle here.
Amen.
Keep them coming, guys.
Please.
That's more NWLs, as we call it in the business for the top of our two full house.
I just made that up.
That's not, yeah.
I was going to make an NWA reference, but I won't do that.
But Sigas did say to give you guys a bit of backstory for the awesome storytelling you do on the show.
Now that things have settled down in the house, they had three and they thought they were done.
They got red-pilled, but then decided to have a fourth as an FU to white replacement.
It was a pretty sketchy pregnancy with some complications, but the wife pulled through.
Found the movement, found the movement shortly after she was born, decided to have number five as the icing on the cake, despite both of us getting up there in years.
See, this is the, it absolutely is a damn phenomenon that people get angry, they see the truth, and they're like, you know what?
Let's have, let's have a romp and not do anything to prevent the beautiful outcome from that.
Tough delivery and having to make the choice of mother or baby.
Man, it was a tough one was definitely on the table with the way things were going.
But we both, they both pulled through in the end due to the Icelandic fortitude of my wife.
God bless her, Sigas.
You picked a warrior wife, no better kind.
And he just added, advise families to avoid birth control as it only causes problems with the woman's reproductive system when you want to have that last FU to Zog.
Babies are much more than that, Sigas, of course, but they are also white babies and FU to Zog.
Absolutely.
And it changes the way you even look at life and certainly at childbearing.
If you're going to put yourself, what you think is being in control with artificial birth control, I mean, it's just a bad deal.
You really got to look into it.
The side effects of every kind of birth control are well documented.
And, you know, it's sometimes in a younger man, especially they want to be brave and they want to do something daring and maybe something ill-advised even.
But how about this?
This is something you can do.
How about have a family?
How about be a guy who can hold down a job and have a wife and bring children into this world and not worry about how many you're going to have?
There's something daring.
There's a little bit of martyrdom for you.
And oh, you're worried about possibly getting pregnant at a very bad time or when money is really tight.
Well, guess what?
You don't have to, you know, fill your wife's belly with birth control pills like Buster to prevent that.
And I'm not even talking about the other options too.
You can do natural family planning, as our own Sam has spoken about multiple times on this show.
Sam Talks, I believe, was that one.
I don't even want to, yeah.
Just just crank them out.
Yeah.
No natural plan either.
No, I'm getting sometimes.
Well, that's only like if you have like an illness or something really serious like that, then maybe there's a way to kind of delay for a while in that.
But being married and having children, you know, that's something that may just come together.
And anyways, a lot of people have trouble even getting pregnant.
You know, just because you think you want a bunch of kids doesn't mean you're going to get them either.
You kind of have to be open-minded and be ready to go with whatever comes your way.
Amen.
Whether you're doing it for religious reasons or racial reasons or racial reasons.
That's right.
Add to the flock of the church and add to the tribe of your race and do it wisely.
Don't just do it willy-nilly.
You know, the coach pill does not mean just go out and knock up random women or get pregnant from random guys.
Do it smartly.
Do it right.
Before we get too far, though, to Ash and Wifey from England.
They welcomed their second daughter recently.
And Ash was a little bit self-deprecating.
I know another guy who had two daughters out of the gate.
And he was like, well, this is just my fate to have two daughters.
You know, at least, you know, at least they won't look like they're old man, etc.
I've seen him.
Ash and I have video conferenced.
You are a fine specimen of Anglo warrior.
And Ash, to his credit, has been active in the cause.
He has suffered as a result of his involvement in the cause.
And let me tell you, talking to this guy, he is not backing down one iota.
Just welcomed a new beautiful baby girl.
His wife is beautiful.
I caught a quick glimpse of her too.
God bless them and God bless our brothers in England.
We know we give your island a hard time, partially because it's painful.
You know, I think we attack some of the things that it pains us to see, like the state of England or the state of Germany today.
So more men like Ash and more people like Ash and his wife making babies over there.
You guys might just make it through.
Yeah.
Moving on, Cody sent us a really nice note, and I wanted to read it here real quick at the risk of reading too much.
Hey, coach, wanted to wish you and your family a Merry Christmas.
Last show was very uplifting, and I'm glad you guys still find the time with everything going on to bang these out.
Have some tangential feel-good news I wanted to share, perhaps full house worthy.
I deemed it worthy, Cody.
I received one of the best compliments of my life recently.
A friend of mine, not involved in anything, who I had brought along towards and accepting our way of thinking, just welcomed his first child, a beautiful, healthy, and smiling baby girl, into the world this past week.
Talks of arranged marriage have already gotten underway.
It was almost not to be, however.
He and his wife had gone down a very hard spiral of self-indulgence and nihilism.
And at one point, we hadn't seen them in nearly a year.
You could blame COVID, but they had been avoiding us after we had our first child.
My friend was always stubbornly and irrationally antinatalist.
And I think my pushing against that way of thought might have driven him away.
It got to the point where even though I was in their wedding party, both my wife and I didn't really know this couple anymore.
We were cut out of their lives almost entirely.
Regardless, at some point, after many unsuccessful attempts at reconnecting, I was finally able to have him meet my son, who was already a year and some change, a year and some change old by that point.
My son took to him well, and at some point of the visit, had my friend buried up to his neck in his menagerie of stuffed animals.
Our friendship continued to mend after that day.
God bless Cody's son.
Fast forward about a year from then, the couple comes to visit.
I was fixing my guests a plate of food when he told me they were expecting.
We were blindsided, a complete 180.
They had apparently been trying for a few months.
I asked him what changed his stance on kids, and he told me that it was the day he met my son, and now he had him buried in his favorite toys.
And he said that after that, yeah, I want this in my life.
Definitely had me choked up, and now they are madly in love with their precious new white life, just like we knew they'd be.
Just goes to show that we evil, hateful terrorist monsters have a real positive impact on those around us.
Sometimes the best propaganda is the way we live our lives in contrast to the wishes of our foul society.
Hell yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Hats off.
We salute you.
Sam, you said that all the time, right?
You know, put a baby in a woman's arms, or in this case, get a childless, I don't know, 20-something, 30-something playing with a little rug rat and some stuffed toys.
Boom.
Yeah.
You don't have to.
Well, I tell you, when you see somebody's life taking off like that, somebody who's getting politically aware or somebody who's taking a stand or welcoming new white life, it fires me up.
It really does.
I mean, it's like I'm living it over and over again.
Amen.
And Rolo has something.
I won't even address it.
Rolo has a promising thing budding in his life.
I'm just going to leave it at that.
Rolo?
Are you actually, you don't have to be, you know, Jim always made the intern like sit in the corner with a dunce's cap and stay with Borzoi most of the time.
I'm joking, of course.
Borzoi also would play video games while we were recording the show.
So disrespectful.
Rolo, man.
I can't tell.
My damn cameras are frozen again.
Rolo, what are you doing for Christmas?
You are a devout Christian man as well, even though you are a Protestant.
I have a soft spot for Protestants.
As a kid, I was always like, well, they were revolutionary Christians.
You know, they didn't like what was going on.
Went for it.
So what's cooking in the Tomasi house?
Well, I'm going to be going over to my parents because my sister is out of state.
Okay.
So it's going to be just a brunch, early lunch type thing.
And then that's about it.
That's my day.
Just hang out there until I just get too tired and just go home.
Do you guys actually hang out and play games or like talk or have drinks?
Or is it?
We talk.
Yeah.
You know, we have a good time.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm listening.
Rolo, you're such a movie guy.
Do you have a favorite Christmas movie?
I cycle through the movies that I watch on Christmas, but generally, my favorite one, the one that I've watched the most and I recommend the most is Batman Returns.
Because it is genuinely a Christmas movie and it is extremely anti-Semitic.
It is absolutely about two Jews that try to steal Christmas and the Gentile has to save it.
I'll have to watch that.
Is that the one with the Joker?
No, the one with the penguin and the Christopher.
Oh, oh, oh, God.
Yeah, back to the Michael Keaton days.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And if I haven't said it on this show before, I've said it many times on my show that Tim Burton was fired from the Batman franchise because the villains in that movie, he based on the Jew producers from the first Batman movie.
And that pissed them off so much that they intentionally tried to tank the movie because he made the first Batman.
It was a huge success.
And they wanted him to come back.
They begged him.
And he said, okay, I want full control, though.
And they said, that's fine.
Okay.
Yeah.
You just do it again.
And then they see the dailies and then there's Danny DeVito and he's just this disgusting sexual, gross little goblin.
And then just there's this obvious capitalist who's trying to undermine all aspects of the city so he can just gain power and put a political puppet that he can control so he can control the city.
And then he kills his secretary who asks too many questions.
It is like absolutely just anti-Jewish.
And Tim Burton has said things that are very dog whistly, not because he's our guy, but he's just so weird that he doesn't know not to say these things.
And despite it, he certainly looks like a Jew.
I mean, he's got that like long, scraggly, curly black hair.
He's just weird.
He's just a, he's just, yeah, he's not Jewish.
He's just a weird guy.
So like he, he's, someone asked him about the set design for Edward Scissor hands.
And he said, I don't know, just seeing all the buildings like this, how the suburbs are designed.
It's, it's very fascistic and I love it.
Good for him.
I don't want to do a whole like content.
That's what the Final Storm is for here.
But full disclosure, my wife got an HBO Max, one of those week-long or 10-day free trials.
Batman Returns is on there.
I'm sure it is, but we've been going through Game of Thrones again.
I know, I know there's a ton of paws and homosexuality and garbage culture stuff in there.
But I have to say, the acting and the set design and the sort of sweeping drama of it all is really spectacular.
It is spectacular long-form television if you can, you know, consume it without being utterly disgusted by all the paws.
But anyway, there's that's every HBO show.
HBO makes really good looking shows.
Yep.
And they often employ the same people like the art directors from the Sopranos.
I was like, this looks like a Sopranos episode.
Yeah, they go and cycle through.
Go ahead, Sam.
Sorry.
If listeners are thinking about Christmas movies at all or thinking about choosing a Christmas movie, I would refer them to the episode when we had Warren on the show, Ahab.
I think he was calling himself at that time.
And he gave off a list of about five or six movies.
And I watched every single one of them.
And they were great.
I would have to think of the names of them, but I'm just remembering having watched those.
And those were all good Christmas movies.
So listeners, if you're looking for a movie for Christmas to watch, you could go back and listen to that episode.
I'll flag that in the show notes.
I remember Babes and Toy Land, which we dusted off again this year, black and white, probably from the 30s.
I couldn't believe that the kids sat through and watched it again.
They were captivated.
They did that one.
One or two of them were stinkers, in my opinion.
He recommended the guy from Quantum Leap was in like a pilot's Christmas movie, which was a little bit made for TV, schlock, but it wasn't bad.
And then A Child's Christmas in Wales.
Yeah, that was beautifully shot in a nice little interesting cultural window.
A child's Christmas in Wales.
And I do forget a couple of the other ones.
There's some obvious ones.
We don't have to do a whole Christmas.
We shouldn't be watching movies on Christmas.
No, but sometimes maybe at night, people like to put something on or something.
Well, you know, you had drinks in you and you just like, what are you going to do at that point?
You might be sitting around and feel like putting something on.
When I was a kid and I used to go to my aunt's house, they would always put on good fellas.
That is a very violent and drunk movie.
And it wasn't like I was the only kid there and I snuck in.
Like there was a lot of kids there and they would just put it on.
My clown, am I here to amuse you?
The guy who watches Game of Thrones is not going to get up in his high horse about watching movies on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day.
Sam, we got a nice one here.
Where is it?
Real quick.
Hey, guys, I love the show.
Listening to Coach's speech has me riled up.
Smasher was talking about his one, Sam was talking about his one-page magazine and the pre-internet.
I first came into the movement in the 90s when we had World Church of the Creator, National Alliance, White Aryan Resistance.
We had a ton of factions out there, but I wanted to bring up, does anyone remember Resistance Magazine?
Oh, yeah.
I have every issue.
Of course.
From issue one.
It covered white power bands and came from National Alliance.
I became racially aware in prison and became a skinhead back in the heyday of the skinhead movement.
Though I have thrown my hair out years later, I still carry the beliefs, the 14 words, and David Lane.
And I was also introduced to Wotanism.
I wear a hammer to this day and never lose faith.
I stay fit, strong, and am prepared to go the distance for my people.
I just wanted to give you guys a sig hail, keep up the positivity.
1488.
And that is from Chris in Pennsylvania.
Thank you, Chris, buddy.
Sam's got you.
He's got you covered.
Yeah, absolutely.
I don't know.
Yeah, I wish I could go more into that one-page magazine because it unfortunately involves the name of somebody.
And I don't want to cause any trouble there.
It was a play on the person's name.
But yeah, it was quite revolutionary in its time.
Sam, I wanted to compliment you on recommending siege.
Now, siege is like one of those words that you get triggered when you hear it.
You're either like, yeah, like, you know, like burn down your local substation.
Don't do that.
Don't isolate that rollo.
Or you have a, you know, you have a very negative reaction like, oh, yeah, I remember that meme.
Like it's, you know, just federation for like, yeah, for incels.
But enough people have said good things, yourself included, Sam.
I take it to heart.
So after I finish my comp, I have been, I'm almost, God knows, I actually don't know how far I'm through because I'm listening to it.
It's a big book.
Yeah.
You're talking like 800 or 1,000 pages of that book.
But the thing is, it's a compilation of all those newsletters.
So like you can read like a, just a few pages and put it down and go read something else.
And when you feel like it come back, and he's got a lot of great stuff in there.
If there's any point in it where you're reading it and it's like, it sounds like an incitement to violence or something like that.
I would only say this.
Think of in those days, the mentality is like you can only hand out so many flyers.
You can only have so many rallies or anything like that.
These people kind of were at the end of their rope.
And I say now, look at how the internet and the cell phone has revolutionized our movement because we are outmaneuvering the enemy by technology that did not exist in those days.
No one should think that they have to resort to violence or doing any kind of crazy illegal thing.
We have ways of organizing now.
We have ways of communicating with each other and spreading the word or even just having like fellowship with each other by these means.
And so, you know, think of it as you read it in that way.
But he's got a lot of practical things there.
He's a very pragmatic thinker, and you can save yourself a lot of trouble even by understanding his points.
Absolutely.
That was the thing.
It was chock full of wisdom.
It was, it was a little bit depressing because he wrote this between 1981 and 1986.
And hear me out because there's a couple of important things here.
I wish that I had read it in 2014 or 2015 when I was just coming into the thing because the depressing part is so many of the pathologies and the mistakes and the flaws that the alt-right exhibited that perhaps we still exhibit today from making the same mistakes.
Same mistakes.
Yep, thinking that you can quote unquote, you know, he called it the mass movement idea.
We would probably call it waking up the normies, things like that.
He said, you know, it's funny.
He has a little bit of a, you know, 60s or 70s hippie.
And he's like, you know, listen, listen, Jack man, you know, that shit has sales.
Yes.
You know, these people almost like a little bit of a hippie Nazi in there.
Because there is an aspect he talks one of the men that he compliments very highly was Rolo Tomasi, I think.
Joe Tomasi.
Joe Tomasi.
Yeah.
They called him like the tomato because he looked tomato Joe because he's Italian.
Yeah.
But, you know, he tomato Joe was like, no, we're not wearing armbands.
We're going to grow our hairs out and grow our hair and have some fun.
And he was a true radical.
Now, yeah, here we are, feds and young men.
I am absolutely not advocating that you go, you know, visit your local substation or whatever.
What I am at, I'm not advocating the Charles Manson stuff, you know, is another one of those trigger points where you're like, oh, you like Charles Manson or you think he was a true revolutionary hero?
You may be crazy, but you know, there's more to that story.
Yeah.
Just like you get triggered by the, oh, the Holocaust, the 6 million, you know, like, oh, Charles Manson, bad, evil, you know, swastika in his forehead.
It's more complicated than that.
But I still, you know, I was like, oh, come on.
This is like a poison pill.
You know, why couldn't you just stick to the wisdom?
Go ahead, Sam.
Sorry.
Yeah.
No, well, it's like I say, it will be a little dated in some ways.
And I would say for those kind of difficult points, think of where they were in that day.
Really, they were kind of locked in.
Now, look at we could like start a podcast and it gets kind of popular like in the whole world.
You know, that's it was, it was just not possible to even imagine things like that in that day.
So these, these people did have a little more of a desperation to them.
And so you could understand their points in that light.
But in the good far outweighs the bad in that one right there.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
He was a young man in Rockwell's American Nazi Party back in the day.
He's, you know, he was around for Rockwell getting assassinated.
He saw the rise of William Luther Pierce.
And he just, he saw too many good men come in with energy and enthusiasm and good ideas and then wash out.
There's a term for it called 18 monthitis or something where they would either, you know, get not abused physically, but just get used, or guys get in the sense that they were just getting milked for dues or something like that, or they would go risk their asses for a street demonstration that wouldn't necessarily do anything.
There's just all these things there.
Yep.
That too.
Absolutely.
You know, the juice isn't worth the squeeze.
And he kind of just came to this realization that I think he probably was the one who coined pig system and B system.
I would guess.
The fact that he, you know, because he's writing this as I'm literally a little baby or two or three or four years old.
And he's like, that's not morning in America.
Reagan, Carter, B.S.
It doesn't matter.
And I'm like, oh, man.
You know, again, one of these guys who had the foresight and the insight to recognize things as they were back then and not, you know, buy into what he clearly saw.
It was all mass media manipulation and the two sides of the same coin.
I'll just end by saying there's a lot of interpersonal organizational wisdom in there.
It's almost like a mirror image of Mein Kampf because Mein Kampf is Hitler putting out his ideas.
Granted, it was after the Munich pooch. when he was licking his wounds in prison, but it was an upward-facing document.
You know, the good stuff is yet to come.
This is reading Mason 81 to 86, learning all these hard lessons.
And then, you know, not much happened other than, you know, the militia movement and some other things between then and really when things got bad enough that a lot more people woke up and decided that they wanted to or had to do something.
Jim himself included.
It is, look at me, siege posting on Christmas Eve.
Sam, do you have a favorite Christmas memory?
I've probably talked about mine on the show before.
Anything from your childhood Christmases or your Christmases as a father that really jumps off the brain to you?
Yeah.
You know, I'm a true believer when it comes to all that.
And I would actively try to engender the excitement in my kids, you know, almost like getting more excited and before that even they could be excited.
Like I would be waking them up and say, hey, the gifts are here.
The gifts are here.
And, you know, jumping up and down, almost, you know, more enthusiastic than them when they were very little, you know, so yeah, I remember that.
And of course, we always enjoyed putting up the tree, which we usually saved for putting, you know, just for these last few days before Christmas is when we would put it up.
And let me tell you, when you wait that long, I can't tell you how many times I got a free tree or $5 for a tree or something like that because, you know, by the last few days, they just want to get rid of them.
I also got skunked once or twice and didn't get any tree.
But in those cases, what I did was you could go like to the, like, let's say you don't have a tree right now.
You could go to the nursery section of your big box hardware store and they will have a potted tiny little tree, you know, that looks like a house plant or something, but it's an actual Christmas tree, scotch pine, whatever, but miniature.
And so a couple of times I got put in that position and I ended up just buying one of those and put some teeny, tiny little ornaments on it and put it on my dining room table.
So, you know, that worked too.
And you can plant it after Christmas too.
You can plant it too.
And there you go.
There's our Christmas tree.
Yeah.
I ended up giving one of them to somebody who then did plant it in their yard.
And the other one, it kind of died before, you know, the Christmas season was up entirely.
But yeah, that's, you can definitely do that.
I think that our very first Christmas after getting married in 2006, we were just we were, you know, double income, no kids.
We both traveled for work and we actually decorated the rubber leaf ficus that we have had since we met in 2001.
This is a really fun story.
So my wife did an internship in Los Angeles while, yeah, we were both in college.
This is after Moscow.
Real quick, fun story.
I don't think she'll mind me telling this one on the air.
And, you know, as an intern in LA, one of her assignments was like, we need you to bring a plant into the, you know, go find a plant for the office.
So, and please know Harvey Weinstein.
On the edge of his table.
I got caught that.
Yeah.
Anyway, she went out and bought a rubber leaf ficus for the office.
Nice, beautiful plant, and they were like, what is this?
We didn't want this.
So it was like a little orphan.
You know, they probably would have like throtted off the balcony or something.
So my wife brought it back to her apartment in Los Angeles and, when she was done with her internship, ended up driving it all the way back to Washington Dc with her in the back of her uh old, rusted out Nissan Pathfinder.
And we still have that ficus sam.
I guess it's like our uh our, lemon tree.
Yeah it's yeah it's, it's a giant beast.
Now I had to cut it back at one point.
It was just too big for our small house, so I put it outside and an early frost came and killed it and I actually really he's got a name too, uh, oh god, what's its name?
I even named the damn plant because I got sentimental about it, because it really was like a symbol of, like you know, when we were apart and she brought this plant back and kept it together, Charles No, what Charles?
Uh, Hercules.
We named the plant Hercules because yeah, he was just big and strong and couldn't be defeated.
So it died.
We had it outside, it died in an early frost and I was like well yeah, I guess we're getting divorced now or one of us is gonna die.
You know, as go, as goes hercules, so goes us uh, and then it, the damn thing, came back in the spring and it sent up those shoots.
I was like oh rebirth, you know hercules has arisen.
So anyway uh, long story again.
Uh yes, it did.
I have to cut it back eventually.
I water it dutifully, but we've had that plant since 2001.
Amazing, same rubber leaf ficus.
You take it outside in the warm weather absolutely yep, it's in our bedroom, just like the lemon tree.
I mean, look at this thing.
When you see this, I mean, look at it, it's crazy.
Yeah, you know so.
Uh, but yeah, we decorated hercules that first christmas.
It doesn't matter, just get something nice.
Uh my, what?
You know?
When I ask people what's your favorite uh, childhood memory, you know, first thing that comes to mind, my favorite christmas memory, the first thing that comes to mind and Sam's heard this on the air before, maybe Rollo as he goes through our archives, but just on the ride home from christmas eve.
Christmas eve is always on the Irish Polish, Catholic side of the family tons of cousins, aunts and uncles uh, fun galore gifts, etc.
With the glorious expectation of christmas morning in front of us and just sitting in the back of the family sedan with my forehead pressed up against the glass, looking up at the sky, straining to catch a glimpse of Sanda, Santa and his reindeer up there in the sky and, like you know, maybe seeing an airplane or a satellite, or maybe that really was Santa, all the way up there.
This is before the damn Nurad Tracker became uh, the thing which the kids still love today.
Anyway, glorious times.
Uh, let's see.
We got a question from an audience member that is not christmas related but is a tough one.
Probably right up Sam's alley, maybe Rollo's?
Uh, we'll see.
Uh, listener is in the midst of in vitro fertilization with his wife.
Uh, they are older and they're doing the full genetic screening and selection which he says.
Some may whine about that on religious grounds, but he doesn't care.
However, he's curious about selecting by gender.
This is an option with IVF.
Now, there's two questions here.
If they give you the option, should you, maybe there's three.
If they give you the option, older couple may only get one child out of this.
Would you want one, would you choose or have them steer it one way or the other?
Or two, and perhaps more interestingly, if you could only have one child, would you want a boy or a girl?
Would you want to know it all?
What would be the pragmatic choice if you thought you might only get one child?
I'll give that one to you, Sam, on both the science choosing as well as the philosophical.
If you could only have one, would you have a boy or a girl?
That's a tough one.
That's a real tough one.
I have to say, I don't understand the science of selecting the gender.
So I'm not sure how that works or what that entails.
I don't, you know, so I don't know that I can say if I would do that or want that because I, you know, what, what, what does it involve?
I know there's some processes that involve, you know, implanting the one you want and destroying the rest or something.
So, you know, I'm against destroying any life.
And so if it involves any kind of choosing one over another one that's not going to survive, then that's not a choice I could make.
As far as, you know, in a, in a, you know, if I could be a millionaire or some other impossible thing, you know, would I want a boy over a girl?
That's, that's hard to say.
You know, as a, as a man, you want the son maybe to continue your name or something like that.
But that's, that's a really tough one.
There's, there isn't, I think, you know, you might lean towards saying, I want a son, but I think when it comes down to it, there's, there's just no choice there for me.
Hedging punting.
So I agree with you completely on the quote unquote science aspect of it.
I don't think you should probably, you know, you don't want to, certainly you don't want to just be like, oh, you know, we want a girl.
So chuck that boy embryo away.
And I, you know, he asked, would you want to know?
Well, we always, we always found out through the sonograms whether it was a boy or a girl.
We didn't have the still the discipline to not find out.
But as a young, as a younger man, as a younger man in my 20s with no kids, if you asked me, could you have a boy or a girl?
I would have said instantaneously, boy, absolutely.
I have to have a boy.
The name has to carry on.
I need to be able to play baseball with him and coach him and all the rest of it.
Sure.
As an older man, if you forced me, knowing what I know now, but I have no kids and you can only have a boy or a girl, I might actually choose a girl because daughters are that uniquely special, right?
I mean, that's no slight to either of my two boys.
But yeah.
Yeah, it's a different type of relationship and different, put something different into your life.
Perspective changes too.
Yeah.
It's like, all right, well, we had the firstborn son.
Great.
So then everything after that was just gravy.
I don't know.
Rolo, I assume you're opposed to this on religious grounds, but if you, all right, Rolo, how about you?
You don't have any kids that you know of.
If you could, if you, you know, gun to your head, you could only have one child.
Would you have a boy or a girl knowing you know nothing?
You don't have any kids, but what would you choose?
And you have to answer.
Honestly, I think what I would do is I would have a girl just because we're starved for right-wing women and having a girl.
Not even right-wing, but yeah, good moral women.
Yeah.
Sure, yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, we're starving for right wing.
Yeah.
Okay.
But it's not about right-wing.
It's about them.
It is.
It is.
What?
Well, I mean, racial pride is good.
Racial pride and hostility to Jewish power is not right wing.
It's, you know, we mostly come from the right wing.
It isn't.
All right.
Not really.
They're just words.
Words.
Depends how you define them.
Then they mean something.
Left, right, tomato, tomato.
Anyway, go ahead.
I didn't mean to get it.
But yeah, that's pretty much it.
I think just because we need women that are not going to poison their body with hormones and do pornography and work soulless corporate jobs.
So knowing that nothing about raising children, I think that that's just where I would line up.
If someone says you only have one, I think that's what I would do.
I think I would have more fun with a son, but I think more men would.
But I think we have enough of that.
That's a very pragmatic, tactical answer.
Yep.
And yet the flip side of that is that throughout much of human history, sons were valued more than daughters and having a male heir to carry on the name and the legacy, etc., was prioritized over daughters.
And there is some wisdom in the.
I think the reason that that was was because it's it's a relatively new phenomenon.
What has happened to women, like women being the, having the reputation that they do?
That's like the last, like 10, 20 years where, where men were were more uh, prioritized because the, the men go out and work, the men go out and fight the wars.
Like they, they are more important on a physical level but now take care of the parents in the long run.
But now the the the the, with the rise of of third wave feminism, like women have been absolutely poisoned and yeah, so unique.
Yeah, it's unique in human history for it to be yeah, this bad where yeah yeah yeah yeah, men were given a pass to, you know, go get drunk or be louts every once in a while, but we didn't expect, because you know, millions of women to not be.
Yeah, because women were still traditional, women still were feminine, women still wanted to get married to good men at the time.
Like this, like men weren't treated, did better, and women were also doing porn and and miscegenating like this is a new thing.
Yeah, good point Rollo, good answer.
Glad I asked Sam, before I forget please, to your comfort level.
Let us know about your pal who is in need of something very significant.
Yeah, I just want to put it out there on the show.
We have a dear friend in our, among our guys, that needs a kidney transplant.
And I know that's a tall order, but you never know when you put things out there to people.
Somebody might say, oh, I know of this situation or I heard about some kind of program or something.
He is on a waiting list, but he's been on it for quite some time.
And you know that every Negro on welfare is going to get one before he does.
So he is waiting.
And if anyone knows of anything, or at least pray for the guy, then maybe our listeners can help in some way.
Who knows?
Oh, man.
If we can find him a kidney, that'll make all those new white lives look like chump change.
I don't have to make a joke about his situation, but that would be holy moly.
Yeah.
Never know.
Never know.
Yep.
And I did have another quick little story.
I don't know if I could, if you got a few minutes left.
Please go.
This is, this is, it has to do with where we go to church.
And this, the story is maybe some weeks old already.
But a few months ago, I was there.
And, you know, I'm a noticer.
You know, I notice things going on around me.
And I couldn't help but notice this one man come into the church.
And he was, I put him about maybe 45 years old, judging by the gray in his beard and the bald spot on his head, but otherwise dressed nicely and in good shape.
And he comes in and accompanying him is this maybe 14 or up to 15 years old boy who was, I don't know what the better way to say this, but like profoundly retarded, I guess might be a specific way to describe the state of this child.
And just judging him, I would say he's 14 to 15 years old.
And, you know, he had like this, like a dog leash, like a steel dog leash kind of wrapped up in his hand.
He was like shaking it kind of in those kind of a muscle movements people like that in that state have.
And he would walk along.
He could be guided in that.
The drool was coming out of his mouth.
It was kind of pathetic in a way.
And I couldn't help, you know, your mind, or at least my mind tends to start filling in the blanks, you know, putting like some story around this.
And I'm thinking maybe this, I've heard that when people, they take somebody out like in public like this, they dope them up so that they're, you know, docile and not disruptive in a public setting.
And I'm thinking, yeah, maybe this kid too is, you know, but anyways, he was not disruptive.
Sometimes he would not sit down.
He would just stand or sometimes he would sit down, but in other respects did not cause any trouble.
And so there was the man with him.
And I started to notice them every Sunday.
And I couldn't help but notice also or wonder, where was the missus in this?
And again, you know, using your imagination, you might think, ah, this might be the couple of hours per week that she has without this child that no doubt needs a lot of care and probably consumes a lot of her time.
You know, I don't know if I'm just letting my imagination run away with me, but at any rate, so, you know, and but while I was kneeling there, I couldn't help but but say, why, you know, in my prayers?
Why, Lord?
Why I don't understand what good does this situation serve, you know, and and the scriptures is, it's, is said that we will do his works in greater.
This is the one who made the blind to see and the lame to walk.
How can I help this guy and this son, you know, or what could I ever do if I could even imagine anything, you know?
So, I, but I just kept coming back to that.
Why?
Why?
So anyways, going, going forward a few weeks.
Go ahead.
No, that has all, I mean, it's a little bit of a stripe of why do bad things happen to good people?
Why does God, you know, because allow such a situation, you know, there's shape, there's shades, right?
Where one, you know, sometimes they're functional.
Sometimes they are clearly, you know, just going to be a burden to somebody.
A massive burden.
Yeah.
A ball and chain around a good woman or a good man's leg.
And they, they have to take care of him or her.
It's their duty.
They've taken it upon themselves, but you can tell that it's sapped their life energy because of the duty.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I would, some weeks later, I would get my answer.
So I was again sitting there and I see them come in.
Only this time he has the wife and four-year-old, six-year-old, eight-year-old, ten-year-old, and a 12-year-old with them.
Healthy kids.
Yeah.
Beautiful family.
And I just, you know, then I had the answer.
This child was meant to be a living rebuke to those of weak faith because that mom and dad might have said, oh, how can we have more kids after having that one, right?
Because that one's the oldest.
Sure.
And he had five more kids.
Healthy.
Yeah.
And so I just, I couldn't help but conclude, they don't need my prayers.
I need their prayers.
Amen, Sam.
Good on that family.
Bless them too.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yeah.
You assume the worst without knowing the full story.
Yeah.
God bless them.
Yeah, indeed.
That's the spirit.
Thank you, big guy.
Yep.
Also relevant to that, to our pal in England, he shared his, his, at least his first name with us and one similar to Sam's revelation.
This guy's got a very difficult situation, partially not his fault, partially of his own making.
And we didn't want to take it up last show because it was a positive green shoots episode.
And this one, it's Christmas time.
But hang in there, buddy.
He said, oh, I didn't expect a response.
We've been in email contact, but we will kick that around the show because it's a really tough one.
It's not the worst.
Don't drink yourself to death or go jump off a bridge, big guy.
No, we will turn it up.
Let them know.
Yep.
That's what made me think of it.
Absolutely.
I wasn't going to take the question up the show.
It's just not that time.
It is Christmas Eve.
We're getting into the wee hours now.
We started late to accommodate Jim's schedule, the bastard.
Same old Jim.
No, I'm joking.
Thank you to Jim in Absentia for coming back.
I had offered before and he's like, nah, nah, nah.
It's time.
Got a yes for a comfy show on Christmas.
I think we pulled it off.
We've got lots more to come in future shows, but let's put a ribbon on it.
Oh, one last thing.
Sam Rolo, I have done the horrible thing again where I've waited until Christmas Eve to buy my wife a present.
Now, there's a caveat there.
I did do extensive research a week ago thinking, oh, a week out?
That's plenty of time for two-day shipping to get here.
Not so.
Not so anymore.
Amazon Prime two-day shipping doesn't work around this time of year, apparently.
So I will be out and, oh, yeah, I got to go to go to the grocery store tomorrow and I'll spend extensive hours searching for things to get for my wife.
But if anything, DM me.
We don't have to talk about it on the show.
I doubt, well, by the time Wifey hears this, it will be after Christmas Eve.
So if you can think of any good gift ideas, DM me.
Regardless, Rolo, start with you.
Thank you for overseeing this episode.
You didn't contribute much, but what you did contribute, I appreciate it.
Vocally, I appreciate it as well.
In terms of content.
Yes.
Hey, Rolo.
Thank you, Sam.
You're always so nice to me.
And coach.
You're always there.
Let it be known.
Rolo is going to be editing this show and Jim's gratuitous profanity on Christmas Eve.
So to Rolo Tomasi, the greatest producer of Full House ever, we salute you.
And Merry Christmas, my friend.
Thank you.
Merry Christmas, everybody.
See, I had to say that.
Yeah, I wanted the show edited, so I had to throw in a little sugar there at the end, sweeten them up.
I'm kidding, buddy.
I hope you have a lovely time.
Thank you.
Tomorrow and the next day.
Sammy baby, thanks.
I think we did it again.
We still got it.
Yeah, indeed.
And I hope this show will get out before Christmas.
I know that there will be people who will like to listen to it before and or on Christmas or even after Christmas.
But I'm mentioning this because we have an episode of White Power Hour coming out.
And I played some of the music.
I played some Christmas music on there.
In addition to some skinhead music, I played a couple of sets of interesting Christmas music.
We used for some break music here.
i sent you a couple songs i don't know which one we ended up using but uh um there's uh for the we we're gonna we did oh holy night for the break of course for the uh for the clothes Let's just go with it, Sam.
You got the DJ booth this entire.
You're the most, well, Rolo's like, I beg to differ.
I was going to say you're the most Christian man on the show.
You're the most Catholic man on the show for sure.
So you got the DJ booth this week.
Oh, and by the way, Rolo, my wife was seriously pissed off that I leaked that she wasn't entirely enthused by some of your musical selections.
So she said, don't say that.
I like some of your musical selections, Rolo.
Some of them are stinkers.
Regardless, Sam.
Sorry to sidetrack.
Well, Faith in the Muse was the first one I heard.
I liked it.
I haven't listened to the whole thing.
Yep.
Yeah.
Or Love Spirals Downwards with Welcome Christmas.
I would maybe recommend that one.
But both songs come from this album of they're all goth artists or goth bands, goth acts that are covering Christmas songs like very legitimately and with a lot of style to it.
At least that's the way I felt.
So I selected a number of these goth style Christmas carols from this album, Excelsius, a Dark Noel.
That was the first one from 1995, but they went on to put maybe five more volumes of this work.
And they're not just Christmas carols.
There are also, I'll call them seasonal type songs like Krampus Nacht.
And there's some other, I don't know what we might say, folky or even pagan type songs that are covered just because they're from the season.
And any of those discs in this series, they're called A Dark Noel.
It's on Project Records, which they have a website.
Some of these, at least you were able to download in the past, because that's how I have at least a couple of them where you could not buy a hard copy, but you could pay for a download.
So you could maybe get them for Christmas if you wanted to.
But they're all worth it and they're all very well done and interesting in different ways.
So check it out.
That's not a dirty word.
Yeah.
Everybody thinks goth and they think of like, you know, those like black dressed teenage freaks.
Right.
Glorious people from European history.
Sure.
But whatever you do, at least listen to the latest White Power Hour, which should be coming out tomorrow, unless it came out, you know, in the last couple hours and I didn't see it come out yet.
But the White Power Hour Christmas episode will be coming out.
So if you think of it, if you think you might like it, at least check that out or check out some of these bands or these discs from Project Records for a different kind of a Christmas song.
Amen.
Thank you, Sam.
And yeah, definitely send me the WPH file when if it's out because their channel's censored and I don't always pop over to Telegram on the desktop or the webinar.
I always post it in the clubhouse and a few other choice places.
So I'm looking for it.
He says he wants to get it out before Christmas, so he's running out of time.
Good stuff.
Yep.
We will get this episode up on Christmas Eve and we will boost the White Power Hour.
And Full House episode 148 was recorded on the coldest night of our three and a half year recording history.
Also the coldest Christmas in 40 years, they said.
I had fun telling the kids about this.
Yeah, maybe, you know, I'm 41.
Maybe there was a really cold Christmas in 1981 or 1982.
I remember some in the 80s.
I remember some minus 60s in that 80s.
It's below zero here in the Mountain Mama.
It's well below zero up in Saskatoon or wherever the hell it is that Sam lives.
Follow us on Telegram, on Gab, drop us a line, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
If we have slighted you by, and I say that's not a royal we, if I have slighted you by skipping or missing a new white life or a donation or a question or a comment, please hit me up.
It's not personal.
I'm usually pretty good about those things, but I do miss them occasionally.
Let me know.
Giftsendgo.com slash fullhouse if you want to help us out or check us out at full-house.com.
So to all of our sincerely treasured audience, Merry Christmas.
Bless you and your families.
Have a wonderful Christmas Eve and Christmas Day.
And do us a favor and give your kids a kiss on the forehead from all of us here at Full House.
Me, Sam, Rollo, and this week, Jim as well.
And for our closer, we're going to go with either Faith in the Muse and a Winter Wasale or Love Spirals Downwards.
Welcome Christmas.
I didn't get a chance to listen to both of these before the show.
I'm trusting in Sam.
I'm going to pick the one that tickles my fancy more in the spirit of the season.
Maybe I'll flip a coin.
Anyway, we love you, Sam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
Go ahead, Sam.
Merry Christmas and see ya.
See ya.
Oh, merry, good cheer.
We wish he'd have faithful a wondrous new year.
Our fireball is made of the white maple tree.
With a wassailing bow, we wanna be.
We wish he'd faithful thy dreams may come true.
One, two, one.
For this is the season warm love need all strong.
The cold will not blow on the elder wood tree.
Once there was a we honor thee.
Our fireball is made of the white maple tree.
With a war selling bow, we honor thee.
Oh, come on, young maidens, and join us in song.
For this is the season warm love need all strong.
What tree was there, what's he on the leaves?
So here by the fire, good spirits renewed.
We wish he did faithful, thy dreams may come true.
That's why it's not a follow-through the old willow tree.