All Episodes
Oct. 29, 2023 - Full Haus
02:16:13
Mountain Men

A change of pace from last week's war room, as we welcome a former Buddhist and leftist turned Christian, National Socialist, and rugged family outdoorsman living in remote Idaho.  In the second half we cover everything from the emerging Israeli invasion of Gaza to the left/white divide to the harsh truth about Elon Musk and a little Halloween culture. Please support the wife and daughter of Jeff Winston here: https://www.givesendgo.com/HiraethFund  Break: Highway Kind by Townes Van Zandt (DJ Hieronymus) Close: A New Beginning by Woflie's Just Fine (DJ Rolo) Go forth and multiply. Subscribe to Surreal Politiks. And follow The Final Storm on Telegram. Support Full Haus here or at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Censorship-free Telegram commentary: https://t.me/prowhitefam2 Telegram channel with ALL shows available for easy download: https://t.me/fullhausshows Gab.com/Fullhaus Odysee for special occasion livestreams and back library in the process of being uploaded. RSS: https://feeds.libsyn.com/275732/rss All shows since Zencast deplatforming: https://fullhaus.libsyn.com/ And of course, feel free to drop us a line with anything on your mind at fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you next week.

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Time Text
If you're remotely familiar with our cause, you know that being a pro-white dissident in America or any other country isn't easy.
System oppression aside, we are vulnerable to the same weaknesses as the left, the establishment right, and the ever-shrinking center all the same.
Narcissistic and greedy opportunists masquerading as leaders, degenerates LARPing as the virtuous, bad actors masquerading as true believers.
And of course, and possibly most harmful of all, those who come to know the score, dabble in our politics and our activism, find one issue or one person with whom they have a problem, and then ghost or get blacklisted, washing their hands of our whole woolly but noble enterprise, essentially throwing the baby out with the bathwater for their own pride or in pure frustration.
On the other hand, anyone who's put in a day's work online or IRL knows down to his DNA that no, we are not crazy, that no, diversity is not our strength, that no, Jews are not God's chosen people, and that no, ours is not a clique of murderous misfits just trolling online, but instead some of the most honest, decent, brave, and brilliant white men and women alive, even if we are still fumbling our way forward to speak the truth,
find kindred comrades, ideally not get personally destroyed for rejecting this pig system, and start to right the ship by raising the next generation right, if nothing else.
At the risk of hyping him up too much, we have just one of those shining examples of our people with us this week, even if he's not a big name content producer, and I'm excited as hell to interview him.
so mr producer hit it
welcome everyone to full house the world's most sincere show for white fathers aspiring ones and the whole bio fam I am, as always, your humble host with perhaps a Son and Rad Halo, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours dedicated to honest exploration of the extremism that Joe Biden warns you about.
Before we meet tonight's birth panel, though, our love and prayers go out to Haraith, her baby girl, and the memory of Jeff Winston.
Jeff was a Charlottesville veteran, expert musician, proud father, and will always be the boss of the White Art Collective.
Jeff passed away this past week.
And if you're listening to this and are able, please honor him and support his wife and daughter at gibsendgo.com slash Haraithfund.
I'll put that link in the show notes.
They did spectacularly meet their goal in almost no time, which was wonderful to see, but show them some more love all the same.
And with that, let's get on to our birth panel.
First up in a future Blues Brothers remake where the utter devastation of the city of Charlottesville is the objective instead of saving some orphanage.
I'm not sure if he would be Dan Aykroyd and I would be John Belushi or vice versa.
Sam, welcome back.
Thanks, Coach.
That was a very creative introduction.
I don't know.
I was just so angry about the Robert E. Lee statue.
It was like right on the top of my head.
Don't even get me started.
Smelting it down.
Yeah, those crickets I'm hearing behind you, though, makes me think of like the battery going bad on a smoke alarm.
I had to tell my wife didn't know the meme about the, what do they call it?
The ceiling bird or the ad bird.
Yeah.
And also I wanted to mention, you know, we want people to sign up for the paywall episode of talking about sex.
And we, so finally we went and signed up for it.
And I'm telling you, we should put like a step-by-step how to do it because this is like it's easier to give my wife a night of thrills than it was to sign up for this for this paywall.
It was kind of complicated.
So I don't know if you did you sign up for it?
Well, yeah, I said you have to like add it to the cart and then you go to the cart and then you put in full house and then you subscribe.
Yeah.
I don't know.
Well, maybe it was maybe it was our boomerang.
Maybe a boomer.
And I wasn't like, she was doing it and I was kind of saying, well, well, try that or did you do that?
And she finally, she, she kind of gave up and then it's like, oh, wait a minute, we're in.
I said, you know, oh my gosh, maybe we should, maybe that's why enough people are not signing up because it's so difficult.
But yeah, it's a little tricky.
But anyways, I just thought I would mention that or to anyone listening, you know, don't let that deter you.
Go sign up for it and play around with it, you know, and you'll make it go.
It's just kind of like a woman.
Yeah, surrealpolitics.com.
Use full house at checkout and bust Sam's balls for how easy it is.
Yeah, I don't want to be mixing the metaphors there, but you know what I mean.
Anyway, anything at the top of your stack here, Sammy Baby, before we get rolling?
No, that was it.
I just wanted to mention that quickly.
Good deal.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
You plug it so I don't have to.
All right, next up.
If migraines and first dates were worth money, he'd be Scrooge McDuck.
Rolo, welcome back.
He's smiling.
Thank you.
That feels good to be back, but my head is killing me.
Is it really?
No, not right now.
No.
No, not right now.
What was the thing that the guys were saying from, there was a big migraine talk, and I knew that you got them sometimes.
I didn't know it was really a problem.
Take drugs was the solution.
Yes, legal, safe, over-the-counter drugs.
Was it silence?
Yeah, mushrooms and marriage ahawana.
No, thank you.
They were just trying to entrap you there.
Back to the monologue.
Anyway, yeah.
Serious.
How do you deal with migraines?
You just take Excedrin like a normal person?
No, I have a prescription for it.
Oh, wow.
It's that bad.
Yeah.
Well, I go, I don't just get a headache.
I go blind and I lose feeling in my extremities and then I get nauseous.
And so what I do is I take medication and then I lie in the dark with an ice pack on my head.
And then I just let it end.
I wouldn't have taken you on as a producer if I knew that you were this adult with a crippling disability.
Seriously, how often does that happen?
It doesn't happen that often.
And it's one of those things.
Like I went to the doctor and I said, what causes it?
And he's like, well, I'll give you a packet.
And then it was like, it was probably like 20 pages of possible things.
And he said, well, the best I can do for you is just make a journal.
And when it happens, just, you know, see if you can cross-reference what are the common causes.
Rollo's headache journal.
Yeah.
Talking to coach seems to be a, yes, a corresponding factor.
Well, I am.
I'm sorry to hear that, buddy.
I knew that you got him.
I didn't look that bad.
Yeah.
All right.
Good on you.
Well, you know, I'm only human after all.
We shall overcome.
So they say.
All right.
Finally, our very special and hopefully not terribly overhyped guest.
I have never met him, but in many communications over the years, have always found him to be wise, kind, decent, honest, mature, confident, and upright.
Maybe he'll prove me wrong this week.
And he ranks very highly on my would like to have a beer with list.
Proud father, mountain man, road warrior, and off-grid homesteader, Hieronymus.
Better late than never.
Welcome to Full House.
Thank you, guys.
It's an honor to be here.
Did I overdo it?
Did I make you feel uncomfortable there?
Oh, no, no.
I liked all the love.
It was great.
Please continue.
All right.
Now, that's all you're getting from me now.
It's all we're ribbing you for the rest of the show.
All right, first timer.
Let us have it.
Your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
Predominantly German and English.
Going back to the 1640s in the United States of America, westward expansion.
We got out here to God's country in 1879 and son of Idaho.
All right, cool.
And your religion and your munchkins.
Saved by the blood of Jesus Christ.
I've got five boys, hers, mine, and ours.
And yeah, happily married for going on 15 years now.
We're going to have our 15th anniversary here coming up shortly.
Good stuff.
Couple teasers for the audience to keep them engaged here in the first half.
Not that I'm worried, but you live off, literally off-grid.
You are not connected into the electrical grid out there in the Great Gem State.
You've been through divorce and remarried and have a blended family.
You've got a son currently in the military, and you are a Pacific Northwest supremacist, as I like to mostly joke.
So we're going to talk about all that this show.
But since the audience has probably, except for our pals, don't know Hieronymus.
Could you tell them you're guessing here?
Maybe I know a little bit about your background, but I'm guessing that you were a more or less mainstream conservative for most of your life growing out there.
Am I wrong?
And how did you end up involved with wild and woolly men like us?
Oh, hell no.
I was a leftist, anarchist, commie hippie.
Whoa.
I come out of the left completely.
It's the duality, man.
No, no, I never was a Republican.
I went from that to being saved, you know, coming to Christianity, getting married the first time.
And then I briefly passed libertarianism, probably at about 100 miles an hour, I like to say.
Found Cantwell.
Okay.
He led me to TDS and here I am.
Now, were you a real foaming at the mouth radical leftist or picturing maybe like a more hippie, you know, live and let live flower power sort of guy?
Not in a gay way, but you know what I mean.
I was a 90s leftist of the kind that's now extinct, an old school leftist, you know, workers' rights, deep ecology, anti-war.
I still am.
I'm still anti-war.
I'm still a deep ecologist, but now I'm a national socialist.
And did you have an epiphany or you blew from leftism through libertarianism to national socialism?
You got to let the audience know the secret sauce.
What happened?
A book, an incident, or just you grew up?
I just grew through it.
I think one progressively moves rightward as they get older, as they get more responsibilities.
They start to look at different components of life and different facets.
They start to start to think that their grandparents probably knew more than they let on when they were younger.
And that the realization hits you that you didn't know everything when you were 20.
And, you know, I've always been cynical of the powers that be.
You know, when I was a leftist, I didn't trust the government and I still don't.
You know, it's just from the other side.
It's merely, I think the depiction of the yin and the yang comes to mind, you know, two sides of the same coin, as it were.
Absolutely.
And were you an atheist?
And how did you come to Christianity, if you don't mind?
No, I wasn't.
I was a Buddhist and I thought Jesus was kind of a cool guy.
I came to Christianity because I lived downtown in an apartment, my urbanite phase.
And there were some black dudes that were old guys that were grilling some meat out there.
It smelled really good.
So I went and checked it out.
And it was the baptism.
Black Hebrew.
I thought you were going to say it was the Black Hebrew Israelites.
I was like, all right.
No, no, they wouldn't have had me, but they were old, nice black gentlemen.
And I came to Christ in that church.
So, yeah, I used to be a member of a black denomination.
Surprises.
I'm glad I asked.
Well, we're glad to have you on board.
And even if I was gilding the lily there with your introduction, that was also 100% sincere, too, if that makes sense.
I'm going to save the off-grid stuff, I think, for last because I don't want to geek out and derail us here too much.
So instead, I'm going to start with, of course, we're going to tape on October 27th.
And it certainly looks like Israel has at least made the initial phase of the invasion happen today, at least bigger, certainly than anything that has happened to date.
And as we all know on the show and in the audience, our guys, perhaps even us sometimes, can gloat a bit at the prospect of, let's say, military misfortunes in the service of the defense of Israel.
And that jumped off the screen when I said, when you said, hold on there, my boy is enlisted.
I don't want that to happen.
And I know that you were opposed to that decision.
So if you don't mind, I know it's personal and I know you weren't happy about it, but tell us a little bit about Junior making that decision over his old man's wishes.
Well, he has the warrior spirit.
He wanted to go out and fight.
And at the time, I think he still had a country that he could adhere to.
He's since become disabused of all of that.
He's become very cynical about the situation.
He's confessed to me many times that I was right.
Every dad likes to hear that.
I know.
But more than that, I don't really want to be right.
I just want him to be home because he's recently married.
He wants to start a family.
He wants to start his life.
And it's just a shame that he has to be in the service of Zog for the next few years, you know?
So, yeah.
I don't want to know what branch he's in or where he is, of course, but are you actively very concerned for his safety or is it more that he's not necessarily likely to be in severe harm's way?
Well, I don't know.
You know, they're ramping up.
They're shaking their drums.
They're doing all their stuff.
So, yeah, you know, what parent isn't concerned for the safety of their kids?
You know, we all are.
So, so, yeah, I think that I would say that I'm doubly concerned for that.
And for parents in the audience, Hieronymus, who may have kids approaching 18 and might be thinking about the military, any lessons learned, you know, things that didn't work or you wish you had said, or in some cases, I guess, you know, your kid is going to be hell-bent on going to join the Warrior Corps, whatever his old man says.
Well, yeah, there's nothing you can do really when a child makes up their mind that they're going to do something.
They're just going to do something.
So they just, at that point, they have to just figure it out for themselves and come to their own terms.
And he has, but it's just a bit too late, you know.
Yeah.
All right.
Send some prayers up to the big man audience for Hieronymus' boy to come home safely and certainly not die for that godforsaken sliver of a security vulnerability on the Mediterranean.
Sam, quick question.
Did any of your kids, this maybe came up years ago, but did any of your kids dabble with the idea of enlisting or you didn't have to worry about that?
No, no.
I think sometimes that's, you know, person is trying to seek their path and then that kind of, they might see some opportunities in that.
My oldest sons, right when they were turning 18, they started working with me in the factory and they kind of got on a track of following to some degree in my footsteps of what I've done.
And, you know, and there were opportunities there.
So the older ones did not absolutely did not think of that.
And kind of the couple in the middle are, they're kind of lost right now.
Like Hieronymus was saying, they're, you know, your children, once they're adults, they're going to do what they're going to do.
You can't really stop them.
And if they want to be partially or unemployed or partially employed, you know, there's a lot of times it would be the best thing in the world for you to tell somebody to do something and they do it, you know, because you know better.
But, you know, sometimes when you're in your young 20s, especially, you kind of wander around what you really want to do or what makes sense.
And this world really doesn't do any justice to guide people the right way.
That's for sure.
Yeah.
I remember my old man, the only time he really intervened and tried to tell me not to do something was when my then girlfriend, now wife and I decided to move in together during college.
And he was really, he thought that was a terrible idea.
I was supposed to focus on college, you know, not play house, as he put it indelicately.
And I just said, sorry, pops, it's happening.
And now he's got three grandkids as a result of that.
So haha, proved him wrong that time.
Old man is not always right.
Hieronymus, back to you.
Oh, Rolo, by the way, he tried to enlist, but they declined him for his migraines.
Yep.
He's shaking his head.
Actually, it was my flat feet.
That too.
That explains a lot.
Let's see.
Hieronymus, you on top of all that stuff, you went through a you converted to Christianity or arrived at Christianity and you got married and then you got divorced and remarried.
Um, that was one thing I wanted to ask about.
We haven't talked spoken about divorce probably in over a year.
Uh, Sam was in the depths of a deep depression when he went through divorce.
Uh, what was it like for you?
I don't necessarily need to know the causes of it or whatnot, but but how'd you deal with it and get back on your feet and essentially start over again?
I listened to a whole lot of Tammy Wynette, you know, R.D. The you know, that good old country song.
No, no, seriously, it sucked.
Um, it was awful.
I had to leave my precious four-year-old little boy, and uh, the wind blew me down in New Mexico.
I started shooting horses down there in the desert, and uh, my life was shattered.
And I signed a stupid document that I would have signed anything that anybody put in front of me because let's just say that that relationship was just an accumulation of uh uh opposites attract, and eventually that's a house of cards that comes down.
You know, when your wife doesn't want what you want, and you're heading in different directions, and you cancel each other out in every possible regard.
So, that's what it was.
You know, she wanted to live in the city, and I didn't.
Yeah, she got her nails done, was an office lady, and I wanted to live in the sticks.
And we thought we could change each other.
You can't change anyone, you know, they are who they are.
So, we have a beautiful son out of that, but um, yeah, it sucked.
Divorce is never good.
How long did it take you to uh get out of the dumps down New Mexico way before you were dating again?
Let's say, oh, I hit the ground running there, man, because I was like, Well, hey, you know, here we go.
So, um, I took my time getting back into a serious relationship, but you know, it didn't really take me that long.
Uh, a man needs a woman, you know, we're always looking, sure.
And uh, and you eventually, oh, go ahead, Sam, please.
Like they say, if you if you fall off the horse, you got to just get right back on indeed.
A little bit of liberty, at least, is a silver lining, I guess, when you go through divorce to go out and play the field.
And I believe that one of our experts on divorce said, Yeah, go out there and play the field, uh, to put it politely.
Uh, and then I learned also, I didn't know all these details about you, Heronimus, but you remarried a woman who, heaven forbid, had children of her own, which to be fair on the show, we have never said never on that front because we just know of too many success stories where men remarried a woman who had a child from a previous relationship or marriage and went on to have many more.
And as I understand it, you guys certainly did.
We did, and uh, she's the love of my life.
She's the best thing that ever happened to me.
She's my best friend, my partner, my soulmate, if you will.
Yeah, I'll go there.
She's brilliant.
Uh, my only regret is that these other people happened before we happened, and we didn't have all those years when we were younger before we met.
You know, sure, yeah, she wants the same things out of life that I want to, uh, as well.
She's she's a wonderful Christian, ex-granola, just like me, born the same year as me, wants to live on a mountain in Idaho with goats and chickens and all that stuff, just like me.
And yeah.
And I'll go full Andy Jackson on anybody that impugns her honor.
I'll tell you that right now.
There you go.
Good man.
Yeah.
Any notes you want to share about how you met?
Oh, yeah.
We met the new fashioned way, you know.
I think it was Google Personals.
Yeah.
There you go.
Yeah.
It works sometimes, you know?
Yeah, absolutely.
I hear what a dismal swamp it is these days for guys, you know, the Tinder and the whole thing.
But, you know, for us, it worked.
We, we, we didn't even have profiles on there, but we, we liked what the other person had wrote and we went around that somehow.
I think we like Facebook friended each other or something.
And then we like started talking and we talked for hours and hours.
And I think that's the bedrock of a good.
I'll go ahead and say it here.
I proposed to her the first day I met her because I knew that I knew what I knew.
Fools rush in.
Apparently, you.
Fools rush in.
Yeah.
My brother, everybody told me, my friends, oh, what are you doing?
You're on the rebound.
How could you?
You know, that's stupid.
Yeah.
I just knew.
I knew in the core of my being.
I've never been more sure about anything since I found Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior.
Did the fact that she, did the fact that she had children at all bother you at the time?
Oh, I like kids.
Yeah.
So, you know, whatever I have to do to marry this woman.
All right.
Tell us a little more about, you know, uniting the clans, as it were.
Were her kids leery of you and giving you the stink eye?
Were you real mean to them and nice to your own?
I'm joking, but how tough was it?
They are what they are.
They're individuals.
They're people.
They have their take on things.
One has to try to be compassionate about, you know, new guy that's coming in.
And I had my kid.
And so, yeah, it was difficult.
I'm not going to sugarcoat it.
It was a whole lot of mistakes on my part, folly.
But there was good things too.
And through it all, we just kept showing up.
I think that's just the nature of it.
You just keep showing up for the work and you try to do better each time than you did the day before.
You don't always make it, but you know, you keep showing up.
Keep clocking in.
Good stuff, man.
Inspirational tale for sure.
And I'm happy for you and looking forward to that first beer now even more.
You are.
Voodoo Ranger tonight, coach.
I've got the Voodoo Ranger by the Voodoo Ranger.
That's a heavy IP.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thick one.
Sammy Babies, of course, on his three Floyds.
I am with my working man's non-homosexual Miller Light here.
And Rolo's got one of those 80s, you know, hand flexors there.
He doesn't drink alcohol.
All right.
We, you know, we've been doing a little bit of a tour de America of North America in terms of where guys may want to consider moving.
Things are just getting crazier and hotter as we are still possibly looking at the prospect of at least a major regional war, if not the big one coming down the pike.
So we still advise, encourage our audience to get to as white, red, and rural as possible within your comfort level before it's too late.
The rush kicked off during COVID is continuing now.
I looked at some real estate stuff around here.
Of course, talked about our friend who couldn't find a place in West Virginia and had to go down look Arkansas away.
But you have always looked down upon us, call us maybe little mountain men here in the mountain mama of West Virginia from up atop your perch out there in, I guess, the Rockies of Idaho.
Why is that place so great?
Aside from the natural beauty, but go ahead and rap on your beloved homeland for a little bit.
It's what America was.
You drive along the Loxaw on Highway 12 and you realize that it's just one season away from reverting to what Lewis and Clark saw.
The river is still the same.
The cedars, the firs, all the animals are still there.
You could still drink the water if you wanted to.
You know, it just one calamity away in that narrow sliver of civilization would dissolve and it would return to what it is.
It's paradise.
It's beautiful.
The sky is clean.
You can grow things here.
It's just God's country.
It just is.
And if anyone was here and saw it, they would concur.
Sorry, I'm back cut out there for a second.
Do you think that it is, it seems a little imposing to me, just the scale of everything and the distance from, you know, major airports and cities and stuff like that?
Like for me, Appalachia is comfortable coming from the mid-Atlantic.
And I don't know what Sam would pick, but it's just, it just seems imposing and like the big leagues of moving to the country as opposed to some of the other parts of America, frankly.
That's precisely what I like about it.
I like that there isn't any Walmart.
I like that there isn't any big box stores.
I like the lack of diversity.
I like the lack of civilization.
I'm an adherent of Uncle Ted, you know, and that's where he was right next door in Montana.
And, you know, they're the same as we are.
And it's just a remnant here of like not messed with country, you know, that you can still work with.
You can still get wood out of it.
You can still hunt here.
You can still fish here.
It's wonderful.
And I wouldn't trade that for any Costco membership or modern convenience or asphalt, whatever.
Yeah, we're going to get into how you make that life work out there.
How about in terms of California left coast exiles?
Are you starting even where you are out in the real boonies, seeing any influx of undesirables?
I know it's happening in Idaho.
Yeah, it's happening in Idaho in general.
Locusts, well, isn't there something locust-like about Americans in general?
I mean, we just move anywhere and suck all the resources out and move on and do it again, repeat rents.
Well, it's happening here just like anywhere else.
People have ruined their state and it's tantamount to taking a dump in your living room and then insisting on taking your neighbor's living room and doing the same thing.
Right.
Are you involved locally?
And I don't mean this as a challenge as if you should be, but are you really isolated up there?
You know, school boards, municipal stuff, or is it really, you know, out on your own?
Oh, no.
We have a, our little town is nearby, and my wife works there, and I work full-time too.
And I'm on the volunteer fire fighting force.
And I get along fairly well with all my neighbors.
And yeah, it's not like Alaska tier, you know, by any means.
I think they would be the true big leagues that you're thinking of.
Okay.
Yep.
Fair enough for the Alaska Bros.
I would say fairly that the Northern Rockies are probably an intermediate between the two extremes.
Shoe being the first.
And we know that people up there have an practically inborn individualistic or libertarian mindset to a certain extent.
That might not be the right word.
Have you noticed any shift?
Of course, we know that back in the 80s with the order, Robert Matthews, the Pacific Northwest was a hotbed of white racial advocates or separatists.
Have you seen any change?
I don't know how long you've been up there.
I know you were born there and then moved away for a while.
Has it changed for the better in terms of, frankly, just white racial awareness as opposed to stubborn individualism?
No, I would say that stubborn individualism is our benchmark.
And it seems like the refugees that we do get seem to be Trump tier, conservative, booma, MAGA people.
We don't really get a whole lot of white nationalism here that I've seen anyway, at least in my area.
I'm not sure that's true of the rest of the state.
But yeah, everyone here, you know, follows Q conspiracies and Trump's going to save us all.
And they tend to be very good people.
I love my people.
I do.
But it's maddening in how myopic and how deluded they are about the Fox News takes that they imbue and the kind of media that they consume.
It's all very predictable.
And every time I talk to somebody, I kind of try to feel them out.
And I'm really disappointed.
I pretty much can peg somebody within five minutes of listening to them talk about where they're at on the spectrum.
So not too much luck in dragging them our way, kind of stuck in their ways.
Well, it's strange.
On an individual level, here and there, you do see some people are starting to notice certain things coming down the pike that are unwanted.
And it's weird just when you think that you're starting, you can wash your hands and you can give up on these people as, oh, they'll always be Republicans.
They'll surprise you.
They'll tell you things that are kind of out of left field.
People are starting to not really believe everything that they hear anymore.
And they're getting more cynical, which is good.
They're not just rushing in like they did, say, 10, 15 years ago, Lee Greenwood style, you know, to just support the latest thing, you know, whatever.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's dig into life out there for life out there.
That's some.
Can't think of the brand that has that as its slogan.
But we'll start with the most fascinating part, which I did not know that you do not have a hookup to the electrical grid, which surprised me.
Yeah.
And yet here we are talking across the continent and beaming out to thousands of ears tomorrow, as it will be.
Was that a choice?
Could you get it if you wanted it?
Why would I want it?
Why not?
There's no reason to have it.
I have all the power I need with my solar and my generators.
And if I need to run power tools or watch a movie, I can have that.
So why Go through the expense of hooking up to the grid, which is inordinately expensive when to make that initial connection.
Yeah, I've got a tiny little house and a lot of land, and I like it that way.
I don't need a big house with a tiny lot with my neighbors right next door that I could touch.
You know, all right, you're flexing there, humble mountain man.
I like it.
Uh, so I assume that you have battery storage because if you just have solar panels, they're not doing you any good at night.
Yeah, we got a cobbled together kind of battery bank, and we charge them with generators or or and/or our solar panels and kind of go back and forth.
And we use power pack.
Uh, we've got an inverter/slash generator that we can plug in and have our electric light.
And then, when it gets dead, we will fire up, as it were, you know, one of our generators and charge that.
And our hot water system is on demand and it's charged by the solar panels.
So, the battery is always being kind of trickle charged.
Okay.
And then all of our water comes down the mountain from springs, and we just have them tapped in, and it just gravity feeds into our plumbing.
And we've got a claw foot bathtub and wonderful hot water, and that's the true mark of civilization.
That's all I need out of civilization is hot water.
What's a clothet bathtub?
Hadn't heard that one before?
A claw foot bathtub is the old deep bath.
Yeah, oh, claw foot.
I got you.
Yeah, claw foot bathtub.
Yeah, yeah, it's just a big old-time uh cast iron bathtub.
I got you.
Sorry, maybe that was a prepper thing.
Um, go ahead, Sam, if you had one.
I was just going to say that certainly is a mark of civilization.
There's nothing more luxurious than the big claw foot bathtub.
I also have one, and uh, especially come a cold winter day where you really need to warm up, fill that thing up full of hot water.
Claw foot bathtub supremacy, my dude.
That's right.
Lots of supremacy on this show.
Hieronymus is, you know, he's casually flexing on all you gridders.
They all got grids for being connected to the electric grid.
All right.
So your refrigerator.
Solar panels are doing the job during the day.
I assume they're doing a little bit less on cloudy, rainy days, which I'm sure you get plenty of.
But at night, so when those go down, you're drawing off to batteries that have been sock and juice away from the solar panels.
How do you like, does the inverter generator is it on standby and it kicks in when the batteries go dead?
Talk us through a little bit because obviously, I think I said this this last show, or I've been thinking it.
The real load star for a prepper is if the power goes out for a real long time, no electricity, you know, most people are going to be in for a world of pain or worse, at least severe discomfort.
So how you transition between the live solar going right into your wires to then back over to the batteries and then over to the generator, how you know what you have to do, what kind of generator is it?
Do you just have to buy a ton of gasoline or is it propane?
You know, some of those details, please.
Well, we had a propane generator.
It died.
We have, I think, four gas generators now.
We have one enormous propane one that I haven't even used yet.
It's like a power plant.
It takes a forklift to move it, but it's out in my yard.
And then we have, I guess, three other gas-powered, but we don't run our fridge off of our generators.
We have a big rural propane tank, and it's filled once a year, and it lasts about a year.
And it runs our fridge and freezer.
So that's how we do that.
We just, yeah.
So we are, you know, we are a little bit dependent on stuff.
Like the propane truck has to come down here and fill our tank up, you know?
How often?
Well, about once a year.
That's not all right.
That's not bad.
And how big a propane tank is it?
Oh, I don't know.
Big old white propane tank, you know, whatever it is.
Little baby submarine up there.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And they come up our road and they always complain about how crappy our road is because it is indeed very bad.
So if anybody ever needed heavy equipment, it's us.
We dream about getting a front end loader backhoe and we will eventually.
That's on the on the hit list here.
Gotcha.
How is the winter there in those conditions?
Wood cold stove, I presume in the house or you have one of those outdoor things that you pipe it in.
Oh, no, we only heat with wood.
That's exclusive.
We have our wood stove and it keeps everything very comfortable in our little house.
Well, you mentioned the roads are bad.
How does that work out if there's snow or ice?
Well, you just deal with it.
You chain up every day.
You hike in when you need to.
You know, you get really good at driving in the snow and the ice.
You have four-wheel drives on everything.
You know, you just kind of work around it.
Right.
You have the propane piped in for cooking on a range or is that electric?
Yep.
Yeah, we have we have a propane stove and then we also have a an old antique wood cook stove too.
That, well, it's it's a restoration project, but it's out here on my porch eyeball on me, right?
Telling me that it wants to come home and be, you know, have ice cooking with it once more.
It was built around 1912 or something like that.
Beautiful old Majestic wood built by Majestic was the company.
I doubt they're even in existence anymore.
Right.
Did Wifey's kids revolt at all at moving to the sticks with their new dad?
Or were they already on the reservation?
And seriously, do the kids ever complain about not having this or that?
Well, honestly, most of them were older and out of the house.
We only have our one son together.
He's 13.
And so it's just the three of us right now.
They're already grown and out of the house.
And yeah, that was in previous times.
We've lived here on our mountain, oh, oh, I want to say five years now.
Yeah.
And the spring water is that pouring into a cistern or how does the water work for the house?
Yeah, it comes out of the mountain in a pipe and it runs across our dirt road in another pipe that's buried.
And then that pipe goes into a big catchment, you know, holding tank.
And then from there, it just gravity feeds into our plumbing because we live on a mountain slope.
So gravity works in our favor.
We don't have to use a pump.
We do have one pump for the hot water supply and that pumps it into our home into the on-demand hot water heater.
What's the toughest situation you've faced since you've been living there five years?
Massive storm or total deprivation of one type or another?
Anything like that?
Well, no, that's just all par for the course.
I would say just holding on to my land, like paying it off, you know, dealing with market capitalism when I wish it was the homestead and kariak still and I could just claim what I needed and live on my land and work it.
That's my dream.
But I have to deal with blankety blank market capitalism and go out and be a wage cuck and earn my, you know, what my ancestors had for, you know.
They could do on their own.
They didn't have to have it.
Right, right, right.
I'm happy with my 20 acres of logged over mountainside and I'll fight for it.
But I much would prefer what my great-great-grandparents had, you know, but that that situation is no longer here.
Trade-offs for sure.
How about growing stuff all the way up there?
I assume you've got long winters.
We do have long winters, but we grow beautiful vegetables here.
My wife is, we've already had our first snow, but my wife is still picking basil and tomatoes out of the garden that haven't completely been ice destroyed yet, you know.
It's all coming in the house.
And we grow good sweet corn here.
We can grow anything we want here.
So that part is wonderful.
We just use the manure from our goat and you mentioned some animals earlier.
So chickens and goats.
And how's that going?
We used to have chickens.
We don't right now.
It's a shame.
I'm a shameful homesteader.
We're trying to.
Haven't got there yet.
We used to keep them, though.
In previous years, we used to have copious bared rock chickens.
Not right now at the moment.
I've got chickens there, Hieronymus.
So I got one up idea there.
But I only have deer.
Deer, we've seen some wild turkeys here, but how about the hunting?
I assume can you do it?
Can you get away with it year-round?
Or do you have to?
Well, no, no, don't, don't confess to any infractions on hunting law.
But what kind of wild game you got there?
What do you want?
What's cool too?
John Denver wrote you a song as well, and it's a beautiful one.
Right.
No, we've got excellent hunting here.
Elk and deer and bear and just all the animals.
You know, they're all still here.
There's even a few grizzlies coming through, you know, that are not completely eradicated.
And they're naturally reintroducing in our remote backcountry here, Missoula, and stuff like that.
I have to tell you, the pictures that you send are breathtaking.
I was going to say they look like brokeback mountain set, but I won't say that or it's too late.
But you know what I mean?
You already did.
Damn it.
What's on your mind, Coach?
No, but I mean, just spectacular natural beauty.
And that's what I was like, man, I don't know if I'm tough enough for all that.
Live out in that type of wilderness.
But you mentioned wage cucking there.
I think it's probably safe to say that you've been a professional operator of many wheeled vehicles for a long time.
And I recall you vividly, for whatever reason, you don't type a lot, but when you do, I tend to pay attention.
And you said it's really a hard profession and existence to be living on the road away from your family for long periods at a time.
Is that safe to say?
Well, yeah, it's a grant, you know, to get into truck driving, which is what you're referring to.
I was being too cutesy there.
You see really the asshole of America.
You see the worst parts of everything, every dock, every industrial zone, you know, every loves, you know, just the horror that is like big box America.
You see it all.
And then you get the relief of being out there and seeing what God made, which is the beautiful deserts and mountains and plains and forests and the natural things.
In between, you get a reprieve, you know, between what.
point A and point B of what the crappy cities are.
Anyway, I don't mean to bash on cities too much.
I know some people appreciate them, but I really don't.
Travel really does broaden the mind.
I traveled myself for about five years as part of my technical trade, you might say.
And for that five years, I did quite a bit of traveling around the country and a little bit out of the country.
And I was always fascinated by the ways that society was different in different areas and the way it was also the same.
People were the same and yet they were different in different areas.
And like you say, you see different environs that are different from how you live or where you live.
And so in a way, it was good, but it was not something I could do long term.
Yeah, Hieronymus is, yeah, he's going back and forth between ass crack and heaven almost on a daily basis, weekly basis, whatever.
Hieronymus, is it fair to say that you've kind of, as a 90s leftist, maybe you never truly loved America, but have you, do you kind of hate America now and just love what you got up there?
I don't mean to pigeonhole you, but.
Well, yeah, you do start to get a like a contempt for the country in a way, but I suppose I'd say like, what, what is a nation?
The nation is the people.
You know, the nation is not just the countryside and the things, though that certainly is part of it.
But I think that's where you can go kind of from one extreme of disillusionment and even depression to really believing in something is when you can see that there really is something called our people.
There really is something there.
And I don't know.
I kind of like some of the city areas.
I kind of grew up around steel mills.
And I don't know, there's a certain charm maybe to the way that industry intersects a community.
Maybe that sounds crazy to.
No, I mean, you're a creature of your environment, Sam, right?
I mean, that's definitely what you grew up with.
And, you know, it's, it's, you know, I'm a creature of the suburbs and I grew to hate the suburbs, which I guess is a little bit of a tragedy, you know, to come to dislike something that was formative in making you.
But yeah, and I don't want to browbeat the audience with this.
It's kind of an interesting segue.
You know, we went from doing, you know, full-on war room last week to now the mountain man atop his peak, which was deliberate, of course, too, because, you know, finding a little peace of mind.
But yeah, for me, it's going like I could be in a store here and encounter easily a dozen.
It's not the stereotypical, oh, West Virginia, everybody's, you know, toothless or fat or ugly or inbred or whatever.
It's the opposite of that.
It's actually proud, well-put together, friendly people in many cases, not always, of course, but I'll be walking through the store and then I'll see some interracial ad for candy or something.
It's like, I hate this place.
But there are legions of lovely, friendly people surrounding me too, you know, the of America.
Well, I think sometimes the tendency to want to withdraw and to be isolated and things like that can generate this kind of person that is unsocialized properly.
Mesanthropic.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, like, you know, the hairs start to grow out of the nose, you know, and maybe the smell starts to emanate a little bit.
And when you're around other people, then other people say, hey, man, you know, you're not looking too good.
Or, you know, in some, in some way, being around other people, I think mankind is a social animal.
We do need to be around each other to merely seek an idyllic existence apart from a community or apart from society.
I don't think it's not necessarily good either.
Yeah.
Sorry, I was just typing in there to see.
Yeah.
Hieronymus, he muted himself.
I don't know if he had to run if a grizzly.
Yeah.
I would have to differentiate between the actual American culture and this whatever it is that they've imposed on us.
Because as a truck driver, you find a similarity anywhere you go that's like soul crushing.
You're in Des Moines, Iowa.
You're in Gillette, Wyoming, you're in Prescott, Arizona.
You're in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and you see the exact same stores with the exact same ugly four-lane highway, the exact same suburbs, the exact same everything.
And it kills any regionalism that we have.
It kills the actual people, the actual culture, whatever it actually is that we're trying to define and replaces it with this horror of modern capitalism that they want for us.
Oh, yeah.
And if you go to any big box stores, you refer to them.
You know, we are not including us, but we, so to speak, as a society are breeding literally a race of monsters.
I mean, look at the dysgenic people, either the race mixed people or just the very low quality, genetic, low genetic quality of even a lot of whites, the fat people, the just ignorant, cultureless, ugly people.
Well, you know, the other day, well, the other day, I guess it was last summer, I took my son up to Spokane, Washington.
You know, I was putting them on a flight.
They were going to Hawaii, my son and my wife.
And they went to a church camp out there.
But anyway, we were in Spokane and he sees all of this stuff that he's just not used to seeing in his wholesome little town.
He's like, whoa, yeah, look at that.
Whoa.
You know, there's like graffiti everywhere.
There's all the things that you see in an urban environment.
I just sold him.
I said, well, welcome to America.
Right.
What it actually is.
You have the last remnant of anything good that we have, the last wholesomeness that we have where you're at.
So you're not used to seeing this.
Right.
Hieronymus, I failed to ask before on the details side.
You're coming through crystal clear from the boonies.
I guess you got good cell service out there.
And what do you do for internet?
We got this Wi-Fi internet.
I can't even remember who the provider is.
I guess I don't care.
As long as it works.
DSL over the phone line.
It must be.
Right, right.
And it's just hooked up to our cabin here.
And yeah, it gives us our four bars.
And we can watch anything on Amazon or whatever, you know, if we want to watch a movie or something.
I was pleasantly surprised.
Well, DSL doesn't work perfect for this purposes of this show, as our audience knows from me glitching here and there.
But it actually is good enough to watch a movie, which, of course, you got to do every once in a while.
You plan to watch one of them.
Got to watch one of them good Jew movies.
Quickly, what is your favorite movie?
Wayne's World.
THX 1138.
Rolo, it's a softball.
Aliens.
All right.
How about Aronimus?
Oh, there you go.
Of course.
Great, great movie.
I enjoyed that one for sure.
Are you going to die out there?
You want to stay there for the rest of your life, Aronimus?
Not anytime soon, but yeah.
When I die, I told my sons to pack me on a horse and dump my body way back in the subway somewhere and just leave me there for the wolves to tear up or whatever, you know?
Just so I can cheat the grave people out of their headstone and their monument and their plot and the whole, you know, the government and whatever, you know, cheat them all.
Maybe a coyote can like play with my skull or something.
That's great.
Well, people in your situation, in olden times, they would bury their loved ones right on the property, you know.
And so if you have somewhere where somebody could dig a hole that deep and put you in there, I do think that graves are important because they say that you were there and it's a way for your loved ones to remember you and pay tribute to you.
Maybe I'll just make a knife or something with my benchmark on it and that'll last beyond me and that's better than any monument.
Well, you don't need a monument, but maybe just a spot for your family to remember you.
I agree, Sammy Baby.
Just a simple stone that'll last 100 years.
Hieronymus, what's your favorite childhood memory?
First thing that comes to mind.
When my uncle, my dad left me when I was, well, one, one and a half years old.
I didn't see him until I was 15.
So my uncle came to visit.
I think I was five years old.
We went down the Snake River there in Idaho in Twin Falls.
And he was, he was, there was one of those things where, I don't know, you get out on the lake and there's those floating, bobbing dock things, you know, whatever that is.
Yeah.
And he was taking the kids and he grabbed us by the hand and he would dip us down into the river back and forth.
And my cousins and I, and he did that for me too.
And it was great.
I was so happy.
My big burly uncle, you know, he came to see us.
Anyway, yeah.
Wonderful.
I can picture it right.
Sorry, Rolo will have to do a little bit of editing there.
There was the chirp.
There's the chirp.
Hieronymus, you know, more or less autonomous out there.
Obviously, you got to worry about propane and fuel and stuff like that, but who doesn't?
With the world slip-sliding towards possible chaos, does that give you anxiety?
I know you got Junior to worry about, but can you more or less tell the world to piss off and have that level of mental confidence where you are?
You know, okay, because you're involved in the cause, obviously.
So it's not like you're completely checked out, but you could, if you wanted to, more or less.
Shut everything down and you got your mountain redoubt and the world can kick stones.
Well, yes and no.
I don't trust the infrastructure for what it is.
And I think that it's failing daily.
And as we get more diversity hires in charge of things, we're going to see that continuing.
And I haul petroleum products.
I'm the guy that, you know, for all my anti-civilizational bit, I help fill up people's cars and get them to work.
And I'm using the income from that, though, to shift to my modality, which is horses and off-grid and everything else.
I have to play the capitalist game while I'm here.
So I'm trying to recreate the 19th century as far as I can get for when it all goes kits up.
Because it is.
It will.
Eventually, fair enough.
Get it.
There are way too many for it to continue.
It's unsustainable to use the leftist parliament.
Yep.
It doesn't make you a collapsitarian to smell trouble in the air and realize that you got to get a jump start before it all comes crashing down.
Hieronymus, we are honored to have you on.
I'm glad to learn more about you.
If the audience has questions about Pac Northwest or more or less off-grid living, I'll be the conduit so you don't have to interact with the Hoy Polo.
That's what I'm saying.
Can I please differentiate quickly?
Sure.
We're not, you know, we're always lumped into the Pacific Northwest, but we're the Northern Rockies.
We're not yes, we're not really.
I know we are in a greater sense, but it's easier to say Pacific Northwest, but this is the Rocky Mountains.
You know, Cascadia, the Cascades aren't in my state.
We're the Rockies and we're a little further east and our culture is a little different.
So gotcha.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Appreciate the distinction.
But if the audience has any questions about the area or getting more autonomous with it, you willing to entertain them.
Sure, certainly.
All right.
Hell yeah.
Good stuff.
All right.
We got to go to a break.
And Hieronymus, it is completely up to you if you want to stay and play too or if you got to run.
I know you're in Uncle Ted's cabin out there, maybe a little chilly, but you want to come back or you got to run.
I'll come back.
I'll hang out with you guys.
All right.
Good, good men are honored too.
All right.
You have the DJ booth this week.
Good sir.
Let the audience know what they're hearing and why.
Oh, in my opinion, the greatest songwriter that ever lived.
Towns of Anziant.
This is one of my favorites.
I love all his songs, but this one is called The Highway Kind.
It speaks for itself.
Enjoy, fam.
We'll be right back.
They only come to leave.
But believing I don't mind is to come in that I crave.
Pour the sun upon the ground.
Stand to throw a shadow.
Watch it grow into a night and fill the spinning sky.
Time among the pine trees.
It felt like breath of air.
But usually I just walk these streets and tell myself to care.
And sometimes I believe me.
And sometimes I don't hear.
And sometimes the shape I'm in won't let me go.
I don't know too much for true, but my heart knows how to pound.
My legs know how to love someone.
My voice knows how to sound.
Shame that it's not enough.
Shame that it is a shame.
Follow the circle down.
Where would you be?
You're the only one I want, and I've never heard your name.
Well, let's hope we meet someday.
If we don't, it's all the same.
And I'll meet the ones between us and be thinking about you and all the places I have seen and why you were not there.
And welcome back to Full House episode 171 Mountain Man Edition, perhaps.
Rocky Mountain High will probably be too on the nose to name this episode.
We shall see.
We always come up with the episode title after the fact, not going on quips during the show.
Great to have our man Hieronymus back with us.
Lots to cover here in the second half.
And I just want to say, too, if you're listening to this, you probably listened to our last outstanding war room special with Padrick Martin on everything unfolding in Gaza and the Middle East with Israel.
And I think it's held up pretty damn well.
And I almost gloated to Padrick today when it looked, it was around 1.30 today on Friday that it looked like Israel had given the ghost sign.
Apparently there was a little bit of hesitation there.
There were some negotiations for hostages that Qatar was supposedly trying to do.
And they unsurprisingly broke down.
Who knows if Hamas was asking too much in return?
Like, how about you give us a thousand of our fighters for one of these elderly Jewesses that we have hospitably housed in tunnels in Gaza, by the way?
It was delightful to see some old woman.
She did not stick with the script.
She forgot to lie.
And she was like, no, we were taken care of.
And we got our medicine that we needed.
And we were handled humanely.
Coach, did they have an orchestra?
They were swimming.
They were playing soccer and listening to the classic Sam.
Now, she didn't get into that level of specificity, but it really was a record scratch.
And it was top billing at the Daily Mail.
You know, Hamas hostage says that they were treated humanely.
And then memory hold.
It was gone like 20 minutes later and I couldn't find it anywhere on the site.
Otherwise, Coach, I'm sure any Hamas that are prisoners in the Israeli prison, I'm sure they're being treated very hospitably too.
Oh man.
You know, I'm, I can be fairly steely about these things, Sam, you know, viewing them sort of dispassionately or from a distance, but I, but I actually felt sick today.
I feel sorry for anyone who's over there.
I mean, look, I can understand the motivation of a Hamas militant, and I can certainly even easier commiserate with somebody who was born there, grew up there, has lived through it.
They've basically been embargoed from the world for over a decade.
I didn't know that Egypt was in on it too.
Egypt agreed basically to shut them off too.
Only the basics were getting in.
There was that flotilla that tried to break the blockade probably about 10 years ago.
And now they're just getting pounded to hell.
And it really, you know, it seems like this is phase one and they've got more coming.
So old Padrick was not entirely incorrect just yet.
I didn't win the bet yet, right?
Because we're going to see how this develops.
But it looks like they're probing, seeing how it goes, how fierce the resistance is.
Maybe they got some other tricks up their blue and white sleeves.
But yeah, there's a lot of baseball to come.
And the ball is basically in Israel's court to go or not to go or to half go, right?
That was something that I posited that they were going to try to do as much as they could without triggering.
a massive assault from Iran and her militants and Hezbollah at the same time.
And now go ahead.
And do you think that the U.S. is really pressuring them not to invade or is that just a delay tactic?
I actually, so I think there's two things there.
I think that one, the U.S., when push comes to shove, would, of course, provide the air support, special forces, et cetera, to help Israel.
We all know that so much.
However, call me credulous or blue pilled or whatever.
I actually do believe, whether it was Blinken or Biden or somebody, I really don't think it's in.
I think that our contra Padrick, I think that our leaders are at least cognizant enough of our vulnerabilities and our weakness that they're not exactly eager to see this kick off into a massive Middle East war, whether it's purely for political reasons going into 2024.
I mean, you know, Trump could just say, I'll end this war, of course, as he does just empty promises or blanket assertions.
But I don't know.
I actually think that they probably did.
It wasn't clear.
Biden had just gone there when we recorded and I was like, I doubt that he really gave them a stern talking to.
But I bet you we did probably pressure them to delay or not go with this full-scale assault.
And maybe there was some meeting of the minds because that's it's not 2001 anymore.
And they can't be so stupid as to think that they're just going to be able to win jingoists.
Yes, they can.
They can absolutely be that stupid.
I'm not saying they are, but they absolutely can.
Oh, fair enough.
Fair enough.
And they may end up being forced to do that.
That's what I'm admitting.
Like, you know, we put the forces in play, whether it's an errant rocket that hits a ship or whether BB says we have this thing called the Samsung option and you will help us here.
You know what I got in my back pocket and then we do it anyway.
I just don't, I think that they don't want it.
And they probably did try to a certain extent to forestall things or not have it lead into this WW3, WWJ crescendo.
Well, this seems to be very similar to how World War II started with basically what they did in Poland to force Hitler to go into there.
Like this all, this just seems like they're just trying to goad Iran or other or, you know, Iran by proxy, but sure.
They want to fight Iran.
Like I was told in 2018 that the United States government is planning on invading Iran and within 10 years, we will invade Iran.
That's what I was told.
So this just seems like they use the invasion of Ukraine as their way to fight Russia, which they wanted.
And now this is their way to basically bait Iran out.
All of the time.
I'm not saying that's a good idea or it's the time because it's not even like a now or never.
It's like a 10 years ago or never.
But I think they are that stupid because I do not believe Jews are smart.
I think that they are very stupid and in their in their arrogance of thinking they're God's chosen people, they make mistakes all the time.
Yep.
And they keep just keep pushing.
Yep.
Go ahead, Sam.
Did you see this reporter's question to the White House chief of staff guy?
And they said, so when Russia invaded Ukraine, you knew right away that they were targeting civilians and that there were war crimes being committed.
But now on this day, what is it, day 19 or 20 or whatever it is?
Yep.
You don't know.
You cannot determine. if Israel is targeting civilians or committing war crimes.
Come on.
Yeah, there's no red lines.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry, the internet's all cut and we can't provide safety to journalists.
So we got carte blanche to do whatever the hell we want and we won't make a damn peep about it, us and our human rights.
Yeah, but to Rolo's point, absolutely.
I mean, you can go back to World War I or whatever, but World War II in particular, obviously the Japanese were already occupying and fighting in China.
And it's a whole thing with Stalin and how he was able to like hoodwink the Japanese to not being a problem for him on his eastern flank, which allowed him to focus all of the Soviet Union's manpower and weaponry against Germany.
But yeah, you've got Russia against Ukraine and Europe.
You've got this bubbling in the Middle East.
And then you've obviously got China licking its chops for Taiwan, which it probably wants to take without a fight, but is preparing for war regardless.
So, you know, one thing goes wrong here or there, and then the big ones popping off.
It's not, it's happening bro thinking to at least realize that that is a distinct possibility, non-zero.
Okay.
And then the other thing I find curious is there's where is the appealing for peace?
And I mean, peace for peace's sake, not who's right, who's wrong, but you know, where is the peacenicks who are, you know, can't we, where, where is the brotherhood of man and the loving each other?
And we have to understand what Hamas.
I mean, that just goes to show you how fake any of this peace movement from years past really is.
100%, Sam.
Yep.
Yeah.
These Democrats are, okay, the Republicans are bad, but these Democrats are even more warmongers, if that's even possible.
The UN resolution to call for a ceasefire was voted against by all of 14, 120 in favor, 14 against.
Listen to this rogues gallery, a couple shockers in here.
Austria voted against, Croatia voted against, Czechia, Czech Republic.
It'll always be to me voted against.
Now you've got these tiny countries that are no doubt bought off by Israel or us.
Fiji, Guatemala, Fiji, Micronesia and the Marshall Islands, Papua New Guinea, total backwards, Southeast Asian, Paraguay, one of the whitest countries in South America, Tonga, again, us, and Hungary.
That was the biggest disappointment shocker.
Yay.
Orban's thinking they're voting against it.
You know what I'm saying?
Where are the prominent music performers and personalities?
Where is all the movie stars?
Peace.
No, they're only.
Go ahead, Roland.
I don't want to steal your thunder.
They're only anti-war when a Republican is in office.
That's how it seems.
That's how it's always been.
Like the only time when there's been like even going back to like the 60s hippie bands, like they, they weren't like they were like anti-war, but they didn't have any like anti-war demonstrations or anything.
It was pretty much just the rank and file.
But that's because at that point in time, the country was still largely anti-war.
Well, to be fair, there was lots of anti-war demonstrations against LBJ and he was a Democrat.
Well, I'm saying, but I'm saying that was just like the rank and file, like regular Americans.
That wasn't like the movie stars and the musicians.
Like the musicians kind of did their like, yeah, you know, make love, not war, but they didn't do any anti-war songs.
They didn't have anti-war demonstrations.
That was on college campuses.
That's where that was done because that was a time when the country was still like war is not good.
Like, you know how many wars we've had lately?
It's a lot.
And they had some pretty disastrous effects, but that's not a thing anymore because they're like the real, like all these college kids that you think would be like anti-war, they're like the most bloodthirsty people on the planet.
And they're just looking for white people to hang.
They don't care.
Like they're looking, they're looking to collect their own scalps.
I just don't get left.
Yeah.
No, the new left is all about Trinity Dildos and whatnot.
That's all that matters to them.
They don't have actual political anymore.
And the Jewish enforcers are at total battle stations just waiting for somebody to poke their head up and say, actually, I support the Palestinians or whatever.
Well, look at what happened when an autistic anti-fub had a picture with the stuffed octopus.
That had to be intentional.
I actually agree.
Let's not forget World War I, World War II both started with Democrats.
Vietnam War, same true.
Yeah, Korea was started by that was Eisenhower.
That was Truman.
Truman was a Eisenhower, who was a Republican, but he was supposedly Jewish too.
Democrats are the real warmongers.
I remember supposedly when he was getting into West Point, they told him, oh, you're part Jewish.
We don't know if we want you.
I read that anyway.
I had heard that too.
Yeah.
I remember when Obama was bombing Libya or whatever, re-upping, you know, like, where are the effigies?
Yeah.
Yeah.
We're like, peace for peace's sake.
Where are those people?
Can we do a CGI where we have like the voice, you know, where they finish each other's sentences and one person says one thing.
You know, we have like Brad Pitt and Angelino Jolie, but they're like, I stand with Palestine.
Right.
Yeah.
In Israel.
And they just purchase you that, you know, it's so redundant.
Yeah.
And it's not a difficult thing.
Anti-attacks on Israel and still say, hello.
That does not give you the right to carpet bomb an entire urban area into dust, including the hospitals, the Christian churches, the shutting off of all supplies.
Not every sin.
I guarantee you right now, every single Gazan is a bloodthirsty anti-Semite for sure.
They got a tufer there with the churches.
Boy.
They can kill Palestinians and blow up churches.
Wow.
So have you followed this?
The thing where the hospital got hit and then Israel was saying, oh, that was an errant Islamic jihad missile that was a friendly fire incident.
And then later the analysis came out because now everywhere, everyone has a camera and there's a lot of cameras out in the world in various ways, personal things or security footage.
And they were able to trace like the trajectory of the missile and the time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The New York Times.
Yeah.
You know, and then so now it's, and then, of course, we have our dumbass retard president agreeing with it right away, just like he saw the decapitated babies, right?
In the same way he saw the decapitated babies.
He was so sure that it was, you know, a friendly fire incident and then very publicly proven wrong again.
Where's the outcry?
Where's where's the I don't get it?
Jewelry on parade, the lies, the arrogance, the cruelty, the politicians in their back pocket.
We'd even talk about Mike Johnson.
Oh my God.
Smarmy looking new speaker of the house, totally, totally gobbling up.
Well, we'll just say he's gobbling Jewish campaign finance funds.
For sure.
There's still a bunch of news cycles back in Hawaii and how Biden screwed all the Hawaiian people out of what they have and all that crap.
I forgot about the fires in Lanai.
Oh, yeah, like land, land grab.
It's a bad year for Palestines.
East Palestine, Ohio, Palestine, Palestine.
If you live in another Palestine, you better get the hell out of there.
It's not looking good.
We're going to come back.
I don't know if we, well, we can if we want to.
But since it's a coincidence, I teased last show about listening to leftist podcasts and programming and just realizing what different worlds we live in.
And it's great to have an actual former leftist on this show to talk about the different worlds we live in.
But before we do that, we got a bumper crop of new white life.
We don't want to get too good away from our coming out of the woodwork this week.
It totally lifted my spirits and my sales.
So we're going to start with our pal Toons.
Toons let us know he and Wifey are expecting another baby girl.
Everybody said congratulations.
You big loser, two girls in a row, no boy.
Not at all.
No, not at all.
It's got to be one or the other, right?
50-50.
We've said it so many times on this show.
We'll say it again.
Girls, daughters are a blessing.
They are wonderful children.
Even maybe I'd feel sorry for you if you had six, seven straight girls or whatever, but you still can't.
Even so.
And Toons is a great guy.
We see you there smiling.
Thank you for listening, bro, and for being a bro.
Our pal Vulture let us know that he is very excited for the flip side.
He's having his first baby girl after three boys in a row.
And he was kind enough to send a picture of the wee lass on presumably her first day in this new world with the standard little cap and a little amorphous at that age, but I say she's going to be a little.
Not to be creepy or whatever.
A beautiful little baby girl vulture.
Congratulations.
Not the most pleasant sock name.
Who wants to be vulture?
Really?
I see turkey vultures around here all the time and they're just so nasty.
They're so big.
And God, my buddy said that the turkey vultures used to like crap in the tree near his house and the crap was so acidic or poisonous that it killed the tree.
So I don't know.
Think about rebranding their vulture, but congratulations all the same.
And then I think maybe Toons popped it in the comment zone that he was having a kid.
And then other people came out of the woodwork.
Oh, the poor public comment zone people.
Marty said, just shared the news of my wife being pregnant again to our other six.
I know.
Marty is our new white life man, at least for now until the next one.
Five of them squealed and shouted and jumped for joy, but our oldest 15-year-old son just had a 1,000-yard stare elevator.
Here we go again.
He's thinking.
Either that or I know what you did in the bedroom two months ago or whatever it was.
He's like, I don't want another damn baby in the house or mom, dad.
You're too old to be doing that.
Come on.
So Marty's flexing and then John comes in to say, I don't know, Marty or John, but John said, I feel this.
Congrats on number six.
We have number seven due in January.
And our 15-year-old also was not a mute.
Everybody's joining the order of Sam.
That's what you get to get to seven.
You get the order of Sam.
There you go.
Congratulations, Toons, Vulture, and Marty and John.
Way to go, guys.
Thanks for letting us know, too.
It's just, you know, I did not know Jeff Winston from the White Art Collective.
We passed, you know, we crossed paths at an event once, but I don't know if I ever shook his hand.
I've enjoyed Haraith's music for years.
She's got a wonderful voice and, of course, lends it to a lot of awesome techno and synth tracks.
So just a little reminder from the first half.
Please check out their Give, Send, Go.
It's Haraith Fund.
And we'll put that link in the show notes, not to be Debbie Downer, but just imagine brand new baby and the best unexpected.
And it was not a suicide.
It was not an overdose, which I maybe perhaps Tackley wanted to ask because it's the first thing that comes to mind, unfortunately, when one of our guys passes way too early that some misfortune like that may have been the case, but it was not.
So over to the different worlds that we live in.
I don't want to be too profound or it just struck me listening to, I won't say which one it was, but it was a leftist podcast.
And there's two things going on.
The things that they hold dear are, of course, free movement of peoples wherever, right?
Immigration, migration is like a human right to go wherever in the world you need to on the flimsiest of excuses, economic, you know, whatever it is, persecution, natural disaster.
You should be able to go to a first world country or a developed country for yourself.
There's abortion, of course, the absolute sacrosanct right for a mother to kill her unborn child in the womb is one of their absence, you know, just absolute, of course, values.
Total, total blackout of mentioning the Jewish question, the Jewish problem, Jewish power, et cetera.
And I've heard them dance around it too.
You can, you can, because they're not dumb.
I suspect that many of them are, you know, relatively to high IQ, but there's, and maybe there's an exception here or there, Jimmy Doer, et cetera, ones who are willing to go there.
But they will dance around the JQ where right there would explain exactly what is going on in Congress or exactly why this or that is being pushed in one way or another, including, of course, Gaza and Israel and U.S. obedience to their desires and foreign policy.
And I won't go on too long here.
But the other thing is that they really think that we are all either murderous, you know, murderers in waiting or cruel, bloodthirsty savages or knuckle-dragging brutes.
And we know that they listen to us and they follow us so closely.
I mean, this was the first time I listened to a leftist podcast probably in a year or two, maybe something like that, right?
So it's like, you know, I get enough leftism through the mass media.
I don't need to listen to your like elite cadre of commentators.
But they follow us obsessively and worry about us.
Living rent-free in their heads comes to mind.
Oh, yeah.
And I'll stop here or posit this, that there's just absolutely no, no, there is some common ground.
And I would suggest that that's perhaps economics and that many of our guys are no longer free market, you know, capitalist adherents and maybe environmental protection to a certain extent.
But on the vast panoply of issues that are out there that are important one way or another, we occupy completely different spaces.
They're set in their ways.
We are certainly set in our ways.
And that's just kind of a recipe for some sort of national dissolution or disunion.
And a real humane, rational way to go about this would be to split.
Obviously, we'd prefer to do it on racial lines, but hell, just doing it on ideological left-right lines would be a step in the right direction.
I spilled my pasta there through the microphone a little bit, but Sam, have that at first.
I know you're changing it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I have a few insights on it because it is very interesting.
You know, aside from the actual content of the politics, I think the phenomenon is just kind of really interesting.
And excuse me, trying to understand it because it is like a riddle.
But I was asking somebody about this just a few years ago, even.
And I think I got one of the best insights I ever did receive on this.
And I said, why are they so shrill when they talk about us?
Why do they care so much?
Like you say, they follow us obsessively.
Why do they care so much?
I mean, we're just some cranks with no power whatsoever.
Who cares what we say or think anyways?
And he says, they believe that if the average person was exposed to our points, that many people would be swayed by it, which sounds like a very obvious point.
But, you know, because yeah, to me, it's like, why would like I would be very much for like not too much censorship, you know, because I feel like the strength of ideas, the best ideas win out.
The best, the strongest things always win out in the end.
So we have to let there be this like interplay between ideas.
Why of all people, for the people that would be for all kinds of allowing pornography and these trans freaks and everything, why, why are they so obsessed with censoring us?
It's because they are actually afraid that if, you know, if our ideas got out there, that regular people would believe like us.
So, yeah, that's one thing.
That was the other load star too, Sam, was the homosexuality and transgenderism, Uber Ellis.
That is superior to being heterosexual or the gender that you were raised with, which is just so pants on head, retarded and contra in nature and logic and all the rest of it that, yeah, they probably feel vulnerable because they know how far, even though they have so much institutional power, they're so far out on a limb from our pal Hieronymus's comfy 90s leftism that they have that anxiety too.
I'll stop.
Yeah.
And it's very far afield from the old leftists, like the old leftists, maybe even in like Soviet times or something.
The old leftists, they were like Puritans.
They would, know like like, if somebody was going to be married, like the spouse would be picked for you like, like it was not about, you know, licentiousness or or you know the, these types of excesses that we've we've come to be accustomed to were just unheard of.
You know, that would have been uh they, they would have looked at that as like taking away from the real message that they had.
Well, they tried that early on in the Soviet Revolution they had a real laissez-faire kind of Bimar Style Soviet period where no marriage, lots of licentiousness, licentiousness and abortion on demand yeah, and then it didn't work out um, it didn't work out for them societally, so they clamped down on that and went to the puritan mode of Soviet Style family making, whatever that means.
Well, this is anyways, that was what uh, an older, much older man was talking about.
You know that the old leftists were not uh, immoral people, you know but uh, one more thing I wanted to say was, you know i've, i've taken on leftists and liberals, especially any chance I could get throughout my life.
And one thing that i've said, like you were saying earlier, well, these they're smart, but they have this other worldview and things like that.
I think the people that remain in that and are the most devoted to it it it begs the question, what?
What do we mean by smart?
Because i've i've debated a lot of liberals, some of them that I continue considered to be geniuses, but they were geniuses in a very narrow sense.
There's one particular guy that I worked with.
This guy was a genius in certain things, but he was absolutely a dumbass in other things.
So I I tend to see that that true leftist that really stick with it.
If they, if they're what you would consider smart.
It's a very narrow type of intelligence, whereas I would put it just the other three men on the show with me right now are extremely intelligent and extremely well-rounded, with a great knowledge of life and experiences on.
You know a whole bunch of things, and I remember Robert A Heinlein said that specialization was for insects and that a man should know how to pray, should know how to write a song, should know how to uh change a tire on a car, who should know how to uh build something out of wood.
You know you should, as a, as a real man, you should be very well rounded and able to do a lot of different things and be be very proficient in a lot of things and I I my experience with the leftists, the ones that I would consider smart, they were, you know, does that word smart really apply?
They were very intelligent in a very narrow way yeah, but I don't know if that matches any of your experiences.
No, that that definitely, definitely meshes.
Uh, you know, maybe a high verbal iq, but not wisdom, something like that.
I can't recreate it, I can't find it or remember it, but our pal Vrill Smith, great name uh very, very sharp guy himself, and himself also a former leftist, if I recall correctly.
I recalled incorrectly when it came to Hieronymus's background early on.
But he said something to the effect of we expend way too much time even considering that many of these people are changeable.
And I actually agree with that too.
Like focusing on focusing on the left is largely a fool.
That's why I question how smart are they?
Because you can show them facts.
and charts and try to make all kind of good arguments.
And you could talk to them for an hour.
And at the end of it, at the end of that hour, they'll come right back to saying the dumb, stupid bullshit they were saying at the beginning of it.
But if you imply that there's a credible threat to their life, that like you might kick their ass literally, all of a sudden they see the light.
All of a sudden, it's like, whoa, whoa, yeah, yeah, oh, yeah, I see what you're saying.
Yeah.
You're right.
Very was saying, we'll have him on.
We were going to get him on earlier in the year and life happened and he couldn't do it.
But he was saying that for most of these people, it is, it's not just a religion, but it is central to their comfort in this world.
They essentially cloak themselves in these, we call them pretty lies, but they're ugly lies.
And it's just sort of worked its way into their organism to the point where it's almost like they're physically incapable of challenging those core tenets that have been programmed into them by a Jewish super system, superstructure.
Go ahead, Rollin.
I used to chat with this guy I used to go bowling with, and he was a pretty liberal guy, as he would describe himself.
And they create a false reality for themselves, regardless, whether it's like thinking that a man can be a woman or a baby is just a clump of cells.
George Floyd was saying.
Yep.
Yeah, yeah, pick your thing.
This was the one that he would harp on, that the media was conservative.
Yeah.
Fox News is.
No, no, CNN is conservative.
Hillary Clinton is conservative.
MSNBC is conservative.
Like that, that was the thing that he would put himself into because all liberalism is anti-war, because liberalism is peace and love.
But during the Iraq war, all the major news outlets were pro-war.
Therefore, they're actually conservative.
That was what he went with.
And that was how he defined everything.
Go ahead, Sam, and then we'll get to Horanius.
Sure.
Another insight that actually one of my sons, he said, you know, with all this, whatever the issue was, something about the gays or something.
And like, why does the average man, many of many people, we might say the status quo, would go along with some of those things.
And one mentality is that by somebody being worse than you, then you say to yourself, I'm not that bad.
You know, it keeps you from having to confront yourself in a moral way.
Yeah, I'm thinking of this very intelligent kid that I worked with back in the day.
And I didn't really know his politics.
You know, of course, I used to be a dumb kid and a liberal just because I hated George W. Bush.
Therefore, I thought that the Democrats were the good guys.
Anybody who was against Bush was a good guy.
And then early in my 20s, maybe mid-20s at latest, then I was like, okay, immigration is out of control.
This diversity crap is nonsense.
But it blew my mind when he was morally and mortally offended that I was against affirmative action as I was doing the whole like it's.
It's racist.
Affirmative action is racist.
You know that.
They can achieve on their own, we just need a level playing field.
And he was shocked and horrified and I still remember that moment like man.
I thought I kind of held you in high regard up until that point and you're, you're telling me that like you want your kids to like be disadvantaged just because they were born white, in a country that is not 1865, 1965 anymore.
Just, I was.
I was thunderstruck um, but I yeah, I was.
It sounds like Hieronymus was a leftist longer, maybe 30s, I don't know.
We didn't probe too much on that.
Buddy, if you'll, you can react to what we said already or dig a little bit more into escaping that and and why you did, if you could.
However, you want to play it well.
The 90s brand of leftism was far.
It was a completely different animal than what we see today and it was all concerned like, like the modern left is ostensibly with, with egalitarianism, and you have this myth of the equality of man that you go by and so it becomes your religion, everything has to to go to that mean, I think the first crack in the armor, as it were, for me was really Christianity,
because in Christianity you have, you have the damned and you then you have the redeemed, so you have, right right away, you're stripped of.
Well, you could say there's equality in Christ, you know the equality of believers, but you, you can't really say that, that everybody's going to the same place.
I mean, god discriminates, he does.
It's just the nature of of what it is.
You know that that god has to be righteous and that man is depraved and fallen.
So therefore there's, there's no such thing really as equality as we understand it, you know, equality of outcome, equality of whatever.
So I I would say that's probably the the first crack in in my armor there in terms of like thinking of the myth of equality as as my religion or or my worldview I, I remember thinking that uh, you know uh, I I never was comfortable with the gay thing, and it wasn't near nearly as strident in the 90s as it is now, but it was there, but it made me uncomfortable, but I went along with it,
because leftism is always a package deal.
You you, you believe in one platform of it, you have the other planks of it and you get kicked out of the club real quick if you're a heretic on one of their classes yeah, and you do create kind of a false reality of a false um.
I remember going with my leftist friends when it came out and we went to see that movie um uh, Malcolm X yeah, And we watched it and everybody liked it.
And I wanted to be honest, though, in my analysis, I was like, well, we actually don't really get along with black people.
But all of my friends were like, oh, well, you're not racist.
And, you know, there's kind of like this denial thing that you do where you like pretend not to believe what you actually believe.
And you carry on in some kind of way that it's quite artificial because you want to maintain whatever it is that you're trying to maintain with the people that you're with.
It's very much a peer-oriented kind of thing.
But I really, I was a true believer.
I believed everyone was equal.
I believed everyone was the same.
I used to, I remember thinking that affirmative action was a good thing because blacks had had it so hard.
And, you know, I had more of a classical Marxist, old leftist kind of take where economics, you know, rich versus poor.
Sure.
I was coming out of that.
It was far more rich versus poor in those days, you know, than it is now.
The Frankfurt School hadn't quite completely destroyed the economic as opposed to the racial analysis of, you know, who's against who.
But on the other hand, I remember thinking that, well, yeah, it is economic.
It's rich versus poor.
But if you're black, you have another stripe against you.
So affirmative action is probably a good thing because, you know, they've had it so rough in 400 years and all that, you know what?
So, yeah, it's just a pie that you eat.
Somebody baked it and you eat it.
Yeah.
And if the, if the left stuck to environment, I'll go right next to you, right to you next, Rolo.
If the left stuck with we are anti-war, we are pro-economic justice or anti-economic inequality per se, there's that still raises my hackles a little bit just to hear those words from my national review reading days.
But if they stuck to the what I would maybe call common sense leftism, environmental protection, right?
You know, treating workers fairly, et cetera, you'd have a lot more.
But it morphed and was dragged and was pushed into this Hydra monster of homosexuality, transgenderism, kill babies, take your guns.
And all of a sudden, now, you know, war is okay as, you know, as long as it's justified.
Do you know who did give justice to the working man?
Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich.
You're right.
Bingo.
Miracle national turnaround.
And only one, well, two groups had to suffer, communists and Jews, to get a national rejuvenation.
Rolo, what'd you have there, book?
Well, what the guy used to go bowling with, and I was against affirmative action.
And back to the fake narrative that they create, he said that all they, all affirmative action is, and this is his words.
I'm not paraphrasing.
All affirmative action is, is they have to at least consider someone of a minority protected class for hiring.
Right.
Well, and I like this latest formulation.
I think we should try to use it affirmative action American instead of African American.
We had a buddy who was like, every time I fly now, I take a little peek into that cockpit to see who's flying it.
And if it's telling you, I'm at a child.
Yeah.
I'll take the delay seriously.
Absolutely.
It's going to start happen.
Things start breaking.
Things are going to start breaking down.
They already are, of course, breaking down as a consequence of their ideology and its hold on our culture.
And one other thought, you know, I said, I don't listen to that stuff.
You know, I got better things to do with my life, but you should.
I don't know if I have the wherewithal to listen to enemy broadcasts, but by all means, it's tough.
It's painful.
It's also, it's boring.
Good God.
You know, like, just listen to people.
I'm sure that maybe they find us boring sometimes talking about the Jews and race and stuff like that, even those are essential issues.
But it's just like, oh my God, these people and their like high-minded, lofty statements about this, the most sordid, disgusting things.
It's well.
If somebody wanted to dabble in that, and I would say maybe it's something worth trying.
I would say listen to NPR because before this modern podcast era, I would listen to NPR all the time.
And when I would tell people that, they would look at me kind of, they would look at me, you know, incredulous, eyes would get big.
How do you do it?
Well, it's not easy.
You have to gird yourself.
You have to be ready for it, but you learn a lot.
I sometimes will listen to it still, but I, you know, it's just gotten too silly for me.
But back in the day, I would listen to it.
And I remember this, remember this incident a few years ago, the cops broke in.
It was in Texas.
This was a woman, black woman.
They shot her in her apartment and everyone was or no.
Was she the one?
She used her child as the human shield, right?
Corin Gaines.
Oh, no, I'm thinking of a different one.
But anyways, so they were interviewing the, they were interviewing the police chief.
And so, you know, the, you know, how the NPR speaker talks on there, you know, kind of breathy, very serious.
Oh, and so, and so what did you do?
Well, we, we sent seven deputies now.
Seven deputies?
Why did you send seven?
And you're thinking like you're listening to it, like, well, how many was he supposed to send in there?
Like, would three?
Would three be good or five or one?
Or, you know, it's just the way that they bait him and everything.
It's fascinating to listen to.
Either way, it's racist.
Yeah, Sam.
I totally agree with you.
I still listen to NPR when I'm driving in the car.
You know, I can only take it for like an hour top.
Right.
And I alternate.
Like, sometimes I'm just cackling like a madman because it just comes through so crystal clear.
There was one hour where it was like every single segment was either about like vaginas or blacks or gays.
Covered the whole, it was all women.
If you put on NPR right now, you could start counting down from 10 and you would hit pause before you got to one.
And you know what it is?
If you were, and I think it is a valuable exercise to listen to it, you got to have somebody like to decompress to.
Oh, I like how NPR.
Like you listen to it and then you got to like kind of talk to somebody on and discharge that energy that you let out a hard R. That's it.
I'm like cackling with delight at how ridiculous it is, or I let out a real loud, hard R that let the car behind me can possibly hear it.
Like you got to go home and talk to your wife or call a friend and say, did you hear that's what I mean.
That's, you got to like decompress.
Decompress it.
He didn't mean you have to physically do it, like go to the chiropractor.
Right.
Yeah.
You got to like let, and that's kind of, I think, the danger of listening to it is if you're not informed or enlightened like we are, like a normie listening to it might get very frustrated and angry.
And that's maybe when people do bad things, you know, when they get so frustrated because they don't realize there's a better way, there's a higher path.
Yeah.
Well, the thing is, we are more interesting than them because they're only allowed to talk about a very narrow field of things.
Like literally, they're only allowed to push the most paused stuff.
Like they can't get into like good economic ideas.
Like the extent of their economics is tax the rich.
And then like, what does that mean?
You know, those privileged white men.
Yeah, they mean me.
That's who they mean.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, no, they don't.
Yeah, they don't mean Tom Steyer.
They don't mean Harvey and Bob Weinstein.
They don't mean George Toros.
Right.
They would tax Elon Musk for sure.
They'd be happy to soak him.
Oh, yeah.
Yes.
Yes.
It's, it's really, it's just anti-white or it's anti-straight.
Yeah.
It's code word for anti-white.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's very narrow parameters where with us on our side, like, sure, we talk about Jews and race, but we talk about every other thing imaginable where every leftist podcast, it's all the same stuff.
That's why Joe Rogan and Andrew Tate are so popular because they're the only things in the mainstream that aren't talking about like, this is how you use a dilation rod.
This is institutional racism.
We talk about how we came to our beliefs.
You know, we talk about how we found out the truth.
They don't talk about that.
And they have the other thing too, and that came crystal clear through my headphones was they have the chutzpah to act totally shocked and bewildered and horrified by the blowback.
What exactly?
Like, do you really think that we, the people of the great white flood from 1492 up until maybe 2001, where like all of us were just going to be like, yes, yes, master, I should say, you know, I should allow my son to cut off his dick and my wife should be able to abort the baby.
And yes, war for Israel is good.
And like, like, it's almost turned off the black.
Excuse me.
It's almost as though for them to like honestly debate with us would be like some sort of lowering of their beliefs or something.
Like, you know, you cannot question these things that they believe in.
These things are beyond any kind of doubt.
And that's why I love Tom Sewell so much too.
He gave a little, you know, front of the courthouse talk to press and some little brown journalist.
He didn't call him brown, but some little smarmy journalist was like, but you plead, but you pleaded guilty, but you pleaded guilty.
And everybody's like, yeah, you know, you have to do that, but he's trying to get him in a gotcha.
And he's like, would you just please be quiet, you small, strange man?
And then a giant truck like honked in the background, like pressure timing.
I don't know.
Maybe one of his lads, you know, spliced that in.
But old Tommy Boy said he's going to come back.
We are on about an annual schedule.
I reach out to Tom.
I want to hear how everybody's going with the baby and the lads and the court drama and not allowing the Aborigines to have their special voice, et cetera.
Lots of good stuff that's coming up.
All right.
I think we did that justice.
And, you know, maybe, sorry, guys, maybe not the most profound observation that we occupy different ideological universes, but I had to had to get it off my chest.
And hey, what do you know?
We got our own show.
So I had to do it.
I listened to God knows how many hours of Elon Musk's biography by Walter Isaacson.
Yes, an establishment Jew biographer.
Definitely, you know, one of the best.
He does good work.
He had absolute access to Elon Musk, to his family, interviewing his father and stuff like that.
One of the most interesting things, I won't do a big thing here.
The core point is that abandon all hope, ye who think that Alan is going to save us.
Maybe that's a small segment of the listenership, but guys who are holding out hope that he might be one of us or he's going to come to the light or whatever.
What he cares most about is excellence in exploration, technology, logistics.
He is a climate change believer.
He really does believe fossil fuels are ruining the earth.
Maybe Hieronymus does too.
To do those things, what came across crystal clear was his number one, he does not want to die until putting men on Mars.
And I believe that he would sacrifice his own children or, you know, be an anti-racist or even anti-for or whatever.
That's his number one goal.
So yes, he shares a lot of our ideals, maybe about free speech.
He's probably a little bit race aware.
He knows that the West is collapsing.
The fact that he grew up in South Africa, all those factors.
But he has one job.
And I don't think that there's anything that will deviate him from getting people to Mars.
Absolutely admirable man.
He is not neurologically typical.
He comes across as a monstrous conceited asshole in lots of the book.
And he also comes across as a little baby child politically and in the way that things in the world work, probably because he's devoting the vast majority of his mental power to issues of engineering, calculations.
He's got all the headaches with Twitter now and profit, et cetera.
And one last thing is that he hates his father.
He did have at least an emotionally abusive childhood.
And his father is actually kind of one of us.
He said, if the white man leaves South Africa, then the blacks will return to the trees.
And, you know, maybe this is the one, you know, what I said there might not have been groundbreaking, but he hated his father when he was a child.
He tried to reconcile with him several times.
His father seems a little bit like a kooky conspiracy guy, but he's race aware.
And I would almost guarantee that his father's racism makes him inclined to not be like his old man, which of course is another tale, old as time.
Go ahead, Taylor.
Well, without white people, you're not going to Mars.
I tell you then.
He's got, you know, he's got some diverse, you know, he can get some engineering talent from the subcontinent and whatnot.
You know, he's had non-white partners and plenty of Jewish partners, you know, capital investors from Sequoia and all these other things out in Silicon Valley.
You know, he's, he's totally immersed in that world.
So the idea that he's going to pull like a high IQ Kanye one day and turn the tables on him and pull the rug out from him.
I'm willing to be optimistic on certain people that people can change, that they can see the light, that maybe there is a heroic instinct in some people.
But man, listening to that monstrous biography completely disabused me of all of that.
And I just wanted to let the audience know that.
Leftists will think you're being mean by looking into the cockpit to see what the race of your pilot is.
It's just so simple that they have replaced God with their false God of equality that they believe in.
And so therefore you're transgressing and being completely mean.
And you're evil for looking at the cockpit and presuming that a white person could be better than a black person for piloting that aircraft.
Yeah.
And of course, there's the talented 10th and, you know, deviations from the mean.
Of course, we acknowledge that they exist.
But we don't live in a world where we just assume that everybody is above average.
We live in a world where we will assume that many of most of them are average.
And was that you, Rolo?
Or was that a legit one?
Yeah, he's trouble.
That's a new sound drive.
Yeah, I got a migraine coming on.
I have been watching this show.
It's Halloween in three days.
In past years, we've done little Halloween spectaculars.
The hunt for white October was our last Halloween show.
Pat on the back for myself there.
I was proud of that one.
But my wife, you know, my wife, she's pretty discerning when it comes to TV programs.
She likes her survivor.
She likes the amazing race.
And she recently put on the show called Ghosts.
I don't know if any of you guys have heard of it, Rolo.
Are you?
The British one or the American.
The American one.
The British one may be great, you know, office, office, et cetera.
But aside from the fact that it's a beautiful New Zealand woman who's the protagonist who can see the ghosts in her ancient bed and breakfast, she has an Indian husband who's very white presenting.
Like it's, I said, I said, man, if they just had, if she just had a white husband, this would be a really great show.
But regardless, it is funny, charming, entertaining, and there's maybe even some subversive humor in there.
Most of the cast is white.
There's like an Indian, Native American ghost.
There's a sassy black lady, flapper ghost, et cetera.
But if you need some empty escapism, it's a really well-done, funny show.
Maybe everybody knows about this.
Maybe nobody knows about this.
I had never heard of it or seen a second of it.
And I have to say, I'm looking forward to the next episode.
Rolo, have you watched it at all?
You got to stay on top of it.
You have to watch TV all day long to stay on top of things.
I have watched it, but I am aware of it.
Generally, I don't watch any TV shows.
I watch three TV shows total, not counting if I have a niche to yeah, or Star Trek.
So what are the three shows you watch?
I watch Cobra Kai, Stranger Things, and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
All right.
Not a bad Troika.
I think that both Stranger Things and Cobra Kai jumped the shark as they went along, as these series tend to do.
I lost track of always sunny in Philadelphia.
But yeah, check out Ghost Left.
That show is still funny, by the way.
It's always funny.
The newest season was actually very good.
All right.
Ghosts is on Paramount Plus.
We don't get terrestrial television here.
It's all streaming.
But yeah, Hieronymus, when you do rarely pop on that TV with the generator giving you juice, any recommendations for the audience?
Lonesome Dove.
Jeremiah Johnson.
Yeah.
Well, all the best movies are Westerns.
Your wife is like the shrunken Wojack.
You're like, honey, it's time to watch Jeremiah Johnson again next year.
Yeah, I just don't want to turn on the TV and ask your doctor if La Vitra is right for you.
I don't have to care about that.
La Vitra isn't right for me.
And I don't want to hear about your AIDS medicine.
It's just nasty.
Yeah.
We will, of course, be taking the kids out trick-or-treating on Halloween.
One of the kids said, can we do trunker treating and trick-or-treating?
I said, no, I am religiously opposed to trunker treating.
I don't just go on car to car to fill your sex.
That's against the spirit of Halloween.
But Sam Rolo Hieronymus, before we land this puppy, any Halloween plans?
Do you give a rat's ass?
Watch any good flicks.
Oh, I don't want to open that can of worm with can of worms with Rolo.
Go ahead.
Oh, yeah.
That's coming right at the end here.
Yeah, that's a good question.
There are a couple of movies I like to watch.
I guess if I had to throw one out, I like Nasferatu with the typo negative soundtrack to it is one we like.
That's awesome.
Yeah, that is a good one.
And my youngest son, he's really too old for the trick-or-treating, but he does like to dress up and maybe hang out with his pals or something.
And coach, you know my son, Ro Rolo, you know my son as well.
He's got the total like a dictator outfit.
Like, you know, sunglasses and that type of military hat.
And he's got like a phony military jacket with like a red banner sash across the you know.
I bet the chicks dig that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we do enjoy it in a way.
I've got my, I just got my pumpkin today.
I always like to carve it.
And then I enjoy baking the seeds with a little bit of seasoning on there.
Oh my gosh.
Oh, yeah, baby.
And I like that's to your gums, but delicious as hell.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And I like carving the pumpkin and then we put a candle in there.
And we don't do a lot of decorating, but I like some of those basic things like that.
I like to put the, I like to do the pumpkin.
Yeah.
There, there was like when the kids were real little, we probably splurged a couple hundred bucks on Halloween decorations.
You know, a little skeleton, you press the button and it cackles, etc.
The dog.
And last year we got the damn banjo playing skeletons to sit out front.
And yeah, and it was a dad fail.
I left them out.
They got rained on and they didn't work this year.
I was like, son of a bitch, 100 bucks for those damn banjo playing skeletons and they don't work.
So they're just sitting out there as decorations now.
But yeah.
When I was little, you know, we didn't have, we didn't do a lot of those things.
Like there weren't just there.
It's like Halloween, they say, is the holiday that people spend the most money now.
Maybe after Christmas or maybe even more than Christmas.
But the other thing I like to do on Halloween, I have a CD and it's called Classical Terror.
And it's all like that, you know, like Night on Bald Mountain and Dance of the Mountain King or something.
But the one I remember from when I was little and I was in school, we had music classes, Dance Macabre by St. Sans.
Oh, that's a great piece right there.
So I like to listen to that on Halloween as well.
Absolutely.
Takata and Fugue indeed.
Oh, yes.
I still put that on.
I'm like, kids, this was a banger back in the 1700s.
Yes.
Oh, and my recommendation is if you've seen all of them, and that's the case in our hat.
Like, we're really, you know, the bottom of the barrel for Halloween movies.
My wife has disavowed all of Rolo's film recommendations.
But the Pope's Exorcist with Russell Crowe was very good.
I forget if I talked about it on the show.
It was energy.
It jumped a shark at the end.
It got ludicrous.
But he's just such a great actor.
And it was a fairly good.
Yeah, I like him.
Exorcist tale.
Hieronymus, over to you.
Any Halloween tales, tips, treats, tricks, or nothing.
Oh, I like to watch anything about the bubonic plague at this time of the year.
I like to get all medieval and, you know, the Shakespearean tragedies and bonfires and, you know, some good ale and get all Elizabethan and all that good stuff.
There's something about the death of the year that I still like it, even though I'm a Christian.
I don't really.
And we don't have any trick-or-treaters or anything up here.
We live on our mountain.
We don't have anything like that.
Yeah, I do like to indulge in a little bit of that.
That movie, The Witch.
That was a good movie.
One of the better horror films I've seen in a long time.
17th century family that leaves the colony there because they disagree with their scripture interpretations.
They go out in the width of the woods and they're just attacked by a demonic witch and tears their family apart.
Very, very, to me, it was less like watching a film and more like being transported back to the 1630s and being there.
What it actually probably would have looked like.
Spark.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Classic call.
Rolo, don't let my wife give you any guff.
One or two recommendations for the audience.
It's not too late.
Well, this on the 29th.
Well, I will, I like to go a little outside the box.
So I'll do two double features.
Oh, boy.
And then it's an obvious one with something I bet you didn't know that there was this sequel.
So the first one is Exorcist, double featured with Exorcist 3.
Is that the one Jeffrey Dahmer liked to watch with his gay black lovers?
Yes.
Yes, it is.
Not just the black ones.
Yeah, not just the black ones.
All of them.
Yes.
But yes.
And we do have a commentary track for it.
The whole movie with our commentary track has been uploaded to Telegram.
So you can watch it with our funny talking.
If you, you know, if you're too chicken to watch it with the actual sound.
And the other one is three.
You did the commentary to the third?
Okay.
Yes.
And the second one is Psycho paired with Psycho 2.
Okay.
And yeah, so Psycho is a classic.
And at this point, everybody knows it.
But I think the second one is a better watch.
And it's more interesting.
And, you know, 14 words be damned because the amount of amorous I feel towards Meg Tilly in that movie.
Oh, boy.
You know, eat crap, Martha Quinn.
This is the quintessential 80s bob.
I've never heard either of these names, but do you know who Jennifer Tilly is?
Jennifer Tilly.
No, Jennifer Tilly.
Isn't she like a half Filipino or quarter Filipino or something?
Chinese.
Chinese.
Okay.
Yeah.
And when she was young, you didn't know, but now it's like, yep.
It comes out.
It comes out later.
Yeah.
Berating you for not eating your noodles in the nursing home.
Yeah.
All right, gents.
That's all I got in my stack.
It is 1251 here on the East Coast.
And I got to say, Hieronymus, during the break, I went outside.
I looked up at that beautiful full moon, all the trees and the crickets.
And I said, this is good enough for me.
I don't need to move all the way hell out there.
But God bless you and your family.
And thanks for coming on.
It's our pleasure and our honor.
Any last thoughts from you, my friend?
No, I just wish a few more of you were out here to have a beer with.
It's kind of lonesome out here.
And it's a perfect place for white nationalists.
So there's my plug.
There you go.
I'm happy that you're happy in West Virginia.
And God bless you and your family, coach.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Hieronymus.
Means the world.
We will have that beer come hill or high water out your way, out my way, or somewhere in between.
And yeah, seriously, if you're interested in Idaho, generic questions or specific questions, I'll be the go-between to protect Hieronymus and happy to, you know, possibly help him help you.
Sammy Baby, thank you.
Happy pre-Halloween to you.
And yeah.
Yeah, well, and more important than Halloween, the next day is all Saints Day.
All Saints Day.
So a fine day to celebrate as well.
So yeah, great show.
I think Hieronymus did a great job here tonight.
Amen.
Rolo, it is, well, here, I'll say Full House episode 171 was recorded on October 28th or October 27th, now October 28th.
Follow us on Telegram, Gab.
Most importantly, if you really want to catch our attention, email us, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
And we have not plugged our give send go yet this show.
But if you like what we do, check us out, givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
Or if you want to do another good thing, subscribe to surreal politics and use code fullhouse when you check out so you know that we sent you.
But Rolo, you got the DJ booth.
You got the last word.
And thank you so much for putting up with my ribbing and suffering through migraines.
And yeah, I mean, show wouldn't be the same without you, buddy.
It's over to you.
Well, and we also didn't say this on air.
I have been here two years since I believe October 5th.
Oh, great.
Congratulations.
Thank you, sir.
Possibly, probably our longest running producer.
Yeah.
That's right.
Yeah.
Always needs to be more Rolo.
Never enough Rolo.
I always welcome him.
The son of a bitch is playing games and some talking on their show.
Are you saying something?
It's my turn.
Go ahead.
Well, the song is A New Beginning by Wolfie's Just Fine, which is, you may remember this guy as who did the song Show Me Your Genitals.
But he makes well, it was a very early YouTube meme.
And when he makes less silly stuff, he has a musical act called Wolfie's Just Fine, which is a little tongue-in-cheek, but sure.
I was going to say blatant sop to curry favor with my wife.
Yeah.
All right.
Well, fam, we love you.
Thanks for riding with us.
And we will talk to you next week for sure.
Hieronymus, it's all yours.
God bless.
See ya.
See ya!
Back then, you were so much older than me, but now you're a child.
Oh, I was wondering why you got naked when that boy started kissing you.
I was disgusted yet oddly excited.
The feeling was completely new.
It made you laugh when he kissed your breast.
I didn't get the joke.
He got up a few moments later and left you all alone As you lay there in the forest.
I pictured myself lying right next to you.
You fell asleep.
Someone approached I figured it was your friend returning to you didn't have any time to move.
We sat and watched as he murdered you.
I thought it was safe.
We wanted to play.
Yo brother, we should leave now.
We were led astray.
pastor would say oh your sins shall find you out but frozen desperately trying to make sense of it
Your body lay motionless and your face was covered in blood.
And then your boyfriend came back looking for you.
I started shaking cause I knew We tried to warn him, but he couldn't hear us through the screen.
What could we do?
His blood was dark, it was almost blue I thought it was safe We wanted to play Oh brother We should leave now We were led astray The pastor would say Oh,
Your sins shall find you out And as we make I never know you.
As we made our way back home, I felt a pain.
As we made our swamp, I felt a shame.
I didn't have any time to move.
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