All Episodes
Aug. 15, 2023 - Full Haus
02:19:09
New Blood

A righteously motivated younger listener and new husband joins us for a wide-ranging discussion on everything from starting a family to religion, activism, prepping, when to pull the plug on a relationship, and even a few overlooked 9/11 smoking guns from last week. And yes, we even address the latest country song everyone's arguing about.  "If you're feeling nihilistic, you're not angry enough." Bumper: Mastermind (Instrumental) by Deltron 3030 Break: Rich Men North of Richmond by Oliver Anthony Close: "Battle Hymn of the Republic" by the Tabernacle Choir Levi recommends "Who Really Did 911" Other listeners recommended September 11, the New Pearl Harbor and The Empire Unmasked. Listen to: The Final Storm HateHouse Cantwell Go forth and multiply. Support Full Haus here or at givesendgo.com/FullHaus  Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2  Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows  Gab.com/Fullhaus Odysee for special occasion livestreams and back library in the process of being uploaded. RSS: https://feeds.libsyn.com/275732/rss  All shows since Zencast deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week!

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We often receive the kindest, most uplifting messages of hope and success from our dear listeners.
I always share these with the lads regularly on this show.
We almost as often receive heartbreaking missives of woe from the global wastelands from good men and sometimes women in rough spots and needing a little advice or encouragement.
You've heard some of these on this program as well.
And more rarely, we receive true stem winders from impassioned listeners inflamed or motivated by our commentary on the passing scene.
This past week, we received one of these that was equal parts informed and intelligent and just as equally righteously indignant and inspiring.
Having no idea who this correspondent was, but liking the cut of his jib, I ventured that he would make a damn good guest to inject more nitrous into our engines, and he gladly accepted.
Whether that was a good decision or not will be decided by you over the next hour or two.
We all know things are bad, to quote Howard Beale from Network.
We all know they're largely getting worse, more or less.
And although he was a pudgy son of a bitch largely responsible for the Third Reich's demise, as well as that of the British Empire, Winston Churchill's advice that when you're going through hell, you keep going still rings true.
And to quote our special guest this week, if you're feeling nihilistic, you're not angry enough.
So in the words of DMX, here we go again.
Mr. Producer, hit it.
We want to Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
It is actually episode 166 this week.
That's right.
Rollo threw me off and our numerology got skewed, but remain your grateful host, Coach Finstock, back with another hour or two, probably closer to two, of actual honesty and courage in commentary.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Ted and Doomsday for their kind support of the show over the past week.
And if you'd like to be like those bastions of benevolence, and you should, please visit us at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
I have to say that one of our donors was kind enough this week to give, you know, slightly larger than the average amount and took the kids out for a swim in a local waterway estuary, if you will.
And then I took them.
They were so good and they didn't slip on the rocks and crack their heads.
They listened to me in terms of safety that I took them out for ice cream and sent it to one of our kind donors and said, thanks.
You made that possible.
Anyway, with that, let's get on to the birth panel and get cracking here.
First up, he has more sex in his 50s than you had in your 20s.
Ask him how.
Just three episodes from now, Sam.
Well, probably true.
Yay, you ain't wrong.
You ain't wrong.
Thanks, Coach.
That's very nice.
It's great to be here.
I'm very interested in this guest.
And it's been a good day today.
I'm just come from a wonderful birthday party with our guys and gals and a dear listener of the show.
And, you know, there's nothing better than getting together with our guys and having some fun and a few laughs.
Heck yeah, absolutely.
Charges your batteries every single time, most of the time.
Anything else?
Are you getting any end of summer melancholy, Sam?
Or have you moved beyond seasonal affective disorder?
End of summer, school starting not to be all moody or whatever.
It's a kind of bittersweet melancholy time of year to me.
Well, yeah.
You know, when you're a melancholic, there's probably a whole bunch of things that can trigger that type of thing.
No, I haven't have not been triggered with that.
I've just been so busy with a number of different things and work and everything.
Some things I was going to mention on the show, maybe we get to later about camping.
Once again, everyone, the house is basically empty.
Everyone's out camping.
And I had some thoughts on that.
Maybe we could hit that up later.
Good stuff.
Yeah, I mean, this goes back to childhood when those first leaves start falling in August and the days start to get a little bit short and you feel that impending doom of the return to school.
That always, I used to get so bummed out when school was around the corner.
And then lo and behold, school comes and you're like, all right, this isn't terrible.
Yeah, anytime there's a big change, right?
You know, when you got something you got to go through or you got your week upset by some big project or something, I've been, I guess I did have a bit of that last month, especially.
I had a few big projects that were coming to finality and I had to had to go through a bunch of extra trouble and everything.
But, you know, you get through the things.
And just like you said, I like that quote, you know, when you're going through hell, you keep going and have a little faith, you know, and don't forget your buddies.
You know, that's where we hold each other up, build each other up, and you're not in this alone.
That's right.
Yeah.
I finally finished Stalin's War this past week.
And, you know, Churchill's a real bastard throughout, true to form.
And then towards the end, when he realizes, good God, I have both mortgaged the British Empire to the Americans.
I've turned over Eastern Europe to the Soviets.
It was not entirely, but in some percentage due to his machinations and his desire to defeat Hitler.
And it really showed through toward the end that he was sort of horrified by his own actions.
Of course, he was a proud Brit, so he would never come to admit his own faults.
But I think that he realized how badly he screwed up.
Regardless, thank you, Sammy Beatty.
Welcome back.
And next up, he is the Robin to my Batman.
And by that, I only mean that he's younger than me.
Rolo, welcome back.
Well, I am wearing very short shorts right now.
So I think that accurate as anything you've ever described.
Yeah, I was going to go with, you know, shorter, but we're about the same height.
You know, smaller.
I don't know.
I'm probably bigger than you.
You're a little leaner.
Anyway.
Maybe you weigh slightly more than me.
Oh, I definitely weigh more than you.
Oh, yeah, you know, who's counting?
Yeah.
So Rolo's all tired out this week, audience.
I don't know if he wants to tell why.
It's just a vigorous exercise routine.
Yeah, you know, I get a, you know, I do late night cardio.
You know, it helps, you know, relax me before bed.
That's a good euphemism.
Late night client.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Feel free to steal that one.
Yeah.
And I think most people can pick up on what that means.
But yeah.
Yeah.
After all these, after, I don't know, 67 episodes.
Yeah, I'm seeing someone regularly.
I just don't know if it's worth it.
I do not think this will last long term.
And it was her wearing the Ruth Bader Ginsburg shirt that kind of gave it all away.
If I were truly trad Rolo, I would tell you that you need to stop immediately and let her move on with her life if you're not serious about pursuing her long-term.
But I won't do that.
You deserve a little bit of fun and miracles do happen sometimes.
Yeah.
Well, who knows?
Like, maybe, maybe because there's the thing with this girl is I'm not necessarily looking at it as a project because I think that is fool's errand.
But she was a train wreck of a libtard and it clearly ruined her life.
And a lot later than she would have liked to admit, she realized that it was all a mistake.
And there's a lot of trad things about her, but it's so hard to fight liberal programming, like as just a person.
So I'm thinking, yeah, so I'm thinking like there's a chance that, you know, because you know, when we talk about normal stuff, like she tells me about her past, and she's clearly not happy that she lived the nihilistic, hedonistic, liberal life.
Right.
Like she, you know, she's in her mid-30s and is like, you know, I was in a relationship with a guy for years and he never gave me a baby and he didn't want to get married.
And that was the biggest mistake of my life.
So, you know, there is a glimmer of hope, but that Ruth Bader Ginsburg shirt is not doing her any favors.
And she was wearing it unironically or ironically.
She was wearing it quite unironically.
For no reason, she told me her hero was Princess Diana.
This is rare value add from Rolo at the top as opposed to banal, you know, slightly different.
Yeah, good for you.
I do think that it is somewhat relevant because I have heard from a lot of our guys that it's better to get a liberal girl than a conservative girl.
Now, this is where I do want to add a little bit of a nuance to that.
I will say it's easier to get a liberal girl, but that doesn't mean that you're going to be happier.
Because the thing is, with a lot of the conservative women I've met, their standards are extremely high.
That's where you're going to come into a lot of the like over six foot, over 100,000, like you come into a lot of that.
Where liberal women are usually surrounded by liberal men.
So you stand next to one of those.
And, you know, thank you.
And you look like Hercules.
Like she actually said to me yesterday, she said, you're the first guy I ever dated with muscles.
I thought that was really funny.
Rolo's smile lit up the room.
Finally, well, you know, some women are just like going along with whatever they've been told.
You know, they might not be real liberals.
You have to always keep that in mind.
Somewhere a Ruth Bader Ginsburg t-shirt and tell you my hero is Princess Diana.
That is a little rough.
Let's revisit this one too, because I, with apologies to our special guest who's waiting there, like, hello, hello, is my microphone on?
You know, what?
Because I'm sure there's, I know of at least a few guys, and I know they're listening right now who are in relationships that they do not think are the one and they're a little bit trapped or maybe it's a little bit comfortable.
You know, do you take the bird in hand versus two out in the bush?
Difficult calculation that our very own Rolo is, it doesn't sound like he's struggling with it, but it's also a principled call too.
I mean, in reality, you're not just wasting your time, you're possibly wasting her time too.
And yet, sometimes things do get better, but they usually don't get better.
I would think they get worse.
Anyway, earmark that one, Rolo and Sam and special guests.
We'll talk about that a little bit later.
And finally, our extraordinarily patient and special guest.
He has been a first responder, a writer and speaker for our cause.
He has suffered for his convictions and his willingness to not just keep them under his hat.
He was a delightful correspondent to this show.
And now we know that he is relatively newly married as well.
Levi Savage, the macho man, welcome to Full House, brother.
Thanks for having me on.
I've been a long-term listener and just surprised that I was actually able to find my spot on this podcast today.
I was surprised too, Levi.
You know, I just genuinely enjoyed your email and I'll cite a little passage from it here in a little bit, but of course, we've got some homework to get out of the way first.
But thank you for writing in and just a reminder for the audience too.
If you've got something on your mind, whether it's bugging you, whether it's a suggestion, a problem in your life, or even a great glory, please do write in.
It's obviously free content for us, but more importantly, we care.
And who knows, you might just get an invite on here.
So Levi, let's do it.
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
Ethnicity, I'm mostly Anglo, come from England.
I'm a bit of a lot of different things, a little bit of Norwegian, a bit of Russian, a bit of German, a lot of different things.
It's like a 2% down the line for a bunch of different things.
And was that important to you at all?
Because I remember as a kid being fascinated with my ethnicity.
Was that part of your identity even before you woke up to the world or just background noise?
Yeah, I know where my family comes from before the Americas.
We traced our ancestry all the way back to the English Isles and actually found where the old homestead used to be.
It's no longer there, obviously, but where it would have been.
Good stuff.
All right.
And your religion here.
Go ahead.
Religion is going to be, I used to be Mormon, but I identify now as a cosmotheist.
I really look at the works of William Luther Pierce as being informative in my thinking of like my worldview.
Fair enough.
I dig it and we'll dig into the MQ a little bit later.
And, you know, I don't know if you got hot water for leaving the church or why that was, but we'll get to it later for sure.
And again, congratulations.
We did catch a glimpse of your beautiful bride on camera before we went to tape.
A little background about how you met her and how things are going so far as a new husband.
Yeah, it's pretty cool.
We were high school sweethearts, grew up together.
She knew me before.
I found nationalist politics or white nationalism.
And then we had about a year apart.
And then I came back to town and we reconnected.
And slowly but surely, it was a waking up process for her.
She was non-political before, very much political now, same string of things as me.
And so we're a team at this point.
And the fact that you have four kids already is truly impressive.
But seriously, what's your thinking?
Are you going to enjoy a little honeymoon period before you get kraken or are you just going for it right out of the gate?
Yeah, I wish it was a good time to go ahead and start putting some kids on the table, but it's a difficult time for everybody as far as those grocery bills don't seem to go down.
So once I get into a better position in my career, I think I'll be able to start looking at some more kids.
All right.
Well, you know, don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good.
Kids aren't nearly as expensive as you think they are.
Breast milk and raw cow milk, as we all know, totally full house endorsed.
But no, seriously, like even if you guys are poor, there's snap and that stuff.
And aside from diapers and obviously the need to care for the kid, you'd be surprised.
When we had our first, you know, we bought all new car seats, new crib, new this, new that.
We were young, dumb, double income, no kids.
And you can get a lot of great stuff either through family, friends, or just secondhand stuff that's not gross and caked and, you know, baby detritus.
Well, thank you, Levi.
Tell us a little bit about yourself, if you would, how you got where you are today.
You're still a young guy.
You're in your 20s, obviously, and you seem young and earnest.
I assume you were a normie at one point, but that's maybe not the case.
A little background for the audience, please.
Yeah, so I'm a third generation prepper.
That comes from my family history, as well as, you know, I was a ham radio operator.
I did a lot of stuff when it came to generally just looking at the world and seeing that I knew from a young age that things were only headed downhill from where we were at.
And I grew up in a relatively ideal place in America.
But slowly that demographic shift has been happening in where I used to grow up or where I grew up.
And, you know, I've just seen things slide downhill.
And my time out there on the street, actually having to deal with the problems of today's society, fentanyl overdoses, sometimes a couple in a day, definitely shows you where we're at in this country.
Sure.
How about any violent interactions in your duties or was it more of these like sort of just depressing, despairing observations?
I had one time there was a, I obviously can't give specifics, but there was a black individual who was having it's having some sort of mental episode, was already pretty low on the IQ spectrum and decided to come out of the back room of this double wide trailer with a knife.
And it was, I was standing in front of his mother who had been stabbed in the back by him.
And so we had to get out of that situation really quick.
And then we called the entire police department to come to respond to that situation.
Sure.
Yep.
We had another EMS on earlier in the show, EMSOS is that episode who gave his tails from the wastelands and another buddy who got radicalized by having his ambulance shot at in the hood.
And it reminds me, this is kind of off topic, but my wife has been on a survivor kick recently.
I think it's streaming free on one of the platforms.
And it's actually, you know, I never watched survivor because it was a trendy thing when it came out.
I was like, I don't watch television, but it's really entertaining and you get a lot of good life lessons.
And in this one season that she's watching, it's Survivor Nicaragua.
There's one black contestant left among maybe a dozen or 15.
And at one point, they get a bunch of goodies in a treasure chest.
And then she just for no apparent reason, like steals half the items and goes and like buries them in the woods and totally does it foolishly and gets caught.
And one of the contestants is like, what motivates a person to do something like that?
You know, they're just shocked and appalled.
And I was like, are you literally from Mars?
You know, did you grow up in an actual white ethnostate with no experience with these people?
It was just such a true deform moment.
But regardless, I wanted to ask about the prepping thing.
You're a third generation prepper.
I assume that's still part of your life.
Do you feel in your bones, do you believe that we're actually getting closer to a point where that stuff is urgently, vitally necessary?
Or is it more just like a lifestyle, a hobby, a good thing to do regardless of whether the lights go out and the grocery shelves go empty?
Well, I think William Luther Pierce is a great example of his outlook.
If you read his writings and stuff, he thought that and kind of told in his stories about how he thought things were going to collapse in the 1990s.
You know, from the 1970s to the 1990s, he thought things were going to decline so rapidly that that was when the collapse was going to happen.
Obviously, there were some magicians' work done behind the scenes.
For example, Nixon taking us off the gold standard, that sort of stuff that breathes some new life into the economy and kind of allowed Ronald Reagan to come in and give a new contract or new promise to the American people or something like that.
I can't remember how he phrased that, but it basically breathed new life into America and gave us another 50 years, I think.
They could try to do something similar now, but the demographic problems are so prevalent that it's going to be really hard to turn this one over again.
I agree with you.
And it's sort of like our cause, too.
It stretches over such a long timeframe, the ups and downs that it can wear you down.
And you're like, oh, man, you know, to maintain the intensity or the seriousness of purpose over a sustained time period is challenging.
It doesn't make it wrong.
And it was Obama's reelection in 2012 that really hit me like a thunderbolt.
That was the election I thought that white middle America was, you know, see the charade for what it was.
And now we know, of course, Alex Trebeckstile, things that straight men would never say.
I imagine homosexual sex with men or something that we know from Obama's early years letters to some female correspondent.
Sam's nodding his head like, yep, yep.
See, I told you, I told you Michelle was a man, regardless.
Yeah, it's important stuff.
And I feel in my bones that it is, it's coming eventually.
The bitch is just predict is just, you know, being ready when it does actually happen.
The waiting is the hardest part, as Tom Petty said.
All right, moving on.
I want to read Levi from something that you wrote to me after our most recent show with John Friend of The Realist Report.
And it's why you're here.
I empathize with your pessimistic outlook on the future, but here's the truth.
If you're feeling nihilistic, you're not angry enough.
I think we lose sight of the true human cost of our enemies' continued existence and what it brings upon the world because we generalize the problems we face to make them easier to deal with.
But this struggle must be personal for each of us.
If you're feeling out of touch with that fire that first got you motivated to take the fight to our enemies in the first place, and of course, we are here six years after Charlottesville, my ad lib there, I'd encourage you to find something that truly makes you angry.
A suggestion of mine would be to watch the Sound of Freedom movie.
You're a father and I can't imagine any father coming out of the theater from that movie not being deeply affected given the subject matter.
My point is get angry, then channel that anger in a useful direction.
And that was definitely fuel for my fire.
We'll talk about Sound of Freedom perhaps later, but I guess the question then, Levi, is what makes you angry?
What sustains your commitment and motivates your brother?
Yeah, that Sound of Freedom movie was just a good example.
I watched it recently.
That was one that definitely rekindled that fire for me.
But just the day-to-day stuff, I kind of let it be a slow burn for me.
I think when I initially found nationalist politics, it kind of lit a fire under me and I was kind of like a rocket and I was, you know, going higher and higher.
But I had to find some way to turn that into kind of plateau out and find a way to kind of coast because a lot of people, they go up and then they come back down, if that makes sense.
And absolutely.
And so I found that.
And it's like the daily grind.
Being an activist is it's a daily commitment.
You wake up every day and you just think, what's the one thing I can do to spread the message and find that one lost person that just needs to hear that they're not alone and that they need to take a stand for what's right and light that fire in them so that they can follow the same trajectory.
Hell yeah.
I guess let's talk about sound of freedom a little bit because it's relevant.
I haven't seen it.
I know that some of our guys have lampooned it as the ultimate message was we need to let these people in.
So they perceived it as subversive, get the audience all riled up, feeling angry and pity for these poor children and then open borders, new world order agenda being sort of the takeaway.
Was there that element there?
You disagree with that?
I would disagree with that from just the facts in the movie.
I'm not exactly sure what the directors or the producers' intentions were behind making the film.
Obviously, I don't trust anything that comes out of Hollywood.
But what I got from the movie, I think one of the most striking facts that's presented at the end of the movie is that the United States is one of the largest, if not the largest destination for child trafficking in the world.
So I think it begs the question, why are people being trafficked into the United States?
You know, you would think that people are coming here willingly.
Oh, they're seeking a better life.
It's not that they are slaves to the system, that they are literally being brought into this country against their own will and they are being put into the meat grinder, basically, that this country has become places like Los Angeles, big cities that are basically the final destination for a lot of these kids that they will never come out of, you know.
And I think it's anyway.
It's because our government is operating these child porn sites and everything like that, you know, that's it's enemies are in charge.
Yeah, I always say open borders makes child trafficking and the jobs that these absolute scum of the earth do easier.
So if you wanted to, you know, give them something to take home from this movie, you would tell them, yeah, we need to shut down the borders to stop them from being able to do this more easily.
There you go, common sense.
And it also raised in my mind the sort of affliction that a lot of our guys have.
We're in a world with apologies for the dog barks, in a world where 90 to 95% of the content that comes out on movie screens, on streaming platforms, et cetera, is degenerate or totally subversive.
And then along comes a intended to be suppressed, right?
I think Disney was going to release it and then passed on it comes something that is maybe 75, 80, maybe 90% good with a few things that we have qualms with.
And we seize on the 5% or 10% that is not full 1488, you know what, and pick it apart as opposed to not looking the gift horse in the mouth and just saying that this is forward motion.
I'm grateful that that film is out there.
Some percentage of the audience that sees it is going to get virtuously radicalized as a result of this.
And it's not just all SOMA to sort of surreptitiously pacify those teeming, angry MA masses.
And it sounds like that's your assessment of that one.
So if the audience should go see it, Levi sounds like you endorse it for sure.
Yeah, I just want to give a little bit of my message that I got out of it.
It's that the kids that are displayed in the movie as being the ones that are being trafficked and stuff are Hispanic, right?
And some people might say, well, they're not white, so why should I care?
And my response would be, I don't care what blood this system, this beast system is sucking in order for it to continue to exist and perpetuate itself.
I want it to stop all of it, right?
I don't care where the kids come from.
I don't care what race they are.
In order for this to stop, that in particular has to stop as well.
They certainly would do it to white children too.
What's the biggest source of trafficking from Europe?
Begins with a U, ends in a crane.
Yeah.
No coincidence there.
Well, thank you for that, Levi.
I don't know if I'll go see it in theaters, but I will certainly check it out.
And honestly, the more I read about OP, I'm certainly not going to see Barbie or giving it a penny.
I was tempted to go see Oppenheimer due to my severe liking of previous Christopher Nolan films.
But maybe I'll just check out Sound of Freedom.
I think it's still in my local theater.
Yeah, go ahead.
I can give you the synopsis of Oppenheimer.
They say the word communist over a hundred times in that movie, and they really get the point home to you that Oppenheimer was a Jewish physicist who really liked communists.
And he's still a heroic feature of the film or a tortured hero.
Shame on me.
I didn't know Oppenheimer was Jewish.
I just didn't even think about it until the movie came out.
Son of a gun.
He is the most lizard-looking subhuman demon.
How did you not know that?
Oh my gosh.
I told you, it took courage to be dishonest on this show and admit embarrassing gaps in my bona fides like that rollo.
So I'm sorry.
Maybe somebody else out there didn't know that Oppenheimer was Jewish.
Anyway, Levi, I want to pivot back to the main meat of your email was actually 9-11 stuff.
And don't worry, audience, we're not going to like turn into a quote-unquote conspiracy show or focus too much on 9-11, but it brought out a ton of commentary more than usual from the audience.
Guys say, oh, gosh, you got to see this documentary.
I got like 14 hours of documentaries to watch as a result of audience feedback who are like, yeah, the ones that John didn't even recommend the right one.
He had to correct himself later on.
But Levi, it sounded like you were authoritative on this and you raised a few things that we missed the last show.
And that's not John's fault.
We kind of squeezed it in before the break.
But you started off, of course, with Larry Silverstein and the lease in the World Trade Center.
I can prompt you here or you can hit the high points.
I have your email in front of me, but things that jumped out at you that we missed last show.
Big task, but I'm sure you're up to it.
Yeah, so I'll just run through real quick some of the proofs for why 9-11 was an inside job.
And I'm not by any means an expert on this.
I'd recommend people check out Christopher Bolin's documentary, Who Really Did 9-11, Who Benefited and Their Agenda.
You can find that on the internet.
And he goes into all of this stuff.
But what I really wanted to get across in that email was that there are some scientific proofs that I knew growing up because some of my earliest memories actually is 9-11 was an inside job, Bohemian Grove.
I had a father who was listening to the Alex Jones show every day.
So he definitely drilled it into me early, like, hey, there's people out there in the world that don't like you.
And so when I actually looked down into the proofs myself, because I wanted to learn these things for myself, I found that there was some very convincing evidence that you could show anybody off the street that they could understand as long as they have more than a room temperature IQ.
One of those is just you ask any demolition expert, any person that is in charge of controlling and planning a demolition, they will tell you that the images that come out of the twin towers when they collapse is textbook control demolition.
They fell the supporting columns in those buildings literally ceased to exist, one after the other, going down into the foundation of both of those buildings.
Then you can talk about Tower 7, obviously, which collapsed into its own footprint hours after the initial two towers came down.
And then getting into the evidence of explosives that were in the building.
There was actually some revolutionary work done in the early aughts after 9-11, where they analyzed the dust from the World Trade Center and they found iron microspheres in the dust.
That means that iron was literally vaporized in the process of those towers collapsing.
And so those supporting steel columns were literally blown into vapor, into dust, and that became constituted in the dust.
Another thing that they found is in the days after the towers collapsed, as they were trying to clear the rubble, they actually set up a scientific measuring device to measure the size of the particles that were coming through the air.
And they found that a significant amount of the particles were nanoparticles, meaning that they were so small that the rescuers who were actually digging through the pile were being exposed to these particles that would be able to go into their lungs and not even just be able to pass into their lungs.
It would actually pass into the cells of their lungs and it would give them carcinogenic effects.
And so more people have actually died since 9-11 due to the carcinogenic effects of the dust from the pile than have actually died of the attacks themselves.
And so I think that's a really important thing is that that doesn't just come from any old plane crash.
They literally had nanothermite.
They found evidence and Christopher Bolin talks about this evidence of nanothermite, which is a way of being able to create a very high energetic explosive several times more powerful than C4 or TNT and be able to blast apart those supporting columns very efficiently.
And then the last thing.
More powerful than burn jet fuel, presumably too.
Yes, several hundred times more heat generated than what kerosene, aka jet fuel would have done.
And the last thing was surface temperature scans of the pile.
They were literally pulling out molten metal out of the middle of that pile because all of those beams had to be first melted before they could be blown apart by cutter charges.
And so all of that was still reacting in the pile for months, for literally weeks and weeks and weeks after those buildings came down.
And they had to basically pour gallons upon gallons of water onto that fire and it just kept on burning for months.
Fair enough.
And of course, you know, we discussed not being entirely confident about the who done it aspect makes you, or at least makes me tempted to say, well, if I can't figure out exactly what happened here, it's still kind of a mystery.
I can't get too worked up about it.
Do you have a more direct operating thesis on the who and the how?
Or is it just the evidence that stinks to high heaven almost literally that makes you smell a rat?
Well, the Jews really did a trial run for this whole thing with the Empire State Building back in the 1970s.
If you watch Christopher Bolin's documentary, which I highly recommend, he actually goes through the proof that the Jews were actually going to try the exact same strategy with the Empire State Building.
But because they had some difficulty arranging the necessary pieces in order to get it done in the 1970s, they decided to construct two World Trade Centers specifically for the purpose of bringing them down.
It took them a while to get the security contract from it.
They tried it in the 19, I think in the 2000s.
They blew up the basement, all that sort of stuff.
And when they attempted to get the security contract that way, there was one of the Port Authority officials noticed that one of the people that were signing up for it had a criminal record.
And so he tore up the contract and that prevented them from doing it basically in the 90s, I believe.
And then finally, they got the security contract.
Larry Silverstein takes out, you know, a billion dollars worth of terrorism insurance.
The towers come down.
He gets paid out double time.
Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Fair enough, Levi.
And thank you for doing that.
Again, raise this one, because it was in John's wheelhouse and two, because you have to be aware that another one is probably being cooked or brewed or planned for somewhere in a basement somewhere in America or in a little sliver in the Middle East.
Levi, I wanted to ask about the Mormon question.
I am not asking you to bad talk the faith of your forefathers, but you did leave, presumably.
And I'm curious.
I sent you the Mormon episode that we did.
A lot of our guys looked down on it as utterly, you know, not heathenistic, but just contrary to standard mainline Christian thinking.
Sam said before the show that he wants your address so he can come and pay you a visit and smack you straight.
No, that was when I thought you were still a Mormon.
But yeah, what happened?
Why did you leave?
You know, I think my issue with Mormonism, aside from the theology, is that maybe they had a really good thing going when they were white exclusive and pursuing almost a Jewish success strategy of severe tribalism, prepping money is not evil, getting their own members into positions of influence, cross-government and finance, et cetera, being hardworking, et cetera.
There's a lot to admire, and there's a lot to think that is either kooky or subversive.
So I'm just curious about your experience and how you went from that to cosmotheism.
Yeah, I almost have nothing negative to say of the historical church.
I mean, you know, whether Joe Smith was a prophet who spoke for God or not, we can just look at the trajectory that he took the Mormon church on.
I think his martyrdom is the reason why the church is still around today.
I think that basically the story was that he was the mayor of a town called Nauvoo, and he shut down a printing press there that was saying some less than some information that he didn't want out there, basically.
He had some scandals.
And so because they were printing that about him, he shut down the printing press.
He was put in jail for various crimes that he had done.
And he was lynched in that jail.
And because of that, he died a hero instead of probably living to be what he was, which is somebody who had basically ripped people off his whole life.
And so I know that that turns off a lot of Mormon listeners, but I think being truthful about how it started actually gives you a better perspective of where it went from there, where a guy named Brigham Young took over.
He actually cleaned up a lot of the things that Joe Smith had left behind, actually took the church out west.
He was the person responsible for taking them out of what was then U.S. territory and basically settling what was then Mexico and creating what is now basically a lighthouse on a hill, literally a paradise in the middle of the desert.
And my ancestors were a part of that.
They were some of the first pioneers that went out there with the Mormons and made Salt Lake City what it is today and that whole valley area.
And so I'm very proud of my ancestors for what they did.
I believe that they truly believed in their faith and I honor that.
But I also can look at the historical record and realize that maybe the people that got the whole ball rolling were not the most honest of characters and that today the church has completely betrayed its roots, has turned to proselytizing to economic migrants and trying to exacerbate the demographic change in this country, but not only in this country, but around the world.
They sponsored a lot of immigration.
They've sponsored a lot of the political movements that have encouraged more quote-unquote legal immigration into various European countries.
And they've given $100 million to the NAACP, apologizing for racism, apologizing for their racist past, all this kind of stuff.
They say they have an off-again, on again, oh, you can be Mormon again and gay.
We're cool with that, whatever.
Basically, anybody who likes Mormon history and likes what it was in the past, they're forced to acknowledge what the church has become today.
And very conveniently, in the 1970s, after the last time that the church ran into money problems, they sold out to Wall Street.
And that's when everything started going downhill.
They changed it so it was no longer white exclusive.
And they've never had money problems ever again.
They've, you know, approaching a $1 trillion enterprise.
I read that headline just the other day.
They're rolling it.
Oh, yeah.
$100 billion in their savings account.
So they're doing just fine.
Yeah.
And I think if I recall correctly, both of our Mormon guests from the Mormon show largely agree, you know, they didn't leave the church.
They felt like the church left them.
And for exhibit A of current Mormonism, look no further than Mitt Romney, who doesn't even pretend to be even remotely our guy anymore.
And go ahead, Sam, did you have something there?
I didn't want to cut you off.
Well, I was just going to say that the problem with that church is the same problem with all churches, which is they have betrayed the race that has built it.
Bingo, that's about as simple as it gets.
You can't continue to have the same successes from the past without the same types of people, the same clans that helped you to build it.
And then cosmotheism tickled my ears, Levi, because I've said on the show before that possibly one of the most moving religious passages I've ever read was from William Luther Pierce and his Our Cause or a different speech,
I forget the name of it, where he basically explained that cosmotheism is about living better, smarter, healthier, more effectively in an effort to come closer to the creator, to become more like a creator in holiness, perhaps with the humility that you'll never get there, but it's a worthwhile journey anyway.
What was it about it that drew you to it?
And where should the audience go if they're interested?
I'm sure some will just be like, that's kooky.
No, I'm a Christian.
I'm not.
Other guys who are perhaps irreligious might find it more of interest.
Yeah, I think what really turned me on to it, I actually watched the last Murdoch-Murdoch episode, which goes into a bit of cosmotheism and William Luther Pierce's ideas about what makes life worth living, what's the meaning of existence, that sort of thing.
But I was just kind of coming at it from like, oh, this is cool.
You know, I agree with this.
And then I read A Tale of a Dead Man's Deeds, which is William Luther Pierce's biography done by somebody who actually isn't like a fan of William Luther Pierce, but was an honest reteller of his story and did a very good job of representing the ideas of cosmotheism.
And basically, I like to focus when I talk to people that are in our thing about the upsides of where we're going.
We can get down in the dirt a lot about this problem or that problem or how things seem to always progressing in the opposite direction.
But I always like to talk about what we're capable of, what our potential is, and just the fact that the European race has survived this long and its grand achievements that basically nobody can deny the things that the European race has done for the trajectory of human evolution.
For example, domesticating animals.
The European race is responsible for every species of cow, horse, donkey, pig that you see was done by European people.
We were responsible for all of it.
And if that is not basically deciding the course of history or the evolution for those animals, I don't know what else to explain it as is basically we can decide and chart our own course in the future.
I still believe in a higher power.
I still believe that there are things outside of my control and stuff that are in the supernatural, if you want to put it that way.
But I think it's important to realize that as a race, we have the ability to chart our own course, decide our own destiny.
And anybody that is trying to wallow in the mud of this planet don't realize that there are infinite planets out there that we can colonize.
We don't need to fight over this piece of dirt or that piece of dirt.
What we really need to realize is look towards the sky, look towards the stars and realize that there are infinite planets for white ethnostates, right?
We don't need to quarrel over.
Yeah, I'm smiling through the microphone at your youthful and noble idealism and enthusiasm for all this stuff, big guy.
And I don't know if you know this.
You mentioned, you know, Robert Griffin, who wrote that wonderful biography of William Luther Pierce, obviously spending time with him in Hillsboro, West Virginia.
He published the piece, or at least his piece was published on UNS recently.
Apparently, he is cognizant that he's nearing the end of his life.
And it sounds like he is our guy.
He maybe wasn't and was just a, you know, a curious writer at the time that he went there.
But it sounds like that experience with William Luther Pierce set him on the trajectory to be a white advocate, if nothing else.
I don't know if he's a cosmotheist today, but I'll put that in the show notes.
I just put it in the chat.
I found that remarkable because it's shown through in that biography.
It's still available on mainstream sites.
I think you probably get it from cosmotheism.org, perhaps it is.
I've ordered books from them before, and it's absolutely worth reading.
It'll rekindle your spirits on that.
Let's see.
Let's go.
One of the pieces that you've written over the past few years, Levi, was about January 6th and Trump and the election, which similar to your conviction on 9-11, you seem absolutely convinced that the 2020 election was rigged or stolen, et cetera, with plenty of proofs and things that got shoved down the memory hole that stunk just as badly as some of the things or worse from 9-11.
And yet you also had the level-headedness to recognize that Trump is a charlatan and perhaps didn't even deserve to get reelected.
I don't want, you know, we're going back to 9-11, the show, and we're going back to Trump and 2024 around the corner.
Again, we're not going to do this every week, but I also think that we do ourselves a disservice from sort of ignoring completely what does actually matter, which is one of the biggest news stories out there.
It's like saying COVID is a distraction or the election is a distraction.
Well, guess what?
You can consume news and have opinions on it and talk about things that other people are talking about.
It doesn't mean like, oh, I don't have time for white nationalism or wake people up or anything like that.
You can walk and chew gum at the same time.
So thinking that the election was stolen and not being a huge Trump fan, where are you right now with regard to Trump, the election or politics in general?
I'm all about the Trump train 2024 chaos candidate.
You know, I want the insurrectionist, you know, basically terrorist president in office.
I want to ride, I want him to ride this train off the bridge.
You know, basically, I think that's what America deserves.
We deserve to have the clown show continue.
Well, and just because he does all that, you know, you're going to have those same January 6th type people that are, let's be honest, naive and they're desperately trying to support something they think is good.
When Trump gets to doing something, it's going to ignite those same type of people.
Those are not us.
We're not going to do anything foolish in support of or because of Trump, that's for sure.
But you know that it is going to bring people out.
It's going to rile people and point to things that are definitely problems or part of the problems.
And so that's good, I think.
Yeah, the idea, you know, there's this whole thing of who's the accelerationist candidate.
Biden's the accelerationist candidate because white people are angry again.
Trump will put them back to sleep.
That may, I think that was true in 2020.
And now seeing the treatment that Trump has received, that his supporters have received, that just an angry or cynical pull at the box at minimum is worth it, even if you are simply in it for the popcorn.
So yeah, to me, it's a no-brainer.
We don't have to beat that one with a dead horse.
Go ahead, Levi.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I just like to remind people, like a new white nationalist is minted every day.
And maybe I have the foresight or the hindsight and the ability to see that I've walked up to people on the street at like a 5K that they were running past me and I was handing out flyers and I've handed a flyer to somebody with a QR code and they contacted me after the race and literally joined up, you know, to white nationalist politics from that race, right?
Just from that flyer.
And so with that perspective in mind, everybody comes from somewhere.
You know, I think a lot of people in our movement looked at what Trump was saying maybe back in 2016, 2015, maybe even more recently favorably.
And so what I like to see is I like to see somebody that people look at as this figure that represents everything that we're about as far as a rebirth for the American nation, white America, that sort of stuff, being persecuted and absolutely being, you know, having the stones thrown at them.
That's what we need to see because we need to tell people and show people that we are under attack.
And when they're attacking Trump, that's what they're doing.
Yeah.
And that is the sort of stuff that requires, well, easy for me to say, but a youthful enthusiasm for that one-on-one, that personal awakening.
I had that fire so intensely 2014 to maybe 2019 or 2020, you know, opportunities to talk about this stuff, raising it, not out of the blue.
I got a little bit more savvy and more mature about it.
And that in particular, you know, I used to say, if you don't get it by now, you know, you are absolutely cut off from the world or you're stupid or you're with the enemy or there's no hope for you yet.
And then again, living more rural, more red around white people with busy lives has made me a little bit more humble about the fact that, hey, you can't judge somebody because they didn't get radicalized on Twitter in 2015 or 2016, right?
So many of these people are just on Facebook still or still live or don't consume mainstream media or don't have access to the same stuff that we do.
They're certainly not on Telegram yet.
So seriously, hats off to you, Levi, and all the guys who are still out there working hard, whether it's in the ghettos of echo chambers on certain platforms that we're on or just doing the real pounding the pavement stuff and talking to people.
I just heard a story the other day from a guy who just, he was out to dinner and I think he was in a buffet line or something and he was talking to somebody and he was like arguing with a hostile and then winning over a neutral or a guy leaning our way.
I said, man, you know, that is courageous work.
It's sometimes risky work.
And the more, the better, the more the merrier for sure.
We need every single person on our side that we can get.
And that's, that's a very effective way to do it is face-to-face, eye to eye, as opposed to churning out yet another attempt at a viral tweet or telegram post.
Yeah, if I may share like a nugget of wisdom I've picked up along the way.
Sure.
The main motto for our entire movement is the 14 words.
We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children.
There are two parts to that motto.
We must secure the existence of our people part, which I would consider to be street activism, getting out there and doing the flyers, the stickers, the face-to-face, meeting people, all that stuff.
And then there's the second part of it, which is and secure existence for white children, which is raising families, forming those communities, those networks, the brotherhood, all that kind of stuff.
Both of those are essential.
And I really think, you know, I've had a lot of people in my time meeting people and that sort of thing that have gotten into the family side of things where they have a family now.
They're building a homestead, you know, that sort of thing.
And they don't have as much time for street activism like they used to.
There's no judgment that I have for those people.
They're doing exactly what we need, which is raising the next generation, making sure that there is another generation of street activists that are going to be able to get out there and keep this fight going.
So no judgment from my side, you know, to those guys that are doing the father game, you know, basically playing their part in a way of making sure that the European race has a future.
Thank you for being outstanding.
My relative lack of fire.
Go ahead, Sam.
Well, you can, whatever stage of your life that you're living in, you can always reach people with our good message, you know, even if you're a dad or a mom.
Well, there's other dads and moms.
You know, there's maybe your church group or some social group you're in or neighborhood thing or something like that.
So definitely the in-person experience is very powerful because just like Hitler talked about, you know, the spoken word is very powerful because as you speak to somebody or a group, you are gauging if they are getting it or not, you know, and if they if they are not getting it, then you alter your approach or you explain it more.
And when you see that even the slowest person is finally getting it, then you move on to your next point if you're talking to a few people or a group.
So definitely the in-person experience is very powerful.
Yeah.
How do you, how do you think churches and faiths grew aside from Islam spreading by the sword?
They grew by proselytizing, by spreading the good word.
It's something that we have to do.
And I'm reminded there's two young white kids wearing white shirts who are pounding the pavement near where I live.
I see them all the time.
Sometimes they're like taking a break on the bench.
You know, they're sweating buckets.
I presume that they are Mormons doing some outreach.
And, you know, I have to admire the hard work that they're putting in.
I don't imagine they're getting a hugely receptive audience.
And yet there they are regularly still working over this town.
Now, I'm not saying you need to go door to door.
Have you heard the good news about the white race?
But I'm not saying you shouldn't either.
I'm all about that.
You know, the system made a mistake by basically allowing a disaffected Mormon to get into white nationalist politics because I was taught from a young age that door to door is the way to go.
And so, you know, flyers are going out there mysteriously all over a state that I'm local to.
And I don't know.
I mean, maybe there's a part to that or not, but I think the direct approach is definitely very effective.
When people can hold your message in their hand and they read it, obviously not everybody's going to read it.
A lot of people are going to just toss it in the trash, but a lot of people are curious, right?
They just read it and then they want to know more because they're like, man, this is absurd.
This is crazy.
But that's the start, right?
Everybody, they like to lampoon our ideas.
They like to scoff at them and say, oh, how horrible.
But then when it shows up on their front porch, then it's real.
It's actually there.
And many, many people are suffering from this demoralization as well.
And it's tied to them being white.
So when they hear something that sounds hopeful and defiant against this active measures that we're suffering under, then it certainly does.
At the same time, it lights your moral outrage, but it also feels good in a way like, hey, somebody knows what I'm feeling.
Somebody knows I'm hurting or I'm discouraged.
And so that's why our message can be so powerful for people, because it takes you from maybe feeling irrelevant to realizing how very important you actually are.
Suicides and drug overdoses both at record highs for the previous year's new CDC data out.
Now, I didn't look at per capita.
It's the total numbers that are at record highs, but I don't think you have to be too kooky to say, yeah, that is obviously a symptom of our society.
And you could possibly be like that Gingerzilla cartoon with Hitler reaching out to the guy drowning, reaching a hand out.
It might sound a little bit silly, but it really can save some people.
I did misjudge, I misjudged Levi in one way.
I like to think that I'm a good judge of character, but I presumed he was older by the way that he wrote.
So I didn't know that we were having a young, fiery buck on this show, but I'm even happier for the fact that he's younger than I prejudged him as such.
I'll give him one more plug here from his message.
It's my belief that Mother Nature will take care of herself.
Whether we survive into the future or not, life will find a way.
The question is, will we win or will our enemies win?
Truthfully, we're winning.
As long as European people still exist, we are running out the clock on our enemies.
They are not eternal.
They will die as we all do, but when they die, there will be nothing left of them.
Eons from now, nobody will remember the names or their pointless titles they gave each other while they existed.
But we will never forget what they did to us.
And we will use that memory when we as a race were on the verge of extinction to propel us to live among the stars.
Don't lose hope, Finstock.
We have the greatest comeback story of all time to write.
Thank you for that, Levi.
Right on.
That's really, really true is to, we tend to want to think that our enemies are like omnipotent somehow, you know, that they aren't subject to the same forces that we are.
And I think that's a very important point right there is we're going to run out the clock on them.
Yes, we have problems, but those problems are also affecting them.
And we're better and smarter in the long run.
Yep.
I would think, or in my dour moments, I think that they're running the clock out on us and boiling the frog slowly, but they're clearly doing it too fast.
And those of us who get it either from a religious perspective or from a white racial pride perspective, having more kids every single one is a revolt against their planned genocide.
They're not cooking up fake gas chambers for us yet, but they're clearly experimenting with a sort of neo-Soviet red terror program of, yeah, basically thought crime, getting you thrown in the gulag, Charlottesville, which we might talk about a little bit in the second half as exhibit A, if not B or C. For the break this week, Levi, we're going to give you the close because this is kind of a current event thing, the Oliver Anthony phenomenon.
A little bit on this before we play it.
So this is turning into like a current events country style show for the break music because we did Jason Aldean try that in a small town last week, which I like that song more than I was led to believe.
And I'll be honest here, I don't like the Oliver Anthony song as much as I was led to believe.
In the Jason Aldean, it was like, oh, you're being a hooky.
The criticism was that this is hooky, bad advice.
It's not realistic anymore.
And I said, whatever, it's aspirational.
In the Oliver Anthony thing, you know, it's a good tune.
He's got a great voice, but it's very basic to me.
There's one subtle mention of Epstein Island, and the rest of it is kind of, I'm not dismissing it or poo-pooing it, but it's boilerplate working man woes with a vague, perhaps, I don't know if he's talking about Yankees or if he really knows the JQ.
Obviously, he's a Bible reading man.
I just, I didn't think it was so subversive or edgy.
I just thought it was a nice, folksy working man song.
But if you guys, I'm sure you guys have opinions on it.
I just, it was more class struggle and like taxes.
I mean, if you're poor, taxes are among the lowest of your concerns.
Now, I know sometimes property taxes, I'm not saying that that's not a big deal.
I just, I didn't think that it was that hard on the nose about the real issues facing us for the support and outpouring of love.
I don't mean to be a dour Debbie here.
So if you guys loved it, have at it.
Or if you're kind of picking up what I'm throwing down, have at it too.
I kind of agree with you, Coach.
I mean, it's a good song and a good sentiment, but if anyone's thinking this is some kind of, wow, a really important thing was said here.
I don't know that it's so crucial like that.
It's a nice song.
It's good.
Get you fired up a little bit.
But yeah, it's a good song.
I mean, that's back-to-back, semi-subversive white country or folk songs, which is certainly a good showing.
But I could probably think of half a dozen great Byron De La Vandal songs that would put old chubby bearded Oliver Anthony to shame.
I'm not crapping on Oliver Anthony.
God bless him for having a massive overnight smash coming from south of Richmond.
I guess he's working on building a farm there.
But yeah, I'm just trying to be honest here.
It didn't really rev my motor.
But if it does for other people, great.
We are going to play it at the break, of course, for the four or five listeners who have heard it yet.
Roll, you have strong opinions on music and culture.
If you can tear yourself away from Magic the Gathering for just a minute here, sir.
We'll revisit your lady issues too in the second half.
Just want to know my opinion on Oliver Anthony?
Just that?
Yeah, that song.
Yeah.
Just that.
Nothing more.
You know, I'm going to tell you this.
So I recorded another show that I do that I forget the name of earlier today.
And Steve Dave told me about him.
And I had no idea who the guy was until he mentioned it a few hours ago.
And then all of a sudden, in a bunch of other chats I was in, people were talking about this guy.
Sure.
Okay.
So you're totally, you know, you just got the old midnight cardio on the mind.
Clearly, it has sapped your vrill.
Levi, have you heard this?
Have you heard the song and any opinions on it?
I'm not much of keeping up with the modern music trends these days.
I don't know.
I like to stick with the old classics, you know.
But I hope that whatever the messaging that people get out of it, you know, even if it's maybe a boomer take or I hope that people, it helps them get there through their day because, you know, at the end of the day, we don't need more of this Lizzo.
You know, we don't need more of this, you know, gangster rap, you know, all this kind of stuff.
Anything.
There's nothing.
There's nothing wrong with classic gangster rap.
Please cut his mic, Rollo open up.
You're the wrong guy there, Levi.
You're done with.
We've had to endure a lot of rap on this show, let me tell you.
That's not true.
Let's just say that Coach is down with OPP.
Oh, I was a kid when OPP came out.
No, I remember like debating with the baseball players what it really meant.
And then one of the older kids is like, nah, you dummies, this is what it means.
We're like, ooh, wow.
But yeah, Levi listens exclusively 24-7 to the Mormon Tabernacle choir.
So, you know, you can't expect him to deviate from his ancestral origins.
Regardless, here's Oliver Anthony with Rich Jews North.
I mean, Rich Men North of Richmond.
It's a good song, regardless of whether it gets your motor revved or not.
Big thanks to Levi.
He is coming back in the second half.
So far as I know, we'll revisit Rolo's principled woman issue here and a lot more in the second half.
Don't go anywhere.
I've been selling my soul, working all day, over time hours for bullshit pay.
So I can sit out here and waste my life away.
Drag back home and drown my troubles away.
It's a damn shame what the world's gotten to for people like me.
People like you wish I could just wake up and it not be true, but it is.
Oh, it is living in the new world with an whole soul.
These rich men north of rich men, Lord knows they all just want to have total control.
Want to know what you think?
Wanna know what you do.
And they don't think you know, but I know that you do.
Cause your dollar ain't shit.
And it's taxed to no hen.
Because the rich men, politicians, look out for miners, and not just miners on an island somewhere.
Lord, we got folks in the street, ain't got nothing to heat.
And the whole beast milking welfare.
Well, God, if you're five foot three and you're 300 pounds, taxes ought not to pay for your bags of fudge rounds.
Young men are putting themselves six feet in the ground because all this damn country does is keep on kicking them down.
Lord, it's a damn shame what the world's gotten to for people like me.
People like you wish I could just wake up and it not be true, but it is all it is living in the new world with an whole soul.
These rich men north of rich men, Lord knows they all just want to have total control.
Want to know what you think?
Want to know what you do and they don't think you know, but I know that you do.
Cause your dollar ain't shit, and it's taxed to no end, cause the rich men know the rich men.
I've been selling my soul, working all day, overtime hours for bullshit pay.
Hey, welcome back to Full House episode 166, I believe.
First time we screwed up the nomenclature in quite some time, or the numerology, I should say.
I finally watched that Casey Oliver Anthony.
The first I thought his name was Casey Anthony, but she was an alleged killer here in the States.
Oliver Anthony and watching the video, which I hadn't done to date, made me understand a lot better why that's a hit, because it's just a slightly pudgy blonde guy with a red beard in the woods with his tree stand in the background, his dogs at his feet, strumming at a guitar and singing his heart out.
So seeing made me slightly more of a believer, even if I remain nonplussed by the lyrics.
And Rolo, shame on him, was totally clueless to this.
And Levi too, all living in the clouds, not keeping their finger.
How are you going to talk to your white brothers and sisters if you're not keeping tabs on the zeitgeist?
Seriously.
And I also want the thought occurred that the reason that I like the Jason Aldean song, because that was basically like F around and find out however LARPy it might be.
And Oliver Anthony is like, you know, woe is me.
This is all terrible and sucky.
Whatever.
Audience, you can make your decision.
Wanted to flag a couple things here.
For a while now, a couple months, we had a wonderful email in the inbox about a listener's travel to Japan recently from our perspective.
And I characterized it as, you know, what life is like in a homogenous society.
And I realized I should have clarified life in an advanced homogenous society.
You could possibly live in a homogenous society in Niger or Chad or Equatorial Guinea and not be necessarily better off for it, regardless.
That is up at the top of the site right now.
When the show posts on Monday, that will be at the top.
But give it a read.
Just a real simple, direct observation of what life is actually like in Japan, Tokyo and Okinawa was where this guy traveled.
So thank you.
I was going to read it on the show.
I had it in the hopper for the past couple weeks, but it was just, I was like, ah, it's too long.
We got other stuff to get to.
So check it out.
Rare entry on our blog.
And before we move on, I also wanted to flag Chris Cantwell dusting off the old Seaville chops to release, I guess, a recreation of his closing argument.
So many guys who couldn't get on those calls to listen in in real time from the Science vs. Kessler trial and Cantwell's true virtuoso performance.
He has recreated his closing statements and then somebody emailed me.
I didn't know if it was a trap saying, hey, coach, you know, the audio from Science vs. Kessler has posted.
It's here on this website.
And I was like, I'm not clicking that because I remember at the time all the warnings, you may not record this.
That is illegal.
I was like, I'm not getting hemmed up trying to record some Charlottesville trial.
However, it's out there.
There's some you can probably find it if you want to and you don't mind taking the risk.
I don't think that once it's out in the wild, you know, it's like WikiLeaks.
You can't get prosecuted for reading WikiLeaks, so far as I know, as much as they would like to.
But again, hats off to Cantwell for his wonderful job there.
He's been a great friend of the show.
He had very fun things to say about us as he prepped for his interview with Hammer.
And I have been terrible about listening to stuff lately.
I've been kind of on a techno kick.
Apologies, audience.
John Friend interviewed K Mack on his most recent realist report.
Check that out.
And there's also a show called The Final Storm floating around out there.
You know, one of its members is supposed to stay on top of cultural phenomena and was utterly oblivious to Oliver Anthony, apparently.
So, you know, take that for what it's worth.
New white life.
I do.
If there's one thing I like about this show, it's being cheeky toward Rolo.
He's not even smiling.
Sam, you got new white life this week.
I meant to text my buddy to see if he had finally reached DEF CON zero, baby issue, or back to back to five after the baby arrives, but I didn't.
I'll do that tomorrow.
But you got one or two in the hopper, I think.
Well, we are tracking, well, six now.
This is a new white life, new white conception of life, we'll call it.
And dear friend of ours, you will know who I'm talking about.
Just let me know.
Number five was in the hopper and believe he's got, yeah, four daughters.
And so we'll see what happens with number five here.
But definitely showing some guts, you know, to keep going like that.
It ain't easy.
If you're not in the dad game yet, you know, it sounds all fun and everything.
We announce.
Oh, yeah, one child, two child, we have four, five, six, seven children, whatever.
It's hard work and there's heartache as well as joys in it.
And just the fun of making this announcements is hardly anything part of it, but at least we could be encouraged.
And I was certainly very happy to hear the news.
Amen.
That's awesome.
I will give the audience a report as to whether I actually get misty or if liquid passes the hemispheres of my eyes when potato goes off to school.
I promised myself I wouldn't cry, but I can get choked up just thinking about my little buddy and co-pilot for so many years here going off like a big boy to school.
Don't give me any guff about government schools or whatever.
Just let me have my moment of a rite of passage that's coming up.
You can do that.
You could do that later.
Before we move on to Sam and roll content, I neglected to ask our special guest, Levi, what his favorite childhood memory was.
And he's had time to think about it, so it better be a damn good one.
Yes.
So my favorite childhood memory, I would have to say, is there was an old climbing gym that a family friend owned and it closed down for whatever reason.
I think it was either they were responsible for actually the demolition of taking down all the rock walls and stuff and making the building ready for the new occupant.
But the rock climbing walls with all the little holes in it where you would put the pegs for the different handholds and stuff got repurposed by my dad in our backyard and he made a little tree fort out of it.
So that was my memory.
That's a good one.
You delivered.
Yep.
Old man putting it together for his family.
I love it.
Sirius, before we go to camping, Sam, the question of Rolo's non-serious midnight cardio partner.
I'm joking, but I'm serious too.
If he feels in his heart or in his gut, or maybe in his brain or his nuts that this is not the one and it's not going anywhere, is it immoral of him to continue to have such vigorous workouts or should he cut it right now and move on?
I honestly don't know what the right answer is here.
I'm leaning one way, but it's over to you.
Yeah, I think you move on.
I think that the purpose of pursuing a woman has got to be, is she marriage material or not?
And if she's not marriage material, then you should move on.
I'm not going to exactly break into the thing that, you know, any kind of intimacy with a woman is like a sinful thing, really, outside of marriage.
I think that, you know, if you're pursuing a woman and you get to that point and you know, this one is too problematic, I think you owe it to yourself and to her to be serious and break it off.
I think that's probably right.
I am not a pre-maritable celibacy advocate, but the thought has occurred to me more than once that you should not engage in the forbidden with a woman if she is not at least possibly marriage material.
Now, that's a tough one to live up to.
You don't always know for sure.
And sometimes the animal spirits overwhelm your intellectual faculties, especially after midnight, after a night out on the town.
So I'm not going to be super chaste and prudy here.
That thought has occurred.
Then you got to rely on this Jewish birth control too.
So you're taking the hand of the enemy in the thing too.
Yep.
Rolo, you are not, in fact, muted here.
You can contribute to the discourse on your own future.
Do you think that's right that you should probably break it off or is having a little bit of fun, something that you think that you've earned and should not have it yanked away by the preaching menaces of Sam and Coach?
Well, the way I do see it is it's not looking good, but as far as long term, but there are things that make me think that it's possible because she is genuinely a nice person and I can talk to her and we get along.
But politics have has only come up really once and it caused, well, I made her cry over it.
And so we just kind of set the rule, like, don't talk about politics, but you can't do that forever, especially when it's what we're doing.
And so it just becomes a thing of how do I get her to think rationally when it's very clear by the stuff that she says that she is not fulfilled by the choices that she's made as far as everything communist, satanic, Jewish.
And it's all because she watched too much TV and said, like, yeah, this is the right thing.
Like, boy, the stupid things that she said, like the platitudes that she has just said are extremely embarrassing.
But outside of that, to me, it's perfectly fine, but I just don't know how long term it can all last.
So I don't, I, and too many times in the past, I've just said like, you know, elbow's too pointy.
I'm out.
I don't want to waste anyone's time.
And then here I'm taking my time a little more because there will be a time when it like, all right, like in case you haven't figured out my politics are literally the opposite of yours and this needs to be addressed.
And if by then she hasn't shown an ability to or a desire to listen to my side, then, you know, then I can cut it.
But until then, I don't think there's any reason to just cut it off now.
But that doesn't mean I'm not looking around at other people, you know, eyes on the other prize.
Yeah, I mean, if she's, if she's open to discussing it civilly and not chimping out at the merest mention of anything remotely in the political realm, that's promising.
But also choosing your future mate should not be, I think, like the ideological development of them should not be a significant factor.
And often that is a massive hindrance and flashing red warning signs.
That's the world we live in, though.
See, that's the thing.
If this were me 15 years ago, I would easily just say like, well, she's not where I am politically.
I'm done.
It's a waste of everyone's time.
But how many people am I going to do that to?
Because I've done it a lot.
And, you know, I'm not getting any younger.
And, you know, it's getting harder to maintain my abs.
So eventually I'm not going to have that going for me.
And then, and then like, well, that's true.
I mean, I could always be like a liver king and $10,000 worth of steroids a month.
If RFK Jr. can do it, so can you, Rolo, into your 60s.
Right.
Yes.
If, you know, all I need to do is just get a prescription for adrenochrome and then I'll be good to go.
It'll only just cost me the sweet sound of my voice.
Yeah.
But until then.
Yeah.
Imagine being like, well, I could marry and have kids with this liberal with the Ruth Bader Ginsburg t-shirt or I could die alone with my cats and no abs.
That's the choice facing.
No, it's not the choice facing Rolo, but I'm not sure.
Obviously not.
But the thing is, I can't be just discounting someone because they're liberal.
And I do stand by this.
It'll be easier for men out there to pick up a liberal than a conservative woman.
That's because you are going to be a better choice cut than your competition because they're going to look at liberals and this guy's is going to be weak.
He's going to be effeminate and you're going to have conviction and you're going to be strong and fit.
But at the same time, like the amount of work that you have to do, there's a reason it's easier.
And I do not think every person out there that thinks it's easier to get a liberal or a leftist to our politics than a conservative, you are out of your mind.
And if you truly believe that, I'm sorry to say, but you have brain cancer and you have three months to live.
It's absolutely not true.
Liberals, like this woman is 100% white.
She showed me her 23 and me.
And the amount of like involuntary hatred she has for white people and white ideas.
And she doesn't even realize it.
She doesn't know.
She just like, these are just, they're just put in her head.
And if you think that like you can deprogram that because, well, they're anti-taxes and, you know, the elites and blah, whatever.
I don't know, whatever stupid things.
They're anti-billionaire.
Well, that basically means Jew.
No.
No, no, no.
Trust me on this one.
Liberals are not anti-Jew or Israel.
You bring up anything Jewish.
Oh, so you're a Nazi like Trump?
Watch her scramble back to defending.
Yeah.
Sorry, guys.
It's not how it works.
So it just comes down to, does she like me enough that she will hear me out on this?
That's it.
If she falls in love with you, then you'll have a good chance of explaining things and showing the better side of things and stuff like that.
And I was about to say that it's a lot easier for younger guys because everybody's young and dumb and liberal when they're young, but that's not even true anymore because there's the data out showing that younger white men are increasingly conservative and right wing and or right wing, whereas women are more liberal.
So this is not just a like 30 something, you know, woe is me, these 30 something liberal ladies.
Like the young guys too are like increasingly like us in a, in a leftist dating pool.
Sorry, Roloca.
Yeah.
And the real the real conundrum is because the woman will follow the strong man, but it comes down to at the end of the day, am I stronger than all the men that have poisoned her brain?
Because I can be the man in her life, but like that, that is just ultimately the gamble that it comes down to.
Because I can't just come out and say, listen, the Holocaust is fake.
All blacks want to rape you.
Isolate that maximum.
You got it.
Mexicans, all they want to do is drink and drive.
And Asians just want to play DDR and do math problems.
Obviously, you can't do it like that.
But it is a lot of work.
And the main thing to me at this point is because I hadn't been in an intimate relationship with someone in so long that it's just kind of practice for me because she's already throwing a lot of like, you know, of the hormonal stuff at me.
And it's been a test of patience.
And I think I've picked up on how to deal with that.
So I don't straight up look at it as like, well, we're wasting each other's time because, well, I am getting something out of it.
And well, and she's getting used to a man who's not a total loser.
So maybe next time she won't pick a liberal.
Fair enough.
And I certainly was not giving you a hard time and saying, you need to dump this broad ASAP, right?
It was a sincere thought process going forward here.
And we just happen to have a young guy on this show who recently cracked the code with his high school sweetheart.
I'm not probing Levi.
It's not cracking the code.
That's what the proctologist said.
Yeah, Levi was on easy mode.
But I guess, were you guys together that whole time?
Did you do a little split up and then realize you missed each other?
Whatever you're comfortable with sharing about going from, you know, 18-year-old sweethearts to now husband and wife.
Yeah, for me, I can't talk too much about the dating game because for me, I tried once and scored, but I can't say that was just all my fault or anything.
I thought it was a little bit of luck on my part.
But I always tell young men that are in this thing, go for the ones that are not already, haven't already made up their mind, women that are non-political.
They're going to have an easier time getting through to them after you've established that relationship, that we're poor, they trust you, that sort of stuff, because their mind isn't already filled with all those things because you can't pull that out.
That's always going to be there in their brain.
You're just going to have to either overcome it or you're going to have to realize that, you know, maybe they're not the one for you because with women, they get programmed a certain way and that's how they're going to be going forward, unfortunately.
And so my thinking is you got to try and try again.
You know, I would rather our guys get out there, you know, be a part of the process of trying to find somebody that is material, you know, good marriage material than just stay home and not try.
Because ultimately, the only way you're going to find somebody is sifting through the trash out there.
Brutally put, but so true.
Yeah, I would say, you know, why, why try to climb K2 or Everest to conquer a radical leftist woman who might be hot and still be kind to you when you can just take a little saunter up Camelback Mountain north of Phoenix, one of my favorite hiking trips.
Speaking of hiking, Sam, you wanted to deliver a treatise on camping, as I understand it.
Well, you know, once again, I'm kind of in this position where the house is rather empty because my son went out camping and my wife went out camping.
And I'm here with my older son, but, you know, he really leads kind of his own life.
And, but so I had that feeling once again of, you know, I just realize when I'm by myself, I mean, sure, it might sound like, well, you just do what you want to do, right?
Well, yeah, I know, but everything I do is kind of like timed, you know, so that I don't, you know, I don't just give myself to some activity.
I, I, you know, okay, I'm going to work out.
So I got like a 40-minute workout.
You know, okay, well, 40 minutes, that's not very much time when no one else is here, you know.
But anyways, you know, honestly, I feel kind of bad.
And I have to confess in a way that, you know, I'm not against camping.
I think camping is really great.
But I've done that.
You know, I've proven I can sleep outside under the stars or set up a tent, even if it's by myself or with a group.
And my youngest son, he really loves camping.
And I feel a little bad that I don't pursue it with him too much because I'll do it, but I don't go after it, you know, too hard because I just, you know, well, I've done that, like I said, but yeah, and but he really loves it.
And when it comes time like a birthday or Christmas or something like that, and I'll ask him, what do you want?
And he always wants something that's kind of for that.
You know, I bought him a fancy hatchet and it's got like a holster that you attach to your belt.
And that's really, you know, nice.
Always positive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I hope my sons want stuff like that for Christmas one day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or a fancy flashlight that's good for outside or a nice knife with some different features.
It's got a compass on the end of the handle, you know, and it's got us the serrated edge on it and all this.
So he really likes it.
So when there's a chance to go after it, I really encourage him to do it.
And he was in the Boy Scouts, but, you know, we talked about Boy Scouts kind of off the air, how that's all destroyed.
And then we got him in the troops of St. George and they go camping once in a while.
So that's, that's good.
But this Catholic group, I won't say the name, name of it just to give, you know, to deprive the enemy of an extra data point.
But this very conservative Catholic group, they're running a camp for boys.
Well, actually, they run it for boys of a couple different ages and then also girls of a couple different ages.
And they all take place at different times, but it's roughly like a week of camping.
And so I sent him off to that, which was very, very nice.
And then my wife went off camping with a bunch of our gals slash our gals slash, you know what I mean.
And so that just got me thinking about camping.
And actually, I have to go take this very long ride tomorrow to pick him up.
Sure.
Yeah.
I'm picking up what you're throwing down, Sammy baby.
Now, it's a little different for me because I used to really enjoy camping.
I did camping at the seashore, assetigue with those ponies.
Good God, the mosquitoes were terrible at sunrise and sunset.
And this is our fourth summer here in the country.
And the past three summers, we've set up the tent and had a little campfire, you know, made some s'mores and played cards by the campfire.
And this, this was the first summer.
I mean, we basically live in what used to be a campground.
And this was the first summer where I didn't have the fire to do it.
When you live in the country, it's definitely like I live camping every day.
You know, I don't, I don't have to go out there and set up a tent.
I've done January camping in the woods of Pennsylvania and almost literally froze my ass off.
So I get being a little bit jaded, but I might even venture.
I don't know if I've ever given Sam advice on this show, but this might be that moment.
I'd say, hey, you've got your youngest son who's all about it and he's going to be out of the house before you know it.
And even if the prospect is sleeping in a crummy tent with mosquitoes and feeling like crap the next morning, even if you don't hit the sauce, isn't that appealing?
You should probably suck it up and just go out there to treasure the time with your son and indulge in his healthy, virtuous hobby.
Yeah, no, you are right.
You are right.
And if it comes right down to it, I will go and do it.
I guess I'm just kind of like sidestepping it if I can or when I can.
I mean, when the older kids were younger, we did go like to events, you know, our guy events in the 90s, especially.
And I would set up the tent and do those.
And we were camping by off by ourselves somewhere, not necessarily around a bunch of other people.
And so I have done that.
And of course, we have our quote camps unquote that we do where we're sleeping in bunkhouses and things like that.
That's no problem.
But, you know, there's just the sleeping on the ground and setting up a tent.
Like you say, the bugs and all that stuff.
It's certainly a healthy, wholesome activity to do.
And I'm in favor of it.
And this particular thing, it's all boys of a certain age.
My wife dropped him off and she said, I was surprised how many kids there were and they're all white, you know, so I'm sure he's having the time of his life.
He just loves anything like that.
And it's, yeah, it's, it's a good, wholesome thing.
Now, Levi, hold on.
Levi is a total bugman basement dwelling internet guy.
He's never started a fire in his life or sharpened a knife.
So I'm sure he has something to say here.
Well, as an Eagle Scout, I have to flex my credentials here a little bit.
40-mile canoe trip, 20 miles in the Appalachian Mountains, you know, all that stuff.
But I don't, I don't crap on anybody that likes to glamp.
That's my thinking.
Yeah.
I've done all of that, you know, but camping is not a competition of who can suffer the most.
You know, it's not about, oh, I slept in the mud for three straight days.
You know, I'm the best.
You know, it's if you want to break out the cot and the air pad and all that kind of stuff to make it your life, you know, tolerable, that's what it's about.
Because at the end of the day, what I encourage people to do is it's kind of like field day of the military, where you're trying to get your equipment out there and you're trying to see if it still works, right?
Does the, does the camp, does the camping stove still turn on, right?
Does the, do you have gas in the tank, right?
Because at the end of the day, if you ever actually need to use those skills, you want it to be brushed up and you want to make sure you're not caught with your pants down where it's like, oh man, we actually have to live like this now and nothing works.
Yeah.
Amen.
Amen.
And yep, real quick, Sam, it reminded me, you know, Levi saying there, like, you know, I support glamping to a certain extent.
Better to be out there with over, you know, hyper-expensive accoutrements and as comfortable as possible than not doing it whatsoever.
And that reminds me of people who tut-tut a little bit, the quote-unquote hobbyist farmers.
Maybe you're as truly here with his, you know, little batches of eggs and his potato harvest and his cucumbers and tomatoes.
It's like, I want to say, you know, you son of a bitch, would you prefer that I not do that?
Do you want me to ramp up from zero to 100% homesteading self-reliance in the span of a couple of years?
I've got no experience in it.
So what do I, my understanding is you learn things incrementally.
You start with a base, you read a couple of books, you experiment, you build a success, then you do another thing and another thing.
Same with camping.
But I'll leave it at that.
When I hear sneering at hobbyist farmers or gardeners, my Irish gets up.
Well, it's the journey is the point of the thing, not just the destination.
It's not just to say we camped, but the, like you say, the preparing it and the doing it and then maybe getting better the next time.
And yeah, the Coleman stove, all that stuff.
My son, he's got all that, you know?
So that is certainly true, all of that.
And then my wife went off camping, I mentioned with these other gals.
And I was so impressed to hear she just actually came back tonight.
So I've been hearing about the particular, particularly one of the women there knew all about foraging and finding the right type of mushrooms or finding certain wild growing fruit or how to find certain herbs and things in the forest.
And so they all enjoyed doing that too.
That's awesome.
One of my master deer hunter with bows, he said, I prefer to shoot my food rather than gambling my life on poisonous mushrooms and berries and stuff like that.
Well, you know, Chris.
Yeah, exactly.
You are good.
Yeah.
Do not eat stuff.
Do not forage unless you got a damn good confidence that what you're throwing down is not going to kill you.
Right.
And that's especially true for berries and mushrooms.
Levi, prepping is a little bit of catnip to me.
And we've done a bunch of shows on that.
Haven't revisited in a while.
Anything, I don't know if you have to go like something that nobody's thought of before, but I assume you're still doing it.
And is there anything in your not your arsenal, but your stock, your inventory that you think people should have on hand that they might not think about?
I don't know if I have like the most novel takes when it comes to prepping, but I think the simple stuff that people don't think about is that most people in society, 75% of the United States population is three days without food from the collapse of civilization.
Most people, if the lights turned off, if the power went out um, and they didn't have any hope of it turning on sometime in the future um, would literally result, resort to cannibalism within a couple, you know, a couple of months.
And so um, it's the case that there's your preps and then your ability to defend your preps um, and that comes down to tribing and training right uh, you might think you're the most prepared person in the world.
You've got, you know, a week, a year's worth of food supply.
You have, you know, a ready source of water.
You have, you know, more guns and ammunition that you know what to do with right, but if you don't have other people around you you're, you're a soft target, you're an easy target.
You know, 60 people against one person uh, I think, is what they would consider to be a fair fight.
Um, and there's going to be a lot of people looking for soft targets, guys out on their own defenseless, and you know, maybe they have uh, some small arms or something like that, but they're rolling up with a whole raiding party.
And so I just encourage people that it when this happens eventually, when we are having to use these skills that we've attained and we're better than the rest because we're not three days without food from, you know, completely losing our minds and, you know, turning back into.
So you know, cavemen savages that we're, we're gonna be, we're gonna have a head start on other people, but it's gonna be us versus the cannibals.
And people got to realize that you know it's only one horde of can, you're only one horde of cannibals away from losing it all.
So you, you know, prepare like you're, prepare like you're preparing for the zombie apocalypse.
Basically yeah, our our pal Rusty, when we did a uh, sort of an unexpected prepping show with him, emphasized the fact that everybody thinks about the stuff which they absolutely need to, the water, the food, the ammo, the tools, etc.
Uh primarily, bugging in is way safer than planning to hit the road to get somewhere safer.
Uh, but you have to know your neighbors, whether you're in the country, the city or in the suburbs uh, being on good terms uh, making allies, knowing who's hostile, etc.
Having access to a network of people who could band together, tribe together in a time of troubles.
I know we've talked, people have been talking about this for decades.
If it's probably in our genetics that we think about this stuff because we are from Europe, where we've had so many wars and so many hard winners, etc.
Will never stop thinking and preparing.
It's what we do and you shouldn't lampoon or criticize people who are into that.
It's probably one of the healthiest hobbies, with exceptions of people who perhaps go a little bit kooky.
But don't forget about the human aspect, your nearby allies and your nearby enemies or potential enemies.
All the stuff in the world means jack squat if, as Levi said, a roving band of 60 uh shows up to steal your and of course I recommend the Road Uh, the movie perhaps even more than the novel.
Cormick Mccarthy, an author who I believe Uh is even better in film than in the written word.
You can criticize me all you want for that.
Speaking of roving bands of savages, we are now just one day after Charlottesville.
It's six years.
We've talked a lot about Charlottesville on the show.
No need to revisit it too much.
It was particularly poignant this year, to me at least, because the anniversary fell on a Saturday on a hot, humid August day.
So it was visceral.
I can think back, son of a bitch.
I remember exactly what this day was like six years ago.
And I wrote on Telegram, just wanted, just had a moment of inspiration.
And it's rare in life to confront concentrated, violent evil along with a thousand or more of your comrades in a world historical event.
No regrets six years later and eternal respect to all of our Seaville vets.
That is 100% true.
That was not glamping internet style or LARPing, et cetera.
That's 100% true.
The only caveats to that I would have added to all of our Seaville vets who didn't turn or cuck after the event in the face of adversity and send into, oh, yeah, clutching their pearls, etc.
Obviously, there were plenty of those guys who did that, either turned or got too scared and went underground.
And I didn't want to be particularly negative on that front.
The other thing is, of course, I have lessons learned and regrets from that day, from the alt-right heyday, etc.
It's not like, oh, I do it all exactly the same.
But the point was that I am so damn glad to have been there, to have seen it with my own two eyes, from the snarling, stinking, violent Antifa to the robo-cop armed SWAT or riot police showing up who we thought were going to, at minimum, keep us separated from Antifa, at best,
go there to uphold free speech and freedom of assembly.
I wouldn't trade that for the world.
That was a searing experience.
None of our guys died that day.
You know, obviously it derailed the alt-right to a certain extent.
We derailed it.
The system derailed it.
But hey, that's the overriding lesson that I got from that day was that simply getting a thousand or so, whatever the number was, of men together to system was worth a million bucks.
And I'll still think back to that day with smiles on my deathbed.
And even though I'm basically out of the activism game, not forever, I just personally question the risk-reward ratio myself now as a slightly older and more jaded father.
Keep that in mind, fam, that, you know, whether you, I don't know if the J6 guys would feel the same way about that as going to Charlottesville, especially if they're riding in a DC jail.
But remember that to do activism as sort of a base level, but to go to a rally and stand tall with your brothers and your sisters against evil is a spectacular feeling that perhaps military men know best.
You know, going into battle with comrades is something that's also deep in our gene code.
And if you write that stuff off completely, I think you're a fool and we're going to need more of it in the coming years if we're going to turn this thing around.
So I'm certainly not saying I would never do that again.
It was a glorious experience despite all of the hardship that we faced.
And, you know, shame on Sam and Rolo for not being there that day, frankly.
Oh, man.
Well, you know, my name.
You say my name as a verb.
You say you derailed it.
What does that mean?
I'm some kind of verb now, huh?
What you're trying to say, baby.
I'm trying to say, you didn't have the stones to go to Charlottesville either for Antifa or the white race.
You're no Jesse Lee Peterson.
Hey, man.
I'll get sitting on the couch that day.
You know, it's too hot.
I can't be out doing everything.
I got a lot of work doing nothing.
Come on, man.
You know how it is.
Peace.
Yeah, clearly your work ethic has extended to your tales from the ghetto too, Darrell.
Yeah.
I just, you know, there's a feeling in me like, oh, it's time.
It's time to like let Charlottesville go and like stop talking about it.
Like you're being a little bit selfish or solipsistic somehow.
But at the same time, the enemy hasn't.
Clearly, the torch marchers are still getting arrested.
Augustus Evictus was arrested.
I don't think he was involved in any fisticuffs.
Remember, my theory was that they were, at least at first, only going after guys who were maybe a little over-exuberant that glorious evening.
But perhaps not the case.
So if the system still cares enough to make examples of men who went to Charlottesville, I dare say that we should too.
And somebody mentioned Fuentes, and I'm not in the business of dumping on Fuentes, and I'm certainly not in the business of complimenting Fuentes.
But of course, just before he went to the show, he like had a little tantrum about Oliver Anthony and just completely dumping buckets of shit all over him and anybody who likes that song.
And somebody said it and I thought, what in God's name would overcome somebody who's purportedly trying to build a movement to insult many, many millions of white people, if assuming they even see it or give a rat's ass what he thinks, as opposed to just being a petulant child at times and spilling spaghetti all over the internet without a thought.
Reminded me of why I didn't like that guy to begin with.
Yeah.
Well, my two cents is, you know, if you think about from history, there was a lot of putsches that happened before the famous beer hall putsch.
A lot of communist revolutions that happened in Weimar, Germany, that were put down by nationalists returning from World War I that were, you know, they didn't have the leadership or the ability to turn that into something that was going to save Germany, but it was instrumental in paving the way and providing the needed time for a bigger figure to rise.
I don't think we're going to be able to stop this train where it's headed, but I think these examples of men that when everything was against them, literally nothing, nobody paid them to be out there.
You know, they had literally only their convictions to stand there against the rising tide of the violent mob.
Those people will be remembered when we are facing literal extinction and somebody is looking for someone to save us.
They'll say, where are those guys?
Where are they now?
And I think we've turned a lot of that energy, that movement from Charlottesville into something that will save our race.
Well, and certainly there's a parallel with the January 6th things.
I mean, having gone to Charlottesville when the January 6th thing was brewing, certainly you knew not to go be a part of that because you saw what happened on the Charlottesville thing.
So that's kind of where my mind is when I heard about the Unite the Right forming up and all that.
I said, well, all right, you know, the intention is good, but this is not my first rodeo.
And I wouldn't be surprised if this goes bad.
And sure enough, it did have a bad aspect.
But one certainly must respect the motivation of people going there.
Looking back, you would say maybe naivete was part of the equation there, but that doesn't mean that the people weren't rightly motivated.
And the same thing with the January 6th people.
Maybe we tend to kind of, I don't know, we sneer a little bit at that maybe, but it's really kind of the same thing.
People wanted to make a difference.
They were outraged.
They wanted to be part of this thing.
And well, now they're sitting in these prison cells for going on years now.
Yeah.
My takeaway, of course, is that you get a thousand or more largely white people motivated by ideology, passion, in many cases, anger together.
That's going to cause problems for the system one way or another, either through good optics or bad optics or good decisions or bad decisions.
They know it and you know it deep down in your heart.
And the crux of it is having it be organized and relatively well planned and with a game plan and trying not to lead sheep to slaughter.
And I guess I don't know if it happened yet or if it's in the works.
I don't think it's secret, but I'll be vague here deliberately.
It's probably announced, but I'll play it safe regardless.
There is a large rally occurring that I think is going to unite one or two or three unruly tribes of our ilk that may or may not have bad optics or something in a state that may be problematic.
And somebody's like, what do you think is going to happen here?
You know, it's just like, man, I, you know, you hope for the best and expect the worst when it comes to public rallies of unruly numbers of our guys.
Maybe it's perfectly planned.
I'm certainly not telling anybody not to go.
But the lessons of a long life have not been that nothing ever happens.
That was some British statesman, but that bad things happen quite often.
And better to, I don't want to say like, don't do anything unless it's planned perfectly, because I think everybody knew that Charlottesville is not impeccable.
Sometimes you got to put your ass on the line, roll the dice, but don't offer yourself up to be a needless political victim without at least thinking it through cost benefit.
Well, that's the whole thing there.
When you look at these things, whether January 6th, Charlottesville, or something else that I might have been part of, you would just like to see that when something like this was being contemplated, somebody says, okay, so when this goes bad, what do we do?
You know, just some kind of contingency plan of what to do when the enemies are hurling bottles of piss at you or the cops are cracking down on people or whatever it is.
And that seems kind of what's missing sometimes is that we're never planning for the really bad thing.
Go ahead, Levi.
Yeah, sorry.
Basically, my thoughts are is that each of these different examples, and even including the Patriot Front prosecutions that are happening right now currently, each of these are a chance for the system.
It's like a fork in the road.
The system can go down two different routes.
And we know which choice the system is going to make probably 99 out of 100 times.
And so we got to prepare for the worst, which is, you know, we should have the legal right to protest in these ways, right?
We should be able to express our political opinions, but we know the system isn't going to be fair to us.
We know the system isn't going to play by the rules.
And so we basically were going to be able to explain to people after the fact and show them this is why it fell apart.
We tried to bring us back from the brink.
We tried all the methods available to us to bring this country back from the edge, but they decided to push us over it.
And so we just got to understand that we don't want to go over that cliff with them.
Right.
Yep.
And if you have never, if you've never put up a sticker or put a banner up over an overpass or attended a rally, even we know guys who have gone to our rallies, but lingered in the background as sort of curious onlookers.
If you haven't done that, then you haven't lived because that's just another level above from going to an R guy meetup or, you know, being in a chat group or even creating virtuous propaganda, getting out there and doing activism, I can tell you from putting up little stickers and flyers to attending the big one is its next level.
And you may suffer for it, but you're probably going to be like, damn, I was alive that day.
Well, and I think there's a real value in seeing just how vile the enemy is.
You might think you have an idea of what it's about.
And perhaps you do have an idea of what it's about, but to be confronted with the absolute disgusting ugliness of our enemies is, I think, a very good experience.
And especially the more close you are to being a normie, let's say, I think it's very healthy for regular people to experience that type of ugliness because the people like us, maybe we've had an interest in these types of politics for a long time and participated at different levels.
And so we're coming from one place.
But, you know, there's a great layer of American society that somehow thinks their justice remains out there and that, well, most people are pretty decent and they just don't maybe come into contact with the enemy the way they really are.
And there's something very valuable about that and waking people up.
And scrutinize the leaders and the ringleaders for sure too, because although I don't regret going to Charlottesville 100%, if I knew what I know now then in terms of the alt-right and some of the purported leadership and how it would have turned out, I certainly would have played a more cautious game because at that time, you know, fevers were high and passions were high and motivation was high.
We were changing the world, et cetera.
And now when you look back three, four, five years later, you realize, oh boy, that really was not very well thought out and had poor leadership, many of whom later went on to be, you know, just the utterly despicable.
And oh, yes, sure, I would have played certain things differently, but if the cause is just and you act nobly and take certain risks, you can't live with regret or say, oh, yeah, nobody has a crystal ball for how these things you could go to what is purportedly the safest, most well-planned rally in the world, then you could get shot down by somebody from a rooftop.
You just don't know.
Sometimes you have to roll the dice.
I guess that was a little bit of, hopefully not sermonizing, but lessons learned and a little bit of older and wiser wisdom for the younger guys out there who we know are listening.
I think we're probably close to bringing this puppy home.
I'm definitely not shutting it down.
Somebody asked me the other day about what countries I've been to, and then I started rattling them off and I realized I was still going.
It was really a long time.
I have traveled and seen a lot of the world.
This will probably be a better segment for a future show.
I need to sit down and talk about lessons learned from that.
But one of the questions was, I'm going to this continent.
Where should I go?
What do I need to see?
Because I've been to 45 or 46 countries, if you include the Vatican City, Sam.
If we want to count that as a country, you know, as a technicality.
But my answer actually was Budapest.
I only spent maybe a week in Budapest.
And of all the European capitals and cities I've been to, that one stands out as just being spectacularly gorgeous, overwhelmingly white, wonderful food, affordable.
And that was before I even gave a damn about the politics of Hungary or the sort of conflict between East and West.
And I think, frankly, the noble job that Orban is doing there to keep Hungary Hungarian.
So it's not really summer vacation anymore, but I wanted to data dump that one, my favorite European city that I've ever been to.
And put that in your pipe and smoke it.
No, put that in your itinerary for the future.
I guarantee you.
Budapest is still more Hungarian than some of the other lovely cities.
It's been 20 or more years since I've visited.
Sam, it sounded like you had something there.
And if Levi's got anything in the hopper, we know Rolo's dialing it in, but yeah.
I actually didn't have anything to add right there.
Sorry.
All right.
Levi, anything in the stack before we land this puppy?
Yeah.
Yeah, I just wanted to follow up on the activism thing.
Being on the street and stuff, I think that gone are the days of people mentioning like, oh, conservatives aren't censored on the internet.
The right-wing, you know, right-wing political ideas are you can look it up on the internet and get everything you want.
You know, that was the, that was the talking points that the media was throwing out five years ago.
But they've pushed things so far and they've had to overplay their hand so much that everybody is conscious and aware that there is something being censored out there and the system doesn't want you to see it.
And so the trick when it comes to peaceful legal activism is to do something normal, to do something that the average person would see to be as your legal, lawful right and for the system to overplay their hand, you know, to crack down really hard, you know, this example of the Corderlane, you know, prosecutions.
You got 31 guys trying to, you know, legally, lawfully protest a drag queen story hour, and they are pulled out of their transportation to be, you know, basically goon, you know, walked, perp walked, you know, into the back of a paddy wagon.
Yep.
When you get those sorts of propaganda images, you can show people this is what the system doesn't want you to see.
And these are normal guys.
You know, Joe Schmo down the street could have been one of these guys.
And, you know, if you don't think it's coming for you, it's come for you next.
The more that they grip harder on people, the more people will slip through their fingers.
So it's not do something reckless and get caught.
It's not, you know, do something stupid and get in trouble.
It's do something normal, you know, just like the most normal thing in the world.
And if you, if the system comes down on you for it, then that's your golden opportunity.
Well, yeah, that's like these PTA mothers and stuff like that, where they're being, you know, forcibly removed from a meeting or called terrorists by the so-called president of the United States.
Trad cats too.
FBI was totally right on that one, Sam.
They've hone in on these trad cats communities.
Yeah, Trump talking about that and all the Catholic sphere of podcasts.
They're all riled up about all that.
And I mean, I think we talked about it on the show a little bit before.
Like the funny thing is, like, and the talking point is always like, oh, that's so ridiculous.
They are trying to persecute us.
Look at that.
Our Catholic, my Catholic faith and all this type of thing.
But the very funny thing is that for once in their miserable lives, these leftoids and the FBI, they're actually right.
There is a good, healthy rebellion going on among trad Catholics.
And I wouldn't say that they are prone to violence or anything like that.
But as far as do they represent a real resistance and a real bulwark, yes, they do.
I know, Sam, it was funny.
It made me laugh, actually, because, you know, we always obviously there are confidential informants throughout America, right?
You know, this is again a proto, a proto-neo-Soviet thing.
It's not just limited to white nationalism.
Of course, they did that to Muslim communities too.
But imagine being like a confidential informant inside like a trad cath aftermath chat.
And they're like, oh, man, these guys really don't like fags.
These guys are not fans of pornography and the I got to fire this one off to headquarters right now.
And then somebody was like, somebody typed up a report and was like, we've got a report of radicalism in the traditional Catholic community.
And then they ran with it.
It's just incredible.
I thought that Levi was going to go with the old dichotomy that the system can choose to either control, you know, power or legitimacy or control and living up to their own supposed code of operation, the constitution, and the rest of it.
We all know the answer to that, that the ultimate power is to be don't give a rat's ass.
They just, you know, it's, they paid lip service to the old ways.
And you could argue this goes back many, many decades, possibly a century or more in terms of the Constitution being no hindrance to the operation of government, as Joe Sobran once said.
But they do still have to dance to the music to a certain extent because they're clearly concerned.
They can't completely railroad you.
Several of those Patriot Front guys have been released with prejudice against the prosecutor, I guess, because they misstepped or overstepped in one way or another.
So a lot of those guys got off scot free after perhaps doing jail time.
Others were quote unquote convicted, but had to serve no more time.
So we absolutely salute the men and women who are out there pushing the envelope to put the system to the test.
Do you actually believe in what that Bill of Rights and the rest of it says?
Or is that a mere fig leaf and just a little hurdle to get around right now as we hurdle toward either balkanization, total leftist totalitarianism, or perhaps new opportunities for resurgence and renewal and my favorite idea of cosmotheism coming closer to the creator.
Levi, you've been a wonderful guest.
are a bright, brave young man with a beautiful wife.
We wish you, I'm going to modify Jim from the fatherland and say I wish you many sons, many daughters, and a lot of guns.
It's not as snappy or kitchy, but it's more encompassing.
Yeah, anything you want to plug or leave it where it is, definitely send me any links.
Send me that 9-11 link.
If you want your writing or speeches highlighted, I will.
put those in the show notes.
Thank you.
Yeah, I appreciate you guys having me on.
You know, it's rare for me to actually have the time to air out the things that I'm so passionate about.
I'm down in the trenches.
You know, every day is another day, another flyer, another sticker.
And I just want to lend voice to, you know, hundreds, if not thousands of like-minded people like me that are so dedicated to this cause that, you know, they would love to tell you all about their adventures.
But I'm sure we'll be able to write it down in the history books at some point, just how many people have given time to this movement to make sure that we can continue to exist.
Amen, brother.
Godspeed.
And yeah, come back on sometime.
We'll keep you in the stable as our young motivational speaker, perhaps.
Sam, I sure am glad I didn't quit the show.
Thanks for being a big bully today.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, like, and I mentioned just a little whiff of advice last time.
It was not on the show, but I'll just mention it to the audience.
You know, it sounds like the corniest thing in the world, but you got to count your blessings every day.
And especially if you're having a down moment, you know, and maybe you don't even feel like you want to do it.
But once you start to think about all the great things that you got going for you, it can really turn you around.
So that goes for anybody listening too.
I remember that and I shared it with my wife too, big guy.
Yeah, good.
Rolo, no thanks to you.
What about me, dog?
Totally.
Rolo has got tired balls.
His vrill has been drained.
What about me?
You never asked me how I'm doing.
You get a real bad idea.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't know.
Darrell, you just pick up strange on the corner anytime you like it.
I know, I know how it'd be.
I worked in Camden, New Jersey.
You wake up.
Oh, you made a candy.
I never met him, but that's what I hear.
My mama said.
Yeah.
as long as you get out before noon it's it's like uh it's like the omega man is getting out before noon you know i might have met your your uh your mama because i remember going down a row of row Oh, oh, I was in her house.
Yeah, I knocked on her door.
I went in.
I said, good morning, ma'am.
I'm here to read your gas meter.
And she said, come on in, child.
And I went down in the basement.
It was relatively orderly.
I read that gas meter and then I think she offered me like a biscuit or something.
She was a lovely, lovely black woman, totally sincere here, Darrell, living in like the one row house that was not condemned, living in squalor all around her.
So I don't know if that was your drug money kicking back to mama or if she was just, you know, getting the Gibbs and she handled her finance as well.
But they do exist in the ghetto.
Good black people still holding up the old homestead.
Now, I don't kick up my mama, no drug money.
That be my pimping money.
That makes it better.
Yeah.
Hell yeah.
I didn't really think you're, I didn't think Durrell was going to make a cameo this episode, but I sure am glad.
He heard his name and he just started jumping up and down.
I said, he said D-Rail, not Durrell.
And he was like, no, I heard Durrell.
And I tell him, you hear what you want.
You know, you probably hear with an accent.
And then, you know, he just pulled a gun on me.
And then I just let him have the mic.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Rolo getting some is certainly, I don't know.
I think I like Incel Rolo better than God bless.
I'm not a Groyper.
I, yeah.
But hey, ladies, I know you're listening.
Rolo remains on his own merits at the very top of the Full House eligible bachelor's squad, his current side piece notwithstanding.
Come on.
Yep.
It's my life mission.
Basically, you know, I've been to Charlottesville.
I've raised a family.
I got a homestead in the country.
I need to get Rolo married and with a big, beautiful family and then move him to Appalachia away from Area 51.
Thank you.
Listen to the final storm if you have the wherewithal.
How much did that hurt you to say that?
I'm just trying to think of the right word.
I could feel like your balls dropped.
No, no, no, not at all.
I've listened once or twice.
That's pretty good.
That's not bad.
Well, you know, you rag on me for coming on.
I was like the worst guest you ever had.
I didn't say that.
I said it was the lowest rated episode.
I don't know why.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just not, I'm just not hip anymore.
I'm basically, you know, middle-aged, washed up WN living in the country, belly aching on a show for two hours every week when we get around to it.
And yet Sam has the opposite attitude.
Yeah.
How does that happen?
I don't know.
Yeah, come on.
You're more like Sam.
Maybe it's maybe you just need a new haircut like Sam.
Well, you know what?
I'm lifting.
Now that I can run again, I start lifting.
I started doing my pull-ups and my curls and my kettlebells.
So look out, look out, world.
It's happening.
Maybe.
No promises.
I hate lifting.
I love running, but running gets the juices flowing.
All right.
That's enough.
Thank you, everybody.
Thank you, audience.
Full house episode 166.
That means two more shows to go until the dreaded was recorded on a bittersweet late summer night, August 13th.
It's now August 14th.
The leaves are starting to fall.
The dog is barking.
The hottest is behind us, and the days are growing noticeably shorter, just like our days in this world.
And it's almost back to school.
It's almost too much for a sentimental old softie to handle, but handle it.
We will.
Big thanks to Levi.
Godspeed, big guy with raising a big, healthy family.
I know you will one way or another.
Don't let the shekels get in the way.
Audience, we love you.
Thank you, Sam and Rolo.
Follow us, Telegram, Gab.
And definitely, if you like what you heard, check us out at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
And remember, it's H-A-U-S.
I don't know how many noobs out there are looking for full house, the H-O-U-S-E-Sing, but it's H-A-U-S because we do give a nod to the great German people and language.
And Levi, you are in the DJ booth this week for a close.
You certainly earned it.
What are we going to listen to?
I got to remember exactly which song I sent you, but it's a classic from the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
Battle Hymn of the Republic.
And I'll just let you know that my old man around Christmas time had a Mormon tabernacle choir that he would always play.
And I had no idea what a Mormon was, what a tabernacle was.
I knew what a choir was.
And I just remember thinking, man, those are some angelic pipes on these people.
So enjoy the Battle Hymn of the Republic by the Tabernacle Choir.
And we love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Let's see if Levi's ever listened to the end of the show.
What do we say after we say we'll talk to you next week?
I'm sorry I didn't make it this far.
Another one.
Go ahead, Darrell.
See ya, dawg.
His truth is hearting more.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
Glory God.
Glory, glory, hallelujah.
Glory God, glory.
Hallelujah.
Glory God.
His truth is parting all.
I've singed in the parchment of hands.
They have built in the altar in me.
Wine and drink is righteous sentence.
In the deep and bearing land, his day is more tingling.
This morning.
Oh, my God.
In the beauty of the living, Christ was born across the sea with our glory in his full soul that transfigured you and me as he died to make men holy.
Let us live to make men free.
What God is mighty horror.
Hallelujah.
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