Padraig Martin joins us to discuss his new book "A Walk in the Park: My Charlottesville Story" - which is about a lot more than just those fateful days of August 2017. Plus plenty of laughs and even some heartbreak in the second half. Buy the book here. Bumper: Cherub Rock by the Smashing Pumpkins Break: Heavy Eyes by Zach Bryan Close: Track 2 by Hild Check out Dixie Republic for great merch. And The League of the South and Identity Dixie. Write to: James Alex Fields 22239-084 USP ALLENWOOD U.S. PENITENTIARY P.O. BOX 3000 WHITE DEER, PA 17887 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.
There comes a time in most men's lives when they feel compelled to answer the call, not just to support family or friends, but to run toward the fire for something larger and more dangerous than sacrifice for loved ones.
Countless millions of our ancestors have accordingly signed up for war, revolution, or public dissent.
Yes, the latter sometimes counts as life-threatening when it's directed against an evil regime.
H.L. Mencken's classic line about the temptation to spit on your hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats comes to mind often.
But sometimes those calls we answer are siren songs, white meat grinders, hopeless fantasies, or thankless toils with painfully little progress to show for them.
Our special guest this week has lived an adventurous, if mostly normal life until the indignities of our maddening times prove too much to ignore.
Like so many of us, he then jumped into the fray and at great personal risk, including marching in Charlottesville.
He suffered for his sacrifices, but unlike some, adversity only strengthened his resolve, sharpened his pen, if not his blade.
Don't fret, dear listener.
You're not in for another hour or more of just rehashing a couple days from six years ago in a commie-infested city.
Confident you're in for much more than that.
So, mr producer, hit it, welcome everyone
to full house.
The world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, the whole Biofam and perhaps fatigued dissidents.
It is episode 167, and I am your considerate host, Coach Finstock, determined to give you your money's worth, ha ha, every show for you freeloaders out there.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Mangerian, Rusty, Knickerbocker, Cadias, and Derek for their kind support this week.
And Mangerian asked, news feeds often show video on delay, so it's no surprise that a reporter mentioned Building 7 go down before viewers saw it on the screen.
But the 9-11 truther crowd has yet to explain why the supposed orchestrators would have reporters announce it happened before it happened.
So there you go.
Mangerian is severely allergic to almost all conspiracy theories, and we do appreciate him kicking the tires on whatever we're ever flapping our gums about.
If you'd like to support the show like those fine fellows, please visit us at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
And with that, let's get on to the birth panel.
First up, rumor has it, his notes already run to the length of a Tolstoy novel for the upcoming sex talk show, just two episodes from now.
Heaven help us.
Oh, sorry, I was getting in late.
Is this the sex show?
No, it is decidedly not.
No, I'm just kidding.
No, I'm looking forward to it.
I watched the video of Patrick Martin there.
He was fired.
Absolutely.
And I can't wait to get to him, Sam.
But before we do, what's new in your world or what do you got here right at the top?
Well, you probably saw the pictures gone fishing.
You know, we were gone fishing with the troops of St. George.
That was really nice.
And got a big camp out coming up in the near future.
So, yeah, everything's going good.
Cramming it in.
End of the summer.
Good man.
And I got a fun story or two in that regard for the second half for sure.
All right.
Welcome back.
Welcome back, Sammy Baby.
Please don't add any more notes for the upcoming show of Doom.
And next up, rumor has it that his note prep runs to a grand total of zero pages for the upcoming show, despite his boasting of midnight cardio.
Now, you can draw your own conclusions, listener, whether that means he has zero experience or he doesn't need any notes.
He's lived the experience.
Rolo, welcome back.
It's good to be here.
And back to tradition, I have very little to say, so let's keep it going.
Good man.
Happy to hear it.
Thank you.
All right.
Finally, our very patient and special guest.
He is, among other things, a father, a Marine Corps veteran, an experienced world traveler, a League of the South supporter, a Charlottesville veteran, by now longtime dissident, and the author of the new book, A Walk in the Park, My Charlottesville Story.
Padreg Martin Hardy, welcome to Full House, sir.
Thank you very much for the invitation.
I appreciate it.
Thank you, gentlemen.
Thank you for your service, for writing the book that I have not yet written, and excited to talk to you and get some of your fire, which clearly comes through in the pages.
Before we do that, though, sir, please regale us your ethnicity, your religion, and fatherhood status for those who haven't read the book yet.
Absolutely.
First of all, I'm a white man, primarily of Irish and Scottish descent.
95%.
In fact, I've got my mother was born in Ireland, so I'm 50% off boat for the most part.
I got dual citizenship as a result of that birthright, that is.
I also am a Christian.
Now, I was raised Catholic, but I do not have a Christian home because most of the churches have just outright cucked out.
I have a lot of Christian identitarian beliefs, but not fully.
I'm not a purist in that regard.
As far as being a father, I've got seven children, two boys and five girls.
Holy man.
I didn't know you had that many kids.
Way to go, big guy.
We'll talk fatherhood for sure.
I'm sure you got some great tales of wisdom and perhaps woe, but we got to get through the business first, the white identitarian and movement-related stuff first, and the book, of course.
We'll start here at the top.
I didn't know you wrote the book until about a couple of weeks ago.
I went to buy it.
You said you'd come on the show.
I plowed through it.
Absolutely enjoyable read.
It's not just about Charlottesville, which is important for people to understand.
It's also about your ideological journey, which I mentioned to you was eerily similar to my own with just a couple tweaks.
You had some libertarian priors, you had live and let live leanings, and you had a reverence for the Constitution and civic Americana, essentially.
Most importantly, though, I think, Padreg, is that you have a background that applies to probably the most competent white men in the country, many of whom are with us already or going through those painful lessons now or are about to.
Just in terms of your journey, the highlights or lowlights as they are from you going from a normie, more or less, to an activist and a dissident, please.
Yeah, absolutely.
Well, to begin, you know, I started again as a Marine veteran, raised to love the United States.
Grandma and O'Calla had a wall of heroes where everybody who served was on that wall.
My picture prominently displayed next to my grandpa.
So, I mean, it's the kind of thing where you grow up all pro-American or rah-rah, and the Constitution was sacrosanct.
After school, I wound up working for, I actually was recruited while I was in school, a program called the Student Career Entry Program for government employees.
It was the early 2000s.
They were trying to get a hold of employees, and I was working at an agency, a really weird little agency that worked on nuclear nonproliferation issues and weapons issues as well.
And I kind of expected I would just keep on rolling.
I went to a high-level graduate school, Tufts University, Fletcher School.
I wound up studying Islamic studies as well as strategic studies as well.
Thought it was going to be my career would be either in government or in some kind of government contracting capacity, rose through the ranks, executive at one of the largest contractors in the world.
And again, everything was about America.
But I began seeing how the United States was falling apart in real time, and it was falling apart along a real sharp, not just racial division, but simply a moral division as well.
And I tried to ignore the racial components of that to some extent, making excuses such as poverty and so forth and things along those lines.
But as you watch incidents like Trayvon Martin, or you watch how the news was beginning to skew things like Michael Brown, the rioting that was occurring, the targeting of white men, the targeting of Christians in general, but especially white Christian men, became, it wound up hitting home.
And I began to realize that this was no longer something that could be ignored or avoided, that our people, specifically my people, were under attack in every which way possible.
The post-Dylan Roof era, I think, really was what ripped the band-aid off because you saw almost on cue, every enemy of the white race poured out of the woodwork and began attacking immediately the South and Southern iconography.
But it began, it went into hyperdrive, especially throughout the 2015, 2016 election under Trump.
Now, I'm not a huge fan of Trump for a lot of reasons now, but in 2016, I was.
I especially liked what he had to say.
And the more he said things and the more he was attacked, the more it really brought it home that this was no longer really a fight about Democrat, right, left divides, things along those lines.
This really was a fight over Western civilization and who would be conquered.
And that's really where I eventually found myself kind of thrust into the fight.
And Charlottesville, I think, galvanized all that.
And that's really, I mean, I started, I accidentally tripped in the movement in 2015, going to Legion South, and it just sort of blew from there.
I know.
It was really, you were like, I don't know, not a sheep among wolves, but you just sort of signed up and there you are.
You know, in a very short timeframe, you're involved in, you know, one of the biggest domestic happenings in decades, if not a century.
I got to ask, at some point, did you, you must have thought, you know, this is risky for my career and my income.
Maybe I shouldn't do this.
Or are you such a man that you were like, screw it?
That's the right thing to do.
I'm getting involved.
Sort of in between.
I didn't really think it was going to be risky for my career.
First of all, I still had this strange belief that there was still something called freedom of speech and personal consciousness.
That was stupid on my part, naively.
You know, I was there really to defend a monument.
You know, the speeches themselves were sort of ancillary as far as I was concerned.
But I was there to defend a monument and I felt the historic monument could be defended.
Obviously, I was wrong.
It was a trap.
I mean, everybody could see that now.
So a lot of it was, I mean, the night before, you know, while folks were at the Torchlit March and all that stuff was going on, hell, I was having supper at Morton's of Chicago Steakhouse in Richmond with a bunch of friends of mine who went to school with me at William Mary.
And so I'm there, you know, they were joking at the table.
Hey, did you bring your clan cap with you?
You know, where'd you leave your glory suit?
Good old boys, you know, we're smoking cigars, drinking.
We looked up at the television on Torchlit March on, and I was like, well, that looks pretty cool.
You know, these guys were like, yeah, those look really cool.
So I didn't think anything of it.
Honestly, I didn't.
And, you know, I certainly didn't expect to be doxed or any of that kind of stuff.
It just happened.
Mostly doxed as a result of state police.
And, you know, we'll get to that story too.
One of the many tidbits from the book that I loved is the fact that you were listening to Christmas classics on your drive into Charlottesville that hot and humid August day, which I just said, you know, you're a big guy, and I certainly wouldn't want to be on the other end of a bar fight with you.
So the idea of you listening to Bing Crosby and Silent Knight just tickled me to no end.
And I have to agree, you know, I had a feeling that, and I told the audience, this isn't going to be like trip down memory lane, but we got to do it to a certain extent.
I had a feeling that it was going to be hairy there and it was going to be a little bit risky, but it was like a tractor beam for me.
I was like, yes, I have to go.
If this is still America, I have not just the obligation, but the right to go and, you know, exercise those constitutional rights.
I think Joe Sobron was the one who said the Constitution has proven no obstacle to the operation of the American government.
Going back to the reverence for the Constitution, but I don't want to digress too much.
Why did you book, sir?
What's it really about?
And I also want to compliment you for writing like a Marine.
It is clear, direct, competent, and forceful.
Well, first of all, thank you for the compliment.
The reason why I wrote the book was simple.
We have allowed the left to define narratives.
And that's really been the biggest problem for the dissident right in general, has been that the left has really a bullhorn in controlling most of the media, media mechanisms.
And as a result, our story gets buried as to why we march, why we fight, why we care about our people.
When writing this book, and I wrote another book as well with a number of authors as well, is largely because I want us to begin defining ourselves.
We need to begin defining ourselves.
So hearing all the BS stories about what happened, what truly transpired at UTR, the leftist narratives, et cetera, it just dawned on me that, you know, 20 years from now, there will be folks that are going to be looking for more concrete information as to what or who marched, especially after we win this war.
And they're going to need heroes.
And they're going to need to hear stories about folks who finally stood up and stood down communism and stood down.
Really, when I say communism, I'm talking about the Judeo-Bolshevik system of governance that is creeping around the world like a big, big fire, like a big wildfire, a true wildfire.
And so somebody had to begin writing our story.
And so that's why I decided to write it.
And, you know, there are other folks as well.
I know Ann Wilson Smith wrote Charlottesville Untold, and she interviewed a few folks as well.
But there have been very few folks who have actually recorded their stories from the right.
I think largely because they're afraid of being hunted down.
And we got to stop that.
We got to stop being afraid.
Amen, brother.
Speaking of being afraid, one of my favorite lines from the book was this one.
One odd quirk about doxing is that it ensures you have no other option but to double down on the movement.
There is no exit ramp.
The left will never let it rest.
You cannot leave the movement.
Your network becomes an internal group that reinforces and ensures you remain committed to the cause.
That's powerful stuff.
Now, of course, we know of at least two men who have committed suicide after getting exposed for being at Charlottesville.
We know of a few charlatans who have turned or gone wobbly.
Many more have continued on, soldiered on with their lives.
Many more are living in at least a little bit of fear of getting arrested now for marching in the torchlit march, despite maybe saying nothing and not getting involved in any fisticuffs.
You are one of the ones who soldiered on and you suffered significantly, including serving prison time.
A little bit about stoicism in the face of adversity.
And you can be honest with the audience.
Did you ever go wobbly?
Did you ever think maybe I should go back to not being involved with this stuff?
Or you just powered through?
Just power through.
You know, really is no option.
I've watched, yeah, hey, one of the things is I'm a little bit older than a lot of the folks in the distant right.
I'm 50 years old, not that much older.
I've watched as I've seen folks decide to melt away and they still got hunted down.
And, you know, I've watched as folks have tried to essentially rout out their buddies or do whatever it might be to kind of save themselves and they still got hunted down.
So, one, there's no, there is really no, first of all, no honor into betraying your tribe.
That's number one.
And I do believe their honor is important.
But also, there's no benefit.
You know, if you were, say, a cowardly wimp and decided to betray your tribe and got some benefit out of it, that might be, I don't want to say excusable from a moral perspective, but you can understand it.
You don't even have that.
So you can, if you have an individual who betrays his tribe, his tribe being the fellow white men who march with him, who fight with him, who stand up for their people.
Well, if you betray that tribe, that network, not only do you not have them anymore, you don't have the folks that you just ran over to and said, save me.
And I've seen it.
I mean, I've watched it in real time.
And I think that's one of the issues.
I mean, it's unfortunate about suicide.
It's unfortunate about these other guys who fall apart, but you need to be ready to just stand up and say, okay, well, you know, here's the way the cards have been dealt.
Let's start playing.
Yeah.
And it's a cautionary tale, too.
I mean, guys hear that, you know, if you get dox, there's no going back.
It's true.
A little bit of context on that.
It kind of depends on how big or how bad the dox is.
The more, I'll say, quote unquote, successful or prominent you are.
You know, it depends on your line of work.
It can be more or less harmful, but it really is a scarlet letter that they tattoo on your chest or on your back, and you're never going to wash it off.
You can try to mince words or, you know, weasel word your way out of it or run and hide, but it really will never go away.
And I hope that the real men of the audience will hear that and run toward the fire and not run away from it.
Consequences be damned.
We are going to talk a little bit later about the realities of America and the fact that we live in an evil and still very powerful system, but one that is also lashing out increasingly and making a mockery of itself because it is concerned and it knows that it's creaking and deserves to be.
There's a lot of nuggets in the book.
I don't want to give too many spoilers, but I think there's enough good stuff that we can hit on a couple here.
So some of the highlights of your Charlottesville experience, of course, the book is a walk in the park.
You attended with the League of the South and you were assaulted by filthy items, among other things.
And then you were arrested hours after the rally in almost a comical set of circumstances.
Give us, I guess, whatever highlights you want to deliver from that day, please, sir.
Sure.
It's just right.
I mean, there was certainly, there's no question about it.
There was, there were punches being thrown, being hit.
I want to get in.
So I marched in there, first of all, League of the South.
I was going to be in the front.
One of the folks pointed out that there was a bunch of volunteer females in the back echelon who were many were acting as nurses, essentially.
This was their voluntary role.
And they had committed to help anybody left, right?
It was, again, naivety on steroids, but they were exposed completely.
And there was a bunch of old folks.
In fact, some weird, at one moment that you described in the book as a couple of old people, we never even knew who they were, wanted to just mark in.
And there were these libertarian old people that wanted to protect the monument.
Well, I went in the back end with two other fellas, and we wound up doing triangulating around what we felt to be the softer targets of our group.
And as we marched in, it has this accordion effect.
Of course, the left immediately engaged League of the South.
I did not have a shield.
My arms were too large for the shields.
As we got in there, the accordion effect kind of spread us out, and then we really became a scrum of just fighting our way back into the park.
Well, as soon as we realized everybody was safely into the park, then it was a matter of getting on that line, that shield wall.
And it was a fight.
It was a fight all day.
And I had stuff thrown at me, all kinds of nasty things, what I mean, feminine products that were used and so forth, you know, all kinds of things.
And as the day wore on and eventually we marched out of the park because we were forced to do so.
And again, that was part of the big chaos that occurred.
Eventually got back to the parking lot and lost the keys.
Didn't have the keys at my car.
Had to get into the trunk of the car.
And while trying to break into my own vehicle, the state troopers came along and came up on me and said, hey, what are you doing?
I'm breaking my own car.
One of the funny things that I've seen.
Yeah, no, it's crazy, right?
Well, the funny thing was, you know, so I don't know if I got too much in this book, but there's these two skinny police officers that, so where the parking lot is, is right next to the police station.
And that's where they told us to go park.
Well, the police station had all this parking up top.
And these two, like, I'm talking, you know, Barney Fife looking characters were, came down.
They saw me breaking in.
Now, again, you're right.
I'm a big guy.
I'm six foot three.
I'm almost 300 pounds.
I mean, I was bashing in this car and they stand behind one of these cement pile, like cement things, and they've got their guns drawn on me.
And they call in the state police to say, please come in an army.
And they're like, what are you doing?
Breaking my own car.
Of all the things going on that day, yes.
We got a car break in.
9-1-1.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so, you know, I wound up, you know, I was telling them they said, do you have a weapon on you?
I said, yes, I do.
I've got a pistol on me.
One of the league members had lent it to me just in case it was an issue because he knew what had happened.
And I had it in my pocket.
I said, this is in my pocket.
So, do you have a concealed carry permit?
I said, I do in the state of Virginia.
Well, it turns out that's nullified because I'd moved back to Florida at this point.
So I wound up getting a technicality.
I wound up getting a $500 fine eventually and a two-month suspended sentence after months.
But the problem was, of course, is that by being arrested, the Virginia State Police said there were three prominent members that were arrested of all the white nationalist movement.
And one of them was me.
And it went in all of the Florida news.
The Florida news had it everywhere.
My name was blasted everywhere in newspapers, everywhere else.
Well, I mean, not only was that the case, but of course, I was held for several hours after the fact.
I had a bird's eye, well, not a clear view of everything that was going on in the state troopers' command center until they brought me over to a jail where I was being processed by a magistrate.
And in came a kid who I thought was, he looked like he had just gotten to a DUI.
I felt bad for him.
I thought, who the hell is this kid?
Look preppy to me.
This part of the wilder audience.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was James Fields.
James Fields and I were sitting right next to each other while they were railroading him.
And he looked just stunned.
He just, you know, his face just looked blank.
He rosy cheeked because, again, it flushed all the way.
Sure.
His shirt was torn about quite a bit.
And there were these police officers coming back in and out, asking him questions and telling him, really giving him his statement.
They didn't actually ask for his statement.
They were giving him his statement.
And he just kind of blankly signed paperwork in front of him right in front of right within clear sight of me.
And I was, man, this kid's getting railroaded.
I knew it right there.
I got a probe on this one because that jumped off the page.
Holy cow.
He had a, you know, like you said, a bird's eye view to James Fields getting processed.
Essentially, you said you thought maybe he was like a drunk or a frat boy.
I don't think that James, I don't think James went to hit a local Charlottesville watering hole in between the rally and trying to get the hell out of there.
Do you think he was just in shock of everything and probably incapable of processing what was going on to him?
Yeah, no, no question about it.
I think he now, well, first of all, if I, if, if I know my timing is right, anyway, I don't think he was aware that there was a woman who died in relation to the incident.
Now, I can argue whether or not his he's struck or not.
I don't think he did.
But that said, I don't think he was aware of that at the moment.
All I know is he knew that he had gone down a street crashing with a bunch of people.
And so I think it was just shock.
I think he was just, he had clearly been beaten up.
That was clear as day.
I could see that on, you know, based on his shirt, even the shirt was torn.
The officers were literally putting words in his mouth.
And he just kind of sort of sat there and just kind of nodded yes.
And they would say, would you sign here?
I'd watch him walk into a room.
They'd come back in.
They say, listen, I had to change your statement.
Were you initial here?
And he just kind of initialed.
And again, you did, you did do this on purpose, right?
And that was their asking him.
They're like, you did drive down that road on purpose.
Your intention was to hit these people.
And he just kind of just sat there and kind of nodded in just complete shock.
Oh, man.
Some of our guys have speculated that maybe he was set up or that he was some MK Ultra victim.
I don't usually go down those roads because I think that we have plenty of homegrown genuine lunatics.
Now, obviously, they do get groomed sometimes.
But do you my honest speculation is that he was a scared kid trying to get the hell out of town and who panicked and hit the accelerator.
I've hit the accelerator instead of the gas, not in a car, but in a UTV, et cetera, and at times on a dirt bike.
You don't think that he was a Fed plot to make us look bad?
You think that was a scared kid who panicked?
Not to put words in here.
Yeah, yeah.
They don't need, well, first of all, the feds were going to make us look bad no matter what.
They didn't need any actors to do that.
They had it all set up.
You had Katie Kirk apparently standing there with a bunch of other cameras and everybody else.
So they were all looking to make us look bad.
No matter they didn't need it.
They didn't need him to try to ruin us.
He, I think, he was a scared kid.
And honestly, to be fair, I'm older than him, more experienced than him.
And I come down that road and all of a sudden I got my car being bashed in by a bunch of radical communists after what I just saw in the park.
I probably would have accelerated too.
And I probably would have gunned it even harder.
To be fair, I wouldn't have stopped.
I think he might have crashed me in the back of a car, if I recall how the ultimate video was.
But I just think he was just a scared kid, period.
Absolutely.
I want to remind him.
Didn't he claim that a gun was pointed at him?
And that's why he pushed on the accelerator?
And didn't Dwayne Dixon, didn't Dwayne Dixon claim before the actual trial that he pointed the gun at him?
Yeah, I don't know if James Fields, I don't know if James Fields made that claim, Rolo, but clearly there was that Dwayne Dixon evidence.
I believe Dwayne Dixon made the claim that he pointed the gun at him.
And I thought James Fields said that someone pointed a gun at him.
And then when the lawyer asked in court, they said, I believe to Dwayne Dixon.
Now, when you said you pointed the gun at him, you were just boasting, right?
And he said, yeah, I was just boasting.
I made that up.
And then no further questions.
As far as I, from what I remember, you know, this was a few years ago, but from what I remember, that was what happened is that he said, yeah, that guy pointed a gun at me.
And before the trial, Dwayne Dixon claimed he pointed a gun at him.
And at the trial, they said to him to lead him, you didn't actually do that.
You said that to be posted.
Yeah.
And he said, yep, yep, that's what I did.
I wanted to remind you.
Go ahead, Padre.
Or Sam.
I was going to say, go ahead, Sam.
Sorry about that.
That's all right.
Let us not forget we had Handsome Truth on this show.
And he showed us an article from, what was it, the Jerusalem Post or whatever that talking about James Fields' Jewish background and this and that.
Yeah, I wouldn't, you know, it doesn't surprise me.
I don't know if he's got a Jewish background or not.
Maybe he does.
But I don't, you know, again, a lot of these, I just don't think this guy was an actor of some kind or said, you know, sit out there.
Yeah, I think, I think he just, I just think he happened to be, if he has Jewish blood in him, what it is, I guess Micheling or something.
But, you know, that said, he, I just think he's just scared.
I mean, based on what I saw, and the one thing about it was, you know, I was sitting there.
So I was in a black tank top and cargo pants with my black boots.
He was to my left.
I didn't know what was going to happen to me yet.
I didn't know what they were going to do.
I didn't know if I was going to have to go inside.
I can see straight ahead where two officers with the guard area.
And then through the glass, there's a television that was on.
So everybody's watching the whole stuff happen.
And right through the glass, I had a clear view of it.
You could see a bunch of purple grape apes on the other side of that glass just waiting for the two white boys to walk in.
And I was ready to just start fighting.
I mean, I just kind of figured, okay, well, I guess it's going to be a bad, bad night.
Here we go again.
Yeah, exactly.
You know, and I assumed, well, I was going to have to protect his white boy.
Not really knowing much about him other than, again, I thought he was a DY guy.
I was unaware of what had happened with James Fields at the time because I would have in custody.
So, you know, I heard about some kind of car crash, but I didn't know who it was.
I didn't know what was going on.
I heard some girl died.
You know, I heard that scuttlebut going on in the state trooper thing, but I never knew who he was until after the fact when I left the station.
Public enemy number one, Charlottesville, for sure.
To remind the audience that for a car crash amidst panic, in a parade of violent communists, amidst a state of emergency, with a tangential or incidental death remember there was a lot of questions about whether she had a heart attack or was actually impacted by that car James Fields got something like 400 years plus life.
Uh, and I also want to let the audience know I found this out doing a little bit of homework for this show that earlier this year the FEDS ruled that James Fields commissary, can be seized as part of the judgment of the Jewish law affair of Signs Versus Kessler.
So not only is James Fields completely railroaded, rotting away in some prison for something that at best would be considered a felony and result in maybe five or ten years I don't think he had a prior record but now they're even seizing his commissary to help pay off the millions of dollars fines that they've levied against him for a car crash.
Um yeah, and real quick, sam.
I have written to James before and not gotten a response.
It may have been around the time that he was having medical issues, but I will uh look up wherever he's at currently for the audience to send a letter.
Even if he doesn't write back.
Just send him some good wishes and maybe even I don't know if it makes sense to donate to his commissary.
If the feds are going to seize it, you know, just funnel it right to them.
Uh, but an absolute atrocity and a strong reminder of what we're up against.
Go ahead, sam thanks.
And worse than that it, they were they.
They threatened him with the death penalty.
And if he ever makes an exculpatory statement about the case, saying something like listen I, I was uh out of sorts, I said things that were, I didn't mean, it was an accident, I didn't mean to if he ever tries to clarify or or deny what happened they, they will give him the death penalty again, they'll go for the death penalty.
So you know these this, these people are evil.
Yeah uh Padrega, I wanted to ask the maybe the most important question.
I'm sure you've read the Hefey report.
He was a quote-unquote independent lawyer who conducted the investigation into the events of Charlottesville.
It was a pretty good report, clearly showed that there was a they wanted to have down order to enable violence, which would then enable the state of emergency which would then shut it down.
But it didn't go all the way, or speculate higher order where this all came from the trap.
Uh, I have my theories, but i'm curious about your.
You know what the actual system was doing behind the scenes in the days and hours leading up to Charlottesville that led to such uh, I mean frankly it's, it was just an outrage, as corny as it sounds, that that was uh allowed to happen in the first place.
Yeah, it's clear as day that this was all set up.
That's just.
You know again what I could see.
Now one for those who don't remember, there was a, a CLAN In Glory Suits rally About, maybe about a month before Charlottesville had happened, and nothing had occurred.
I thought it was the week before.
Maybe about it wasn't a week before.
It was probably about maybe three weeks before.
It was mid to late July and August 12th.
So it was around, I wouldn't say it was probably around July 20th or something like that, maybe around that timeframe.
But regardless, it was certainly clear as day that it made it look like the police can hold their own.
These guys were in glory suits.
Anybody who's been around the current iteration of the Klan, that was 99.9% of their feds.
But that said, the Klan itself was there.
They had supposedly there doing a rally.
A bunch of leftists yelled at and screamed at them.
They had a couple of cattle grates up there and they came in, did their protests, and left.
So there was almost a sort of a bait that was there.
Hey, you know, this can be, you know, this, this, you can still come in here and you might get yelled at.
You might have a few things that aren't at you, but otherwise you'll be fine.
So that was part of that.
It was July 10th.
So basically a month before.
Yep.
About a month.
Yeah, exactly.
So that was one part of it.
The other part of it, too, was I was at, eventually I was the S2 of Florida for League of South.
It was number two in command for as far as security is concerned.
I was there with Ike Baker was standing right next to me while Ike Baker was asking police, what do you want us to do?
Where do you want us to go?
What do you want to do?
And the police officer told us, you're to park at that garage.
And you park at that garage.
You can march in from this angle down Market Street and you will be safe.
If you go any other way, if you try any other method, we cannot have your safety.
We cannot protect your safety.
We can't guarantee it.
You will have broken the rules essentially of where you were supposed to march through, but you can go here.
And multiple times, don't engage.
This is Ike Baker was saying this.
Doc Hill was saying this.
You can engage.
Don't engage unless you're engaged.
If somebody hits you, sure, go ahead and defend yourself.
But let's go in there.
Let's march.
Let's look like men.
We're going to march through.
And the police said that they're going to guarantee our safety if we go down Market Street.
But we went down, we kind of come out of that parking lot, get over the sort of hill coming down, and it was clear as day that there was no police presence whatsoever.
I mean, there might have been a couple of them standing around in uniform, but that was about it.
It was all set up.
And even when we were at the park, there was a small battalion-sized riot police on the side standing there ready to do absolutely nothing about the violence until it was time to push us into the Antifa in the scrum that ended the event in the park itself.
So it was a, I think this is all coordinated entirely.
I think it was partly, I think part of it was to try to trap Trump, to be honest, to kind of tie him into a white nationalist rally.
It was part of Terry McAuliffe at the time as a governor.
Big time Democratic opera, not just a governor, but totally tied to the Clintons and the Democrat power machine.
100%.
And so this is all part of it.
It was all part of it.
There were national implications there.
But there was a, again, this was one of, this was going to be a, I think, this was going to be a test run to see how well they can crush other movements that I think they have more fear of, such as those militia movements and so forth, that eventually the J6, which I consider to be the Civnat version of Charlottesville.
Sure, we call it DCville.
Yep.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's exactly what it was.
And so you, so you have these, they're looking to test what can we do?
How far can we push the envelope?
And the complicity was all across the board at every government level, both state, federal, city, you name it.
Yeah.
The safest speculation is that McAuliffe conspired almost certainly with higher-ups, more powerful people than him and just gave the marching orders to Mayor Siner and then down to Chief Thomas to essentially stand down, deliberate negligence to enable violence, to enable the state of emergency, to enable us to get rocked and urined and used tampons thrown at us, among other things.
I got clubbed in the head and all the rest of it.
And yeah, it was a trap.
Even if I suspected a trap at the time, I remember there was tons of surveillance there too, guys with big, expensive cameras up on the roofs, helicopter circling overhead.
We still went and we still served.
And at the risk of sounding like, you know, some battle veteran who won't shut up about it for the rest of his lives, we won't shut up about it for the rest of our lives because it was important.
Would you do it again, Padre?
Serious question.
Yes.
Yeah.
I would.
I wound up going back, not Charlesville, but in Tallahassee.
And as soon as I was off of my two-month suspended sentence, I went right back out to protest.
Now, I've since changed my viewpoints on the effectiveness of street protests.
I don't think they're very effective.
I think there's more effective ways of fighting for our people.
But that said, I'm not going to back down.
I certainly don't regret it.
You know, I regret some of the things that happened.
I wish it had gone differently.
I wish I had kept my job, things like that.
But I had a good network that got me back on my feet quickly.
I think the biggest thing really is, you have to be a man.
If you're going to be, if you're a father, what kind of father can you be if you're not willing to stand up for the very lessons that you teach your sons?
Amen, brother.
Now, I got to ask, did your wife.
Oh, sorry, I might have cut out there.
Sorry, I have to ask at any point, did your wife or any of your kids say, Dad, you big dummy, why'd you go down there and get yourself in such trouble?
As whatever you're comfortable with, Sherry.
Yeah.
I mean, certainly there were a couple of arguments after the fact.
The SPLC called my second eldest daughter and asked her what it was like to have a Nazi father.
SBLC did this in 2007.
That's familiar to me.
Yeah.
Yep.
So apparently they were trying to reach me and they got her number or something like that from Verizon.
That's the only reason why I began using a pseudonym was more because of that.
It had nothing to do with, I was using my open name.
I don't know who I am.
But that said, I did that mostly more to protect her.
They called the school as well.
And they told the school that she may be in danger of her Nazi father, that he may be abusing her and so forth.
I had a sheriff that I had to go and speak to.
I had, you know, it was bad.
I mean, I had a Virginia court that wanted to keep me away from in Loudoun County, wanted to keep me away from my kids.
So, yeah, I mean, it was, but all that said, so there were some tensions as a result of it.
But at the end of the day, again, and I told everybody, listen, I'm doing this for you.
I'm doing this for the family.
I'm doing this for our people.
And you either fight now or you just get conquered and eventually you will be slaves.
And so it's time to fight back.
There's no longer, we don't have the, we don't have the luxury of sitting around and just taking it anymore.
And the lessons of the past six years since then have only 100% reinforced our justification and our cause for going there.
You know, that was the one thing.
Like, if things got better, if Trump actually started to turn the ship around without us, then maybe I'd say, okay, we were a little bit overzealous, but quite the contrary.
We have limited time here, but we got a lot to cover.
I wanted to move on unless there's anything else from the book or from Charlottesville.
I do want to ask before we get too far along, I ordered mine from Amazon like a chump.
Is there a place that you prefer people go to purchase the book?
Yeah, Amazon's fine.
It's probably the fastest and easiest way to do it.
You know, one of the reasons why you kind of have to play with their rules in order to get stuff published and so forth there.
But if somebody does want to buy it as well, I do encourage there is Dixie Republic in Travelers Rest, South Carolina.
They do cover, they have copies.
So Dixie Republic in Travelers Rest, South Carolina, you can look up their website.
They do carry copies of the book.
And, you know, this is Paul and Lynn are dedicated, dead and dead and dedicated to the white race, to southern nationalism.
And so supporting them is just, it just winds up being a great cause.
And they want to hosting a ton of events for anybody that's willing to stand their ground on behalf of their folk.
Sounds good.
I will put that link in the show notes or eternal shame upon my head.
Moving on, Padreg, you are an adopted son of the South in a sense.
I think you've earned your stripes by now, and you travel a lot too.
You talk to a lot of people day to day, both back in the day as well as now.
Where is the essential, you know, our natural constituency is, in my mind, at least, the white working class, you know, maybe middle class, et cetera.
Are you seeing positive signs out there?
Because there's still a lot of frustrating, anti-racist, I'm okay with everything, the same stuff that we threw away as counterproductive years ago.
It's still out there.
But are you optimistic in general impressions on the common man?
I guess.
I'm very optimistic.
I think the biggest issue, well, first of all, the working class, middle-class man is he that middle-class man is already where we are at.
That working class guy has probably been there before we were there.
So that fella is on board because he sees what's going around.
He's living where those pain points.
He doesn't have the luxury of a gated community.
He doesn't have the luxury of being able to be somewhat divorced from the realities of black criminality or even Jewish subversion.
The folks that I start that I'm really beginning to talk to more are folks at the higher ends of the kind of country club set.
Okay.
We've really lost.
We haven't had an officer corps for a long time.
We haven't had that elite level leadership that's needed.
And I'm starting to see that.
You're starting to hear, especially in the South, folks say, enough's enough.
And I think that's where we're really beginning to see a lot of really positiveness coming out of is they're beginning to say the same things I was saying about five, 10 years ago.
Now, I do tell them, listen, guys, don't go grab a tiki torch and start marching down the road now.
Not with that attitude.
Yeah.
Come on.
Let them live a little.
But they're going to run.
The thing is that the common person I hate to put it like that the person that is not radicalized yet like us, they don't have knowledge or access to like the talking points that we have.
You know what I mean.
We're enough steps ahead of them and it's not like our message can come out really too broadly.
So when you talk to these people, it's like you're you're throwing the firebrand in the, you know, in the kindling.
You know they're, they're we.
We have the solutions to the problems, we have the, the logic that brings order to all this insanity, the diagnoses, at least for sure, everybody sees the symptoms and many still don't know where the hell did all this crap crap come from?
Right, and that's that's the, the.
It's so difficult to to be living like that.
Imagine the frustration that such a person is going through, and that's what I say.
Like you know, somebody might wonder, what do we get out of all this?
What we get out of all this is, we're living in reality and there's a certain power that comes from understanding the causes and the effects and where we are and where we're going.
You know, and we're optimistic, I think Patrick, There is optimistic, as we are too.
You know that that there's power in, in knowledge and and it's our enemies will do anything to keep our people from the knowledge.
You know, I agree with you on that.
There is one, one area of hope, though.
When you talk about whether or not folks have access to this information, there was a survey about two weeks ago FOX NEWS had a surprising survey that gen z boys are more and more far right right yeah, that overall, gen z is kind of considered on left of the spectrum.
But obviously when you look at the demographic breakdowns first of all, gen z being the first generation in the United States, it's being that will be where whites are not a majority in the birth pool.
So that's part of that.
But also you have females that are that gravitate far left.
The males are getting more and more right, far right.
I've my experience has always been that if you are a strong enough man, you're going to pull a left-leaning female over to the right.
Otherwise she's just going to be uh, you know, she's going to be some urban cat lady, you know, who dies alone, because many many, many women that we would uh, you know, make the memes about or whatever.
In a lot of ways they they're just saying the things they've been told.
You know what I mean.
They're, these aren't there.
They didn't come up with these conclusions they're, they're just following kind of in the, in the ways, and and the other thing is, like the I i'm always saying this uh, that circumstances drive the directions of things.
You know.
So, like the, the fundamentals of this society have shifted in a way that that favors people coming to us.
You know, and and um the, the circumstances are driving our people to certain conclusions.
I was listening to Chris Cantwell's show and he was, you know, we had him on this show and he was talking about how yeah, his mother tried to raise him with religion, but it didn't take, and he doesn't have a, you know, any kind of belief or faith necessarily, and stuff like that.
But on his show he was talking about like our enemies.
He described them as demonic and and even if, even if you don't believe, you know like, you don't have this explicit, like well laid out thing, that's the only way to describe them.
These, these things are demonic and that's so.
The circumstances are driving our people to these conclusions.
I could talk about religion and maybe people nod off or no, I don't think, but you know what it's, it's it, this is the way it's, it's pushing us to be and that's the way God's people are going to end up.
You know, coming to the truth, I agree with you and I think that's the one thing is again, people gravitate towards strength and conviction.
One of the problems that you, you know with regard to however you feel about Trump in 2016 and so forth, one of the reasons why, like Trump, was because Trump at least came across sounding genuine and you know, you get a lot of wet noodles in the political sphere and milquetoast um politicians and whatnot.
Folks want a leader who has conviction.
They want to hear conviction.
They want you to come up and stand up in front of them and say, I believe this, and here's why now there are some folks that need to be led red pill drips versus a red pill shoved down the throat, you know, um an intravenous needle, so to speak.
One of the biggest threats we have is dispensational Christian uh, Christendom.
Dispensationalism has destroyed Christianity, and so you have to fight that.
You have to attack it from different angles, which they do every day on GAB and things of that nature, but I do think you, you see, looking at it in total.
If you come together with a strong clear, concise message to say, my people deserve to have their own homeland and you are one of my people and you have their.
They have no right to your homeland, they have no right to tear your your, your society down, and you come down and strong, you show, you point this out to them, they'll come your way.
Yeah Padreg, for a long time I looked down on southern nationalism.
Perhaps it was my Yankee priors.
Now i'm an adopted son of Appalachia uh, but it wasn't uh nasty.
I just thought, you know, we're all white, we need to stand together.
It's unnecessary sectarianism.
And then we had uh, Dr Hill on the show.
We had a delightful conversation about that, all in accord.
Ike Baker himself came on the show uh, just a couple weeks ago.
And you are a southern nationalist.
Uh, does that mean you're not a white nationalist?
That's not the most important question here.
Uh, to the southerners listening to this really uh, why should they be a southern nationalist?
And what would you say to all of our men and women who don't happen to find themselves living in Dixie?
So first, i'm a southern nationalist.
First, i'm a white nationalist.
Second, I root for all white societies, all white nations to elevate themselves, and I want the white race to be strong and and prosper.
This Western civilization is ours and it's the only successful civilization that's ever existed.
We've allowed this liberalism, These ideals that tear us apart.
But there was a time when we once conquered under the crofts.
And I'd like to see us come back to some of that, you know, that kind of tradition.
As it pertains to southern nationalism, and this comes from my Irish nationalist roots, which are very strong.
When you have a nate, broader white nationalism, where it fails often is it doesn't take into consideration that there are regional distinctions that make it easier to galvanize groups, organize groups, and work effectively within regions to more to better bring people along to the overall fight for the white cause.
Right.
Southern nationalism, the South has a unique ethnic and historical identity.
The Irish do, the English do, the Poles do, the Germans do.
That doesn't mean I don't want to see, I don't root against English nationalists right now.
And, you know, maybe my family 100 years ago would have, but right now, I'm rooting for those Anglos to fight back and take back their country.
I'm rooting for the guy in Massachusetts to win back his country in his area.
When you break it up in segmentation and yet you cooperate amongst regions, I think that's the best model.
Working within the confines of a culture that works, that understands itself, understands its humor, understands its hysterosity, understands its culture and society.
That's where it's most effective.
And then if somebody from, let's say, for instance, somebody came as a New England, a Yankee nationalist, came down to the South and said, hey, I need help, Patrick.
Sure, man.
Come on.
Let me help you out.
That's like the black arm and the white arm linking up.
Of course, the white arm would be the South and it would be the.
I can make that joke, yeah.
No, bless you.
Yeah.
No, a lot of Irish people in New England, by the way, Patrick.
Oh, I know.
Listen, I went to school there.
I went to school in Boston.
I was 13 years old when I moved from Ocala to New York City.
That was a whole, that was a whole culture shock.
And then moved back.
But yeah, I went to school in Boston.
It was a pretty town.
Yeah, it was.
I got a small apartment in Southeast Myers' last name.
I wound up living in Southeast.
I was commuting to Medford at the time, Tufts University.
So I take the red line straight up and come back to the bars and hang out and talk.
But at the end of the day, the home is in the South.
And again, I root for every one of those guys up there to win.
I want everyone.
I want all those Irish.
I want even those old Anglo-Saxon Yankees to finally wake up and realize, you know what, guys, your skin, your people, you got to protect it.
It matters.
Amen, brother.
Yeah.
So it stands to reason then, Patrick, that Balkanization or regional power development and local activism as opposed to intergalactic Laban's ROM is just a more effective, more grounded, more realistic approach at this point, as opposed to, let's take it all back.
Now, that's a fine objective, ultimately, to reclaim our sovereignty everywhere.
You know, the apex of Western civilization was probably right before World War I and the Victorian era.
I doubt we'll ever see that in our lives, but maybe our kids.
It's just, it's principled and pragmatic the way I see it now.
That's right.
That's exactly right.
All right.
Selfish question.
You spent a lot of time moving on, total digression here.
You spent a lot of time in the Soviet Union, which you, or the former Soviet Union, excuse me, which you reference in the book, but didn't really delve into that.
I'm dying to ask your opinion on Russia.
And regardless of where things are now, which is basically hopeless absent some massive shift in our government policy, are you more or less pro-Russia or optimistic toward it?
In particular, given that you spent a lot of time there, probably know at least a few of the words and met plenty of the people.
Yeah, I am.
I'm very much pro-Russian.
I think one of the challenges for many of the white nationalists here in the United States is that they hear things like the Ukrainian Nazis.
And so your immediate thought is to support them because there's an association or an attempted association, NSTAP, with the Nazi movement in Ukraine and so forth.
That's really not the way.
It's kind of an odd cultural dynamic for the Russians.
They use the term Nazi much like we would use terrorist in a way.
Again, this is a World War II vestige of World War II.
I think right now where the Russians are going is extraordinary.
I worked throughout the Soviet Union, especially in the stands.
In fact, my nickname was the stand man when I was working in the government.
So I was on the ground frequently.
The former Soviet Union is unique in that it's dynamic and that the stands are primarily Turk-speaking countries.
And Turkey looks like it's going to take on a much more aggressive role in managing the affairs of the stands.
Russia, meanwhile, is realigning in a way that the BRICS long term, and there's going to be a lot of challenges within the BRICS.
South Africa is clearly anti-white, and it's definitely going to have, it's not economically viable.
India has challenges.
It's a sick man of BRICS.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
You know, India is pushing back against some of the consolidation they believe is being China-led.
But I think Russia is really positioning itself quite well long term to be able to work with China, to work on the Eurasian plateau as kind of McKinder has been reincarnated, so to speak.
And so you have this, they have a, the only challenge that really Russia is going to find itself.
Now, this is where I find, this is what I think is going to occur, is that Russia has very poor relations for obvious reasons with the rest of Eastern Europe.
The Poles don't like them, the Romanians, et cetera.
I think what's going to ultimately happen is you're going to see the Eastern Europeans break off.
They already began doing this.
They're going to break off.
There's going to be a new security apparatus, perhaps one that's within the NATO framework, but that's unique to Eastern Europe, that's going to try to check Russian power as the West continues to fall apart.
Eastern Europe continues to grow more and more traditionally conservative.
It looks at as a check to Russia.
Meanwhile, the Russians themselves, again, they're positioning themselves quite well.
I think a BRICS currency is going to do very well, especially if it's adopted by a few states with a little more of a, well, you're talking about differences between fiat currency and spec currency.
If it goes special currency, especially if it's tied to commodities, which it seems that's where they're going, which would be smart because as the West is committing suicide, this area, Russia is well positioned to bridge both the East-West divide and be sort of a bulwark against what is a collapsing European identity.
I agree 100%.
And as we were speaking about conspiracies from real conspiracies from Charlottesville to January 6th, the idea that the powers that be are perfectly delighted with white nationalists, national socialists,
and Ukrainian nationalists being bled white in Ukraine to essentially depopulate that country lines up perfectly with their objectives for it all under, of course, a Jewish president, which is too rich and too tragic to ignore, of course.
And I understand where our guys come and I'm not sneering or casting shade, as the kids would say, because I understand.
You know, you've got guys with the ideology and the tattoos and the imagery going to fight for what they think is right.
But from the outside, at least, it certainly looks like they're being deliberately led to slaughter.
Agreed.
I don't root against the Ukrainians.
I have a lot of Ukrainian friends.
The Ukrainian people, it is.
I don't root against them.
The Antonov, the Antonov 124, for those of you who are familiar with that large, beautiful aircraft.
I used to use them all the time working in Ukraine.
I've worked in Ukraine.
It's not the Ukrainian, your average Ukrainian that I'm against anyway.
What I see is a government in Kiev that was clearly a backwater, backstop for the U.S. intelligence community as a whole.
It's been highly disruptive.
The cultural disintegration of areas throughout Eastern Europe that were being led out of organizations based in Kiev, such as the Democratic Institute and so forth, Republican Institute, excuse me.
You have these other entities that were operating there.
I mean, hello, open borders or with Open Society's border or foundation, whatever it was, open societies foundation by George Toros, based in Kiev.
So, I mean, you've got these culturally corrosive groups that are operating there in Kiev.
That Kiev government is clearly the enemy.
It's definitely a Judeo-Bolshevik group.
It's Jewish all the way.
Zelensky is who he is.
He's in power because he is really an American puppet, but he's a Jewish-American puppet.
And what I mean by that is the United States is clearly under occupation by a foreign entity.
And that foreign entity are the Jews.
And so they've taken over so many elements of society and they're just breaking it apart because they're on the precipice to them.
They're on the precipice of victory.
They're on the precipice of taking Western civilization down finally.
This has been a goal of theirs for almost 2,000 years.
And Zelensky is just one of their puppets.
And unfortunately, a lot of guys in Ukraine are getting bled out and they're not going to win that war.
I mean, they're just keep dying on the battlefields while we hand them essentially sticks and stones and promise them in one neighborhood.
For Zelensky's glory, not for their glory.
I think our guys are tragically misled if they think that Ukraine will be better off long term under Western occupation, not to mention the ludicrous idea that it's going to become Nazi moon base Donetsk after the war.
And I have to say, you know, whatever you think of Putin or Russia, the idea that a serious leader of a serious nation would allow all that stuff to happen right under his nose in their soft underbelly for long enough would be simply unacceptable.
And you wouldn't allow it one town over or next door, et cetera.
The same parallel applies.
Padreg Martin, you are an early riser, of course.
So we're not going to keep you here too much longer.
I got one last question for you.
Sam Rolo might have another one, but this is a real sneak attack.
What's your favorite childhood memory?
First thing that comes to mind.
Favorite childhood memory of mine was trying to feed my brother to a gator.
Florida man revealed.
Yeah.
I was five years old.
My brother was three.
There was a big gator in the back, and I had this great idea.
I had a stick, and I was going to use my brother as bait.
And when the gator came to eat my brother, I was going to put a stick in a gator's mouth and catch him like a bunny cartoon.
And so we stood there.
We threw rocks at this gator, this big old gator, threw rocks at him for a while, kicking his, you know, kicking them in the water.
Finally, the gator started coming at us.
And an old man who must have been watching, this guy ran up to us like a spider monkey, grabbed us by the ears, tore us in the back, started whooping my ass, excuse me, and bringing me back to my grandma.
My grandma, who's this little old Irish lady, she's standing there.
She's like, you know, what did he do?
And he says, well, this guy tries to feed his brother a Gator.
And says, you welcome him.
She says, yes, I did.
She's like, good.
I'm going to hit him more.
I'm sure I've got my tan hunt.
But, you know, it is one of my favorite memories because it's just one of those, it's just something you really can't live outside of Florida.
As a father, I'm sweating through the microphone.
That's definitely the best answer we've gotten to that question.
Unfortunately, we're not going to release this show, you sadistic bastard, trying to get your brother eaten by a gator.
Yeah, this is all getting mothballed.
Just kidding, big guy.
The book is a walk in the park.
By the way, credit to Rick Dirtwater for doing a fine job editing.
I don't think I came across a single typo, maybe one, but I certainly didn't circle it.
Really great book about an important thing from a wonderful stand-up guy who really has earned his stripes and more importantly, continues to earn them to this day.
Dreg Martin, last word before we go to the break.
Ladies and gentlemen, I think what you're doing is great.
This is a cumulative movement.
We got to keep on fighting.
And I just appreciate the time that you provided to me.
And God bless all y'all.
And let's just win this.
We got to win it for our people.
We will win this.
Absolutely.
And eventually our children and our grandchildren will be the, will reap the benefits of our fight.
Amen.
Thank you, sir.
God bless you and your family.
I did offer the DJ booth to our esteemed guest, but he declined.
He said none of his music is mass appeal.
I certainly hope he's not one of those thrash metal screaming guys.
So I won't probe.
I won't probe.
So anyway, I went with actually an upbeat happy.
We're really on the country kick these days.
And I really like this artist, Zach Bryan.
He himself is a former sailor.
And this one is called Heavy Eyes.
Remember, we did summertime blues last year around this time.
Another great song.
But I hope you enjoy this.
Please buy Pedreg Martin's book, A Walk in the Park.
And we will, of course, be back for more, a little more lighthearted content in the second half.
We love you, fam.
Two kids in the bike, drunk off their ass, screaming in it all, Bronco.
And I recall what she said that she wanted me dead.
There ain't no grave deep enough.
Remember all the nights we had?
You said it ain't so bad.
Keep those heavy eyes lookin' wrong, Jane Lucas thought he was gonna die.
The stars started falling out of night clouds from a clear midwestern sky.
I recall what she said, screaming that the sky's red, burning to a younger man's mind.
Remember all the days we had, I say it ain't so bad.
Keep those heavy eyes off and kind.
Oh, and I'm old.
How we're a phone.
All the nights we spent out lost.
It's getting cold, but that sun is cresting.
HEAVIER!
The boys and me are walking staggered vision blur.
One thing you'll come to know, the boys back home, live for things like dead man's curve.
I recall what he said.
He'd rather be gone and dead than living like those sad folks in town.
I can't take this soul with me.
Fuck oh, I'm going quickly.
Keep those heavy eyes free and fine.
Oh, and I won't.
I will recall all the nights we spent town long.
It's getting cold, but that sun is cresting.
And heavy eyes ain't born for resting.
Town lost.
It's getting cold, but that sun is cresting.
And heavy eyes ain't born for resting.
Heavy eyes ain't born for resting, except for yours truly, perhaps.
Every day around midday, that's perhaps why I look like a Mexican.
I get the urge for a siesta, but not today, not tonight.
Dear audience, welcome back to Full House episode 167.
Huge salute from us, from Sam, from Rolo, from all of our regulars, from all of our guests and the audience.
It's rare to have a totally stand-up, sacrificing, and also eloquent author on this show.
And it really was enjoyable to read the book and brought back a lot of memories and reminded me that I got to write my story when the time is right as well.
So please do buy it.
And it is DixieRepublic.com, the best place to buy it to make sure your money goes to the right place.
So without further ado, let's do new white life.
First up, congratulations to our pal.
We mentioned one or two shows back.
He did indeed welcome another healthy baby from his beautiful wife recently.
It is their third.
I won't give any more details than that, but way to go, bud.
You finally caught up to me.
And I do hope that you exceed us in due time.
Enjoy the early days, as you know.
Extremely, it's not really stressful with your third, but it's still precious time and it can be stressful time.
Oh, yes.
Well, way to go.
Yep.
Compliments to mom as well.
Little Haywood number two arrived on 8-8.
Exclamation mark.
We got the Hitler baby.
Says Haywood.
It's been a week.
What was an anticipated home birth involved an unplanned hospital trip for mom to help things along without injury to anyone?
And we made it safely through.
See?
We always got to think about the backup, guys.
I know we got a lot of home birth enthusiasts out there.
I don't blame you.
God bless.
But sometimes you got to make that run to the hospital.
Anyway, I'll shut up.
Baby is absolutely perfect.
Mom is stable, recovering, and glad she had a Jewish doctor and not a Negress.
I kid.
It was obviously a competent white man.
That's old Haywood for you.
There's still a bit of a path to recovery, but it looks like it won't be long before she'll be back to fit form feeding the new little one and making me breast milk ice cream.
Good God, this guy's been listening to Sam.
All right.
Oh, God.
Good God, Mr. Producer.
I should have read the email before I decided to read it on the show.
Just kidding.
I did.
I hope you're joking.
Send it to Sam.
Send Sam a little ice cream.
Bunch of creeps.
He also said.
You tried it.
All right.
Oh, anxiety rising.
He says, praise God for our competent birthing team, hospital doctors and family and friends who have helped us focus on keeping mom and baby safe.
Salute.
Big salutes to Haywood wife and family.
Way to go.
Yeah.
Another, another nice note from the audience.
Howdy, I might not be someone to remember, but after some thought, I reckon it would be nice to send at least some encouragement.
We always welcome encouragement.
Thank you, dear correspondent.
And he goes on to write, I met Sam at last year's rack show in Pittsburgh and had the opportunity to speak to him for a little.
This was something of a big deal to me as I am still a big fan of the show.
But at the time, Full House was one of the few things that was helping me stay sane.
I was attending an almost all black school, working full-time hours on top of school, and was just overall not at my best.
Full house helped me get through a lot of that.
Just thought I'd say that since I have since gone on to graduate, gotten a job that pays well more than someone at my age should be getting.
And I'm making plans to move closer to my last.
Bless all y'all's hearts at the show.
I couldn't thank you all enough for all the help you've unintentionally given me.
God bless.
And that's from Clam.
Clam, you're trying to get me misty here?
What a nice note.
Sam, all of you.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, this young fellow is such a treat to get to know and get to talk to.
We enjoy the gig together, slam each other in the pit, and have some good times.
A particularly noble soul, this young fellow was.
He's extraordinarily idealistic, knew what he wanted to do.
He talked about that.
He must have just been graduating high school.
That's how young this guy was.
He might have been 18 or just turning 18 at the time.
And it's knowing people like that that make it where there's no turning back.
You know what I'm saying?
Noble souls like this.
The way I look at it, I've seen too much.
I know too much.
There's nothing that could ever make me turn because I've seen the goodness, the idealism, the purity in a sense, if I could put it that way.
And, you know, and being involved in this show, we've met just like a ton of people like that, which does not make each of them any less remarkable, but there's certain people just make an impression on you and you just hit it off with them.
And it all makes it all worth it and just proves it all over and over again.
I think what we have to do is set Clam up to be Rolo's mentor, frankly.
Clam's got it all figured out.
Yeah.
I had to bust his chops.
I'll bust my own chops here and say that Sam is always the one who gets these glow and glorious kudos.
Meanwhile, I'm toiling here in my little own self-developed salt mines and just totally chopped liver.
Thank God, you know, I've got Sam on the show and Rolo toiling at the control center.
Yeah.
Well, and when you hear stuff like that, it's hard to even reconcile it to reality.
Of course, it's a huge compliment to hear those nice things about myself or about the show.
But, you know, it honestly is a little hard to believe sometimes.
You know, it's hard to, if anyone thinks it's going to our head or anything like that, no, it's almost like you said it about somebody else.
You know, it's, it's hard to wrap your mind around it.
One, one very fine young man, he was telling me the only reason he's in the movement is because of being coach.
I mean, that's like ridiculous to hear something like that, you know.
But I'm glad we can say something or do something that gives people inspiration to go on and be great people in their own right.
Amen.
I certainly hope nobody comes out of the woodwork and says, Yeah, yeah, Sam, you and Coach convinced me to get involved and now my life is ruined.
You know, woe is me.
SOB.
Sorry.
You know, I told you it wasn't going to be easy.
Yeah.
Well, there is that.
Yeah.
It's there's certainly a price to be paid.
But the way I look at it is just like with Pat Patrick Martin there, that the book he write is, that's for us.
That, you know, the good words he said in that little clip that he had or the things that he writes, we're setting up our own parallel society, if you will, or our scene or whatever you want to call it.
Sure.
And, you know, we, yeah, oh, somebody's going to say something bad about you or come after you or something.
That's, we can't control what the enemy is going to do.
That what they're going to do or not do, whatever it is they're going to do.
And we have our own thing, which we make these things for us.
This show is for our people.
The book he wrote, that's for our people.
And the music we hear on the show, those are things for our people.
There's what we can control and what we can work toward.
And then there's the stuff that is completely outside of our control that we can't fall into despair and doom just because it currently is in that state.
And even if it's a pipe dream, let's be honest.
We're not exactly on the cusp of attaining power in any appreciable manner.
Sorry, truth hurts.
But that doesn't mean that you don't stop grinding.
And as we've mentioned many times in the show, things can change dramatically overnight, especially quickly in this day and age.
We got our enemies know that.
And that's why they're so insane about like shutting down what we have to say or banning our accounts or whatever the thing is.
You know, it's you look at them and you say, why are they so crazy?
Why do they feel so threatened?
Because they know it could all change.
Look at how these songs, right?
This Jason Aldean or this other guy, Oliver Anthony, just the slightest thing is a little spark and they go crazy about it.
Yep.
And you can probably count the number of white nationalist jobs out there, serious long-term Employment opportunities where you can feed your family in the double digits, probably at most.
Meanwhile, the enemy has scores and legions to their credit of paid activists out there dedicating their lives to suppressing and frankly destroying us.
It's a badge of honor.
It's a shame on us that we haven't developed the infrastructure yet.
Shame on me in particular.
But also just a recognition that, yes, they are dedicating massive resources.
And I don't know if it's recent or if it was a rehash, but Biden recently said the clip went around again that the intelligence agencies have decided that white supremacist terrorism is the number one threat facing the United States as if internal collapse, inflation, crime, open borders, drug overdoses, rise of other powers, collapse of the military motivation.
Good job, guys.
Really earning your team.
Right.
Well, the terrorism part is not true.
There's no white nationalist terrorism that is any threat to this country or anything, but just our ideas, you know, our very existence or the fact that we represent an alternative to this disgusting society.
Yeah, I guess you could say that's like an existential threat or a philosophical threat to it.
But no, there's nobody that's going to, you know, set off a bomb or something stupid like that.
Yeah.
And well, and hey, you know, the kid that there's no need to sweep this under the rug.
I wasn't planning on addressing it, but it happened.
The kid that shot up a Dollar General store with swastika sort of a little bit imitating.
I think it was Bretton Tarrant with the sort of whiteout, you know, insignias on his gun.
Yeah.
He looks like he was a mentally ill shut-in.
Neighbor speculated that he was dosed on some sort of medication for his mental issues and that he went off of it.
Parents surprised, et cetera.
We don't need to remind the audience that that would be among the dumbest, most counterproductive, wrong things you could do in your life.
Don't do it.
But, you know, this country makes plenty of mentally ill people.
Excuse me.
I'm allergic.
Yes, I'm allergic to going to shoot up a dollar general, clearly.
But I mean, give me a break, the number of black shootings.
I mean, we could do the conservative thing and be like, you know, look at this black guy who just shot off four people and wherever.
And there's no mass outrage about black terrorism.
You know, whether it's motivated or not, you know, how about that for a national security priority?
No, I can't say that.
Right.
Exactly.
We got one more nice piece of email, or I actually don't know where this came from.
I copy-pasted it and which platform it came from.
So apologize to the correspondent.
Maybe safer that I don't name his name or suck.
Anyway, he says, hello, my friend.
Really like the newest show and want you to know that your arguments for having children from the fatherland and early full house are what I used on my wife.
Once my wife got pregnant, I looked up the fatherland, which was recommended from 4chan.
I won't say I wouldn't have had others, but wife was planning on getting birth control after our first.
Now, as Sam said on the show, we're expecting our fifth oldest will be six by the time he or she shows up.
Holy cow, talk about turning them out.
Order of order of the white nation bestowed upon you and wifey in particular, good sir.
And we lost one in the middle.
I credit you and Sam both with our perseverance.
Thank you.
Also, the latest episode was great for my morale as we have a young man who is raised in it and still holds those values.
I've been struggling to find how to keep my kids from buying the lies.
It almost seems like you should raise your kids opposite of how you want them sometimes.
Thanks for another excellent episode, brother.
Thank you, brother.
Well, yeah, that's it.
I mean, we just were at a party with some of our people, and there's a young lady there with her husband, and they have a young child, and the child is very active, and it's difficult because, you know, they just want to break, you know, and it just, it just doesn't come.
And, and, uh, and like I told them, you know, the child does not stay that age and that activity level.
The child grows older and then he will, you know, he will do what's right and everything like that.
But, you know, think of the women that have, okay, they deal with the one and then, you know, then the next one comes and then the next one and the next one.
And you got 20 years of people being, you know, a very, you know, one series of little people coming along.
And you have to embrace it.
Yeah, that's right.
When you have certain expectations, like maybe a single person or an adult that has all kind of prerogatives, sure, yeah, that's those children intrude on all that type of a thing, but that's where the love comes in.
You know, you got to love the challenge and believe in what you're doing.
Yeah.
And that comment from the listener really hit home too, because I realized we haven't done too much of the glorification, the righteous and honest glorification of fatherhood, of having kids, of maybe having one more when you think that you're done, partly because we've done it, but it does need to be reiterated.
So I'm thinking, coming back next episode, we got to go back to the absolute joys.
Of course, there's struggles and pains and heartaches and sleepless nights and all the rest of it.
But good God, we wouldn't have it any other way.
And I'll give you an example before we have a really tough, painful question from an audience member to get to, but it's just perfect in line with what our correspondent wrote.
My little buddy, my shadow for the past few years, my co-pilot, finally went to school on Monday of this week.
And he's our last.
He was not an easy birth.
And that was the determinant that we were done with three.
At the time, we were like, oh, yeah, I want to have more or whatever.
But in hindsight, it was just not worth risking.
Frankly, my wife's health to go for more would have been a little bit self-indulgent regardless.
I have spent a lot of time with him over the past few years.
I've been blessed.
God knows I've given him a little bit of guff on previous episodes.
He's been our most difficult, truculent, challenging child.
Everything from sleep to food to, you know, stubborn independence.
God bless him for that.
But he finally, we had to wake him up with the other kids and give him a ride to the bus stop.
And I was worried that I was going to baw like a baby.
I held it together.
We got the standard picture of all three kids for the first time on the first day of school holding up the fingers for which grade they were entering.
You know, a little, the sun wasn't quite up.
You know, it's always a little bit dusky in the morning on the first day of school here in late August.
And at his age, he has to be led to the bus.
You can't have little munchkins running around, possibly getting hit by traffic.
So I had to hold his hand and lead him up to the bus.
And then he boarded up the steps.
Oh, man.
And I did hold it together mostly because I was worried that he was going to revolt and be like, nah, I'm not doing this.
Screw your bus.
But he didn't.
He had a smile on his face.
He had his little backpack and his fancy first day of school outfit on.
And then after he got on the bus and the bus rolled away, that was what was when I lost it.
So yeah, point being, I wish that I had more little ones coming that I could have that same experience for, you know?
Yeah, well, that's, that's exactly right.
You know, whatever difficulty, because like I say, I observe it firsthand with the, with people with the young children and the, that, those.
That you're going to get past all that and then you'll be looking back on it.
You know what i'm saying and you will not regret it.
You will not regret having those children.
So, have the children.
If you can have them, have them.
And uh uh, you won't be sorry.
I can't believe.
I got choked up there, sam.
What a, what a puss I am.
I wasn't planning on that, I thought I could hold it together, but there you go, fam.
That's the kind of emotion just thinking about a poignant, you know uh, rite of passage with your kids.
And then I told one of our uh, dear local friends about it, the fact that I got choked up as that bus was driving away, and they said oh, it doesn't stop.
They said, you know, when our son comes home from college and then he, you know, goes away again for another semester, it happens again.
I said oh great thanks, that's very comforting.
You know, nothing but a life of heartache, these kids coming and going.
But that's, that's the love joke, you know yeah yeah, that was.
We had a little glitch there, I don't know.
It happened on my end too but uh, you know that that feeling that just shows, shows you the love coming out.
Yeah absolutely yep, the more the merrier.
God bless all of our big families, small families, one and done.
Whatever it is you gotta, you gotta go for it, gotta go for it.
That's right uh, life.
Life is incomplete without it, and if it doesn't work out, it's not the end of the world too.
You know you better, you better damn, contribute to the cause too and and make up for it in other ways.
Obviously we're not going to breed our way out of this.
Obviously you don't want to have more than you can feed or keep safe, although that shouldn't be a primary concern.
But you know you.
Obviously you know, don't?
Well well, i'll stop there before I put my foot in it.
Well, I would say that, like you say, the health concern.
I don't know what is exactly at at uh, stake in in what, the way you described it, but let's just say that somebody somewhere, does have some actual real uh health, health concern.
Yeah, those things you have to uh, you can't foolishly uh charge in in the thing without thinking about that.
Yeah sorry babe, we're gonna put you six feet under just to get another New White Life announcement on full house.
Yeah, don't take that as my wife yeah, as my wife always said, you know, having children is like having your heart beating.
You know, outside your own chest.
You really do, you.
You feel all their, all their glories, all their struggles.
When they're sick, you feel a little bit sick.
When they're happy, you feel happy.
Nothing, nothing like it wouldn't trade it for the world.
That's right.
All right uh, let's move on to a yeah, keeping in the spirit of uh, emotion and the joys and struggles.
Here's One of the struggles.
God bless our audience member who felt confident reaching out to us with this one.
Hello, gentlemen.
I write to you in search of advice on moving on and healing a severe broken heart.
The woman I fell in love with the first time I laid eyes on her, mother of my young daughter and the woman I asked to marry me, she said yes, has left me.
It's been six months now and my broken heart seems to only get worse.
Jim, my music making, or my efforts for our struggle are not filling the void in my heart.
I'm in my early 30s and I need to move on, but how?
I don't feel like dating yet, and the possibility of finding a new woman that approves of my name being known for being an evil Nazi is limited.
You guys are full of the greatest advice a white man in my position seeks.
One of your co-hosts went through a divorce in his 30s.
How did he carry himself in the following months after that?
What I feel to be the biggest betrayal of my life.
Now, on lighter terms, I've been a longtime listener to The Full House.
It's the most family-friendly podcast the world has.
Thank you for it.
Hope I can get some white pill answer, brother.
My life is beyond black pilled right now and starting to become a tar pit.
Now, Sam, of course, you have first up on this.
I just want to add a couple.
I had to answer this guy immediately as opposed to just waiting for whenever we got to the show.
A few additional details.
You know, early 30s.
I did the standard, you know, well, I won't get into my response to him, but he's fit, he's attractive, and he knows how to talk to women.
And he definitely is not interested in getting back with her or mending it.
He said, no, she broke the trust.
She left.
She broke my heart.
I guess it's been six months now.
So he absolutely has to move on and is, by all accounts, young enough, good-looking enough, and skilled enough.
Not that you have to be good-looking or skilled to move on from heartbreak or betrayal, but he's got the chops, I believe, assuming everything that he said is accurate.
But Sam, he called you out again, fan favorite, six months after, I don't know if they're divorced or just separated right now, fill his sales or just give him some straight dope.
With a caveat, I said, look, I know what everybody says.
Go to the gym, get fit, get ripped, go out there, sow your wild oats, have some fun.
That will help the black.
Now, when you're depressed, right?
Like you said, you could give somebody a steak and a beer and possibly even a hottie on their lap, and they might not respond to it.
But this guy seems definitely emotionally mature enough to recognize everything going on.
He said, oh, brother, don't, you know, don't worry.
I'm competent of all that, but he's just in that dark hole.
And God knows the access to the daughter.
I think he said he's going to have access to his daughter, too.
It's not like she took her and ran.
But over to you, Sam.
Well, the first thing I would say is, if you remember the Beatitudes, blessed are those who mourn, they shall be comforted.
So the mourning process is part of what's going to help you.
You know, this is a very sad thing that happened to you.
It's a betrayal of the most personal type.
And so mourning is part of that.
And in mourning, you'll be comforted.
And the weird thing about life is life goes on, you know, whether it's a loved one passes away or a betrayal of a best friend or a wife.
You know, life does go on.
And after a little while, you're going to pick yourself up and dust yourself off and you're going to get back into the fight.
And it does make us a little more jaded.
We want to believe in good things and we want to be idealistic and we want to trust in things.
And this thing that's happened to you, it's an assault on those things for sure.
Life does go on.
And it sounds everything that I'm hearing, it sounds like you have it together.
And as far as if meeting another woman is what needs to happen, that will happen.
You know, that's when you go through something like this, you feel like this is all happening to you.
Like there's something especially wrong.
There's something especially out of whack about you or the circumstance.
It's just so horrible.
This is the worst thing that's ever happened in the history of the world.
But it happens to a million people every single day.
So in that way, you could see that this is just something you can overcome like many people overcome.
If you want to meet a woman, I think Rolo said it very well, which is, you know, a nationalist man stands out against any of the men that women would date.
So definitely put stock in that, believe in that, and things will work out.
And maybe something even better will happen for you as it did for me.
When you're in it, you don't think anything good can come of it.
You know, that's for sure.
You think this is the end.
This is the end of the world or the end of my life or something like that.
But no, things go on.
Things continue.
And you are going to be there and you're going to be the fighter you are.
And you're going to get back in it.
And you're going to do whatever is the thing in your path that needs doing.
Damn right.
And remember, Sam was deep in a dark hole alone on Christmas Eve or Christmas morning thinking, boy, look at me.
What a loser.
And look at him now.
The most beloved member of the full house.
Sam's serious.
I'm overjoyed that people love your commentary so much.
I am not at all crying into my beer or whining.
Another thing I said to this guy is the most beloved.
Rearrange your criteria because baby, they call me.
Well, you know, I was going to ask Rolo, not knowing if the roommate was in, but I'll turn it over to Rolo or Darrell.
You know, word on the street has it that both of you have been through breakups and a little bit of heartbreak and betrayal in your time.
Either of you lads can have it.
No bitch breakup with me.
Not she.
She leaves if I'm talented leave.
That's it.
And just, you know, I get out there, you know.
It's still on the go, Jack.
You get the hell out of here.
I got shit to do today.
You and me.
And play dice with the brothers, but you know, I can't have you being here touching my shit.
You know what I'm saying?
That's one way to look at it.
Yeah.
Don't let the door hit you on the way out, Biach.
I do want to hear from Rolo, too.
But one of the things I told him was revenge is a dish best served cold.
And your ultimate goal, I think, if you have decided.
Is it really?
No, you made that.
Yeah.
No, that is from Star Trek.
Okay.
Well, I still like it.
Quote unquote, an old Klingon proverb.
All right.
Well, you know, I like rap.
I like Darrell.
I like Klingon Proverbs, apparently.
But I said the best way to get you out of this is to set your sights, perhaps not on eternity, but on finding a more attractive, more fertile and kinder and sweeter lady out there and going forward with your life.
Now, I know that probably seems impossible to men who are in the depths of depression after getting effectively abandoned.
But for this guy, put yourself in the shoes of like, imagine a 40-year-old, fat, you know, unattractive guy who gets left.
Look at Tom Woods, for example.
I had no idea.
Tom Woods, he's sort of a libertarian common sense writer, I want to say.
I used to read him a lot more back in the day.
He's done a lot of good work.
Apparently, his wife left him.
Maybe she went crazy.
I don't know if it was ideology related.
And then he went and married a behemoth, a total, and not in an Amazonian sense, but like Big Bertha.
He married Ginny Sack.
Ginny Sack, yeah.
So you know, you don't want to do that.
Go get yourself a fine piece.
And look, if you're, and if you're, you know, if you're a doxed or an outed national socialist, it's not like the women are completely gone from the scene now.
I don't know exactly where he lives or what the deal is or if he needs help with networking, but there's still women around and a newly eligible, fertile, fit Natsock out on the market.
Good God, man.
Shake yourself out of the doldrums.
Yeah, I mean, yeah.
I think that part of it, though, is for the person that's new, newly thrust into these circumstances, they are not even thinking like that.
You know, like going and meeting a new chick and getting with her or having a sexual attraction or that's the furthest thing from there.
You know, it just seems so alien at that point.
And so that's, that's why, you know, the feeling bad, that's, that's part of it.
You know, that's something, something, something tragic did happen.
And so there's, you got to give yourself a little bit of time.
But when you start to see the reality of it, it's, you know, you are holding the winning hand here.
This is, this is going to be, this is going to turn into something good for you eventually.
Maybe you're not at the point of seeing it that way.
But, you know, the cautionary tale is, as I could see, because I've seen the scenario play out a few times is I hate to put it this way, but I got to just say the truth, which is women that get into this later 30s, you know, maybe they have a sense of something, they're losing something maybe, or, you know, time is slipping through their fingers like sand or something.
There's a sense of like in their minds, they have to show that they still have what they think they're losing, you know?
And so I'm just saying that as a way for men who have maybe wives in that timeframe to be sensitive to that and realize that they're feeling those things.
And if it happens to you, like a similar thing happened to me, you know, that is kind of part of it.
So in other words, don't blame yourself.
You know, this is this is something in a way society is doing to women too.
Um, you know, holding things out to them that are not real, anyways.
And to clarify for the audience, uh, and Sam didn't say this, of course, but I just want to make it clear: we're not saying to all the guys out there, you know, don't set a hard cap on 32 or 33.
You know, heaven forbid she's 35 or whatever.
You still got more years there.
They're not necessarily crazy.
And the other thing, too, is we know the guys who married women with a child from a previous marriage or relationship.
Now, as long as that is not a mongrel mulatto, it is not necessarily a deal breaker.
It is suboptimal.
You are getting cucked to a certain extent, and you have to really look closely under the hood to make sure she's not just seeking a sugar daddy to take care of her pre-existing progeny.
But we know too many success stories of guys who have gone that route, and it's been good for the man, the woman, and the pre-existing child for a painful clinical term.
One more thing I wanted to add, not and this is not just for the correspondent, but for the audience too, a sort of life lesson of mine.
When my first girlfriend and I sort of vaguely split up, it was summer after sophomore year, I think, of college, and I knew she was out on the market and I was technically free.
Oh boy, was I in the dumps?
How sad was I that you know the relationship was mostly over and how I bellyached when in hindsight, I should have looked back and said, ah, you know what?
A whole summer free, single, no guilt about possibly going and meeting other women, which I did actually.
That was the rare summer of coach when I temporarily cracked the code.
You know, the hours and the days and the weeks that I bellyached and bemoaned my lowly, sorry state of not being able to keep that relationship alive were stupid, self-indulgent.
And I, I mean, I did fine.
I ended up much better off.
Another life lesson: there are upgrades out there.
Just because you, just because, you know, we always think about breakups in terms of girlfriends or the ones you're hooking up with.
Even if your wife or for the ladies out there, a husband who leaves, you can do better than that.
I know it's hard to contemplate, but you can.
Sam proves it.
Well, yeah.
And, you know, I would say too, don't be a serial boyfriend, serial girlfriend.
You know, you can take a little bit of time and live your life and think about things.
And if that being in a relationship is in the cards for you, it will happen.
I know a guy who's been with the same girl since high school, and it's been well over a decade since then.
And I got tired of telling him to get married, you big dummy, and start a family.
I don't know what changed his mind.
It certainly wasn't mine, but I did get news that he's getting married in the spring.
So good things come to those who wait against eternal patience, never give up hope.
And, you know, I hope that they have kids.
We'll see.
But Rolo, I did, I did seriously want to go to you about overcoming a breakup or a heartache or anything like that and going forward.
Because you got the, you know, I'm not going to put yourself in the correspondent's shoes, but you're fit, you're good looking, and you've more or less cracked the code too.
Well, this is like a little different issue, though, because this isn't just like a breakup.
Because the thing is, how this guy feels is probably how a 15-year-old feels the first time a woman leaves him.
Because you don't understand that there's more women.
So that's why you get so devastated at a young age.
But this is the mother of his children.
So this is like, I can't say anything on this matter because this isn't just like a breakup.
Like this is like a life-changing breakup.
Cause like if I'm with a girl, if I'm with a girl now and there's no child, it's just like, okay, you know, back to the drawing board and move on.
No big deal.
But this, like, there is an actual, like, a physical attachment as well as an emotional one.
Fair enough, Mr. Modesty, but you have been through breakups.
I assume one or two of them have been painful.
Come on, you know, a little psychology or I'm with Darrell on this one.
Like the only breakup that I have has been like, you know, why are you still here?
Okay.
Oh, ice cold, Rolo.
I mean, I, I, I had a breakup went when I was young, but I was just kind of like, eh, because I was, I was so young.
Like, you know, I was sophomore in high school.
I was just like, whatever, you know, keep going.
Look on the bright side, guys who get dumped or have to go through separation or divorce.
All of a sudden, at the stroke of a pen or the sound of tires squealing out of your driveway, you are free.
Every time you go out to a bar or to a meetup or to a party or whatever, you might get lucky with some strains.
Well, there's also the complicating factor.
If you are a person of faith, then you might regard yourself as married, even if there's a legal separation called divorce.
You know, many of us, we do not believe in divorce per se.
And so that is a mitigating factor.
So if a wife leaves a man, he might feel, you know, not as I also felt that I was not free to now go with somebody else.
You know what I'm saying?
So it does get more complicated there.
But even if that's the case, there's a path through there, you know?
And I would say, don't give up no matter what.
Yeah.
And this guy seems resolved that it is over.
The betrayal was too much to ever take her back.
But don't overlook the possibility if you have enough humility and she's not a total battle axe that you can get back together.
I know.
Oh, yeah.
A couple that divorced due to infidelity and they got back together.
Yeah.
You know, presumably.
People get back together all the time.
So that's, don't, don't write it off.
If it is, if it is any kind of possibility, then don't give up on that either.
Fair enough.
All right.
Moving on.
Sammy Baby, it is over to you.
Tales of woe from the new Catholic semi-wastelands, if that's what you want to go with.
Yeah, well, that's my just might be overstating it.
I was just going to, I was irritated and, you know, I got to get it off my chest.
So it was, let's see, the previous Sunday, we weren't on last week, but it was the parable of the Good Samaritan, you know.
And it was that Sunday when those readings are read.
We all know the story of the Good Samaritan.
And so the priest comes on and he launches into, you know, I was disappointed that it was such a very basic bitch take, as we would say, or the, you know,
just taking the thing that I've heard a million times in my life, which is, oh, well, you know, if any of us here are maybe should be confessing that if we are holding hatred for maybe racial hatred or hatred towards the hierarchy of the church or hatred for politicians or hatred for this or that, you know, maybe we need to confess that.
And I just, in my mind, I just said, you know, I've heard this sermon a million times.
I guess a million and one times is not going to kill me.
But here's the sermon I've never heard.
Let's say you are a member of a racial minority and you are holding out hatred against the host population.
And maybe you take advantage of situations based on your hatred.
Maybe you need to go to confession.
I've never heard that sermon, you know, or let's say you are some kind of official in the church or a politician and you are fleecing or taking advantage of the people that you are in charge of.
Maybe you are in sin and should confess.
And, you know, where was that lesson in this sermon?
You know, it's just the same old stupid thing.
These people, they'll preach to us the same message that, and here's the thing.
So the church, the government, every TV show, every magazine, every newspaper article ever written, all is an agreement on this, that I, the white male Christian, I'm the one that needs to make sure I repent and confess my sins.
You know, it's just, it's so tired that it just irritated me freshly.
And Sam, it's also a huge dissuasion.
Even content aside, the quality of the homily every week makes a huge difference, especially for the younger kids in the audience, because I remember being bored to tears.
I wasn't sophisticated enough to pick apart the content, but the parish that I grew up in, St. Luke's in South Jersey, had probably a blabbering, blustering, obese Irish Catholic, Father Fitzsimmons.
And then they had somebody who was on death's doorstep.
You know, he'd be chain smoking out front.
I forget his name.
But then there was a young, handsome, charismatic, well-spoken priest named Father Pete.
And he was the only one who could keep my attention during the homily.
Why?
I don't know if it was, you know, in line with scripture.
I'm sure it was.
Nobody complained about Father Pete.
Everybody loved him.
And I think the women were probably trying to seduce him away from his sacred obligations.
But he, you know, a good priest, even though at that age I had the disinclination to be religious, I would sit up in the pews and listen to what Father Pete said and come away with it with at least some nugget of wisdom or feeling of virtue and reverence for the Bible.
And part of the reason why I am not devout was just a series of terrible priests and, you know, CCD teachers, et cetera.
You got to have, God, I can't imagine, you know, the recruiting challenges that the Catholic Church has to find well-spoken, you know, scripturally pure priests to populate thousands of parishes all over the country.
Talk about, we think we have problems, but yeah, that's a problem too.
Yeah.
Well, where I go is normally very based and there are a lot of good people there.
And we go to the place we go for a very good reason.
It just so happened that this one kind of hit me the wrong way.
And, you know, we go to the traditional Catholic Tridentine Mass.
So it tends to be very good.
You know, it's just in this particular case, even for that priest, I just couldn't help escape the notion that don't you realize you're saying the same stupid bullshit that every every I hear everywhere.
Pablom.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Rolo, do you have frustrations when you, I'm sure you go to church every Sunday, but you're also not Catholic.
Tales of woe from the Rolo Church of No, the last time I went to church, I was very unhappy with what the person was saying.
And I've been looking for a church in the meantime that I feel reflects my values.
Like if I see like a Mexican or like black in a church, you know, I'm not necessarily like, you know, I'm out, can't go there.
But if I see the refugees welcome or the fag flag or anything like that, it's like that you're not a house of God.
You are a house of lies.
Oh, yeah.
I do think that the church is about the community.
It's not like, like, okay, we live in an era where if you want to learn something, it's there, there's never been more information out there.
So like, if I want to learn about God, I don't need to go to church to do it.
So it's about the community.
And if the church is preaching like refugees welcome, Black Lives Matter, fags should watch your children, then the members of that church are going to believe that whether they actually believe it or they're just parroting it because their spiritual leader told them to.
So I cannot have a community with people like that because if I cannot be myself, and that doesn't mean throwing Romans and reenacting my favorite scene from American History X, but if I have to censor every single thing that I say and I have to pretend that the things that are destroying my country and my people is okay,
then that's not a life I can live because at that point I'm bearing false witness.
In the meantime, I'm still on search for a church that is at least like neutral and like just not saying those things.
Sure.
Sam, despite the fact that Rolo is wearing spanks on his wrists provided by the Kim Kardashian store, I believe.
I saw it.
I saw it.
It's like flesh colored.
You want to explain that there, tough guy?
Do I want to explain my compression sleeve?
It's a compression sleeve.
It's spanks.
You're trying to make your wrist look better.
I know what's going on.
It's a compression sleeve.
It doesn't make my wrist look better.
Too much.
Self-indulgence.
Now we have intentional.
I'm not going to make a lot of asses who want to bring attention to it.
Oh, I got under his skin with that one.
Mo wrist.
Mo wrist.
Coach with his knee, Rolo with his wrist.
No, it's not about my wrist.
You come on.
It spanks like Kim Kardashian.
Oh, you know damn well it's not.
You know damn well.
Her line is something else.
I don't know what they're called.
Fleshies or see-throughs.
I don't know.
I'm going, coach, I'm going to choke you.
I've been a little hard on you this episode.
It's been a while.
I've got to get out of my system.
Sam is a saint.
Sam can do no wrong.
Rolo on the other hand.
No good, worthless bottom.
I know.
And to break Kayfabe for the audience, coach is trying to get under my skin because he misses me that much.
And then he thinks that provoking me on a violent reaction would get me to fly out to where he is.
Yeah.
That's you and me fight on the trampoline.
No homo.
I understand.
We'll get some stock and boppers.
It'll be a good time.
At least we know I can run faster than you, especially now that I'm back at the grind.
I have a, I have a fun summer story, but also sort of the bearing false witness and the priest spilling pablum.
I mentioned last show, I think, that my wife has been on a survivor kick because it's streaming for free on whatever platform.
And it really is a spectacular show.
You're going to learn a lot about human psychology, not so much on survivalism, but it's visual crack.
You just get lured into it with the competitions and the backstabbing and the lies and some virtuous players, et cetera.
But there was a contestant, a bearded, chubby, 20-something dude named Zeke, who we were like, oh, he's clearly gay.
You know, he had a little bit of a lisp and he admitted that he was gay to one of the contestants to try to build bonds.
And he was like, oh, yeah, I'm gay too.
And then at one of the tribal councils, I'll be real quick with this.
One of the homos who was trying to save his own ass outed the Zeke, who apparently is at least a Micheling, if not a total Jew, as a tranny.
And I said, oh, my God.
And everybody on the panel was like outraged.
How could you betray his trust?
It was such an awesome display of like the various hierarchies at conflict.
And what was most fascinating is that this like, you know, 50-something gay guy outing the tranny who had the click.
I saw that he had like a scar under his nipple, but he must be on so much testosterone.
You know, he's like, he's hairy.
He's got a beard.
Still talk a little bit like a fag.
I was just like, oh, that's just like a doughy fat guy.
No, it turns out it's a tranny.
The gay guy outed the tranny.
And then everybody turned on the gay guy for outing the tranny.
The gay guy's like apologizing.
He's like, I just thought it was a deception or whatever.
It was just incredible.
And the most despicable thing was, you know, everybody to a man and woman was so supportive of the tranny.
Like, you know, bless you.
That's not, that's not his place to out you.
So you got, you've got homos outing trannies.
I don't know how old this episode was.
Yeah.
It's the current year.
Yeah.
And it was so incredible.
And then, you know, they usually have a vote.
You have to go and put your anonymous vote in the stupid little container.
And then Jeff Propes comes.
And Jeff Propes, who is more or less a likable guy, he just goes, so what I'm seeing is that everybody wants to vote out.
I forget the name of the old homo.
And everybody's like, yes, yes, yes.
And he's like, so we don't even have to vote.
So they just ejected the homo like in unanimity and he walks off in shame.
Talk about, you know, eating your own or the new the varieties of internecine conflict.
If you, yeah, you can't out a homo, but a homo can't apparently can't out a tranny now.
Total wasteland.
Quick work.
Can we just, can we just out?
Can we out them both or can we kick them both off the island or whatever?
Yeah.
And yeah, or can one contestant on the show be like, oh, yes, I actually don't like that you're pretending to be a gay man when in reality, and then our older list was in the room.
He's like, so wait, so this is really a woman who likes men.
So it's basically it's a heterosexual woman who's on testosterone.
And God knows thankfully they didn't get into the details of any genetic mutilation or genital mutilation or enhanced.
Yeah, I think I'm pretty much done with the secondhand watching Survivor now on a much needed palate cleanser.
The summer is, of course, drawing to a close here.
I can still hear the crickets and not the cicadas.
My dad informed me when you hear the at night.
It's not cicadas.
They're during the day.
It's Katie dids that make that sort of metallic sound.
Regardless, summer was drawn to a close, and our good pal Water, who will be listening to this for sure, has been in the area.
He lives a peripatetic sort of lifestyle.
He's mobile, but he's been in the area this summer.
And he's a big outdoors guy, fishing, hiking, etc.
He's like, We got to get out on the river to do some tubing.
I was like, All right, all right, all right.
We stayed up too late.
We got a late start.
It was like 3:30 by the time we put into the river.
He had his little ducky raft with a bottom on it.
I just had an inner tube that I had barely filled up before we went.
And we parked our car way far north and then we drove way far south to float on the south branch of the Potomac River, to be candid.
And we brought no supplies with us.
We, you know, we're two grown fit men.
We were going to be fine.
River clear as day, bald eagles flying overhead, but it's been so dry here.
Holy cow, it was slow going and it was rocky in parts where we had to literally just get up and walk.
There were doldrums, there were fast-running rapids.
We were like, All right, we're making good progress.
I brought my phone and a little Ziploc bag around my head.
I dunk the river unintentionally trying to get my feet right on the tube early on, lost my cheap Walmart sunglasses.
He's like, He's like, you know, he talks like Blue Mauer.
Hey, Coach Abo, you know, we look where we are.
And I look at the GPS, I said, Holy crap, there's no way we're making it to that car, and we were too far to turn back.
So we didn't panic.
We were talking about like, well, it's kind of a full moon tonight.
You know, we could just float.
We could just float it tonight, but the temperature will be going down some of these rocks.
You know, I didn't even bring a paddle.
I was just like, do with my hands like a duck, you know, propelling myself forward, especially when we knew we were going slow.
My hands got so soft in the water that by propelling myself on the rocks, which were not exactly sharp, my hands are all cut to shreds.
Really painful.
Water had his GoPro, and he's like taking footage and like providing commentary.
I'm like, Will you turn that goddamn thing off and get your ass in here?
We got to make it like another six hours.
We were like looking on the map, like places to put in.
And eventually, shame upon us.
Thank God we didn't take the kids.
And it was a conscious decision.
I was like, Look, we don't know how long this is going to take.
The river is probably going to be a little low.
We know it's been dry.
I had to text my wife and say, Honey, I'm really ashamed to say this, but we're going to be need to need to be picked up.
She's like, Where?
I was like, I don't know exactly.
We got about another hour of daylight, and I'm not sure exactly how far we're going to make it.
She's like, Okay, let me know, loser.
Can't you drop a pin on Google Maps?
Oh, yeah.
I mean, I could have told her exactly where we were, but I didn't.
I, you know, I wanted to inconvenience her as little as possible because the kids were at home.
There was school the next day.
So Water and I are having this.
You know, we made Huckleberry Finn and Nigger Jim look like Francis Drake and Magellan, the two of us floating in our little rubber dinghies on the Mississippi.
They were the men.
So, and then I had the brilliant stroke of genius.
I said, Ah, I know somebody else who is currently in the area who does not have kids around who can pick us up.
And I would not be massively inconveniencing my wife and children.
So I called him.
He laughed uproariously when I gave him the situation that we had miscalculated our float time and needed to be bailed out.
We could have made it, but we would have been floating by moonlight on a low, slow moving river.
With basically, oh, we had like, we made it maybe a mile and three hours.
That's how slow it was.
That was, it was wonderful for what it lasted, but we learned, we put in the time, we had a lot of bro time.
It was great fun.
And when we were moving fast, we were like, this is living.
Lots of waterfowl.
I was shocked by how clean the river is.
Were like, could we possibly drink this?
But then we passed one spot where it was like, this is the wastewater effluent from x plant and uh, you know it is treated in accordance with uh, local regulations.
We're like well, we should have drinking water before at that point.
But yeah, it was.
I'm we're glad.
We knew that we were pushing it on timing, didn't know how long it was going to take.
We're glad we did it.
Good god yeah, thank god, we didn't take the kids and if you haven't river floated before, we didn't even bring any cold ones too.
We were just like oh, we're doing it, we're cramming this in.
And the summer and it is august 30th, there's still time left in the summer.
Summer ain't over until yeah yeah three three, four weeks.
Well, that's generous, sam.
I always consider summer over by labor day or the return of school.
School returns early here in West Virginia and labor day ain't here yet.
So technically we still got some summer.
But that was our last hurrah on the south branch of the Potomac river.
Uh, absolutely emasculating and humiliating, just kidding.
No, it was great, caught up, hands aside.
God bless water.
Uh, he's gonna be moseying on to warmer climes here very shortly and i've greatly appreciated his ship over the past few months and that's all I got in the uh, in the tech, Sam Rollo.
Anything else before we?
Uh, you know we got got a couple minutes.
If you want to jam it or if not, we can land this puppy.
Yeah I, I think that's.
Uh says it all.
All right Rollo, do you concur?
Or your magic cards giving you bad juju?
Okay he's, he's shaking his head, that's it.
That's it, guys.
I dare, I dare, declare this was a uh, definitely workmanlike, competent.
I don't know if it's classic, I hope it's classic, but it was a good, full house.
I'm feeling very good and I got more in the tech.
Yeah, if you haven't watched uh, Colonel Mcgregor On Tucker, please do.
If you didn't watch the Trump interview with Tucker or the Republican debate, you don't have to.
Uh yeah, water under the bridge.
There's still a lot of baseball to be played there and what it means.
Charlie Kirk and Jack Pasobiak giving explicitly Pro-white commentary on twitter I found very, very suspiciously interesting.
Uh, almost like they're.
They're activating the old guns from 2015 2016 as uh, this dreaded election comes closer and please do go ahead.
Oh, Rollo comes out of the woodwork with a little bit well on.
On that note, I think it is possible that they are trying to resurrect Trump as kind of like a pressure release valve to give, give the further right a victory, so like they don't go crazy when inevitably, this thing all collapses and when everything collapses.
You know, there's a lot of people out there.
You know I wouldn't do anything and none of my friends would, but their addresses are known and there's a lot of nuts out there and there's a lot of nuts that um like, the government is not looking at because you know they they didn't say uh, a mean word on the internet and crazy people might actually do something.
So I think it is possible that they're trying to to get some sympathy for Trump for this, this arrest thing, and uh, and then they're having people saying that, the 2015 talking points.
So you know like well, I can't vote for Trump, he's racist.
But now like well everyone well, Charlie Kirk, is saying these things.
Maybe, maybe that's not so bad because he's doubled these things, but he still loves black people and Jewish people sure, and you got all the all the brothers out there like To Rell say, I didn't like Trump too much until he got indicted.
Now he's one of Us.
You know they coming after him.
And then you know the, the two front assault white.
Yeah get, get the.
Uh, get the racists back on board and get the blacks overall to Rainbow coalition.
I never got me with him.
I am seeing the inside jail cell and never going beard.
So Trump only gets straight cred if he actually gets put behind bars.
Is that right?
Well I, I mean, it seems like um, he's only they, they only like him if they're also felons that can't vote.
Well, every time he gets indicted, he gets more popular.
Yeah yeah, so I, I think it's possible, because the, the policies aren't going to change.
Whether it's Newsom Desantis or Harris or um Ross Salami or whatever that guy's name is, you're gonna, you're gonna.
You're gonna get the same thing.
Maybe you'll get a tax raise, maybe you'll get a tax cut but like, either way, there's gonna be wars for Israel, there's gonna be more, more Mexicans coming into the country and and and more gibbs for blacks.
That's what you're getting.
It doesn't matter.
But if Trump is there, then it looks like the right got some kind of victory, even though it's just a phone.
Uh, I there.
There will be difference whether it's Biden or Trump, for sure, whether it's a difference that actually matters.
Not the major, not the major issues.
Well, you know the major issues will be on the current trajectory with Biden.
They might be different with Trump.
Uh interestingly, the Heritage Foundation just put out a roadmap for bringing in radicals to a Trump administration.
You know whether it's 50, 50 chances?
Agree that there is more of a chance that Trump flicks over some dominoes out of spite than uh, anyone else.
And yeah Trump, Trump is most likely to do something to help that could help us cynically, not because he believes in anything right, but yeah, it's deck chairs on the Titanic for sure.
Um, but I did want to flag that the Heritage Foundation uh, put out a apparently like a coffee table book uh, with a roadmap to get uh, you know, MOGA radicals or loyalists into government to totally shake things up.
Now, of course, you're a fool if you think that that's definitely about to happen.
Is a MOGA radical?
Is Charlie Kirk?
Yeah, just just a shameless Trump booster.
But it reminded me of of Greatagain.gov, when Trump got elected and he was like he created that website where you could go and apply to join, you know, the federal government, which I did.
I sent a cover letter and my resume and all the reasons why it'd be perfect.
I was already in a good position to do it.
I had donated, I had volunteered, I had campaigned for him and I was ready to rock and roll and it went right into the dustbin.
Were those lessons learned, I don't know.
But I pulled up that letter today and I was like, huh, that was a good letter.
If I was in the uh, you know, staffing a new administration, i'd say that guy at least deserves to come in for an interview.
But it was crickets because they lost the database or it was deleted.
I would not be surprised one bit if uh, if Trump got in and Charlie Kirk became press secretary.
That is what I'm that, that is my prediction for if Trump gets it like not him specifically, but it'll be someone that'll yeah, it'll be someone that look like if you're really like a really really brain dead libtard, which is most of them like oh my gosh, can you believe they put this Nazi in?
It's gonna be something like that and we're like like he put in the biggest loser dork possible yeah, I guess in theory it's possible that these people actually have a come to Jesus or come to this moment that there is really an idea.
We just seen too much from them.
Yeah yeah, the come to Jesus moment comes after, like the the, all the blacks.
I kick their door down and like rape their family members in front of them and laugh and yell, world star, like that's, that's when they have it like.
Or when the Mexicans like do the same thing.
Like how many, how many days are we gonna get like Mexican human trafficker, like arrested?
It just happens like multiple times every day, like that, like only when they're affected by these directly is when they'll have their come to Jesus moment, because they should have had it eight years ago and they didn't, and they're still getting paid.
So they won't get it unless, like who was the guy that just got stabbed?
He got, he was like a, he was someone's like legal aid, not ringing a bell.
I want to say he's from New Hampshire.
Oh yeah, he was a, he was a GOP operative.
He got abbed in the neck and died, but it may have been a family member.
I don't think it was a commie that came into his house, unless that came out later.
Okay well, i'm gonna say like unless, like it's like one of them that happens to then, like they're not having their come to Jesus, then they could have it.
Yeah, I mean, i'm trying to be deliberately less cynical and reflexively negative toward previous very dubious social media suspects if they're saying the right thing, but some of them, like Besobiak and Charlie Kirk, requires way too much suspension of disbelief uh, to get on board uh, but you know, it's like, ah de, just take that that, the whole, take the w thing, versus saying no, this is all gay and an option.
You, you have to because they're they're saying it and it doesn't matter if they don't believe it because they're saying it.
So someone that listens to them will talk and then they'll start talking points.
Yeah yeah, like I don't, I don't care about that, i'm, i'm just strictly saying like, if Trump gets back in, he's going, like there's going to be some like some nerd like that that, like the dummies think, is like an extremist.
Because like they're saying talking points six years too late and from a cynical standpoint.
But yeah, I don't know when, when they, when they do it good, keep doing it.
I don't care, because eventually the right person will see it all.
Right, Sam's got something to do tomorrow.
Before we have a revolt on our hand from our number one brief panelist.
Let's get the hell out of here.
Thank you to everybody who's still riding with us.
I see you there.
I don't actually see you there in the minivan at work, listening wherever the hell you are.
Thank you, I hope you enjoy this one.
Uh, full house episode 167 was recorded on a rainy, humid august 29th from this great, creaking Appalachian gazebo.
It's august 30th 2023.
Well into it, summer.
Rest in peace.
Follow us on telegram GAB fullhouse show at Protonmail.com full-house.com and give Sendgo.com slash fullhouse if you liked what you heard.
And whatever you do after this damn show, you better listen.
Yep, you got it, sam.
Just buy a Walk in the Park from Dixie Republic.com sam over to you.
Coach, what about that closing song?
I was, I was getting there, big guy Pushy, look who's.
He's abusing his number Earlier in the summer, sent me a series of links to tracks, and we don't always see eye to eye.
I did not pop on them at the time or I missed them.
But Sam's got a glorious artist here.
I'll let him characterize her.
And then my homework is to listen to all these tracks after the show and pick the one that I think has the not just what I like best, but what I think the audience will like best.
But Sam, give them a little bit of color about who we're going to close out with this week.
Yeah, this is a very talented young lady.
The title of the CD is Hild H-I-L-D.
It's probably her name or something.
She's Swedish.
And I don't know too much about her, but it's a short disc.
It has four songs on it.
And they're all covers of skinhead tracks of different artists.
But they're very nicely done.
And I think it would appeal to even somebody like Coach.
And I thought they would be nice songs to close the show with or even for break music.
So yeah, definitely check it out.
I won't talk about any of the three songs I think you might pick from, but they're all good.
One of them's not in English, but the other ones are.
And any of them will make a fine closer.
Amen.
Thank you, Sam.
Bless Hild, wherever she is, and however beautiful or homely she may be.
And one of these songs is earmarked for the fall.
And real quick, Sam, do you know if there's another rack or skinhead rock show in the works or coming up?
No spoilers, but nothing really soon.
I hear tale of something coming up.
I'm going to be performing myself at our upcoming camp out.
I've seen that and it's wonderful.
Yes, thank you.
Thank you.
And so, no, I don't have any hot takes for you.
All right, keep us posted.
Sure will.
All right, guys.
Enjoy Hild.
Buy a walk in the park.
Never waver.
And we still love you after all these years in our desultory recording schedule.
And we'll talk to you next week.
We got a lot still in the hopper in terms of great guests and just stuff that we can talk about on our own.