A lifelong National Socialist was suffering from kidney failure, and a young Full Haus listener answered our seemingly implausible call for an organ donor. Hear both their stories together - plus a lot more - this week! Break: Soldat by Endstufe (DJ German Mike) Close: American Kids by Kenny Chesney (DJ Robert) 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.
We live in dark and painful times, no doubt, but you don't need us to regale you with a litany.
A quick scan of the news or your local grocery store is usually enough to do the trick.
Avoiding despondency in this hellscape requires either an iron spine, a willful blind eye, an evil soul, or mental retardation.
We don't shy away from discussing the worst of it all on this show, but we also try our best to emphasize the best.
Just this past week, for example, on the small and personal scale, one of our favorite couples welcomed their first child, hopefully the first of many.
One of our best guys was released from prison just in time to spend Thanksgiving with his wife and son.
The fundraiser for one of our own blew past its goal.
And another one of our favorite couples is at baby DEF CON 2, awaiting the arrival of their second child.
And that's just a small sample.
And in the big picture, Israel is taking L's in Gaza and in global opinion just as fast as they're stacking the bodies of Palestinian children.
The fissures and the foundation of the evil empire of the American left are expanding as the kids learn to heed Nancy Reagan's old mantra to just say no to Zionism and Jewish lies.
The world's wealthiest and most industrious man, Elon Musk, is again at least signal boosting the truth.
And so is arguably the most influential American right-wing commentator in Tucker Carlson.
And accordingly, so are the scum-sucking gatekeeping clickbait shills from Charlie Kirk to Jack Basobiek to Juden Peterstein and Alex Jones, who are forced to do the same lest they lose any remaining credibility with their increasingly radicalized by reality audience.
In that spirit, and for this Thanksgiving week episode, we bring you a heartbreaking and heartwarming tale of medical pain and suffering, the hunt for a great white donor, a full house Hail Mary that scored a righteous touchdown, and a mostly happy ending that's still unfolding.
So Mr. Producer, hit it.
You got an organ going there.
No wonder the sound has so much body.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's realest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
It is episode 172 and I am your recently rejuvenated host, Coach Finstock.
I've been on and off sick for over a month, truth be told.
Back with another two hours of genuine sincerity.
That bumper was organ donor by DJ Shadow, a longtime favorite track of mine that was just waiting for the perfect excuse to be played on this show.
Before we meet the birth panel and our very special guests, however, huge thanks to Charles, Theo, and Rusty for their generous support of Full House this week.
If you'd like to be like those lords of largesse, please go to givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or full-house.com and the support us tab.
And with all that, let's get on with the show.
First up, if you love this episode, all thanks to him.
And if you hate this episode, all shame to him.
Sam, thanks so much for setting this up.
Thanks, Coach.
Yeah, it's a great story.
I'm glad to have these guys on.
These guys are friends.
These guys are brothers.
And I think the listeners will really appreciate it.
It certainly is a great time to be a white nationalist with a lot of great things you can point to.
I was just on a vetting call this week and vetting a very fine man in our area.
And he was saying that one of the things he really wanted was to be able to get in touch with other serious guys and families and have good contact with people and good positive events.
And so that was when we asked him, hey, do you have questions?
He says, will I be able to get involved with things in the area?
Do you guys have outings and things?
And I was kind of holding back because this was a vetting call, you know.
But what I wanted to say to him is, my goodness, three weekends ago, we had a gigantic bash for one of our ladies turning 40 years old.
And then last weekend, we had our men's group had a wonderful outing out in the wilds of Iowa for a weekend, which was great.
And then this weekend, we were celebrating a couple of birthdays.
A bunch of us went out to a log cabin, all white nationalists.
And I mean, if you and next week there's a concert.
So, I mean, you could spend all your time doing this if you wanted to.
So it's definitely a great time because there's so many things you can get involved.
And so if any listeners are not involved, please get involved.
And if you say, well, I am involved, but there's not much in my area.
Well, then start making things happen in your area.
Oh, yeah.
Any Johnny come lately, just start up an active club, you and a buddy, right?
I'm mostly joking there, but it's like there's so many options.
Back in my day, it was like, well, there's Patriot Front, there's the pool parties, there's the matter.
There are like three or four things.
And now there's a whole bunch of options.
You could argue that maybe more, too many is too much or something like that.
Or more the merrier, you know, let a thousand flowers blossom, that sort of thing.
Well, you can be involved if you want to be in a white nationalist outing every single weekend.
You just about can do it.
Absolutely.
Thanks again, Sam, for setting this up.
Whenever anybody gives me guff about not doing the show, I'm like, well, if somebody else would like to produce a show or come up with the concept, you know, have at it by all means.
This will probably be.
Thank you again.
All right.
Next time.
Forget the migraines.
This week, he's got delirium tremens that are just right now starting to recede as he recovers from major withdrawal without full house for the past two weeks.
Rolo, my friend, welcome back.
Has it been two weeks?
I haven't noticed.
I don't know.
Yeah.
Hey, no, we were going to go last weekend, despite my grids, but our special, very special guest who's still going to come on was out of town.
So, you know, I would have done it.
Yeah.
Okay.
Real quick before we get on with our very special guests.
What's up with you?
Well, you know, I'm just I got something I really, really want to get off my chest.
I'm not happy about that, but I think everyone is going to be much happier after my vent.
All right.
Probably second half venting, but if you really got to go for it in the first.
No, no, I can wait.
I can wait.
All right.
A little teaser for the second half.
Maybe we'll paywall it.
Just kidding.
Well, this one will probably be.
He's waited two weeks.
Yeah.
Cantwell's like, are you fellas going to paywall any other content there?
No, he actually didn't say anything like that, but I'm feeling guilty.
We'll have to do a special and yeah, encourage some more signups there.
All right.
Enough.
Let's move on again.
our first special guest this week he's been a proud german chauvinist skinhead music aficionado and white nationalist ass kicker for decades but the red lace has perhaps collected a little bit of dust up in the closet after one of his kidneys crapped out on him within the past few years but he is newly fixed up and on the mend german mike welcome to full house thank you Honored to have you.
It was an honor to meet you at my first ever skinhead show, probably, God, a year and a half ago.
Remember you clear as day there.
And we're still going to put you through the works here, the rigor, the ringer.
Your ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please, Mike.
Well, number one, I'm first generation German.
I was baptized Lutheran and my marital status is separated.
All right.
And you do have a good number of kids, right?
Four.
Three girls and a boy.
Good score.
And when you say first generation, that means both your parents immigrated from Germany, I presume.
My father's grandparents immigrated from Germany, and then my mother was sent here after World War II.
No kidding.
And they were not Jewish émigrés.
Is that right, Mike?
No, sorry.
All right.
Sam smiling.
I got to like rib the guests just a little bit.
All right.
And let's go on to our next guest and we'll come right back to you, Mike.
We don't know if his Zoomer fro perm seeped into his brain to make him crazier than a loon or if he's just one of the most admirable and courageous young listeners in the entire full house audience willing to go under the knife to help a total stranger in the spirit of our cause.
And despite his fondness for the bestial electronic subgenre called drum and bass, we are damn proud to welcome on Robert.
How are you, pal?
Doing good, coach.
I appreciate you having me on and everything.
What can I say?
I just got that dog in me.
You know, drum and bass is good genre music, and we can talk about that later a little more if you like.
But I do appreciate you having me on.
You bet.
Yeah.
I had a very bad experience with a turn of the century, as it were, but we'll get into that later.
And Robert, yourself, ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
Well, I am a Anglo-Saxon ethnically.
As far as religion goes, trying to be Christian.
I've talked with Sam about it before.
It's just sort of a long journey, I believe, to really try to become like Christ-like.
And as far as fatherhood status goes, I'm a single Pringle.
I have no children of my own yet.
But I hope eventually I'll get to, you know, maybe 10 plus someday.
Good stuff.
Yeah.
Yes, with that attitude.
I've never heard single Pringle before, these kids with the lingo.
When you say real quick, Robert, that you're trying to find Christianity or find your way there, is that just because you were raised irreligiously?
Lack of.
Yeah, so my parents, they never really made religion an important part of our lives.
Whenever I was growing up, you know, I kind of grew up like in a middle class, like white, like vanilla household.
So they were mostly just kind of focused on work and other such things, but they weren't really very spiritual people, you know, in all honesty.
So I was kind of left on my own to try to find that stuff.
Maybe we can talk about that a little bit later, too, because the kids have started.
More daughter has been asking.
So what are we, Dad?
And of course, I give her the long explanation.
Well, I was raised this, but the whole thing.
But yeah, we'll save that for later.
We're going to come back to you, Robert.
But first, I want to go back to Mike.
And before we do the health saga and the sort of full house Hail Mary that was miraculously answered and ultimately unnecessary, I think it's fair to say that you've lived a long and fascinating life.
Were you a white nationalist from childhood, Mike, or how did you find your way into our scene?
And what was it like back then, I guess?
Well, I pretty much spent all my summers every year going to Germany for the whole summer.
So that's all I heard from my grandfather and all those guys because my grandfather was Gebirk's Jäger Mountain Troops.
Okay.
And he was fighting in the mountains and then he got sent into the Russian front.
And were they National Socialist, loyalist to the end?
Were they 100% pro?
It was a disaster that they lost all the time.
That's all I ever heard from my grandparents all the time.
My mother was a Jungfrau, which was like the German Girl Scouts.
And my uncle was a Hitler youth.
Sure.
And do you know why or under what circumstances they came to America?
Well, after the war, there was nothing left because they totally just took out all of Germany.
So my parents, my grandparents found out there was a program that if you had a relative that lived in the United States, that they would send you.
So my mom had a great aunt that lived here in Chicago.
So they sent her here.
But right before my mom passed away in 2016, she had told me that she wished she had never came here.
And my mom was always a German citizen to the day she died.
She never took United States citizenship or nothing.
Yeah, I'm familiar with other immigrants who came here in the 70s and later in life realized, oh man, this thing really went off the rails.
And, you know, hindsight's 2020, but perhaps we should have stayed in the old country.
So you're growing up with the right instruction and the heritage and the faith and your heritage.
You speak German fluently.
Roughly what decade or did you come into the scene through skinhead music, the same as Sam?
And when was that?
Well, I started out as a long-haired rocker, you know, listening to Motorhead and that kind of stuff.
Sure.
Then I kind of went into the punk rock scene for about a half year, skateboarding.
And then I was bouncing at a club down in a city that was like a punk rock new wave place.
I was a bouncer there.
And then there was a lot of skinhead guys hanging around there that I worked with.
And then like 85, that's when I decided to shave my head and get my first pairs in at Paradox.
Good stuff.
Let's go over to Robert too.
Robert, roughly how old you are.
How old are you?
Excuse me.
Oh, yeah, you know, you're good.
I'm in my early 20s right now.
So I'm still a pretty young chicken, I would say, but I'm deep enough in there to sort of understand how the world works, you know, not like a sprigy kid, I suppose.
And, you know, back in the day, of course, it was, you know, music or newsletters.
Sam's told us about the old.
Sam would get faxes.
No, Sam would sign up for newsletters and call in to hear recordings.
Let me guess.
You were on, was it the Chans that first woke you up?
Yeah, you know what?
That's actually pretty accurate.
Yeah.
I didn't know that.
2016.
Yeah.
It was the great 4chan that got me into things a little bit.
Good stuff.
And how'd you find us, just out of curiosity?
Oh, yeah.
Well, actually, I didn't find you guys until I was about maybe three or four years into white nationalist politics.
At first, I kind of thought that I was just like an isolated incident.
I didn't really think that like white nationalist politics existed outside of the internet for some reason.
You know, that the media really doesn't expose you to half of the stuff that happens out there in our spheres.
And one day I was just kind of at work and I remember I was scrolling on a 4chan looking for like podcasts that were approved for white nationalists.
And I saw Full House was one of them.
And I was like, oh, I'm going to check these guys out, you know, and it was very early on.
You know, you guys still had JO on at the time.
And I remember I loved the show so much.
Like the family-oriented content was my bag.
So good stuff.
Even as a young 20s guy, that's cool to hear.
And I swear I really, I have never posted on 4chan.
So if anybody's endorsing Full House on there, it's probably Rolo.
No, but that's pro bono volunteerism from our guys.
Glad to have you with us.
Thank you, means the world.
Yeah, somebody once disparaged us as, oh, half your audience is unmarried, single, no kids.
I was like, yeah, what's the problem?
That's part of our mission statement is to entertain and enlighten those guys and get them excited for the big game.
Let's get down to brass techs.
Probably a year ago, I want to say, roughly, Sam put out what I thought was more than a Hail Mary sort of pie in the sky announcement that one of our friends needed a kidney.
And if there was anybody in the audience who would possibly consider donating, that it would be going to a great guy and a worthy cause.
And our pal Robert, to my great surprise, answered the call.
I've talked about this on the show a little bit for those who maybe didn't hear it that I was like, first I thought maybe this was like a troll, somebody trying to get personal information.
Then I thought it's just some kid who like says, oh yeah, yeah, sure, I'll donate.
And then would get cold feet later.
But it went all the way.
Mike, not to delve too much, but what happened with the old kidney?
Or you were suffering for years.
Whatever you're comfortable sharing about the health background, please.
Okay.
Well, in 2016, I'm a union tradesman, a sheet metal worker, and I was working at Midway Airport up on the scissor lifts, hanging ductwork down the terminals.
And I kept getting dizzy and almost feeling like I was going to pass out.
My partners like brought me down off the lift.
And then my foreman came by and said, what's going on, Mike?
I'm like, I don't know, dude.
I have no idea.
I feel like I got to keep laying down and pass out.
So he called the office.
They said for me to take a week off.
And I went to the doctor.
And the doctor said I had 3% left in both kidneys.
And he wanted me to start dialysis like a month later.
And I'm like, dude, I got to go to Germany.
I got to see my family because I knew once that started, I'll probably never make it back to visit.
So I hopped the plane like in May and I lost myself.
I didn't come back.
My wife had to come back in October to find me because I was just abroad all over Europe visiting friends and seeing as many people as I could see.
And not getting any treatment?
I mean, did you think you were on your way out and that was your last hurrah?
Two more weeks, I would have passed away.
And you said something about 3% blocked or was it 3% kidney function?
I only had 3%.
Basically, you have two kidneys.
So each one was at 3% left.
So I only had 6% of kidney function left.
So I was already in stage four renal failure.
And when so you got back to the States and did they have to start dialysis immediately and or whenever that was and what's involved with that?
Yep.
Yeah, that Monday morning, went to my doctor and he's like, you're crazy, man.
He's like, you look, you're yellow.
You have so much jonda and just foreign stuff in your body that's not supposed to be there, poison.
And they sent me right to the emergency room.
They put me in a room and I had to have four transfusions that night.
And then they started me on dialysis the next morning.
And what is dialysis exactly?
You're not getting a blood transfusion every time.
Are they filtering your blood through a machine?
Yeah, they basically stick two needles in your arm and it pumps it out, cleans it, and then puts it back in.
And I used to go Monday, Wednesday, Friday from five in the morning till 9.30 in the morning.
So basically four hours, three days a week.
Yeah, that's tough.
And you were undergoing dialysis for how long, roughly?
From 2016, March.
Because I got the new kidney April 12th.
And you're on a donor waiting list that entire time?
Yes.
They kept kicking me up, putting me on, and I'm watching all the other people that are doing dialysis, getting a new kidney.
And I'm just like, why aren't I getting one?
There's all like black people.
I had a lot of blacks and a lot of Oriental at my place and Muslim.
And they all got new kidneys way before I even left.
I was like, man, I'm the only one stuck here still.
So you think you were actually put at the back of the line because of your race?
Not that.
I think it's more about the insurance.
I mean, they were charging my insurance $6,000 a day for treatment.
Right.
And I assume you weren't able to go back to work once you had to start the dialysis.
No, I had, couldn't work anymore.
Had to go on disability, which is nothing.
Because I was a union tradesman.
I mean, I made $6,000 a month.
And now I'm only getting like $1,500, $1,600 a month.
So it's a major life change.
Sorry to hear it.
Glad you're still with us.
So you're in dire straits waiting, waiting, waiting.
And Sam, God bless him, floats this thing.
Yep.
Go ahead, Sam.
We got, you know, I've been knowing Mike now.
This is maybe two and a half, three years ago.
We've been knowing Mike and we just got to talking and stuff.
And Mike is, hey, you know, could you say something on the show?
You never know.
Like, it's not just about the kidney.
Maybe somebody knows of a program or something.
It's kind of hard to look somebody in the eye and say, hey, can I have your kidney?
But who knows?
You put something out there.
Maybe somebody.
Yeah.
You know, put it out there.
Maybe somebody.
Go ahead.
It's true.
My kids, none of my kids even were willing to donate.
Yeah.
So you don't know.
I mean, maybe somebody knows of a program or something.
That was my thought.
Like, because different universities, sometimes you're getting something where they can help you.
So we put it out there.
And then what a surprise.
Go ahead.
I won't spoil it.
I was telling my family about the show before I evicted them from the kitchen so I could have my prime recording spot despite the damn internet going out.
And yeah, it was like, what?
Really?
Yeah.
He was willing to give up his kidney?
That's great.
And then my daughter's like, what's a kidney?
What does it do?
Yeah.
We're not doing that.
I don't know what it is.
Then in those early days, we were feeling out Robert there and saying, okay, well, you know, we went back and forth talking just to see if he was for real, you know, and then at some point I put him in touch with Mike and I said, hey, I got to step out of this.
This is like too emotional for me to even, you know, be hanging on a thread about.
So they talked, they worked it out and they started taking the steps, you know, to get qualified to do it and all that.
So I'll let them go ahead and continue to tell the story.
I felt the same way, Sam.
I was like, oh, it was like holding like a very fragile crystal or something.
I don't want to be the one to drop this or screw it up.
And the thought also occurs, Sam, that, you know, you could have mentioned this on show one and got the show rolling a lot earlier.
But instead, you waited you waited until episode 125 or whatever that was.
Robert, I was, you don't really have a Zoomer fro, although you probably could if you went into the salon.
Yeah, he's got a mop up there, but it's not curly, ladies, yeah.
It doesn't shave it.
I hate taking a kidney, kidney from no Zoomer fro.
Serious question, Robert.
I mean, I'm still smiling through the microphone and kind of surprised.
Maybe this is all still a little elaborate because you're eating cold feet at the end.
But what was going through your head at the time to make you respond?
I remember you emailing in and saying, you guys were helpful to me.
And now I feel like a true National Socialist would step up to the plate here.
Whatever you want to share from that thought process.
Yeah, coach.
So at the time, you know, I had gotten involved with my local pool party organization and everything.
And, you know, I had been pretty well established for about a year or two whenever this call was made for an organ transplant.
The thing is, at the time, I was kind of struggling in my personal life with some things.
And I felt like I just wasn't doing enough.
So I sort of started at that time going through a little bit of like a spiritual journey and trying to establish myself in the world as an actual person that would make a difference somehow.
The thing is really, it's just sort of popped up and it was the sort of thing where it was like, hey, I've been looking for something for a long time now.
And this is a perfect opportunity for me to try to prove my salt a little bit, you know?
And whenever you guys made the call for it, I decided I would, you know, get back with you and see what I can do.
You know, it was a little scary at first, so, you know, I'm not going to lie.
I believe it.
I mean, did you research, you know, life with one kidney or what was involved and all that?
And you still didn't get spooked?
Yeah.
So the whole thing is whenever you go through like the donation process with a kidney, they do multiple, multiple like psychiatric examinations.
They do all sorts of like screening on you.
They do a lot of teaching to make sure that you're well informed of the risk involved with the process and the rewards that are associated with it.
The rures are obviously just like, oh, you feel good about yourself.
You know, you did something cool.
But the thing is, like, before you go through any sort of donation process, there's hours and hours of content that you have to go through where you have to learn about all the intricacies of how it works, especially with how young I was.
I was getting phone calls from the lady that I was talking with that was my donor facilitator.
And she was talking to me like, hey, you know, like, you're a young guy and everything.
We're not exactly sure how this would work out for you.
It should be okay.
But if you're having any sort of second thoughts, just let us know and we can cut it off at any time.
You know, so giving you a lot of information you wanted it.
Yeah, but you didn't take it.
How far did you go in the process?
I think the spoiler is out there that eventually some other donor, I don't know if it was a, you know, a car crash victim or a living one that Mike got hooked up with, but how far did you get before Mike got the alternative kidney?
So basically, like once I started doing, I think I remember it was the same week that I had done my first blood test to see if I was like medically cleared to make any sort of organ donation.
Yeah.
It was within that week is whenever I got the news from Mike that he would be getting a new donation.
So I went through like the schooling and everything for it.
I did like the examinations as far as like your mental health goes and all like the information stuff.
But as far as clinical things, I really only got through one blood test before we got the great news of our of our homeboy Mike over here getting his new kidney.
Yeah.
And I imagine you were quite relieved.
Let's be honest.
I'm not going to be disappointed.
Okay.
Yeah.
You really wanted to be the kidney donor for the rest of your life.
You know, but the thing, the thing is, I think that it was that pushing this process that shook something loose on Mike's end.
You know, so it really was, maybe it really all worked out.
You know, it like worked out miraculously.
So, Mike, did they, do you think they gave you a basketball American's kidney just to mess with you?
Or back in the local synagogue?
Do you know how?
I mean, lately, I've been wanting to eat watermelon and bagels.
I don't know why.
You got a kidney from Lenny Kravitz?
There you go.
I'm very grateful for what he did and all the effort because I got my facilitator called me all the time, said he needs to do this.
He needs to do that.
And I would always text him and say, you got this number, that number, blah, blah, blah.
But April 12th, I got a call and I thought it was a joke.
And the lady's like, no.
She's called me at like five in the afternoon.
She's like, we have a gentleman that's in his mid early 40s, had a massive stroke to where his brain went dead and his kidney was being donated.
And there's three other people besides you that might be a match.
And then she said, she wouldn't give me exact where he's from, but she said it was in a southern, so I'm going to assume I knocked it out to either Tennessee or Kentucky is where he came from.
Good odds.
I kept mentioning towns because I'm like, oh, I got a friend that lives in Florida that just passed away in Tennessee.
And I was wondering if maybe my friend Dave, you know, from the Florida guys.
Right.
And then I found out it wasn't.
But Sam, there's the only problem is I regret.
Yeah.
Go ahead, please.
I kind of regret that I should have maybe waited longer and not jumped on it.
I mean, you got to realize eight years, it's a struggle.
I can't go anywhere.
I can't do anything.
I can't travel.
Nothing.
Yeah.
I mean, ask Sam.
I barely ever came out.
I couldn't get around or do nothing.
It was tough.
It was tough.
Sometimes we would, sometimes we would arrange a ride for him and stuff, you know, just to make sure he knew he was not forgotten.
But yeah, it was tough.
But he did.
You did sneak off to Germany.
I had to go for the two weeks because my, of course, Nate and Eric were playing over there in Germany for a couple of weeks.
And then I found out that Enstup was playing, which is Jens, one of my favorite bands from Germany.
And then there's another good band of mine from Stuttgart that played too.
Because when we're standing there and Nate's like, oh man, I love these guys.
And then the singer comes off the stage and he looks at me.
Like Mike.
I'm like hey Stefan, and it's like you know, you know these guys.
I'm like yeah, I was like these are my buddies from like the early 90s.
So you hopped over there Mike, before before you got the transplant or right after before I got the transplant that was last october.
But I wound up paying almost 3 000 euro just for treatment and I got a bill in a mail the other day from the Dr Alice's Center saying that I still owed them a thousand euro.
But, son of a gun, i'm never gonna send that.
Let them come find me here.
You can tell them in the original German.
Yeah, the problem was that this kidney was not a living donor kidney, it was a deceased kidney donor.
So my body is taking it a lot harder.
I'm still not at a hundred percent with my kidney.
I've been fighting.
My blood, my uh blood, red blood cells are.
I'm fighting really bad.
I have to take two, two shots a week just to try to keep it up enough.
That's why I kept passing out and falling down all the time because I was so weak.
Yeah Mike, Mike went through uh quite a recovery he's.
The recovery was probably as hard as anything he had to do and uh, three months.
You know, they tell you in the kidney classes oh, you'll get the new kidney, we'll be done.
In four hours we'll do a four inch incision on your side of your uh belt line and then three days you'll be, you know, cut loose to go home.
I was there three months, I guess.
We they found out that I had an irregular valve in my heart.
My blood's not pumping properly.
And then i'm still fighting uh, fluid gain, because now I have to drink like two liters a day, right.
So now the problem is my ankles and my legs are like swelling up from all the fluid and i'm getting a lot of fluid in my lungs lately.
So I got an inhaler.
Now I got to inhale every day, not out of the woods, yet you do not look, you don't.
You don't look puffy on on camera.
If that makes it Mike's like, I don't give a damn.
No, i've lost yeah, I lost one 274.
I went in and I came.
I went to the doctor last week.
I was 225.
All right.
Oh, my goodness, they gave you this, they gave you.
I went from 2x.
That went from 2x to like xl sweatpants.
Now that's, that's one way to lose weight.
Um, I wanted to say Sam, it's absolutely not crazy to think that yep, by Robert being willing to get on the list, it sort of shook the system a little bit or bumped him off the priority list like hey, this guy is still on the list.
Hey, here's somebody coming out of the woodwork.
Not crazy at all to do that.
And it also makes me think about the process of organ donation.
Seriously uh, the most recent time I went to get my license renewed, I uh, just without thought, said no, I do not want to be an organ donor if I die, because of the cynical properly cynical approach that so many of us take to the system, that you know there's organ harvesting operations and what if i'm not actually dead?
And they decide oh, this guy's brain or whatever is useful to somebody else.
Uh Mike, I suppose you would suggest to our guys that they should be organ donors.
Fair to say, I think you should be an organ donor, but to our own people, and there's probably not well yeah, you'd have to be a willing alive one to do that, as opposed to after you're kidding.
There's a lot of stuff you got to go through.
I i've had to see psychiatrists like four or five times to clear me All kinds of doctors, just never ending.
It was non-stop, go, go, go.
And I pushed them.
I called every week.
And my nurse coordinator is like, are you calling again?
I'm like, yeah, dude, what's going on with the kidney?
I want a kidney.
I'm ready.
You told me to lose weight.
I lost weight.
I'm in shape.
I'm ready to go.
I'm cleared by all these doctors you needed me to be cleared by.
I took all these tests and everything you guys wanted.
It's all done.
I'm ready.
What's going on?
I mean, it was very frustrating.
I'm still stressed out from it.
Yep.
Well, I'm glad you're here with us.
And I have to think that, Robert, you really opened up a can of moral hazard there because if there's any other full house listeners out there who need a kidney, they know where to come asking for it.
I kind of wish I would have waited to see if Robert did match because I would have loved to have had Robert's kidney.
But I think I was just so desperate in the moment.
And the lady calls me back up at midnight and says, are you ready?
I'm like, what do you mean?
Am I ready?
Is this a test or practice or what?
She's like, no, the other three didn't match and you're a perfect match with this donor.
It's happening.
You've got an hour to get to the hospital.
I was like, get out of here.
Robert's got the finest kidneys.
The finest, the finest of Anglo-Saxon kidneys.
One glass of milk and you would have been able to do anything.
I'm hoping it was a white person, but I'll never know probably.
That's all right.
I don't care.
When I got all my ACL repairs, yeah, the kids or not the kids wouldn't joke at that time, but my buddies were, hey, coach, you're jumping a little higher there.
No idea.
But I did, yeah, I did get a card in the mail from, you know, the system, the donation system, because I got a cadaver ACL at least twice, maybe three times, whatever.
And it was like, you know, this person's tendon is now in your body.
If you would like to send a thank you note to his survivors, here's, you know, you can do it anonymously through this thing.
And I never did, actually.
It was kind of disturbing.
I was like, I don't know what to say.
Maybe I should have.
Serious question, Robert.
What's the consequence of donating a kidney for the audience that may be put in this situation?
This happens to families, you know, where like, you know, it's like dads needs a kidney and Junior might have to step up to the plate.
I assume you did your homework on what life with one would be like.
Yeah.
So believe it or not, the way it works is, you know, once you donate a kidney, both your kidneys are capable of working at two times the amount that they really need to work to keep your body sustained.
So whenever you donate one, theoretically, one kidney is more than fine to live with.
I believe that most kidney donors actually don't really have a whole lot of problems.
If you do donate a kidney, you're not able to make any other organ donations, I don't believe, for the rest of your life.
So it's off the table to make any sort of other donations.
One and done, off the hook.
Yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
One's enough.
But yeah.
For the most part, like if you know, if you know someone that's in need that needs an organ or a kidney, honestly, the health risk is relatively low.
Obviously, like it is a major surgery.
So there's always going to be risk involved with that.
You need to be in fairly decent shape if you're going to do it.
You know, that way you don't die on the operating table or anything.
But really, the hospitals can tell you that if you want to donate a kidney, they're not able to really say that you will be 100% fine, right?
Because it's sort of a liability thing.
But in most cases, it's actually not that bad to live on without it.
There's a couple of other small things that you have to live with.
I believe there might be a couple of dietary restrictions or medical treatments that you can't get if you donate a kidney.
But it's all really like relatively small stuff.
Jokes aside, brother.
So sincerely proud and impressed by you.
Go ahead, please.
Coach, should I consider donating one of my testicles?
Yeah, I mean, I hear that one of yours could function at four times the rate.
That's right.
That's right.
I can think of a couple guys who might need a little.
You have five.
Oh, there he is.
Donating one is not.
The total recall woman.
Yeah.
Robert, a little more from you, because you certainly earned it.
Our enemies, of course, like to describe white nationalism, national socialism, et cetera, as these violent, life-destroying spirals.
Normal kids with their lives ahead of them, all of a sudden become jackboot-wearing terrorists.
You, I believe, in your email, gave us a little bit of credit or the cause credit, national socialism credit for taking you from, if I recall correctly, an overweight shut-in to getting involved, being healthier, being more confident, et cetera.
Is that fair?
Is that true a little bit about what may have been a transformation for you?
Yeah, Coach.
So really, I mean, I think that most right-wing circles that you get into are just genuinely decent people.
That being said, I think that there are rabbit holes that you can fall down as a young man, right?
Sure.
I mean, we do see like these videos of these guys that are going out in public, like throwing Romans and doing stuff.
I think there was a group recently at Disneyland that did some stuff like that.
Just bad optics things that really make other people look kind of bad.
But in all honesty, most of the bigger networks that are out there within our spheres are full of good people.
They go out of their way to make sure that they get people that are of decent character.
And they really try to make sure that their vetting standards are good enough to where they don't get people that are even degenerates.
They don't want people that have heavy drug use, they have bad mental problems.
They want to keep everyone relatively safe and healthy, you know?
Sure.
And yeah, and that and getting involved.
I don't want to put words in your mouth, but did it, you know, or how did it change you, if at all?
Oh, yeah, no, yeah, of course.
So like the way it first works.
You don't have to put yourself down.
Yeah, I was a fat version.
Maybe you're.
Yeah.
So I started on an episode of my 600-pound life, right?
No, but no, when I first started out, you know, I got in touch with some guys.
And, you know, it's like any other sort of social thing, right?
Where whenever you first get involved with any sort of group of people that you don't know, you're going to be a little bit awkward and you're not going to be completely open.
But honestly, like you form really tight relationships with our guys really quickly.
You know, I think that the quality of man that is involved with our circles speaks a lot to like the sort of relationships you can form.
And over time, you know, I started meeting people that were really good with stuff like nutrition and fitness.
And most people in our causes, they care for your genuine well-being.
You know, they're not trying to sell you products.
Most of them aren't.
They're not, you know, they're not trying to give you like bad information.
They're acting out of goodwill and character.
And, you know, if you talk to some guys.
They can really offer a lot of wisdom, especially if you're a younger man.
You know, I can't really speak for the younger women in the audiences, but I know that obviously most of our circles are sort of like male-oriented.
I think that's just the nature of like politics in general.
But really, like once I got involved with the guys, my local network, I, within the span of probably three years, learned more about being like an actual man than I did most of my life, honestly.
You know, unfortunately, there's a really bad problem with parenting these days.
There's a lot of fathers that don't really know how to be great fathers.
They don't know how to teach their kid how to be masculine.
And whenever you go out to find that elsewhere, you got to just kind of hope and pray that you wind up with a bunch of racist friends, I guess.
You know, it's the best way to go for that sort of stuff.
One more question before we go back to German Mike, who has put on his Knights Cross cap real wartime hours.
Did you talk to your parents about what you were thinking or was this a rogue mission?
Not in terms of the ideology, but about donating the kidney.
Oh, I didn't tell anyone about that stuff.
I do not.
Yeah, I don't like telling people about that sort of thing.
You know, I didn't want to be like, oh, look at me, Mr. Altruistic.
You know, that's not really my kind of thing.
There was probably like two people in my life that knew about it.
And that was really about it.
Those are just people who kind of had to know.
But yeah, no, I'm not a big fan of that kind of stuff.
My esteem for you grows.
Don't get cocky now, Junior.
German Mike, you've got stories out the ass, pardon my French.
You've spent significant time in Germany.
You've been to some of the holy sites.
You've got some relics.
You've been to Nuremberg.
You've been to Braunau.
The mic is yours, big guy.
What do you want to talk about?
Where haven't I been?
Well, have you been to the Berghof in Berchtesgarden, for example?
I don't know if you've been there.
All right.
I have a bottle of Berchtesgarden beer in a basement in my bar from the brewery.
Damn.
Was it depressing to be there or were you filled with a little magic?
We were bunker hunting and tunnel hunting.
Me and my buddy, that's also a military collector.
All right.
How about Nuremberg?
You went to the stadium, the old rally grounds.
I have a skinhead friend, Ilona, that lives in Firth, which is about 15 minutes from Nuremberg.
And then I have a good friend of mine, Tweety, the guitarist from one of the old bands from the old days.
And he lives also right in that area, too.
From what you've seen in Germany or in Europe, I'll go back to the sort of Twitter heydays.
And I remember a lot of Euro guys.
I've never interacted in Europe with WNs, but my travel there predated my involvement.
Do you have more hope for Europe now than America?
Point being back then, I heard a lot of Euro guys.
This is, you know, Trump was going to be the savior of the West, et cetera.
It's all if America falls, or you know, how are you looking at Western civilization, I guess?
Every time I talk to my friends in Germany, they're like, Oh, well, I get my so they get paid like by the month.
You don't get a check every week or every two weeks, right?
You get a check once a month that automatically goes into your bank account.
And 50% of that comes out of that check for national taxes and for immigration.
So you have all these long young immigrants that are coming there.
They get free housing, free car, free cell phone, free health insurance, free money, free dialysis, and all that.
And they just walk around and do nothing.
Yep.
So you're saying they're sticking people.
They're raping girls.
The Germans, you know, want to get the hell out of there.
All my friends hate it there.
They don't want to be there anymore.
They're like, why do you want to come visit, Mike?
I'm like, because it's my heritage, man.
Right.
Would you possibly narrate some choice Hitler speech excerpts for us for the show after the fact in the original?
You think you could do that?
No.
That's those days in the 30s and 40s was Hoch Deutsch, which is high German.
It's kind of different now.
I mean, where I come from, I come from the south by Bavaria, Baden-Wittenberg, Stuttgart.
And we speak Schwebisch, a Schwebisch Deutsch.
And whenever I'm up north visiting friends up in the northern part, Berlin, Dresden area, Rostock, they always laugh because they're like, oh, Mike's speaking the Schwebisch Deutsch.
And actually, Schwebisch Deutsch is Hillbilly German.
Oh, it's Hillbill.
Oh, so you're the Hillbilly.
Yeah, so I'm speaking Hillbilly German.
It's kind of funny.
I thought you were going to be the fancy pants with the old school German through your grandparents and parents.
No.
Go ahead.
So basically, I would get out of school, like the end of June, public school, Chicago public school.
And then my mom was like, oh, you want to go to Germany?
I'm like, what do you think?
So I'd be on a plane.
They'd be put me on a Luktanza with the stewardess and I'd be on my way to Germany.
By yourself.
Yeah, by myself.
My cousin and grandma would pick me up at the airport.
And then I would stay at my grandma's until like the end of August.
So basically three months.
And then in like August, everyone, most companies shut down in the end of August.
So the whole family can go on vacation together for six weeks.
So my cousins and uncle and aunt, they would go down to Spain south of Valencia on the Mediterranean Ocean.
And they would rent like a bungalow house for the whole month.
And I would always, I would go with them because that's like when I was 16, I spent my 16th birthday down there on the beach getting drunk, drinking Sangria with my uncles.
You know.
And then when I got older, I worked HVAC heating and air conditioning.
So I was always slow in like March, April.
So I would either in March or April, I would go for a month every year until I got married.
I never really got into the politics here in the States.
There were like just a lot of groups, but they were getting infiltrated.
And, you know, I met Clark.
Sam knows who I'm talking about.
That was the Ocash Chicago area skinheads.
I think I met Clark in 84, 85.
And we were talking a little bit.
And then he's like, wanted me to join the crew.
I'm like, sorry, dude, but I'm leaving for Germany.
Like, and next week, that was in 86.
And I stayed there for two years, lived at my cousin's house.
Then all those guys went to prison right after that.
Then I found out all those guys went to prison.
I wound up hooking up with 28 guys, Blood and Honor, and I became a patch Blood and Honor member in like 80 between 86 and 87.
So my main focus was always Germany.
I was like, I didn't pay attention to nothing here or people here or nothing.
I just kind of stayed out of it because it was here.
It was all backstabbing, talking shit.
And the unity with the guys there is a lot different than here.
There's a lot more nationalists, a lot more national women too, than here.
Here you go to a concert, maybe four skinhead girls and like 150 skinhead guys.
So there you go.
Skinhead girls, regular girls, and they're all nationalists, you know.
A little different over there.
Do you think American white nationalists, Mike, should give more credence and respect to Hitler and National Socialism?
Or do you think it's just too alien to our culture?
This debate sprung up the other day.
I saw it.
And I kind of understand the arguments.
Go ahead.
I can't get people to understand I'm a Nazi because that's my heritage and that's what I grew up.
That's what my family fought and did.
And then for people here to say they're a Nazi, I'm like, well, how are you a Nazi?
You're not even German or your family didn't fight in the war for Hitler.
So I just leave that be, you know.
Yeah.
And I'm German, but even if I weren't German, I like to think that I would still have the deep reverence and respect for what they achieved and what they almost pulled off.
Robert, you mentioned optics there before you're an Anglo-Saxon.
Did you have the standard infatuation with Hitler and the videos and the clips and the glory years and still love and respect or not so much, not so helpful, different time, different place?
Yeah, I mean, obviously the National Socialist Party in Germany was something to be admired, right?
I mean, it's something that gets a lot of people into our circles.
I mean, it's the biggest meme that we have, right?
You know, like all the Hitler stuff.
But, I mean, the truth of it is, is that we're Americans, you know.
I think that although we should have reverences for the movements of the past, we have to understand that the situation that we have now, although it has its parallels, it is not quite the same.
You know, we're not the same country.
We have some German influence in America.
A lot of us are not German.
So as much as I love those people and what they've done, as an American, I think that if you want to progress any sort of movement in America, you need to appeal to classic American sentiments.
There's a lot of great stuff that we've done in our own country.
The founding fathers, in my opinion, were really rock-solid guys.
They're great men who had a really good vision for basically what was like a white ethnostate.
And I think that if you want to appeal to people in our movement and you want to sort of spread the message a little bit more, you have to use American optics.
And it's not just a tool to be used for some sort of disingenuous message.
You need to mean it.
We are American and we need to be proud of it.
I mean, white America has great culture.
We did a whole show on it.
I forget the episode title.
We should have named it Nazis in Paris instead of Niggas in Paris.
But, you know, it was basically what's with the Nazi thing, guys.
Because I've heard that so many times.
You know, you'd be a lot more relatable if you didn't have that Hitler fetish, you know.
And I forget if I, you know, distilled it perfectly in that show, but the answer is that was the last time that a white people coalesce came together to address the root of the problem, the Jewish problem, not the Jewish question, as I've been so helpfully reminded from so many people.
It's not the JQ anymore, Coach, it's the JP.
But it was the last time in recent memory, or of course, in within the past century, that it really turned things from Weimar to Wunderland.
And it worked.
And the temptation, of course, is not just the cool optics and the marches and the torches and the effects, but to say, well, that worked.
Why not just try to do that again?
And I know that there's arguments to not do that in the presentation, et cetera.
But taking a broken, bankrupt, degenerate, invaded, corrupted country and turning it around almost on a dime.
I dug up an old post that I made probably a year ago.
In the span of six months from January 1933 to about July 1933, the scope of change in Germany was breathtaking.
So you may disagree with reverence for the Third Reich, but there's a reason for it.
And you can modify it, you can change it, you can Americanize it or whatever, but the spirit and the results speak for themselves.
Sorry to get up on my soapbox there for a second.
Sam, is there you want to spur Mike for anything?
We're almost at an hour here, so I don't want to go too long, but over to you for a second.
As long as you didn't have anything off the top of my head, except to say Mike's favorite band, Enstuffe, is a band that will be familiar to especially older persons, shall we say.
And Mike is a couple of years ahead of me, but we're kind of of the same vintage.
And Enstuffa is a band that is playing yet today and putting out music.
And so they're guys that are maybe a few years older than both of us.
But as we draw closer to the hour when Mike introduces them, I thought I'd give that little bit of extra background right there.
Yeah, the singer is 57.
He's the same age as me.
Okay.
Looking forward to hearing from them.
I did not cheat and go to listen to the song.
Mike totally has the DJ booth for the break, and Robert's got it for the close.
Heaven help us if it's one of those drama bass standard things.
But before we go, we'll talk about it.
We'll have a little bit of electronic aspirin in the second half.
But before we do that, Robert, what is your favorite childhood memory, please, sir?
First thing that comes to mind.
You know, Coach, it's crazy.
I thought about you asking me that question for a while.
You were ready.
Usually I was like, oh, God, what am I going to say to him?
Coming for you too.
Mike, we're stalling for you, Mike.
So you got you, I'm sure you got some good ones.
So think about it while Robert's ready to go here.
I don't know.
That was a long time ago, Mike.
Firebombing, I think.
Something about firebombing.
That's a long time ago, too.
Mike is not 57.
He was actually there at Crystal Knocked, actually.
Go ahead, Mike.
I came back from South America.
I would say that when I was younger, some of my fondest memories that I had was going to a small rural property that my grandparents had.
And during the wintertime, where I'm at, we get a pretty good amount of snow.
Not like a ton of it, but we still get enough to have fun.
And what we used to do is we used to get the family together and nigger rig a bunch of like snowboards to four-wheelers and drag the kids along in a huge track on the snow, right?
Going like 15, 20 miles an hour on these four-wheelers.
Water skiing on snow, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
It was a great time.
I used to love that stuff.
It was really, it was really good.
I think playing in the snow is probably one of the best pastimes during the winter.
There you go.
Good stuff.
Yeah.
I have so many fond memories.
My half-Irish, half-Polish grandparents had a cabin up on top of a mountain in Pennsylvania that the whole family or part of the family would go to a fair, you know, once a year, maybe twice a year.
And that was actually sort of a subconscious motivator for the place where I live now because I remember being a kid and those grandparents were both basically public sector employees.
I was like, man, they're so rich.
They have a regular house and then they have a vacation house.
You know, it was a one-story, one-bedroom, maybe cabin in the woods, but so many fond memories from that too.
Thank you, Robert.
All right.
German Mike, a lifetime and many trips to Germany in the bag.
What's your favorite childhood memory, please?
Going to Germany.
All right, come on more specific than that.
No, I would say having the whole summer three months to yourself, do whatever you want to do and no one to tell you what to do.
I mean, I was drinking Jegegemeister at 12 and smoking cigarettes down at the soccer field with my cousins in the evening.
Mike's libertarian German childhood.
Yeah, basically.
My friends, when I go to visit, I used to put my hands on my head and do Jägemeister, Jegegemeister, like the antlers.
Oh my gosh.
Whenever I go to Germany, they still do that.
Oh, look, Michael Merk.
It's like 40 years later, and my friends are still doing it.
It's kind of hilarious.
That was one of my childhood memories that made me laugh still.
Amen.
All right, gentlemen.
Well, thank you for that.
Mike, you game to play two?
Huh?
Hang on.
Are you game to play two?
Hang on for the second hour.
Yeah.
You got enough gas in the tank.
All right.
And Robert, how about you?
Look, I just had a glass of milk before I came on, so I'm feeling like a million bucks.
I'm ready to rock.
Robert is sitting on the floor in his bathroom like a, he's not a regular podcaster.
He doesn't have a table and chair like, you know, the rest of us.
He's modest means.
I'm kidding, buddy.
Thank you.
All right.
Let's do it.
German Mike.
Well, thank you both.
We'll stroke you further in the second hour.
But German Mike, the DJ booth is yours.
Sam teased it up a little bit, but what are we listening to and briefly why?
I'm probably going to say Enstoop because that's like one of my favorite bands.
Most of the mid-80s, early 80 bands, I like the most because that's what I grew up with.
And which song?
Soldot, Soldier.
All right, fam.
Haven't heard it, but it's going out there for sure.
Hope you enjoy Soul Dot by Enstoop.
be right back with German Mike, Robert, and of course, Sam and Rollo.
Don't go away.
Sie waren die Besten, Sie waren die Bestsoldaten der Welt.
Sie waren die Bestsoldaten der Welt.
And welcome back to Full House episode 172, Organ Donor Edition, happy ending version of Full House.
Not in any of that.
Let's get the sick thoughts out of you.
Happy ending means happy ending.
It doesn't mean that.
Yeah.
Sorry, maybe my mind is in the gutter.
Excuse me.
But we are delighted to have both German Mike and young Robert.
Robert the Bruce, Robert the Brave on with us as well.
Sam and Rolo.
We got a lot to cover here in the second half.
Kind of try to fly more casually than the interview style from the first half.
But before we get into all of that, we've got a couple big ones from close friends this week on new white life and just in general, new white good news.
First up to our pal, Kyle, to his lovely wife and their newly growing expanded family.
Congratulations, guys.
They welcomed their first healthy baby child, we'll just say.
He kept us posted, sent us some pics from the special moment in the hospital and everybody's chiming in, giving them congratulations.
Now you got it publicly.
Way to go, guys.
Young, healthy.
Keep at it, you know, within reason, all that stuff.
And Sam, yeah, you're going to meet the lovely new addition before I will too.
So yep.
Yep.
Excited for them.
And we have another wonderful close friend of the show couple.
I won't name them here.
They're right on the verge of welcoming their second about to pop, as they say.
And I think they're all ready.
Dad is excited.
And of course, mom is too.
Good luck, guys.
You know who you are.
We're rooting for you.
You'll do great, of course.
And also, it's a little bit late, but Gumtree Party from down under, he was the one who let us know that he was expecting his first or his first arrived.
Pardon me, buddy.
I can't recall which it was.
I think it was expecting with his partner at the time, but they are now engaged as well to be married.
So way to go.
It doesn't matter personally to me, which way the order goes.
Obviously, there's perhaps one way to do it.
And that's the more standard conventional way.
But good luck, buddy, as you head toward marriage.
All right.
I wanted to start with a public health announcement here in the second half.
I alluded to this in the first, but in all seriousness, probably from the first week of October started with our youngest puked at school.
He got up and was like a little groggy.
It was like, I don't want to go to school.
He didn't have a fever.
He was fine.
I was like, it's just the case of the Mondays.
It was literally a Monday.
And then like an hour later, I got a call that he puked in class, went to pick him up on the way home.
He said, Dad, I feel like I have to puke again.
I said, oh, thank you so much for letting me know.
Let me pull over.
Oh, there it goes right into the family minivan.
Okay, no big deal, stomach bug, et cetera.
He got over that, went back to school.
Then he got a fever a couple days later.
Of course, we kept him home for the fever, had some boogers, et cetera, but he mostly recovered back to school.
And then he came down with a fever again three or four or five days later.
Can't remember the exact sequence or whatever.
But of course, we're on top of this stuff.
We don't, you know, take them to the ER for a fever or freak out anytime a kid gets sick.
It happens.
And nine times out of 10, your immune system just kicks it, of course.
But when he got sick again after that sequence, we said, all right, enough is enough.
We took him to urgent care, not the ER.
And they're like, yeah, he didn't look so good.
He's got some green boogers, et cetera.
Let's do a strep test.
I thought maybe it was an ear infection.
We do not get a lot of ear infections.
But, you know, going to school, getting exposed to new stuff.
Turned out he had strep and he hadn't complained about a sore throat at all.
He's old enough to talk about his symptoms.
My nose, he's got a cough, et cetera.
I feel warm.
No report of sore throat.
Soon as I got the news, of course, got on the phone.
Yep, eat potatoes, got strep.
And my wife goes, you know, my throat's been feeling a little bit scratchy.
Maybe I should go in and get checked too.
Boom.
She's got strep, but didn't really have a sore throat up until that point.
So then we're like, well, son of a bee, I guess maybe we should all go in and get checked.
Turned out all five of us had more or less asymptomatic strep.
And of course, we all each went on our 10-day antibiotic cycle.
I don't say that to cry into my beer or boohoo sick family or whatever, but we didn't have sore throats and we all had strep throat.
So if you have something that's lingering like that for a long time, I guess usually your body knocks out viruses.
I can see a couple of medical professionals in the audience cringing right now as Coach Regales, the family medical story, et cetera.
But I was damn glad that we got that done.
Maybe something going around.
Oh, for sure.
After that, Sam, we actually did some research and there's been stories over the past year about strep, severe outbreaks in cities across America.
Who knows?
I don't know if it's antibiotic resistant or whatever, but this was like a low-level strep.
And the whole time that I was feeling crummy, Sam, what I was really thinking about was blaming the white working class and the small business owners and the people who didn't take vaccines.
It was really their fault that I had sore throat and was feeling crummy and they should all go to hell and pounce in.
Just kidding.
By not getting the vaccine, it's your fault that I feel terrible.
But point, point being, urgent care is a wonderful thing.
God knows whether the pediatrician would have been available for an appointment.
It didn't rise to the level of emergency room, urgent care or whatever they call it, where you are and in doubt, take them.
And I also got a mouthful from both grandmothers saying, you should have taken him sooner.
Like if it's lingering, if you got something like that, live and learn, live and learn.
We're all in the mess.
Like asymptomatic.
So what are you supposed to do?
That's right.
But at least you persisted far enough to see that the whole family was being affected.
And that was certainly good to learn that.
Yeah.
Mike's over there shaking his head like you bunch of, you bunch of pussies.
Let me tell you about medical challenges.
He did let us know that he had strep quite often as a boy, probably from smoking cigarettes and drinking Jägermeister at the age of eight down at the local football stadium, you know, passing bottles around.
Isn't that right, Mike?
He's looking at me.
He's like, yeah, maybe.
I think the worst one is having three daughters and always catching lice at school.
Oh, long hair.
I mean, everything's got to get washed.
Bed sheets, the whole nine yards.
You got to put this stuff in their hair and then run a comb through it and you pick out the little white eggs.
Oh, nasty.
Did you use the opportunity to shoot their heads?
We should get upon anyone.
Zyklon for license.
Is that still?
Yeah, we never, we never had a lice outbreak here.
What was I thinking?
Oh, the dog and fleas.
That reminds me.
Our dog has had a low-level flea infestation for a while, I'll say, before somebody gives me guff.
Given her flea baths, gotten her a flea collar.
She always gets the monthly treatment in between her collarbones and she's still nipping around.
And every once in a while, if we really comb through her, we'll like find one, pick it up and throw it in the toilet.
But they make these tablets now.
I guess this is like an unexpected expanded health section into the animal world.
But they make these tablets that you can get over the counter that supposedly add just enough little like poison to fleas that gets in the blood systems.
The fleas take a bite and they fall off and die.
So that arrives on Monday for this thing.
And I've been at DEF CON one on that because I remember as a kid, we adopted a cat once and it came choked with fleas and we never had a pet before.
We were totally ignorant about fleas.
And one summer, like you would be sitting at the dinner table and you'd like a flea would jump on your leg or, you know, because of carpets, 80s, all that stuff.
So I am really hopeful if you ever have this flea problem where they're there and supposedly flea bass and flea collars don't work that well, the stuff between the shoulder blades is more of a preventative than a treatment for an existing infestation.
You give them six tablets of this stuff once a day and then the fleas just drop off cold dead.
I'll give you an update next week as to whether that really worked.
All right, enough of me.
I had to get that off my chest.
It's been two weeks.
You'd think I'd have more important things to talk about than strep or fleas, but there you go, spilling my pasta.
Let's go.
You know what?
Let's just, let's, let's do it.
Rolo's got something that he wants to get off his chest.
And I don't want to save this for too late in the second half when some of our slacker listeners might go to bed or let life get in the way because that happens to me all the time.
I listen to a podcast and I never finish it.
Rolo, I have no idea where you're going with this one.
He's wearing his black hoodie.
He's not wearing his silk robe.
So that means he means business.
Yeah.
So we got an email recently from one Arian Stallion 1488.
And he's still listening to us.
So here.
You get a sample from okay.
All right.
Go ahead.
It's all yours, buddy.
Well, yeah.
Okay.
So listen, buddy, we don't care about you at all.
You are a loser.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Rolo.
Let me set the table.
Come on.
You can't just go right into it unlooped.
Arian Stallion.
Don't worry.
I was going to break it down, but you can go ahead and set it up all you want.
Let me set the feast.
Look, you know, Arian Stallion wrote in originally asking for help.
And I said, okay, you know, I responded courteously and non-committally, like, I can't offer a woman up.
And then he jumped down our throat with an email, kind of hilarious.
We roasted him on the air.
Then we eventually had him on the show.
It was 90%.
You can argue about the percentage, a normal interview.
And then the revelation about certain activities in Southeast Asia, you know, stereotypical things that happened in Southeast Asia came out that we didn't know about, that he admitted candidly on the air, which we treated, I think, like gentlemen.
And then he's continuing to create his content and it was radio silenced for a while.
It was like kind of, you know, we got a lot of flack for it, et cetera.
We explained a little bit again, I think graciously and kindly on the follow-up show, both to cover our asses and provide some content too.
And then months pass by and we receive another barn burner, another, you know, multi-page message that, you know, frankly, I was willing to just say, okay, that's that, but not our Rolo, not our pit bull.
That's it.
Go ahead.
All right.
Yeah, like I'm saying, yeah, you're a loser, dude.
You are an absolute loser.
So he said that we're male feminists.
Well, yeah, because we don't hate women.
And that's the reality.
You just hate women.
And you're not a white nationalist.
You're not a national socialist.
You blame Jews for the reason that you can't get a woman.
But the reality is you're just a psychopath.
Okay.
You make these hour-long videos.
No one's watching.
You're talking about, oh, I'm going to roast you guys next.
That's entertaining for the audience.
Yeah, you need to have an audience first in order to entertain them.
And Just without Rolo and even without Sam, he wanted a hotline right to me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, he didn't.
No, no, no.
He said he would let you interview him as if he's some hot get.
Yeah, you know that that guy used to it, uh, he used to review prostitutes in Southeast Asia.
That's the burning content that he's out there making.
Yeah, this guy, yeah, he talks about how we encourage infighting.
This all started because you came into our comment zone and you were talking on us, buddy.
Yeah, well, we can't get you aid, we can't get you views, we can't do anything.
You are not wanted here, okay?
And I could go into everything point by point, but all that really needs to be said is you are worthless, you are nothing, and the most interesting thing that ever happened to you in your entire life was you came on our podcast and admitted to having sex with a man.
Get out of here and don't talk to us ever again multiple times.
Maybe he's the Italian stallion.
Yeah, it's uh, you know, we give a lot of latitude of people to kind of think and say what they want, communicate, and all that type of thing.
Hey, there's a lot of ways to look at this thing, but uh, I don't get it.
We uh we tried, we gave him a more than fair and courteous uh two hours.
We gave him more than he's ever had, and it wasn't enough because this guy is unstable, he's a psychopath, he's a loser.
Okay, I could say more, but uh, it doesn't it doesn't matter.
The only thing he's ever been was a punchline on this show, which he made himself out to be by saying the stupid things that he did because he is desperate for V, which he can't get on his own, so he blames Jews.
And because we don't elevate him, he blames us.
The problem is you fix yourself, no one else can do it for you.
That is both deserved, and I still am sensitive about him taking it the wrong way.
Or, you know, I don't know if he's probably listening.
He's gonna make a matter of trying to help him the wrong way.
There is no help for him.
Well, I would actually suggest that he, uh, you know, I suspect that the project is not going particularly well, um, and that he should focus his energies on more productive uh enterprises as opposed to the content creation.
If I were giving him honest advice, just get things in order as opposed to being the Lone Ranger creating videos out there.
That uh, I don't know, makes me sad.
I can take the hate mail and let it roll off my back, my shoulders.
But Rolo could not.
Rolo felt very strongly that that deserved a pushback, and I certainly was not going to muzzle him on him.
But if you want to check him out, he's there on Telegram, still doing his thing, and wherever else, Odyssey Rumble.
I don't know.
Maybe, maybe he'll listen to you, Rolo, little tough love.
I don't know.
All right.
Oh, yeah.
And also, he called me low-G, buddy.
Your tea is so low.
You have to get it from a vial.
Shut your mouth.
Yeah, maybe it was a little bit more personal toward Rolo, and that's what got his goat.
Not just me, but also Larry.
He came after Larry, too.
I forgot that.
Yes, he came after every one of us, and he came after the entire movement.
He's not one of us.
He's not part of us.
He's a loser.
He's a freak.
All right.
Old school beat down.
After this podcast, appearance, Mike, I'm going to send you over Arian Stallions Way for your dead pad.
Shook his head.
No.
When I get done, he'll be crying.
All right.
During the break, of course, you know, this always happens.
We're shooting the shit and telling stories or whatever.
But Mike, you took several tours of the swimming and soccer camps and the orchestral camps of Germany and its environs, one of which was Buchenwald.
Tell us a little bit about your visit there.
I was very impressed with Buchenwald.
It looked brand new.
Like they never did nothing there.
The ovens were clean.
There was nothing in them.
And their museum.
I mean, we went there to the museum just to see the SS uniforms and stuff.
And we're walking around.
We're laughing.
And then I'm down in the basement where they got the hooks on the wall called the hanging room.
And I'm kind of standing on a stool, making myself look like I'm hanging.
My buddy's taking pictures and laughing his ass.
And I'm in full dress, too.
Man, I got my bomber on.
I got my boots on.
And my old bomber's got Hitler's first division patch on the shoulder.
And the other shoulder says Deutschland Power on it.
Halfway through it, we were kind of followed all the way out.
Yeah, but roughly Dachau is another one like that.
Okay.
Yeah.
Soxenhausen I went to last year.
That just a bunch of rebuilt walls showing the outskirts of the building.
And then they took a barracks and rebuilt it.
And that's where the museum's in.
Serious question, Mike.
What do you think is the long and short of the quote-unquote Holocaust?
Obviously, those were concentration camps, work camps, and anything else.
Yeah, but they weren't being burned and shit.
You got to realize, I mean, you're going through the war.
My mom had to stand in line for two days to get a loaf of bread, and she was like 15 years old.
And then she told me another story when she was walking to the next town to get bread with two other older girls, and she was carrying a little girl.
A truck pulled up with some GIs on, two black GIs got out and took the two older girls and took them down in the basement and raped them.
And my mom stood there and watched all this holding the little girl in her arms.
You know, I mean, this is true stuff coming from my mom's mouth from that time.
Nobody ever hears that kind of stuff.
Yeah, the Germans were bad people.
We're no good.
You know, they don't know half the stuff that happened to the German people.
Lothrop Stoddard's Into Darkness, I think he was there 1940.
World War II had kicked off, but it hadn't accelerated to the Eastern Front yet.
And as that early in the war, Germans were already undergoing severe rationing of meat, butter, milk, etc.
So their own population was being severely calorically restricted.
I mean, before people, yeah, yeah.
Do you think people in concentration camp are going to get a full meal?
That's why they're all skinny bones because they didn't get no food or nothing.
The soldiers and Germans are going to get the food first.
Yep, a world historical swindle, as they say.
Sam, you ever been to Germany?
No, I have not.
Oh, shame on you, big guy.
I know.
I've been to Europe before, but not Germany.
My first time, my first time to Germany was 2004.
I had a layover in Frankfurt, an overnight, early flight the next day.
So I had to stay at some, you know, crappy corporate hotel on the outskirts of that big international airport in Frankfurt.
And I just went for a little stroll, as one does, looking at kill time.
Very excited to be there.
First time in my ancestral homeland, among others in Europe.
And I remember seeing lots of what I clearly perceived to be Arabs or Turks out on their balcony or sticking their head out the window or whatnot and thinking, that's kind of strange.
I was still largely blue-pilled there, but I'm walking around Germany for my first time and seeing brown faces on the outskirts of this major international airport gateway to the world and thinking, that's odd.
That doesn't seem right.
Same experience in Amsterdam, walking around and being like, there's not really a lot of Dutch people here.
That was part of the ancient awakening stirring of my soul was seeing more non-Europeans than Europeans in Europe long before the most recent invasion.
If the enemy wants to really talk about roots of radicalization and why the white kids are angry, you know, how about the absolute replacement theory, conspiracy theory?
No, come on.
It's a fact.
And we all know it's a fact.
You're just playing word games.
Speaking of Muslims in Europe, brief update on the Middle East.
I think we've all got a little bit of an unfortunate happening hangover here.
But yet again, it looks like the Palestinians are stuck holding their dicks and fighting for themselves.
The great Muslim threats and banging of drums, etc.
Nothing's really happened aside from a little bit of Hezbollah stuff on the northern border.
Meanwhile, the Israeli army did go in big into Gaza, and they're duking and out with rocket propelled grenades trying to take out those tanks.
One of the million-dollar questions our guys have is, man, I'm seeing a lot of footage of these brave freedom fighters, you know, launching things at tanks and seeing the big boom, but are they actually taking them out?
Obviously, they're taking some out.
But as we go to tape right now, it is 1212 on November 20th.
There's talk of a temporary ceasefire to let some hostages go and possibly get some humanitarian aid in there.
But as of right now, it looks like Israel is arguably, quote unquote, winning the campaign to go into Gaza, bisect the country, go down into the tunnels and try to take out as much of Hamas as possible.
And the Ayatollah is monitoring the situation.
Nasrallah is monitoring the situation.
And I think there was kind of a cope that maybe they are waiting for them to go in and then they would raise the black flag over some mosque and declare jihad or holy war.
I don't know.
It's kind of just grueling cruelty at this point and frankly, quite depressing.
I don't know if you guys have been paying attention or any thoughts on that.
Yeah, well, for sure.
Well, whatever happens in this conflict, I mean, we can kind of anticipate it, right?
I mean, Gaza is going to be subjugated.
They're going to drive out or kill most of those people.
But whatever happens, or, you know, maybe there's some surprise yet to happen.
Whatever happens, this Free Palestine movement in the West is going to be times 100 going forward.
Um, and uh I, I do think that this is a pivotal moment, at least to say that it it there will be a before and an after with this incident, with this ongoing conflict and uh I, I know I know in some ways we we debate about, do you take a side?
Do you care?
Does it matter?
I think it does matter in the sense that, no matter how it turns out there, there will be ramifications in the West.
At the very least, this Free Palestine movement is going to go turbocharged and uh, on the other hand, as if there is some tiny percentage chance that the country we call Israel is the government, is destabilized in some way if Iran gets into this, if there's really like a more even uh, even fighting between the sides.
No matter what happens this, this changes uh, the world dynamic in in politics, because this Jew problem is behind all dynamics of politics in the West and maybe the whole world.
Yeah, there's an interesting dynamic going on with Antifa too.
Right, of course, there's tons of Jews and Antifa and some of them probably are incapable of holding their tongues when it comes to their uh cradle nest over there.
So Non-jewish Antifa are getting into fight with fights with Jewish Antifa.
Yeah, this is, this is uh, uh.
The narrative is being smashed here and you have uh, the uh serpent eating its tail truly, yep.
And uh, Biden's poll numbers are in the tank.
Unfortunately, that only benefits Zion Don, and I said this on a uh on a separate call earlier this week or earlier last week uh, you know nobody when.
When you see 95 of Pro-Palestine protesters, of course they are either women or brown, or there's that bizarre faction of Jews who are like, we're Pro-Palestine too, it's not a Jewish problem.
You know whether they're agents or just you know, basically cucks of Judaism.
I don't know, but I don't, I don't like those people either.
Just you know, just because I believe that Israel is a bad actor and the Palestinians deserve to have their own homeland doesn't mean that I sympathize or identify with all those people, but if you're having the conversation with your, you know your family, your friends.
We heard one horror story about you know, my Boomer dad like sent money to support the IDF, or something like that.
Or oh, my god yeah um, the lefties are not wrong about 100 of every single issue on earth, and this you can be accidentally right, right or right whatever, right for the right reasons.
On certain things.
Yeah, we don't have to agree about everything else.
This is well.
This is a culmination of everything that they've pushed onto the left, because it's all about uh, saving the, the underserved, and and uh, eliminating imperialism and colonialism, and Jews are everything that's wrong with everything.
Like like, no matter who you are, pick like, pick a problem.
Jews will be the cause of it somehow.
And obviously it's not like, oh, really?
When I stump my toe, is it the Jews' fault?
Shut up.
You know what I mean?
On a political and cultural level.
So they've jammed all these institutions with brown people.
Brown people see brown skin and white skin, and they say, hmm, which one do I pick?
So, of course, as these places get browner, well, you're going to have more brown people siding with other brown people.
It's just as simple as that.
And all the brown people that hate Jews, they think Jews are white.
I mean, Jews have been masquerading in the West as white people.
That's the right out of the wrong reasoning part.
Yes.
Yeah.
They only hate Jews because they think they're white.
They don't understand Talmadry.
They don't know about the way they torture chickens.
They don't know about their role in 9-11.
They don't know any of that stuff.
They just see what looks like white skin and they say racial enemy.
They see the brown Palestinian.
Yeah.
And they see racial ally.
That's it.
So, you know, you reap what you sow.
And be grateful.
And be grateful in a certain, in a Machiavellian or a purely opportunistic sense.
Be grateful that the Democrat Party has such a large base of frothing at the mouth brown Muslim, anti-Israeli or anti-Jewish activists, because that will weaken the overwhelmingly evil party.
I still think that the Democrats are the evil party.
The Republicans are the stupid party or the cowardly party.
Well, insert adjective, but it's use.
They are useful to weakening the power base and stronghold of the open borders party, too.
That's yeah.
Have I told you my Democrat-Republican analogy?
Is it about a corpse and the maggots eating the corpse?
Are you going to still go ahead, Roland?
No, no, no.
Well, the Democrat Party is the being that drags you into an alley and violently rapes you.
And the Republican Party stands outside the alley and makes sure no cop comes down to look.
Very good.
Or yeah, they're a little slicker about it with the roofy.
Yeah.
Not bad.
Go ahead, Robert.
You're a young buck.
Were you?
All right.
Let's dig a little bit here.
You know, Robert was, or sorry, German Mike was suckling at anti-Semitism at the boob from day one.
But you, my friend, were just a naive, you know, American kid with probably no political direction aside from what school told you.
Was it again just poll?
You and the Jews, a short tale.
Me and the Jews.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Think it's the end, probably.
An American tale, if you would.
Yes, yes.
No, I mean, for me, like, I really didn't care whenever I first started.
Like, I was just into 4chan and I liked the edging memes and everything.
You know, it was all just like it was all just that.
It was all just theater.
Yeah.
And then eventually what really like made me actually start taking things seriously and like trying to change the way I see the actual world, it's so like silly to say it, but it was the political cartoon, Murdoch Murdoch, that set me off the rails when it came to the way I saw things.
There you go.
Yeah, it's great because the guys who produced that show, they put so much work into actually doing like good historical reading.
They have great philosophical knowledge.
They were able to sort of make something that was funny and entertaining, but at the same time, it came from a very well-informed place.
So it was definitely that, I would say for sure, that really started to put it in perspective.
And then you guys know, like once you start seeing these things, you can't see them.
Yeah, exactly.
You see it everywhere.
Yeah.
Exactly.
But I think there is a lot of hope, though.
Like right now, it's like what Rolo was saying a minute ago with Jews being identified.
About Arian Stallion?
About our good friend, Arian Stallion.
Yeah, no.
He's got it right with those Thai lady boys.
No, no.
Oh, man.
I'm joking, I'm joking.
It's true, though.
I got a lot of friends in it.
I got a lot of friends that have been over there in the military, and they say most of those girls are guys.
Oh, yeah.
I bet.
It sounded like Mike was endorsing a little exploration.
You're right.
They really figured it out.
Mike's like, I don't just go to Germany, fellas.
We have plenty of them in Berlin, too.
He's got lipsticks from Thailand and his passport.
But yeah, there's like what Rolo was saying with a lot of brown people considering Jews white.
I think that now with a lot of what we've been seeing with like large talking heads in America, people are starting to discuss the problem with Israel now and the way Jewish people view white people.
Because a lot of people in America, mostly progressives, they have this slave morality, right?
They always try to appeal to the victim and they want to feel bad for the little guy.
But now that they're seeing that the Palestinians are the little guys and they can see the Jews as the aggressors, they're looking into who else the Jews are being aggressive towards.
And they're seeing more and more now that white people are targeted by the Jews, just like the brown people, I guess.
We don't really need their sympathy, but it at least changes the sort of like talking point in America.
It sort of shifts the window a little bit.
Yeah.
No, the narrative breakthrough or endorsement of Elon Musk and to a lesser extent Tucker with Candace was the explicit statement that Jewish groups, now, of course, they do all the caveating, Jewish communities or like certain Jews, et cetera, are anti-white and are behind the agenda and the open borders and the discrimination, et cetera, to have wealthy, powerful,
beloved, widely followed white men endorsing what is essentially the central tenet.
They don't go all the way and say that it's part of Jewish identity, the revolutionary spirit, et cetera, E. Michael Jones or the culture of critique from Kevin McDonald.
But that's the core of it.
Things are messed up because of them.
White people are no longer in control of their destiny because of them, as painful as it is to admit, right?
I mean, you know, it hurts saying that, even though it's the truth, but it is through their wealth and ferociousness and victimhood that they've been able to get away with all this stuff.
Mike, when you were growing up, did your parents or grandparents talk to you about the Jews specifically?
I assume so, but maybe not.
He's smiling.
Does a cat have an ass?
Does a pope wear a funny hat?
What was it like?
Serious.
What was the discussion?
My mom was always quiet about that.
If I would rant and rave stuff at home about Jews or Jews, my mom would just kind of not say anything.
I think it was because during the war, you didn't really talk a lot during the war.
But my dad was always ranting and raving about that.
And then with my grandfather, he basically told me what was going on during the war, what he did, where he went, what people are doing.
I will tell you, though, I had a Jewish young guy named David.
He was a citigram.
I met him at Home Depot and he's like, oh, you know how to do sheet metal?
Because I was getting some sheet metal stuff for a side job.
I'm like, yeah, I'm a sheet metal worker.
Why?
And he's like, oh, do you do side jobs?
I'm like, yeah, cash.
So this guy brings me on.
Whenever he had an install, he would call me up and he would give me like $1,000 cash for the day to put like a furnace or an AC in.
And it was all Jews' houses.
So I learned a lot in that year how they are.
They're more racist than anyone can even imagine because I saw them, how they talked about it, everything.
I mean, this guy had a company with a livery service because I'm like, well, why do you got all these livery cars?
He's like, oh, my people need a ride to the airport.
Why don't they just take a taxi cab?
And he's like, well, look who's driving a cab.
It's either Muslim, black, or Palestine.
Yeah.
You know, and the schwatze.
So, yeah.
So, I mean, there were, I'm like, man, you sound like really racist, dude.
And he's like, oh, yeah, if you're not Jewish, we don't let you in.
Mask off.
Yep.
Moments of candor.
Absolutely.
That fierce.
So it was kind of really interesting.
I used to always throw a penny on the floor when I was putting a furnace in.
He would look down.
He's like, did you throw another penny on the floor?
I don't know.
He must have.
I was just weird.
I mean, we just were like business partners and we didn't.
I mean, he saw my skin had tattoos and stuff and knew I was a racist.
And I would always, the worst one was we were in Mike and David.
That's a good buddy cup flick, Phil.
A rabbi.
I was in a rabbi's basement putting a furnace in and on the wall were like these like big fur hats.
I took that.
That looks like the cheese wheel looking one, right?
Yeah, it's all fur, like fox fur.
I put that on my head and I started taking pictures of myself with it on.
I was saluting at the same time.
And he comes down there and he just like, his face dropped.
What are you doing?
I'm like, oh, I wanted to try one of these hats on.
They kind of look cool.
And just to piss him off, he's like, you can't wear that, dude.
That's like a high-ranking synagogue, blah, blah, blah.
I'm like, so what?
It looks like just the fur hat to me.
Mike installing furnaces in the basements of Jews is a pretty radical.
Yeah, that's regular Chevroles, I guess.
I wasn't working and I needed money.
So I got to support my family.
No, I hear you.
And that's one of the things you mentioned, Jews, of course, being racist when they're being candid behind the scenes.
One of the reasons that I never bought the whole like Russia other coin of Zog, you know, similar like babes in Toyland with Frankfurt.
When I spent time in Russia and I was in 2001, I was definitely like liberal and anti-racist, not vehemently or whatever, but I said multiple times, I said, Russians are the most racist people I've ever met.
Oh, good God, you know, like if your skin is like a lighter shade than pale white, you know, you're getting hassled by the police, you know, you're getting looked down on by the natives, of course, at the time.
I thought that was a bad thing.
So, yeah, these unrestricted ethnic communities in their natural state are naturally racist.
And I don't even, you know, it's just like the natural state of mind.
It's like the just nature to be that way.
Yep.
It's I had to go to a warehouse that wanted a Jew zone.
I was working on the rooftop unit.
And down in there was a whole warehouse of food and clothing and stuff.
And the Jews that didn't have a lot of stuff would go there.
And it was just like a come in there with a shopping cart and fill up what you need.
Yep.
You know, they all take care of themselves.
That's for sure.
And they don't let outsiders in.
And some of the shit that I, some of the stuff I learned about, they all have single beds and they sleep in separate beds.
And when they have sex, they put a sheet over the woman with a hole in the middle.
Oh, how else can you get it up?
Have you ever seen what a Jewish woman looks like?
Goodness.
Oh, God.
Robo does that too, but that's just to hide some of the women he brings home.
No, I'm kidding.
Maybe that scallion guy needs a Jewish wig.
There you go.
Mike, what's the worst rumble, the most dangerous, the bloodiest rumble you've ever been in?
Vaguely, don't get too many specifics.
I don't want to get you in trouble there, old timer.
He's thinking.
He's like, good God.
We went to Belgium because Fauf Bay VFB is the local German soccer team in Stuttgart.
That's like my team, Fauf Bay.
And all the hooligans and skinheads from the Stuttgart area, we got together.
We went on a train to Ludich in Belgium.
And we get there.
It's probably about 150 of us.
And we're just storming through the streets, drinking, going bar to bar, starting fights in the bars, beating on people.
And then by the time we get to the stadium, there's like maybe a quarter of the guys are already gone, rusted, lost, drunk, passed out.
And then we're on the one side of the stadium.
There must have been about 100 of us.
And the whole rest of the stadium, like, I don't know, 10,000.
We're all the Belgium teen.
And we're standing there.
My friends are burning the Belgium teens' flags and shit.
Oh, my God.
And then I go to my buddy Marcus.
I'm like, how are we getting out of here, dude?
He's like, oh, we're going to fight our way out.
I'm like, what?
How are we going to 100 of us?
Take like 8,000 people.
Next thing I know, next thing I know, the game was over.
And we got a whole bunch of Belgium police guys in Reich German Shepherds.
I had one guy on each side of me walking me out of the stadium.
I'm kicking and trying to punch these guys.
And these guys are just whipping bottles at me.
I just basically covered my face the best that I could and just took hits and kicks and punches.
And they brought me out of the stadium and put me into an armored car, like a riot, like an armored riot car.
And then they drove us to the train station and they held us there at the train station.
And then one of our guys is like, oh man, the main hooligan bar is across the street.
So the cops kind of like, we just cooled down, relaxed, and the cops kind of slowly went away.
And then we stormed out of the train station across the street to their main main bar and we trashed the place.
Man, I was, I was throwing chairs over the bar into the glass, into the mirrors and the booze and punching people, knocking them out.
Oh my God, it was like a blood.
It was rough.
Do you want to do you regret it?
Or are you grateful for the memories?
And, you know, you was really scared, man.
A badass I was.
I was still kind of scared.
Like, how am I getting out of this?
You know?
Fair enough.
And then the one other time probably would be in Brussels, Belgium.
We went to a big skinhead show in Brussels, but I didn't know it was like not a national socialist event.
It was just kind of like bands playing, like kind of punk rock.
And this was like probably 91, 92 when I was in my heyday.
And I separated with my friends.
And there was like these five dark guys driving past me.
And I booted the side of the door with my boots.
And then they stopped and got out.
And there was like five of them.
So I started fighting like two or three of them.
And I'm like, oh, man, I can't take all these guys.
And then the next thing, you know, my crew of guys came around the corner.
And then we cleaned them up and shoveled them back in her car and put them on their way.
And I got other stories, but I don't think I want to talk about those.
No, Fair enough.
All that has to do with bottles and fire.
Serious personal question, Mike, and you can field it as you like.
Yes.
Your life or your worldview has not been, as I understand it, necessarily easy in terms of fatherhood and your kids.
Oh, boy.
We've talked about this a lot.
I'm still very depressed about it.
Is it the ideology that the kids rebelled against?
I mean, listen, you know, fathers and their children get estranged or have difficulties all the time for hundreds of different reasons.
I mean, everything was fine when they were young, but as they got older, my wife kept saying, oh, you can't tell all of the kids this stuff and them not knowing or understanding it.
Because the one teacher from school called my wife up and said, your daughter's drawing swastikas on her paper at school.
And then she asked my oldest daughter, Kaylee, why are you drawing swastikas on your papers at school?
And she's like, well, that's my father.
My father's a Nazi.
And it's like, my wife just went ballistic and started yelling at me about it.
And all my kids grew up and all my kids went to Catholic school.
They were all baptized Lutheran.
And then once they got a little older out of preschool and stuff, then I put them in first and second grade in a Catholic school that my dad went to because he wanted my kids to go there.
So they got re-baptized Catholic and that's where they went for eight years.
You know, basically Catholic grade school.
It's a tightrope with kids and talking to them about our stuff.
And you risk them going overboard and headfirst into it or rebelling against it or making a simple indiscretion at school and getting in trouble and having it blow back on you and the family.
Well, it had a lot to do with my wife.
I even asked her a couple years ago.
I'm like, well, you knew what you were getting into.
You knew I was an active racist skinhead.
And I'm going to Germany every year doing stuff with my blood and honor brothers.
And she was like, oh, well, I was only 22 when I met you.
I thought that shit was all really cool back then.
You know, my 30th birthday, I got pictures of her making a cake with a big swastika on it.
And I can't even tell you the shows that she was at in Germany.
I mean, she's been on stage with brutal attacks.
She's been on stage with Bound for Glory, Conquista 88 from Poland.
I mean, and another thing is I have a good friend Frank that lived on the east side of Berlin, which called the White, the White Sea, the Vision Sea.
That was formerly East Germany.
Because I know a lot of the skinhead guys still from East Germany, because that's where a lot of the crew guys were from.
He drove us around one night, downtown Berlin, and he would stop at these different high-rise buildings.
He's like, look at the roof.
And I would look up there.
I'm like, what am I looking for?
He's like, you see that lit up pyramid?
And I was like, oh, yeah, wow, that's kind of weird.
And we drove around Berlin like the whole evening.
And he's kept stopping at all these buildings with big pyramids on top of the buildings lit up.
I'm like, so what does that mean?
He's like, oh, those are lit up pyramids, letting all the Jews know that that company or building is owned by Jews.
It's really kind of interesting.
Weird.
Yep, it is not the easy path to take our time.
So I don't really talk to my kids.
I haven't talked to my son in two years.
I got a granddaughter.
It's almost two years old.
I've seen her once for a couple hours.
My youngest one lives here.
She's 23, and I just don't even bother to let her be because she's going to be marrying a Puerto Rican boy next year, which I'm not too happy about.
I'm sorry, Mike.
I'm just right now trying.
My main goal right now is to try to get better so I can get to Germany, have some fun again.
There you go.
And then it'd be nice to kind of maybe find a lady friend to at least go out to dinner or a movie or something like that.
Because it's like, I'm kind of a loner now.
I don't want to go out to dinner by myself or a movie, you know.
And it's, again, very hard to find someone with the same beliefs here.
I got way better of a chance finding one.
Plus, my age doesn't help either.
You know, if I was a lot younger, I might have a chance, but not this age.
Because I talk to a lot of girls out in the West Coast and kind of when they find out how old I am and my medical issues, they kind of just veer away.
No one hang out or talk anymore.
So I got my brothers.
Right now, old age is in.
All right.
Look, you're an older guy.
If you got that old game you can throw on women, they won't be able to resist and trust me.
it's what the kids call riz Thank you, Robert.
Yeah, hang in there, Mike.
I know it's been rough and that is painful.
Oh, we talk a lot when we see each other about that.
And it's just, that's my biggest, hardest thing is, is now on holidays.
I'm kind of just sitting here by myself thinking about what I did, what I might have done wrong.
I mean, I went to work.
I went to work.
They went to Disney in the summertime to go to Disneyland.
I stayed home and worked.
I didn't even go on vacation with them to Florida for two weeks.
You know, all I did was work, work, work.
Work my eight-hour day or I worked a ton of overtime.
And then I did side jobs in the evening, you know, to give them all what they wanted.
Now it's like, can't even come by and say hello.
But then I do look back and I think about how it was me and my dad.
I mean, when I got older, me and my dad didn't talk probably from 17 to 30.
Right.
So.
Yeah.
Well, that's, that's the thing.
Maybe it's no consolation for me to say it, but your children, they are adults, but they are, I would call them young adults mostly.
And sometimes people go through those 20s and they could have a rocky relationship with their parents.
And it's kind of like the old joke we hear about that, you know, when I was young, I thought my parents were wrong about everything.
And then when I got a little older, I saw that they were right about everything.
So I would say it's never going to happen.
Well, don't give up.
You know, I got a few duds too, you know.
And sometimes in time, they might have a little change of heart.
I'm basically non-filtered.
That's my problem.
Like, I'll go to my oldest daughter's house and her husband, Tony, the Ecardos, big Sicilian, Italian family.
The one cousin is gay, married to another guy.
Another cousin's a lesbian, married to another girl.
And she asked me never to come over there again on holidays or anything.
Like I would go to the on the 4th of July every year and just go crazy, drink and stuff.
And I would guess I was just shooting.
I can't hold my tongue, man.
I got something to say that comes into my head.
I blunt it out.
I don't care.
Good reminder we got a problem with my kids.
My kids don't like me being around them at all because of a lot of stuff that I blunt out and say.
So I guess it's kind of my fault too, in a way.
But yeah, it is what it is, man.
My time's coming close.
So I lived the life I wanted to live.
I did the things I wanted to do, things I wanted to see.
I still got to get to Australia and visit my brothers over there in Sydney and Melbourne.
I got a lot of friends over in Australia.
I need to get back to the VFS guys in Verona.
I used to go to shows in Verona, Italy, every year.
The Easter show every spring.
Knock it out, Mike.
Yep.
Get after it.
It's a good reminder for us too.
And look, all of us have lost relationships, dear and insignificant, as a result of our views or our inability to censor ourselves or, you know, bite our tongues.
I lost when I couldn't keep my mouth shut once over a dinner.
And I look back on it and I think, well, should I have just kept my mouth shut then?
Maybe.
But was I lying?
Was I wrong?
No.
So that's on him for not being able to accept his old pal, spitting the truth.
You know, we've all gone through it.
It's more painful, of course, when it's yours.
I mean, my whole life's been nothing but a national socialist battle.
You know, in the 80s, I would go out every Saturday night, like with Clark and them guys, and we would go down to Belmont and Sheffield area and we would go look for Valdis and beat on them.
That's what we did every weekend.
Nothing but fighting.
That's how it was for skinheads in the 80s.
You know, it's a lot different with the younger guys now, you know.
That's life.
I can't tell you how many times how many times I've been in front of the courthouse in Berwin wearing my blood drop shield and cloak, but I won't get into anything deeper than that.
Fair enough.
Mike, do you?
I mean, this is probably a dumb question, but the core ideology, the belief, the faith, the pride, it's still with you despite all the scars and the wounds and the pain.
Fair to say?
Yeah, I kind of left my wife and kids aside for my beliefs.
I basically let all that go for my beliefs.
And a lot of people always say, Mike, you're going to be a mean old man by yourself if you don't start straightening up.
And I'm like, I'm not straightening up.
I'm not giving up what my forefathers and my family taught me when I was a kid.
Yeah.
You know, I take that deeply.
I mean, you go in my room, there's my grandfather in his uniform on the wall.
You know, people are like, oh, that's a that's a cool picture of a Nazi guy in a uniform.
That's my grandfather.
You know, every time Nate comes over here, I got a Hitler youth scenario drum in my room that I brought back in 2016.
Nate's always drooling on.
He's like, man, could I put this on a drum kit and play it one time?
I'm like, no, you want to give me 800 bucks?
Yeah.
What they want from you is to shut up or to lie or to bend the knee or to accept the Puerto Rican boyfriend or fiancé, etc.
And it's just for the right man with a semblance of spine.
That's just, it's a non-starter.
Sorry.
Yeah.
I mean, I'll stand by my daughter's side all the time.
I don't care what she marries or who she marries.
As long as they respect me, I'm okay with that.
I guess it makes her happy.
He takes care of her and treats her good.
I'm okay with that, I guess.
Because it could be a lot worse than that.
Fair enough.
That's all I could say.
And that's all I can do.
I don't want to lose the last relationship with my youngest.
She at least talks to me once in a while.
We're cooking dinner together, which is kind of cool still, which I used to do with my kids all the time.
They'd be like, Dad, why don't we make it schnitzel and Spretzlin?
I'm like, or Rolodnum.
You know, it was always Saturday or Sunday, German food night, and I would cook German dishes.
You know, I miss a lot of that.
Mike, we salute you for a long, full life of staying true to yourself, to our ancestors, our shared ancestors, to your family, to our ideals.
And no, it hasn't been easy.
Robert, no offense, but we're not going to go off on a tangent about the drum and bass.
Oh, that's right.
I know.
I mean, I'm willing to, but it just, it would be such a record scratch to pivot off on that.
I know.
This has been a serious, heavy discussion.
We need a little, uh, we need a little break from that.
Come on.
Look, drum and guy.
He needs to learn some drum and bass music.
You know, maybe that'll help.
Maybe this is going to help Mike.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Mike will be like, what a bunch of soft, stupid kids.
All right.
Fine.
How about I'll tell you about the early 90s, the coolest thing I ever did in the early 90s.
Go ahead, big guy.
It was 1992.
I got a call from my best friend Marcus in Germany.
And Marcus is like, you got to get here in the next two weeks.
I'm like, why?
He's like, because Ian Stewart's coming, screwdrivers coming to play a couple shows in Germany.
And he's staying at my house with Stigger.
I was like, get out of here.
So I flew over there two weeks.
I got there and there's Ian and Stigger sitting on the couch in his living room.
And I got to sit down with Ian and Stigger and talk with them a whole evening.
And then we went to his show the next day out in the woods.
I would say that's because I hear a lot of people always say, oh, screwdriver, screwdriver, screwdriver.
I'm like, you want to see on my phone?
I got pictures with Ian and Stigger.
They're like, what?
I'm like, yeah, I used to be good friends with them guys.
And I went over in 92 to hang out with them.
And they're just like, oh my God, that's unbelievable.
So that's probably one of my favorite things, because I remember telling Nate and those guys those stories and they're like, oh my god, you hung out with all these people like Ken from Brutal Attack.
I mean, Ken's a year older than me but he still still texts him once in a while.
See how he's doing, what's going on.
So he's probably got a girlfriend in every country with a kid.
Well, I mean I uh go ahead Mike yeah, i'm not going to cut you off, yeah.
And then uh like, add the guys from Bound For Glory.
Yeah, i've been to a bunch.
We were in Germany, we're in Poland.
You know, that's when my wife was on the stage with them guys.
And it's just like I show people pictures of that and they're just like, oh my god, is that Ken from Brutal Attack?
I'm like yeah, i've known him like 45, 40 years and they're like oh wow, that's great guy for sure.
Eight, no thanks.
So i'm very happy for the people i've met, the things i've done, like Lancer, like Lunikoff I tried to get hang out with him last year in Berlin but he wasn't around.
He was out of town because there's a bar called Sturges in Liichtenstein, east Germany, and that's the main clubhouse for the VAN Dallens, because that's the their biker group.
And then I don't know if you know Griffin used to be Canada.
No, he was originally from England.
Blood AND Honor.
Okay yeah yeah yeah, yeah.
So he's now there in Berlin too.
I tried to get both a whole when I tried to go see them guys when I was there for that two weeks, but I didn't have enough time.
So i'm hoping to go next summer for a month and a half and i'm gonna go stay up with Nigel for a week too.
That's another thing.
You got friends.
You get friends all around the world, my guess when Nigel calls me.
Like a couple times I was at Nate's house and Nigel called me.
I put him on the speakerphone and and they're like who's that?
I'm like Nigel and they're like Nigel who?
I'm like Nigel Brown.
You're like what Nigel, from NO Remorse.
I'm like yeah, i'm real good.
I'm like best friends with Nigel.
I stayed with him last year in Germany with them ain't no thing, and they're just like, oh, my god, it's such a classic, iconic band from Britain.
You know, I don't know those.
Those are the things you got to keep in mind.
You know, sometimes you get down.
I've been with Mike where he was, he was down, you know, and uh.
So I I try to remember, remind him of those things, like when we were at the camp out.
Remember, we were around the Bloat there, we had all the people arm in arm and all that.
I said Mike, you gotta dude, that was bad.
I was crying in the whole nine yards, dude.
Yeah, there's a lot of people who care about you, man.
So whenever you're feeling bad, I drank a mouthful of mead and broke down on that one.
Well, like Mike fortunately, you know, I I never get down about our prospects or life in general never never, never get emotional when I got a Little sauce of me, it's true.
And I, I, you know, for you, skinhead music was formative in, you know, basically your cultural identification.
And I told my, it's similar to a red pill story.
I told my Electronica story on the white power hour.
The first time I ever had more than a beer with my cousins at the Jersey Shore and one of their Goomba Italian buddies, good, good guy.
I say that respectfully, put on Robert Miles Dreamland, you know, children.
And I was like, I don't know what this is, but it's the most amazing, almost like I was stoned.
You know, it's the most amazing music I ever heard.
And I was smitten from that time.
And I'm looking at Robert here and the reason that I had hold drum and bass in such a low, low regard is that the first time I was at college and, you know, a certain associate, he certainly wasn't a friend.
He was a fat, pockmarked Asian wearing those gigantic jeans.
He was a big drum and bass guy.
And, you know, he had access to certain illegal substances that I may or may not have consumed that time.
And he had, he had Robert, he had Paul Oakenfold's Transport, which is a fantastic CD.
That one really blew my socks off.
And then like later in the night, he turned on drum and bass, which is like just brutal and repetitive.
It was like the same song over and over again.
My kids actually tell me that my trance, it all sounds the same, dad.
It all sounds the same.
And then, you know, I held Robert in the highest esteem until I heard he was a drum and bass aficionado.
But basically, the first real rave club that I ever went to, and more or less the only one I've ever been to in DC called Nation, where it was buzzed on Friday nights when they had the good DJs.
You walk into this gigantic old warehouse in the ghetto of Southeast DC.
You could see the Capitol building lit up in the distance, waiting in long lines.
Everybody's sneaking stuff in, trying to get drugs in through the bouncers.
First time I went there, I was like terribly drunk and like friends had to convince them to let an 18-year-old in because it was 19-year-old years to get in.
But the first room that you had to pass through to get to the main floor, you know, where they had the main DJ and the beautiful lights and the good music was the drum and bass room.
And I alluded this to this to Robert.
The drum and bass room was like the scum of the earth.
You know, they were all like on ketamine and the music was terrible.
And there was vomit in the corners.
There were like kids literally like passed out in the speakers.
And I just, I was like, I don't, I don't know what this is, but it was like, it was like ascending from hell into heaven to go from the drum and bass room into the main floor, you know, where the big, beautiful open space and the beautiful people and the lights and the happy people.
It was the sad, ugly people in the drum and bass room and the beautiful dancers in the trance room.
Robert's just looking at me like, all right, old timer, let's try to share the other side of the 2000s.
Yeah, look, the music changes a lot.
Okay.
I mean, that might have been 60, 70 years ago, whatever your day was.
What do you mean?
I still listen to techno.
Oh, all right.
There you go, Michael.
I listen to techno when I go to bed.
It puts me to sleep and relaxes me, actually.
Whoa.
But everywhere you go, Zoom, there's techno playing.
That's a flex.
Mike goes to sleep to techno.
Yeah.
That's hardcore.
Yes, I do.
Well, I can't listen to anything louder than that.
It keeps me up.
Maybe drum and base.
Maybe drum and bass has changed.
Go ahead, Robert.
I want to hear Robert's defense of the drum and bass.
Okay.
All right.
So, my defense would be: no matter what genre of electronic music you listen to, there's going to be druggos everywhere.
I've seen girls at trance concerts that are pumped.
I don't know about gospel, Rolo.
I don't know about that one, but I've seen girls that are like just completely zoinked out on Molly, like at transcription.
It's called ecstasy, son.
Oh, extra shoe.
Right.
But back in my day, yeah.
But no, like any place you go to is going to be like that.
A lot of it's just sort of a matter of the crowd, I think.
You're going to find different venues have different kinds of people to go there.
You know, I'm a young guy, you know, and I love to go out and party when I'm not working.
And I'll tell you, in my city, it is damn near impossible to find a club that is not chock full of niggers.
I mean, holy smokes.
Like dance floors now are the worst places you can go to.
It is absolutely scummy.
It is gross.
No one dances.
You know, they all do the weird, you know, the mating rituals that they do and all that jazz.
But oftentimes.
Even like, have you been to like big DJ shows in your city?
You know, the sketchy stuff.
Oh, yeah.
Like the best places nowadays that I've learned whenever it comes to like electronic music is places that they don't advertise publicly are the best places to go to because that's where you have like the diehard, like really good crowd electronic people go to performances that might only have like 100 or less people, but those have the absolutely finest of like Aryan electronic listening like stock at those joints.
They're good places.
All right.
I need to go there.
Yeah.
I'll take you, Mike.
Yeah, there you go.
Just coming in with a walker.
Two-step Mike.
You could do it.
You and me too, Mike.
Hey, I got bad needs.
So we'll be grandpa and grandpa and the young buckle.
Maybe Sam will come along too.
Yeah.
I like electronic music.
I guess we'll roll.
I can't believe these guys.
Well, I'll tell you a secret.
In 2016, I wanted to go to Boom Belgium because that's where Tomorrowland is.
It's a four-day electronic concert.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Bucket.
Fucking stuff.
Go see the electronic show.
Sam, Rolo, Mike, and Robert.
All right.
Well, let's try to make it happen.
I haven't been to one in God close to two decades.
I just feel like I'd be, I felt like I would be too old at 32, let alone 42.
But I remember there were, yeah, there were geezers.
There were geezers there dancing.
And as long as you looked like you were having fun, nobody cared.
You were sort of like a character, almost like a mascot.
Oh, there's the old guy over there dancing along.
The five of us rolling into a place like that.
What a sight that would be.
And the one show I went to, Carl Cox was the headliner.
Most people won't recognize that name, but he was a big name in Electronica back then, black guy from England.
It was terrible.
It was the worst.
But I once saw Sasha and Digweed, the Chemical Brothers, and Paul Oakenfold at one show with my then-girlfriend, now wife, in Chicago of all places at the United Center.
That was an awesome show.
Yep.
Anyway, things to do.
That is all to bring us down to a close.
We got to get out of here before Rolo assassinates.
Rolo is going to assassinate us before Arian Stallion does.
Well, go ahead, Sam.
Please, yes.
Before we completely wind this down, I do want to give a big thank you to Vatican for helping facilitate this show.
And I think we can say his fake name on there.
And I heard a little snore right there.
But thanks to him for making it my leather couch, that's for sure.
For making sure Mike was all set up properly with a good mic and good sound and everything.
I think Mike's coming through really good.
And so special thanks to Vatican, a great guy, funny guy, and a good friend and brother.
That's right.
Absolutely.
He was crucial to bringing in the tech support to make this show happen.
Thank you, sir, very much.
He was welcome on the show, too.
He deferred.
All right.
I'm going around the horn for final statements.
Rolo, you first this time.
Thank you, my friend.
It's my pleasure.
And I actually wanted to just give a special thanks to our guests, Mike and Bill and Ted.
Thanks a lot, Rolo.
Thanks a lot.
Thanks for having me.
All right.
Sammy, baby.
Yeah, I thought that it was a fascinating conversation with Mike and Robert here.
I've spent some time talking to Mike.
I consider him a good friend and a brother, and I'm glad we had him on.
Amen.
Yep.
We've actually known each other a lot longer than we have recently from the old days.
Yes.
Yes.
I don't think we really ran into each other back in the old days because you're from way south and I'm from way north.
Yep.
Yep.
Same, same scene, different area codes or zip codes.
Robert, my friend, thank you so much for coming on.
Thank you for being willing to do this sincerely.
I bust your chops a little bit about, you know, possibly backing out at the last minute, but you were damn sincere from day one.
I believe you.
And it was an honor and a privilege to have you on the show.
Thank you, Coach.
I appreciate it.
If you don't mind, I would like to just say to all like the young guys listening right now in the audience, if you're looking for some community and you want to improve your life and you really want to go out there and make a change, I would always plug Patriot Front, organization, great guys.
They're absolutely wonderful.
We do a lot of good things.
And you can learn a lot from a lot of the people in there.
So I would definitely recommend them if you're a full house listener.
Go check the org out.
Respect and endorsed.
I once said on the show that I would be damn proud if either of my sons decided to join one day.
And the last word is yours, Mike.
We're going to give the DJ booth back to Robert, give him one last chance to pick a crowd pleaser, not some ooga booga electronic trash.
But thank you so much for coming on, my friend.
It was a damn pleasure to meet you at that show a year or so ago, and glad to have you on the show finally.
Thanks a lot.
I really appreciate it.
Hope to come down and visit you one day.
Amen.
You got space in West Virginia anytime, my friend.
And God, I would love to go to Germany with you or just check out.
Going next year.
All right.
Still got a passport.
We'll see.
Keep me posted.
All right, Robert.
Well, yeah, I'll do my standard thing.
Full House 172 was recorded originally on November 19th.
It's now November 20th.
It's Thanksgiving weekend.
Thanks for putting up with us and missing a week here and there as life goes.
You know where to find us.
Telegram, Gab, drop us a line, fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
If you enjoyed this show or any of our other shows, givesendgo.com slash fullhouse, or you can go to our website and there's a support us tab up there if you should so choose.
And our P.O. box is on there too.
If you ever want to send us snail mail, have that.
I'm the only one with access to the P.O. box, of course.
So, Robert, the DJ booth is yours.
Claim it.
I would just ask that you pick something that's remotely appealing to anyone.
Oh, yeah.
Your whole life.
All right.
So, Blue Band Group.
George Mike's.
Yeah.
All right.
Go ahead.
Have that.
Well, we're going to be shooting for a great classic American song that I think really embodies the spirit that we have in this country.
It's American Kids by Kenny Chesney.
Good stuff.
From the country.
Oh, yeah.
Amen.
All right.
We love you, fam, and we'll talk to you next week.
Let's see if Robert has ever listened to the end of a full house show.
What do we say after we love you, fam?
And we'll talk to you next week.
See ya.
Finally.
My nigga.
Good night, everybody.
Mama and daddy put the roots right here.
Cause this is where the car broke down.
Y'all a don't school bus, kicking up red bus, picking us up by barbed wire fence.
MTV on the RCA, no AC in the vince.
We were Jesus, same blue gene baby, born in the USA.
Trailer park trucks got faded little map dots, New York to LA.
We were teenage dreaming, front seat, leaning, baby.
Come give me a kiss.
Put me on the cover of the Rolling Stone Uptown Down Home American Kids.
Rowing up in little pink houses, making out on living room couches.
Blowing that smoke on Saturday night.
We're a little messed up, but we're all alright.
Hey!
It's a parking lot trying not to get caught.
Take her home and give her your jacket.
Making it to second base, but saying you went all the way Monday afternoon to practice.
Sister's got a boyfriend that he doesn't like.
Now he's sitting out back 30-30 in his laughing the blue bugs after light.
We were Jesus, same blue gene baby, born in the USA.
Trailer park trucks got faded little map dots, New York to LA.
We were teenage dreaming, front seat leaning, baby, come give me a kiss.
Put me on the cover of the Roller Stone Uptown Down Home American Kids.
Rowing up in little pink houses, making out on living room couches.
We'll be right back.
Trailer park trucks got faded little map dots, New York to LA.
We were teenagers dreaming, front seat leaning, baby.
Come give me a kiss.
Put me on the cover of the Roller Stone Uptown Down Home American Kids.