We welcome our favorite drummer on earth and his wonderful mom to discuss the virtually endless joys and heartbreaks, as well as victories and disappointments, that come from a family life in full. Break: How Great Thou Art by Alan Jackson (DJ Mom) Close: Rebel Within by Thumbscrew (DJ Nate) Support The Free Expression Foundation Support Ash Sharp's wife and daughters: https://www.givesendgo.com/SupportingPSharp Support Sam Melia's family: https://www.givesendgo.com/sammelia Buy a David Irving book for yourself, a friend, or a political prisoner: https://irvingbooks.com/donate/ And for the love of all that is good and holy, write to a prisoner: https://Justice-Initiative.net Go forth and multiply. Support Full Haus at givesendgo.com/FullHaus Become a member. And follow The Final Storm on Telegram and subscribe on Odysee. 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. 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.
Over the years, we've had a couple father-son teams join us on Full House, including recently our own Sam and Son, not to be confused with Sanford and son.
But we've never hosted a beloved mother and her treasured son.
And that ends this week as we welcome our favorite drummer on earth and his lovely to discuss the virtually endless joys and heartbreaks, victories and disappointments that come from a long family life in full.
So let's get to it.
Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome everyone to Full House, the world's most mom-reacting show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
It is episode 186, and I am your friendly host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours of perhaps more heartfelt content than usual.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, huge thanks to Sax Beard, who sent a really kind care package from North of the Border that included some genuine Canadian maple syrup.
Also to King Charles and Anon for their kind support of the show this week.
And if you'd like to be like those with Ds of generosity, please go to givesendgo.com slash fullhouse to hear your sock name in lights, as it were.
And finally, if you happen to have missed it, our most recent show that went out on the feed was actually Lord Wolfshield and Co.'s keynote crew, and they were kind enough to welcome yours truly on for really a great time.
Not nerding out, but just getting in depth on the themes and current relevance of the hunt for red October and a lot more.
So check that out over on Wolfshield channels if you missed it on the Full House feed.
And with that, first up, he's finally starting to earn his keep around here as he helped to set this show up.
Sam, big guy.
Hey, Coach, it's a pleasure to be here under these circumstances, especially.
I'm looking forward to this show, been looking forward to it.
Yeah, I started listening to that keynote crew show.
My wife had listened to the whole thing and she told me how great it was.
So I have been listening.
I got through the first maybe 35 minutes, 40 minutes, and it brought me back because I was, I think maybe in high school or just out of high school when that novel was really making the rounds, Hunt for Red October.
And I remember reading the book, and it was a few years later when the movie was finally made.
And I remembered I didn't want to see the movie because the book was so good that I didn't think it could possibly be good enough to measure up to the book.
And the movie was good, but I would say I was correct that the movie is not as good as the book.
The book is extremely excellent.
And that guy, Tom Clancy, as I remember, he's written a couple of books that, you know, a lot of inside, kind of seemingly inside information.
And I even remember hearing something like he got, you know, door knocked by maybe some government people because his knowledge was so good about certain things.
Too good.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we talk about that a little bit and whether it was actually a government op to get people more patriotic and into the Cold War and technology and stuff, or whether he really was just, you know, an insurance salesman autif for digging that stuff up.
But they let it go forward for one reason.
Yep.
That was really good.
But one thing I wanted to say right off the top is we have a great guy, a silent partner here who's who's helped not only us on the show again and again, but in our little community here, a humble guy who never says no.
And if more people, if we had 10% of the people like this guy, we wouldn't have, we wouldn't need a movement because all the problems would be solved.
He's selfless.
He always helps.
And a great guy for helping out Vaticant.
So he's let us saying his sock name there on the air this time.
But a great guy.
So I wanted to acknowledge him right off the top.
But the subject matter of the show or what was the impetus of the show was our brother Nate here and his beautiful mother.
They both recently went through the catechism of the Catholic Church.
And last year, over the last year or so, Nate had a kind of an epiphany, a leading, which we'll let him talk about later.
But he ended up going through the catechism and becoming Catholic.
And the sweetest thing of all was that his mother joined him in that process because she had not practiced for many, many years or many, many decades.
I'll let them tell the story.
But it's just one of those things, as I reflected on myself in this show.
There's been so many times that these touching things like miracles, really, if you think about it, have happened, you know, where we're, and it's, it's no, no one can claim, I can't claim any virtue or our show.
We can't claim any virtue.
It just happens to, you know, we're, we're standing in the breach, so to speak.
And there's been just so many wonderful, touching things like this happen.
It's just, you got to treasure it in your heart, you know.
Absolutely.
Well, thank you, Sam, for helping us set this up.
Hail Vatican.
He's not Vatican.
He Vatican.
Seriously appreciate it.
Yeah.
Our mobile IT support for some of our guests from Sam's area of operations.
All right.
Can't wait to get to it.
Next up, I feel like if we ever have a second mother-son duo on the show, he and his mom would be as well.
Roll, welcome back.
Thank you.
It's good to be here.
You bet.
It was a delight to see and talk with your mom when you were visiting her five or six shows back.
And how's your relationship with your mother?
Well, I taught her to say the N-word.
Oh, all right.
So Nate goes through the catechism with his mother.
You are taking her into the sewer.
And to the best.
There you go.
All right.
Well, it's an important word.
She needs to be aware of it at least.
And finally, our special guests of honor.
At the risk of sounding patronizing, she has raised a fine young man who went on to become a great father himself, among, of course, many other achievements.
Long and rich life.
And he is one of our favorite friends on earth, as he is as kind, as he is loyal, as he is ferocious when necessity dictates.
Sarah and Nate, welcome to Full House, guys.
Thank you for having us.
Thank you for having us.
Doing great.
All smiles here, big guy.
It's good to see you on camera.
Been probably a couple years.
And I guess I'll say, Sarah, I want to say ma'am, but they said that I shouldn't say ma'am.
Just say Sarah.
So excuse me if that sounds presumptuous of me.
We're going to start with your mom first, ladies first.
Sarah, if you could tell us your ethnic background, please, your religion, and how many kids you've had.
Ethnic backgrounds, the first one.
Yeah.
Tell me, Italian, German.
I'm German and Italian.
My father was German.
My mother was Italian.
And how many lovely boys did you have?
Five.
Nice work.
And were you raised Catholic, ma'am, and then you came back to it later in life?
Yeah.
Yeah, I was raised Catholic.
I went to 10 years of Catholic school.
Yeah, I did all the Catholic stuff.
I had religion every day and all that.
And yeah, now I'm back.
Did you willfully disregard it or did you just fade away from the church for a while and then get more involved?
I started pursuing other avenues of thought.
I was pretty immature.
And instead of explaining, I had a run-in with a priest once, and I didn't like what he said that because of my immaturity, I didn't handle it well.
I mean, I wasn't married to him.
I just wasn't happy with the Catholic Church.
Yeah, but you were always a spiritual woman, though.
I've always, you know, I've always had spiritual books and I moved into other areas of thought, different religions.
It's not like I totally dismiss my spirituality.
I just tried different things.
And a few years ago, I started a journey back to the Catholic Church, and then Nathan started his class, and it sounded inviting.
So I went with can't think of a more whole mother and son activity, honestly.
Nate, over to you, big guy.
Obviously, you are German and Italian.
What did you get from your English?
They were.
I think my dad might have been conceived in England.
I don't know.
I don't know.
No, no.
My grandparents were off the boat from England on that side.
I still remember my 90-something-year-old cockney grandmother, you know, still yelling at me and my brother when we were little kids.
It was kind of a crazy story because they didn't.
My dad, they thought my grandmother couldn't get pregnant.
She didn't have my father till she was 40.
And this is back in when he was born 39, right?
Actually, I think she was 37.
37?
Still pretty old, especially for the time.
She told her husband she was trying to make me movie reports because they were married quite a lot.
And then my dad was 46 when he had us.
My dad was 46 years old.
He had twin boys.
It's nice.
Yeah, not too.
That's not so old, you know, 50s, 60s.
40s, you just got a little fight left in you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Nowadays, I think people are having kids a lot older than they used to.
For sure.
I saw a chart just the other day, and it was the birth rate for women over 40 was one of the only ones with an upswing, at least for American ones.
It was the lowest line, but it had an uptrend, whereas all the other basically decade classes of women were experiencing declining fertility.
Before we move on, Nate, were you Catholic?
Did you go to Catholic school?
Were you devout and drifted?
What was the story there?
Well, you know, I don't know how my mom wants me to tell the church we went to when we were kids.
I just thought it was kind of a hippie Christian church.
I can't, really.
It was Christian.
It was good.
It was educational.
It wasn't the worst thing.
You could take a kid too.
I don't know what the church would be like now.
Science of mind.
Christian science of mind.
Not Christian science.
No, Christian science is more radical.
Science of mind is, if you've ever heard of Ernest Holmes, he began it.
I don't know, kind of a different church.
And we kind of stopped going probably when I was like 12 or 13.
I don't know.
You maybe still went.
I don't.
I probably stopped going and I wanted to play my drums and go be with my hoodlum friends.
I was still wrong.
I wasn't.
And how many kids do you have, Nate?
I have three.
I'm thinking about one more.
Good stuff.
Three boys.
You late 30s.
Yeah, late 30s.
So if I'm going to do it, I feel like I should probably do it soon.
One of my biggest regrets is not having children, like at least in my 20s, you know, I really wish I had started sooner.
But I guess it's a story amongst a lot of us.
But I'm here, you know, it's like a lot of things.
I can look back and go, I can sit and wait longer and regret it more or just get at it.
Kind of like what happened with this.
Yeah.
All right.
Let's go.
Let's go back to your mother, if I could.
And Sarah, if you could take us back to the good old days, you know, a lot of listeners to our show think, believe, feel that America today is a much more dangerous, dirty, degraded place than perhaps the one that you grew up in.
Could you take us back maybe when you met your husband and decided to raise a family?
Were those really the good old days?
Were they much better than what you see in America today?
When I was growing up, that is certainly different than what I lived.
The way the things that children are exposed to is much different than what I was exposed to, for sure.
It's kind of crazy, I think.
I think it's like the lunatics are taking care of running the asylum now.
Maybe I shouldn't say that.
You can say that.
You can say whatever you want.
I'm here to notice.
Let it loose.
Well, you know, like when I was a kid, you did what you were told.
And, you know, my father was boss.
My mother had died when I was quite young.
So my father was boss.
I did what he said.
And I, you know, went to school and all that.
Oh, yeah, I still got in trouble and all that.
But overall, he was boss.
What were you saying about the lunatics running the asylum?
Oh, yeah, the lunatics.
Yeah, it feels like the lunatics are running the asylum.
Yeah, that's right.
I think that's why the lunatics escaped.
Well, look at the crazy stuff that's going on in the world.
A lot.
Sure.
Absolutely.
With their letting children make decisions about their bodies.
That's wrong.
Bless you for recognizing that evil.
And did you, back when you started your family, were you very eager and keen to have a lot of kids?
Did you feel pressured to do it?
Or is it just sort of the course of nature?
It was just assumed that you were going to get married and have kids back then.
Well, it didn't start out that way.
My first child, he was born in 1965 and I wasn't married.
And back then it was like a different world.
But I kept him and I raised him.
But I was 19 when he was born and I was 40 when Nathan and Joe were born.
Oh, wonderful.
Bless you for that.
Did you honest question?
Did you get any pressure either from your parents or from society to terminate the pregnancy, having it out of wedlock?
No, abortion wasn't legal then, so you don't want to mess around with that anyway.
But no, even if it was.
Yeah, even if it was, no, I wouldn't have.
I mean, there was a possibility of getting a love for adoption, but that was up too.
And my father was very supportive.
So, and my sister.
And so I hit support and eventually, you know, just got a job and took care of my kid.
Made it work.
And what?
Made it work.
Made it work.
Amen.
Now, Sam, Sam told me a little gossip that you may have been a bit of a hippie back in the day.
Now, I'm sure that's not true, but were you a flyway flower child, Woodstock?
Anything on that?
Yeah, I had a baby.
I was more concerned with taking care of him than living my life.
I couldn't.
I'd think I probably held a lot of beliefs.
I don't know, though.
I mean, like, they were, even back then, they were kind of wild.
That wasn't me.
I really was a chaos girl.
I think I think I'm thinking of your music from back in the day, you know.
Oh, man.
A lot of folk music.
I love folk music.
Peter, Paul, and Mary.
And oh, God, many.
Joan.
Joni Mitchell.
No, Tony.
John Baez.
Joan Baez.
Linda Ronstadt.
Oh, my gosh, there were a lot.
There was no sort of music in the house when I was growing up.
Oh, no, I can't.
That's for sure.
I don't want to bring up Bob Dylan.
We don't like Jews on this show.
Who's the other one?
Tapestry, Carol King.
Yeah.
Carol King, right?
Yeah, that's Carol, Carol King.
You look at the name wouldn't give it away, but the face does.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Oh, no, I was just going to ask one more for your mom here.
How about was we have a concept that back in those days, you know, a man, even if he didn't have a college degree, could just go and get a job and support his family, even if it was a big family and life would be okay.
Was money tight back then?
Did you ever have to work when you were raising kids or were you stay at home?
Oh, I worked.
I started working at the hospital here in Woodstock that's no longer there in 1968.
And I was there 34 years.
Oh, wow.
Flicking share.
Third shift most of the time.
Well, half of that.
Half of it went into school therapy.
So that was days.
And then when I lost my babysitter for Nathan and Joe, then I went tonight.
So I didn't want to have to worry about the sitters anymore.
Of course, I was kind of a crappy mother, but no.
No.
You were the best mother a guy could ever ask for.
Nate, what do you remember of early or young childhood growing up with your ma and your pa and your siblings?
I remember I got, I was very lucky.
We kind of grew up, I would say, kind of in the country a little bit.
You know, I was lucky enough to have dogs and rabbits and there were chickens and turkeys.
Oh, yeah, the turkeys.
Those were miserable animals.
I don't know if you've ever, I still remember them chasing me around the yard.
But it was good.
lot of fishing, a lot of running around with my mom.
I remember, you know, taking a sledding, going on road trips, you know, once every other week, we got to go out to eat.
You know, that was always a treat.
Yeah, now everybody seems to go out to eat every single day.
I can't believe it when I see that.
I don't know.
When we went out, it was a special treat, you know.
Sure.
What's your favorite childhood memory off the top of your head?
I just remember our road trips going to see our cousins in Arizona.
We always had to drive, you know, but we always had to stop every 15 minutes, it seemed like when I was a kid, because I was very impatient then.
I'm still kind of impatient now.
And she went, we might do that road trip one last, or maybe not one last time, but we might try to do it for the first time in 20 years this year.
But Joey and I like to stop.
How long does this take to get that far?
Two days or two.
It's two solid days of driving for sure.
Well, we'd spend the night in a motel.
Yeah, probably spend two nights.
Two nights.
Yeah, probably.
I just remember all the, you know, all the chaos my mom put up with my drums and wrestling.
You know, I was a loud child.
I was definitely a boy, you know?
No doubt about it.
Rowdy.
Just like my boys are rowdy.
Yeah, I was about to say the apples don't fall far from the tree in that one.
Not at all.
Sarah, was Nate a good egg or was he a troublemaker and a rabble rouser?
He could be a brag sometimes, but overall, he is a good kid.
He's a good guy.
I have a lot of respect for him as a father, as my son.
And I love him a lot.
Yeah, I love you a lot too.
I just think, I mean, sleeping through a hurricane with the drones, you know, Joey was wrestling and fighting.
And, you know, I remember I came over there one time and there was a band practice.
I was coming over there to listen to the band, hang out with the band, and I met Sarah for the first time.
And she was upstairs in her kitchen rolling a bunch of cigarettes.
She had like a cigarette rolling machine.
And I was like, all right.
You know, it was the cutest thing in the world.
Listening to our shows, hanging out, whatever.
Cool, mom.
Sarah, before I forget, what is your favorite childhood memory, please?
The first thing that comes to mind.
Oh, my gosh.
I think it's probably a Christmas.
Tell them about grandpa taking this show.
Oh, my father.
Okay.
I went to Chaos School.
And every Wednesday we got out early because the public school kids would come over for catechism class.
And a lot of times my father would take me to the show on those days because they worked evenings.
So he would have a day off during the week and we'd go to the show.
Sometimes we'd go out on the weekend, but I remember mostly during the week.
That was fun.
My grandpa was a truck driver too.
Yeah.
So what was one of the good shows?
Do you remember any of the shows from that day?
Oh, heck yeah.
I remember we saw the spirit of St. Louis with an old star.
Jimmy Stewart.
Yes.
Yeah, I was about to say.
It's one of my favorites.
So that's what about Charles Lindbergh, who was a great patriot, by the way, with the America First Committee.
He objected to World War II.
He didn't want the United States to enter World War II, fighting the Germans and all that.
So yeah, he was a good man.
He was the first to cross the Atlantic by air.
And because he was an outspoken patriot, some Jew went and kidnapped and killed his child.
But yeah, and I only mention all that because me and my son, I try to encourage him to make models and do things with his hands and stuff like that.
So we made a model of the spirit of St. Louis, the plane.
It was a replica of the plane that Charles Lindberg flew over the Atlantic with.
Perhaps one of the elephants in the room is that Nate is a spectacular drummer for a skinhead band.
But, you know, when you think of those rough and tumble guys, you think maybe they had rough childhoods.
They were in an orphanage or they got into drugs and booze at like the age of 10.
But it sounds like Nate, you had a pretty nice childhood and yet you still found your way into the rough and tumble world of that music and that scene.
I want to ask you about that first.
Going from a nice country boy who loves his mom pa to a badass.
You know what?
Just because like the skinhead stuff, I'm still a nice guy.
I was a nice guy today.
And I mean, I'm not, I'm not a crazy person.
You know, when I show up to work every couple of years with a black guy, they're like, oh, what did they do?
Or the one time I got my job.
It's a stereotype anyways, because almost all skinheads are good guys.
If you go to a skinhead gig, I don't care who you are.
I guarantee you're going to have a good time.
So that's just a lie anyways.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
How I got into it.
My older brother worked with a skinhead, you know, and showed me a couple bands, screwdriver and stuff like that.
But I was little, you know, I just considered myself more into like Pantera and stuff, you know.
But he also was friends with this other skinhead dude.
And like, he knew about all different sides of the skinhead coin.
Obviously, you've heard of like what sharp is or, you know, white power skins or a traditional skinhead.
It's really not political, you know.
And he knew about all that.
And I kind of like got away from that stuff for a few years and got back towards it.
I was just trying to play like regular oi punk music for many years.
And then, you know, everything just kind of comes back around, though.
You know, it's the music I love and it's the lifestyle I like leaving and living.
I'm still, I like working.
I like driving a truck.
I'm never going to stop doing that.
And I learned that if I quit playing music, my mind is, I go like a, like a crazy person.
I need a little bit of outlet.
You know, man needs a hobby.
This is my hobby.
You know, it's, I mean, it is a way of life to not sound cliche, but, you know, I want at this point in my life, the main focus is just being a good dad.
I mean, it is really huge to me.
I just want my kids just grow up to be respectful, hardworking, kind people.
I mean, it's just the end game right now.
And, you know, obviously I want to build my relationship with Christ and, you know, maintain an awesome relationship with the family I have, my mom and everything, you know.
Amen.
Let's talk about religion in a little bit.
But first, first I want to ask, and I can maybe misery loves company.
I was such a good, goodie two-shoes or good, like before high school that my mom thought I was going to become a priest.
And then once high school, I deliberately rebelled.
Do you remember Sarah breathing it and getting into that edgy, crazy music?
What was going through your mind back then as your son was coming into his own?
I just thought that was what he liked.
And I guess I didn't know a real lot about it.
I just, you know, he had drum lessons and I wanted him playing the drums.
And I was hoping that as he got older, that he'd still be doing it.
That's a novel.
That's like he just said, something he enjoys and pursues.
Stuck with me for going on 30 years now.
Sarah, a question for Sarah.
Do you have any of his records and do you like his music?
I actually have one CD.
Do I like it too?
It's okay.
Well, okay, it doesn't.
That's not bad, right?
She didn't say it sucks.
I played that Country Western band for a little while.
I think you like that a little bit more.
Yeah, no, I'm happy if he's happy with what he's doing.
That's what matters.
I think playing drums has definitely kept me out of jail and any more trouble than I need.
So definitely a positive in my life.
And one more.
Have you guys talked a lot about politics and race and Jews, Nate?
Have you ever tried to like your mother up to our worldview?
Or was it in the, you know, how did you guys navigate that?
Well, I think, you want to say something or you want me to say something?
Well, I don't think my mom, you know, Jews are just Jews to her.
So I, but she definitely sees the poison that's going on in the world at the moment.
You know, it's sick.
And she recognizes it, you know.
Sorry, sometimes I start talking to her about something and she just kind of cringes and, you know, I think we all have experienced that too, where we go out on the edge and our parents just don't understand.
As Will Smith wants.
You know, when you realize that every single like pornographer is a Jew, I mean, like, and then every all our global leaders, you know, like many of them hold dual citizenship.
It's just, it's hard not to see it, you know?
Yeah, that real wild one was seeing that the number one donor to APAC, the Americans Real Political Action Committee recently, maybe it was ADL, it was APAC, was Leonoy Bershitsky or whatever his name was, who is the owner-CEO of OnlyFans, you know, the world.
Of course.
So never fails.
Of course.
OnlyFans is like a, my mom doesn't know what OnlyFans is.
It's like a disgusting platform for women, pedophiles, whatever you want to call them, to go expose themselves.
Well, let's be clear about it.
It's something that encourages regular girls to do pornography.
That's basically what it is.
Yeah, simple.
Thank you, Roland.
And then it's an attraction for guys to go look at that instead of go meet a real woman and get married and have a normal relationship.
Encouraging more young women to pursue that instead of a family.
It basically is just, it's just an avenue.
It's an avenue for any girl to become a pornographic actress.
Yep.
As if social media wasn't bad enough.
It's basically like democratization of auto-pornography.
I don't know how many of them are actually doing things or just showing their private parts.
But yeah, it's a scourge.
Sam, if it's okay by you, I'm going to turn over the mic to you for a little bit about the religious journey that these two fine people.
Yeah, you know, we talked a little bit on the show or I don't know if it was on the air.
It's hard to remember what's on the air or not on the air about, you know, Nate decided to go on this journey of the Catholic journey.
Last year, I was very privileged to be the godfather of a very fine young man who's a mutual friend of all of us.
And Coach had said, oh, it was because of my influence, maybe that Nate was pursuing this.
And I said, well, I don't know.
I don't necessarily think so.
But what I got out of it is Nate saw what this friend of ours, his journey and how he went through it and what he had in the community of that church in their area where they live.
And, you know, just how nice that was and what a homey feeling.
And I think that is what drew Nate into it.
Nate can comment on that if I'm right or wrong or if you would like to add to that.
But also before I stop talking, I will say what touched me about the whole thing was not only that Nate's mom, Sarah, went through these catechism classes with him, but that they frequently had this after-class rap session, I'll call it, where they, you know, they drew closer to each other and they talked about the things they were learning.
And it was just such a warm way that Nate described it to me.
That's what made me think that this would be a good show to have them both on to talk about.
So Nate or Sarah, maybe you could kind of talk about that.
How did you feel going through the catechism?
That experience of kind of discovering a new dimension of your relationship together, having these late night in the car rap sessions talking about religion and what really did motivate you, Nate.
I remember you talking once about race memory, how this religion is part of our people's history and it drew you to it.
So I've said enough.
Go ahead and say whatever you want to say about that.
Agree, disagree, or add to what I said.
I'll start off.
What do you think, Ma?
Okay, so I think when I looked at our mutual friend and when I looked at Sam and seeing how it's benefited both these good men's life and especially our mutual friend has, I mean, the last two years, this man has, I'm thankful to call him a brother and it's just turned his life around and just a wonderful guy.
But really his when I went to his baptism, it was just really moving.
I mean, I recommend everybody goes to an Easter vigil, you know, you're not Catholic or whatever, it's just really, it's an event, you know.
And just the whole night was just the smells, the ritual of it all was just very moving night.
Smells and bells, as they say.
Yeah, that's what I was listening.
I was listening to a couple, because I've been listening to different podcasts about different saints.
And they said, oh, don't be fooled by the smells and bells.
And I was like, well, you know, have I been?
No, I don't think I've been fooled at all.
You know, there's no way I can get fooled by knowing guys like you, Sam.
You know, and then our mutual friend got me going to church semi-regularly.
And then he mentioned to the priest over there that I was interested in doing the RCIA classes, the catechism.
And when our mutual friend introduced me to the priest, the priest just lit up.
He was so excited.
He's like, we've been waiting for you, you know.
And then I missed one class, but I kept going.
And then I told my mom about it.
She's like, oh, I want to go too.
And then we all started going.
And we had an awesome deacon over there, very informative.
Yeah.
And then usually we'd sit and talk for half an hour afterwards.
I don't know what you think, mom.
Oh, I think it was great.
I have brought back a lot of memories and I remember a lot.
So, I already knew a lot.
It refreshed it.
And it made me feel like at home.
What really, what started it for me was I went on YouTube and I went to my church that I grew up in.
And it was like, I felt at that moment I felt like I was home.
It was like I came back to the place I left.
And then Nathan asked me about the class.
So I think it was all just meant to be.
Yeah.
Sorry about how I felt after our friend's baptism in 2023.
I felt at home.
I felt like this is where I was supposed to be, like a blood memory.
You know, like our ancestors for how many hundred years did it, you know?
Oh, yeah.
I was just there.
Our family was Catholic.
In the neighborhood I lived in back in Chicago.
In fact, I think I was probably about nine years old before I realized there were other people who weren't Catholic.
Wow.
I mean, yeah, that's cool.
Catholicism was one true religion.
So I believe them.
And I saw, I think the Jewish people with the long hair and the hat.
Yeah, you know, in Chicago, there's all kinds of stuff.
Did they try chasing you around or anything?
No, no, no.
They were talking.
I was walking down the street and I saw them and suddenly I realized there's more religions.
My mother told me that her parents, that would be my grandparents, would tell her that the Jews, they wore those long coats and they had long pockets and they would steal children and put them in there over on Maxwell Street.
You know, on Maxwell Street, they had all this kind of like flea market or kind of a lot of stuff.
You know, you could walk along the street and I'm sure Sarah will remember Maxwell Street.
I do.
I do it or not.
It's shut down.
You know, all that is gone for many, many years, of course.
But you know what I'm talking about.
But my grandparents would say about the Jews with their long coats and the deep pockets.
They would steal the children.
Probably true, is all I can think.
But that's 100% true.
Sam, real quick, one of my grandfathers was not, well, I'll just say he wasn't particularly a fan of the blacks or the Jews.
I won't say which side.
And I remember as a kid thinking, oh, grandpa's a racist and an anti-Semite.
Like, that's so sad.
And I don't like him as much.
And now I'm like, oh, what I wouldn't give to crack a cold ball to talk about them together and see if we can.
Right on.
Yes.
And one of those points, make it count while they're around.
Your grandparents, your parents.
Don't wait until it's too late.
Nate, quick one for you.
Did you have any hang-ups that you had to overcome?
I know you listen to Full House.
You know, I have lots of hangups about religion that I can't get over.
Anything you had to like, you know, overcome, essentially.
Well, I was reading a lot about, you know, Saturu and I was into that.
You know, I like that as well.
And I still have a lot of respect for it.
It's, you know, again, something that's a part of our bloodlines, you know.
I think what it really comes down to is, you know, having, you know, knowing that something's greater than you.
And how do I look at my children?
You know, and, You know, I'm not think there's not a helping hand there.
I can't do it.
And uh, I don't know if I should share the story or not, but you know, my 10-year-old's not biologically mine.
I'm his legal guardian.
I'm with him till death to us part.
But I remember when I met that little boy when he was six months old and I looked at him, I just knew there was a God and I knew I had to be there for that child.
Because if I wasn't, I'm not a perfect dad, but I know he'll grow up and like have a decent life and he'll be a good man.
And just things like that just gives me more faith and just my friends, you know, and just even knowing you guys, I think is a miracle in itself, you know?
Yeah, I think about it often.
It's not so amazing that we know each other and we're all friends.
And I might not see Coach for two years, but I guarantee you it'll be a big hug and a whole year.
And, you know, it's yeah, got to experience a great party in your own home.
That's a lot of pleasure to have everybody here.
It was a pleasure.
Hope we can do it again someday.
Absolutely.
Yeah, there's a sense of like it being inescapable.
You know what I mean?
I like you, Nate, in the same way.
You know, I respect what the pagan stuff is about.
I mean, those things are good things to like know about or read about or appreciate in a certain sense, but there is something kind of inescapable about when you are, you've, you're like being pursued, you know, and there's a point where you're like running away and running gets old, you know.
And, you know, the one we follow is the Nazarene, you know, the one that the Jews dogged and persecuted until his death.
That's the one.
And when he's got his hand on your life, when he's got his eye on you, there's, there's just no getting away.
I don't know if you felt that way at any point during when you were like you had to do this.
You couldn't turn away from it anymore.
You know, I two weeks ago, I had a long talk with the deacon.
I was kind of at a moment, you know, and it's like, you know, he's like, you are exactly what Jesus wants.
You are the exact man that he wants.
You know, somebody's made some mistakes, and I'm not afraid to say I have regrets in this life, but how long can I hold regrets or I can just release my burden a little bit and just keep moving?
Otherwise, if I didn't do this now, I'll be looking back this 20 years later and going, why didn't I do it sooner again?
You know, I didn't want that feeling.
I didn't want to look back like I did with my children and say, why didn't I do this sooner?
That's right.
There's no such thing as someday.
Today is the day.
Exactly.
I can't stop.
I just keep moving forward, keep being positive, take the good things that come into my life and embrace them.
Amen.
And I'll just share real quick.
I had, it wasn't an epiphany, but it was a realization the other day.
There was a younger, irreligious guy kid in the comment zone who was being pretty cantankerous about religion and Christianity.
But, you know, the Christians were getting really angry and irritated with him.
But I could see where he was coming from.
And I certainly identified with some of his criticisms.
But he just kept harping on, you know, Christianity being rooted in Judaism.
And that will always hold our people back.
I just said, listen, buddy.
I try not to be patronizing.
I said, if Christians are not held back on issues of race or pride or understanding the nature of the Jews, then there's no problem.
Let be bygones at minimum, right?
I mean, like, you can still have your qualms or beasts or say this or that.
It should be better, or this is the truer faith or whatnot.
But if a devout Christian is pro-white and doesn't genuflect at the altar of Jews and Israel and all that nonsense, then there's no problem whatsoever.
And I would humbly submit that to our Christian critical listeners.
We all know that Jesus was a white man.
We follow the white Jesus.
There you go.
We don't have to move off of that, but I do have a tough question that Nate lost a brother and Sarah lost a son in tragic circumstances some years ago.
And there's probably not much more in life more painful than that, than losing one of your own, than losing a child for sure.
Sarah, I wanted to go over to you if it's okay to talk about dealing with that incredible loss and how you made it through, essentially.
I made it through because I believed in more.
I knew that he was gone, but he wasn't gone from my heart.
And he wasn't gone.
His spirit was still with me.
I feel him every day.
I just, he's a part of me yet.
He always will be.
I had another child that died as an infant.
And they're with me.
Joey, in particular, because he was 26 and I got to know him as a person.
The baby was like losing a body part.
And he's with me too.
I believe that we survive in spirit and that when you love somebody, that they're always with you.
And when I was a little kid, concerning my mother, I always felt that as long as I remembered her, she was with me.
And I just, I feel like he's with me.
He's just so dear to me.
I was so happy to have two babies.
I was so excited when I found out I was going to have twins.
It was great.
Beautiful.
That's wonderful to hear, you know.
I mean, you weren't nervous at all or nothing?
No, I was happy.
I had the ultrasound.
They saw two babies.
Isn't that cool?
My best friend said to me, one of them better be a girl.
Yeah, I know.
I had to hear about the girl name picked out all my life.
He was your twin brother, not just a brother, quote unquote.
Yeah, we're coming up on a 12-year anniversary here.
So, you know, having a twin brother, he's can be your best friend, the whole wide world.
He can be your worst enemy.
You know, we did everything together growing up, you know, riding bikes, running around the country, you know, like fighting, wrestling, you know, just terrorizing each other.
But at the same time, like all the good memories, you know, I think of like just roving around the fields by my house, growing up with him, you know, just exploring, climbing trees, all these like, those are the memories that come back.
I try to, you know, the more I hold on to the good memories, the less I think about the bad memories, you know.
Sure.
But, you know, one thing I can think of at that time in my life before he passed, we had not been talking for, we still talking, but I mean, no, it was one of those moments that you have to twin, you know.
So about three months before his passing, I had this kind of a nervous breakdown.
I was like, I got to get out of here.
You know, I got to pack my shit up.
I got to leave.
And I called my twin brother.
He came over to the place I was staying.
We packed up my truck, filled all my belongings up in there, put up what I couldn't fit in there in my mom's basement, and I headed out for a while.
But at the drop of a hat, he stopped what he was doing and came and helped me, you know?
And then, you know, a few weeks later, we went on the last trip with me and my dad.
We used to go up to La Crosse, Wisconsin.
Sam was just up there.
And Sam, did you see the world's biggest six pack player up there?
I did not, but if I could segue for just one second, we went to the shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe, and it was incredible.
I wish you were with us that morning when we went there because this thing is up on a hill.
You come up to the place, you don't even see, you can't even see the church.
You have to get in a like a golf cart and go up a ride up this mountain to go to this church.
And it is just so cavernous.
The ceilings were so high.
There was so much artwork.
Everything was polished marble.
It was absolutely breathtaking.
But I'll shut up.
Go ahead.
I love it.
I heard it.
We were talking about it a couple of weeks ago.
It was great.
But my dad collected beer memory good.
So every year we'd go up there for, I don't know, we went like four or five years.
We went up there.
And me and my brother would just get completely tossed and go tear up around lacrosse.
And my dad would stay at the hotel.
But anyways, we got to do that one last time.
And I'm so thankful every day that, you know, my twin brother didn't die.
It's just my brother as my friend.
And we're getting along and we're happy and we're, you know, having laughs together.
And I'm blessed for that.
And, you know, that moment sticks in my head forever because I was living three hours south of here and I was uptown, up here to take my nephew out for his, I don't know what the time was, Jared, but 10, something like that, nine.
And took him out to go take him out for his birthday.
Took him up to Lake Michigan.
We went to the auto museum.
We went around and I just remember, you know, I was down in the basement saying goodbye to my brother talking and he was kind of on edge.
And then an incident happened later.
And you'd care if I tell him what it was over?
My twin brother is dead over a $40 bag of weed.
So it wasn't so, it was over a theft incident of someone stealing my brother, chasing down, jumped on the car, started punching out the window.
They hit the brakes.
He hit his head, spent the coma a week in a coma, and that was that.
It was terrible.
The most heartbreaking experience, one of the most heartbreaking experiences I ever had in my life.
Brutal.
At this time of year, it's very, you know, we think about it a lot right now.
12 years ago, and you can still hear the emotion.
Thank you guys for taking that question seriously.
Sarah, if I could, our audience, a little bit lighter fare, excuse younger.
Most of our, you know, our listeners' mothers are still around, maybe grandmothers.
How often do you want to see or hear from your son, Nate?
Every day, once a week?
What's the right amount of time?
I imagine you don't want to see him every day.
Can you not get enough of your son?
Or what should our sons and daughters aim for in terms of contact and visitation with their mothers?
You know, I don't know.
I like to hear from him whenever he wants.
I don't want to get pushy and nosy because he has his own family.
But anytime he wants to call me in, open.
Yeah, I see you at least two or three times a week.
I talk to you at least pretty much every other day.
I would talk to you every day, but you're busy.
You know what?
And I'm not ashamed to say this.
Maybe it's an Italian thing.
I don't know.
But if I didn't have children right now, I don't care.
We'd just all be living together right now.
I wouldn't care.
But you know, you're helping out and doing what I do.
You know, it wouldn't be a layup.
I don't know.
Family's always been so important to us.
So, like, it's all good to stay together and stay together.
Well, I remember years ago, a pope of many years ago said, The Italian sons need to cut the apron straight with the Italian mothers a little bit more, you know.
Yeah, I've heard these lines before.
I'm hearing from Sarah, more is a better audience.
So, Kai knows a little excessive.
Yeah, you know, I'll just visit your mother.
And no, you're right.
And I'll just interject here because it's bad on me.
I live very close to my mother, but I am not good about calling or visiting and things like that.
I do, you know, at least once a week or so.
I definitely see each other and we talk maybe twice a week.
But my brother, who doesn't live close by, he talks to her every day.
And I do feel bad about that.
Yeah.
Definitely, I would say.
Yeah.
I think try to keep in touch with your mother more often than not.
And I wish I had that right in front of me.
Maybe we could bring it up or even read it.
You know, Uncle Adolph, he wrote a very beautiful poem about your mother, you know, and there's things in there about if your mother asks you to do something, do it because one day, you know, she won't ask you anything more.
That's right.
Sarah, if I could, there's a social media trend.
I don't know if it's new or if it's been around for years of people going around and interviewing or speaking with older men and women and asking them to look lives and give lessons, either profound or simple, regrets or things that they wish they did differently.
Now, I'm not suggesting that you made a single error in your years, but when you look back on your life, do you have any regrets or things you wish you did differently?
I do.
I wish I would have matured younger.
I wish I would have stayed with the Catholic Church because I would have brought my kids to church every Sunday and maybe even Catholic school if I could have avoided it.
I think that's my biggest regret.
It's like, because I think, you know, I looked back on my life and thought, what made me me?
And I thought, I suppose it was because I went to Catholic school and I was, you know, when at a certain age, he went to Mass every morning before he went to school.
And so that made me me.
And that's why maybe I'm different from some because I was raised that way.
Sure.
If I could say one thing about my mom, you know, if you always didn't know, I was in a school band most of my life, playing the marching band, the jazz band, the concert band.
I wrestled most of my young life.
And, you know, she'd go and work 10, 12 hour shifts.
No matter what, she made sure I was there for all the activities and all that sort of stuff.
And now that was a good example.
That's something I think about all the time.
Every activity, every moment, I want to be there for my kids.
I want to see them strive.
I want to see them grow.
I don't want to miss a second.
Even if I got to be tired, I don't want to be tired.
Can I sleep in the truck?
Yeah, we can sleep in the truck.
Well, one thing I wanted to say, you know, earlier, Sarah was talking about in her younger life, she was talking to a priest, and a priest said something that really turned her off.
And I've heard this type of thing happen before where somebody kind of really drew back from the faith because of some bad interaction or some bad decision by a priest.
And the only thing I would say, and the reason I'm saying it now, in case anybody finds a listener finds themselves in that position, you know, it's no different than like a doctor or a lawyer or anything else.
If you went to a doctor and you got some kind of advice or diagnosis that you didn't like, you would go to another doctor and get another opinion, right?
And the same thing, a lawyer or something like that.
And priests can be like that too.
Maybe you do have a bad interaction with a priest.
Don't let that be the end.
You go talk to somebody else or talk to even a third person if necessary.
I couldn't agree more.
Looking back on it, I wish I had played it from that point instead of I was just immature.
That's all I can tell you.
I just well, unfortunately, you know, that was unfortunate for you, but one of our listeners can draw the good lesson from it.
And so it's good that you shared that.
I got a story about my mom being immature.
I bet she's got something about you being immature.
But I want to know, my mom, everybody knows, my mom's not afraid to punch a cop.
She did that once.
All right.
I don't know if you want to tell them or not.
I thought they were hurting somebody.
So I tried to pull the ball.
And of course, I ended up in jail.
And what did that person's dad go and do?
He bailed me up.
A kid fell off his motorcycle or something like that.
He wasn't supposed to be riding on the road.
Right.
And I thought that I thought the cops were hurting him.
So I got out of my car to, you know, interfere.
And, well, I guess it wasn't such a hot idea.
This is about 10 years before I came around, though, I think.
Yeah.
I'm picturing Sarah with the cuffs on being walked.
Screaming profanities.
Sam's met my mom.
You know, to think of that moment, you know, it's like, wow.
Very anachronistic.
Yeah.
No, so Sarah, your son kind of put you on the spot there.
Now, how about you turn the tables?
What's the worst thing he's done?
When were you angriest at night?
First thing that comes to mind.
I don't know.
Oh, I don't know.
Yeah, and how to narrow it down.
You know, probably when him and Joey would get into these fights.
Fights.
They were having a physical fight and they fell on the bed.
They were pretty big at that.
Or the time I got my, this is an adult.
I got my jaw broken and my mom had to drive me to the hospital.
My mom had to call me into work as an adult.
Oh, still looking out for you.
That's why.
Oh, man.
Yeah, I fell into a dork.
A mother's love.
We're coming up on an hour, Sam.
I want to give you a chance for last questions too, but I wanted to ask Sarah about the glories and joys of being a grandmother and your grandkids.
I imagine that's almost as good as being a mother.
I don't know.
Anything on grandmotherhood.
It is.
I love my grandchildren, but I love my grandchildren.
It's a different experience.
And I love my kids.
And yeah, I'm really blessed.
I'm very fortunate that I have my children and my grandchildren.
Beautiful.
Any great-grandchildren.
And yeah, from my great-grandchildren.
Oh, I was a two-time great uncle before I had my own.
Yeah.
That's how messed up our age gap is with everybody in my family.
My great-grandchildren are younger, are older than my youngest grandchildren.
Because, you know, I thank you when my first child was born in 40 years and you were born.
Kind of a blessing there.
Just a couple shows ago, I posited that you really haven't been a success in life until you live to see your grandchildren and you've gone above and beyond success to still be in great shape with great-grandchildren.
Spectacular.
We salute you.
Yeah, I am.
I am very fortunate.
Last selfish question.
Lessons from marriage.
As you know, divorce, marriage is a constant struggle.
It's not easy street for 99% of people.
When you look back on your marriage, any lessons for the audience?
You don't have to be personal or specific, but advice for our younger trying to get married or married listeners.
Try and be understanding and compassionate.
I wish I would have been more understanding and compassionate.
But I think that's important because you know you love the person and kindness goes a long way.
Kindness and caring.
Anyhow, I just wish I would have been calmer too.
I think that would have helped.
Yep.
That's all right.
I know better too.
It's okay.
Hindsight is 2020, as they say.
Oh, I lost something here.
I want to unplug.
Nobody's going to go.
We can still hear you, big guy.
We can hear you.
Yeah, go ahead, please.
Because it comes from me.
I mean, he could have been better too, but I could have, but I can't, you know, you can't control somebody else.
You can only control yourself, really.
But controlling yourself makes a difference with the other person.
I agree.
That's all that I have, guys.
And we're at an hour.
I definitely want to give Sam and Rolo a chance if they think there's anything that we missed, but I'll just say it's been a pleasure and a delight.
And I think the proof is in the pudding, Sarah.
We love Nate.
He's a man after my heart because he's a big softie inside, but he looks like he'd smash you in the face if you disrespected his mother.
He would go to prison for his mama.
Without a doubt.
Without a doubt.
That's right.
Anything else you got her, though?
Yeah.
I'm good.
I'm good.
I just hand it to Rolo.
All right.
Rolo's shaking his head.
Thank you, guys.
I really appreciate what you guys do for not only me, my family.
I mean, what you guys do for everyone, all our friends' family, it's huge.
You know, every time you guys do new white life, it's exciting.
I'm just so happy to hear about it.
And, you know, like I've said to Sam before, I mean, even if you guys only inspire one person to have a child, this is all worth it.
But you guys have inspired probably your family by now.
I don't know.
So thank you.
Hey, Nate, I've busted your chops before when you weren't on the air, but I literally cannot wait to listen to your drumming sometime soon.
You're absolutely a tour deforest.
I told you, Neil Peard comes to mind.
I can't give you more kudos than that.
Yeah.
Bill War, Black Sabbath.
But hey, there might be a concert in the fall locally or in your neck of the woods.
We'll see.
We have to get all the other guys on board, but we're trying.
Fingers crossed.
And Sarah, ma'am, thank you so much for coming on the show.
Bless you.
It's been a joy, a pleasure.
And we wish you all the best.
Thanks so much.
Thank you.
And the DJ booth is yours, ma'am.
What song would you like to play for the break?
Oh, how great thou art is that?
Sure.
Ellen Jackson.
All right.
How great thou art.
That's a good one.
I was listening to it when it was suggested.
And boy, if that doesn't put a lump in your throat, that's a tough one to listen to without getting choked up.
Yeah, I have a CE of basketball music.
All of its good, but that's my favorite.
Yeah.
Beautiful.
Thanks again, guys.
And audience, we will be right back.
When I wonder, consider all the worlds thy hands have made.
I see the stars.
I hear the rolling thunder, thy power throughout the universe displayed.
Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee.
How great thou art, how great thou art.
Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee.
How great thou art, how great thou art when Christ shall come with shouts of acclamation and take me home.
What joy shall fill my heart.
Then I shall bow in humble adoration and there proclaim,
my God, how great thou art, then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee,
how great thou art, how great thou art, then sings my soul,
I savior God to thee, how great thou art, how great thou art, how great thou art, how great thou art.
I have to just say again, people are going to really like that.
That's that can stay in the recording, Sam.
Thank you, I hope they.
I mean yeah, I was all smiles.
I posted on telegram like my heart might explode just the thought of a nice loving, you know lifelong mother and and her son on the show with you know, it was kind of a welcome back, by the way, to full house, 186, second half.
Yeah, we can top that uh, first half.
But uh, obviously I had never met Sarah before.
I had met Naple, you know it's.
There's been some heartbreak there and obviously some joy and trying to wade, but I don't want the audience to think I was a jerk.
I did ask if that was okay.
If I asked about the, the brother and the son that they lost to some uh American, American nonsense, they said yeah, that was fine.
12 years on uh, you could tell still getting choked up and and and Sam, I could hear you getting a little bit choked up thinking, thinking about Jesus.
Frankly yeah, oh yeah absolutely, like I said, if once he's got his eye on you and he wants you.
You're, you're a marked man there it is I.
I totally if, if you, if you guys got the faith, if you got the feeling and it's, it's not a hang up for you, God bless, it's an asset, not a curse.
Don't let any of the young, well-intentioned autistes perhaps uh, try to rain on your parade.
I, I saw what that kid was doing on some people anybody who follows the comment zones was like 500 messages.
I didn't even mean to kick off anything religious, I just sort of ranted and raved some post.
One day he's going to have his moment of of looking back on all that and saying, boy was I dumb maybe maybe yep, we'll see.
I've mellowed but not entirely turned anyway.
Uh, let's see.
That was Alan Jackson.
I had heard a couple Alan Jacksons.
I certainly hadn't heard that one.
I listened to that on home today.
We don't have too much of a set agenda here in the second half audience, but we're gonna have fun with it regardless.
We're gonna start off with the awesome letter that came along with my care package.
Sam Or Lower looking up crew bizarre, tasteful care package from Canada.
I've ever seen maple yeah yeah, and he said some Canadian shekels too.
I was like, what am I gonna do with these?
They were, they were very colorful.
Yeah well, you could, you can add them to your monopoly game.
Well, we can all go to.
All go to Niver Falls, go gambling and uh, Windsor across.
I remember being, you know, on the American side.
You know, if you're within a certain amount of miles, some stores will even say something like no Canadian money.
You know, do you ever see that?
Have you ever seen that?
I remember that's years ago.
I remember seeing that years ago, no Canadian we, we took a big Irish Catholic, Irish Polish.
It's see, it's funny, I always say Irish Catholic but it's Irish Polish.
It was basically 50 50, 50th anniversary cruise, my uh maternal grandparents up to Nova Scotia Halifax uh, in like 2000, and I remember it was very exciting because I was 19 years old and you can drink in Canada at 19, you know, brought the passport and me and my cousins when we got off of the first, first beeline right to the bar uh, and then we didn't either.
Their beer is stronger up there too, Canadian lager, moose head and uh labats everybody, uh Labats.
Uh wasn't my favorite, anyway i'm.
We got some favorite beard.
I like who's head better than Labat.
I don't know.
I don't remember liking Labats, but whatever.
I like Miller My Taste Buds.
No.
Anyway, I wanted to read the Sax Beard up to the show now for a year and a half.
It's become my favorite podcast.
I look forward to it every week.
I work out of town in construction and drive back and forth weekly from home to work.
So your show is the favorite part of my drive.
Gardening and homesteading wolves are my favorites.
And he asks, Have you all done a show on hunting and fishing and preparing meat yet?
My wife and I hunt fish and grow as much as we can.
We butcher and process meat and also pressure can a lot of our produce.
This is actually a really good issue because we have not done that.
We've got stable of hunters.
Obviously, we have Hans, but hunting and fishing, we have never specifically addressed.
We did have water on.
Water could come on.
This guy could come on.
We got a new hunting alpha guy.
A little bit more.
I'm early 40s.
My wife and I have five children between us, ranging very young to four, five.
Anyway, they've got a bunch of kids.
You gave me a shout on your show about six weeks ago, the time that you said ball tubes on the air.
Yes, that was an ad-lib.
I was just thinking about vasectomy.
Seriously, we traveled to the U.S. a few years ago to get that vasectomy reversed, and it worked.
In the U.S., in the U.S., it cost $2,000.
In Canada, the best I could find was just under $7K.
And he says the vasectomy was free.
Go for it.
Yes, of course.
Free to sterilize, big money to reverse it and get back.
Oh, yeah.
It's interesting as an American as we all are about, oh my God, prescription drugs are so expensive here.
You got to cross the border over to Canada to get whatever you need.
But apparently it's the opposite when it comes to the ball tube question.
He says, enough rambling.
Please keep up with the show.
It's made a positive difference in my life.
It's a breath of fresh air, more enlightening than listening to all the fear, rage, pouring out there.
And he sent some organic maple syrup, some little sweets, and a Canadian.
Oh, man.
Yep.
Sax Beard.
Thank you, buddy.
Means a lot.
Yeah.
Well, just, I've said it before, but you know, my father was a Canadian citizen, even though he lived and worked in the U.S. most of his life.
He remained a Canadian citizen until his dying day.
So I have many fond memories of trips to Canada in my very young years.
I'd say that means that we have Canadian blood in our show's veins, I'm for sure.
That's right.
No question.
White life.
Side of Sax Beard getting those.
I'm going to say it one more time.
Ball tubes fixed, reconnected.
The plumbing angles were recreated.
Besatkonf said that we had another home, no midwife this time.
And he refused to collaborate.
So he just wanted, you know, thank you.
That was in the comment zone.
Way to go.
Yeah.
He delivered it.
Yeah.
Details.
Thankfully, no pictures of the process.
And our pal, Brian, if you remember Brian, he did like the wood rants probably and three years ago.
I remember he just sort of held up the camera and he was like, all these things, but it's all done.
And we full house with that one.
He says, I have news.
I got news for the birth panel.
Child, his first, was born this morning at around a quarter past seven.
Oh, man.
And Brian went through a rough patch.
I don't know if he got married to the mother of his first, but I know they had a rush, whether they got divorced or separated or weren't married in the first place.
He got back on the wagon and he had a lovely picture of him and her in their totally spiffy wedding attire.
Great.
Yep.
Way to go.
Congratulations.
And make sure this one goes better than the first one, Brian.
Sorry, I had to do that.
That's all I got in my stack.
No new white life here.
Sam, we're still at Full House Grandchild DEF CON 3 with Aslan.
Yeah.
Fingers crossed.
Yeah, they say they're trying and all that.
And I got two other sons that are maybe, you know, could get into the game.
I just look at all the kids and some of them are just not, have not figured life out yet.
And a few of them have.
And so, you know, like you say, fingers crossed.
Amen.
The thought occurred to me, it is May 15th as we go to, it's almost May 16th here in the heart of Appalachia.
I almost went down to the gazebo tonight because it was so beautiful.
We never saw any of those Aurora Borealis here, despite my best efforts.
It was either cloudy or, you know, when you're living in a holler, you got a lot of obstructions, trees up there.
I couldn't see anything.
But summer is just around the corner here.
School gets out like next week, the end of next week in West Virginia, which is always crazy to me.
In Jersey, we always went into June and then didn't go back until after the first week of June, maybe.
And to be honest, I much prefer a longer summer on the ass end than starting it like the last week of May.
But regardless, that means it is summer bucket list time, an absolute requirement of mine to sit down with the kids.
We have not sat down to make our list yet.
Now, whether that's because they're getting older and are less indulging of me and my peculiarities and cutesy, like, hey, guys, let's sit down and have a family meeting and talk about our summer bucket list.
Or is it if it's because I'm slacking, I don't know.
But I got a few ideas here.
The first one, and again, this is just shared in the spirit of something that you may want to do with your kid, whether they're two years old or 17 years old, still under your roof.
And I to this may get me in trouble with the audience, but I want to bring my son and daughter, older son and daughter, to an MLS major league soccer game, because I have to share.
It's cute watching your kids play sports when they're younger, when you see them start to blossom, whatever it is, wrestling, jiu-jitsu, baseball, when you see them start to come into their own and actually start using their brain.
And it's not just athleticism.
They're thinking and they're struggling and they're fighting and they're getting angry out there and they're getting sweaty and they're getting knocked down and getting back up without any tears.
I like wouldn't miss a game for my anything about Nate's mom and taking him to all his band practices and stuff.
I hope Nate played some.
But anyway, they're so crazy about soccer and they're getting so good that I want to take them to a professional soccer game.
Sports ball be damned.
Whether it's Messi or just some scrub team, I don't know where we're going to take it.
It's like either DC or Philly or I don't think Pittsburgh has a team.
I don't know.
We may have to go out and see the Chicago fire or something.
But that's on.
And then one that I really want to do, but they have rolled their eyes at is that after O and me, nigger Jim and Huckleberry Finn, you know, chose to float down the Potomac River like during one of the worst drafts in this area.
It was so slow.
You know, we had to hike off and make it home.
I would love to take now.
This is why I'm talking this out because I'm going to come up with some stuff for the little guy to take him to Sesame Place or Dorney Park or whatever.
But I ones who know how to swim rafting river.
And even if we just do it for a couple hours, just to be floating in nature, because we saw bald eagles, we saw all sorts of waterfowl and stuff like that.
It was awesome water.
And it was so much fun.
I said, oh, the kids would love this.
So that's on there.
And we're got to go to the beach too, close enough that we can make it.
So, Sam, do you have anything on your summer bucket list off the top of your head?
Well, I just doubled back to what you were saying there about, you know, going on a rafting trip or canoe trip, something like that.
My youngest son and I have been fortunate to go on a few of these trips with the Troops of St. George, which is a Catholic version of the Boy Scouts.
And those are precious moments.
We went on one in particular sticks in my mind.
On the way to the event, it was absolutely a downpour of rain and thunder and lightning.
And I thought, certainly they must cancel this event.
And so we were getting closer and I said, get on your phone.
And we have a group chat.
Make sure that this thing is still on, you know, and the leaders.
Oh, yes, absolutely.
You know, it's going to clear up and we're going to go, okay, fine.
All right.
So we get on there.
We get on the Kankakee River and we're going down.
And it, you know, it goes pretty good.
It has a pretty good current and we're in canoes.
We're paddling.
But then there were squalls of rain and not just a minute or two, but a good maybe 15, 20 minutes of drenching rain.
And we're in the canoe and it was warm.
It was summery.
And we kept going.
And then we got into where the wind changed direction and it was getting so choppy, you know, but we kept paddling.
And we're, you know, we were, I'm a strong guy.
My son is a strong guy.
Some of the other crews are the, you know, you got a paunchy dad with a very little child or whatever.
No, but all right, we're going.
We're paddling.
We're going right into it.
But we got capsized.
We, you know, once your canoe turns a little bit and it catches a wave, we went right over like it was nothing.
And but they had instructed us.
We had been instructed.
What do you do?
Of course, first of all, we had all our things like cell phones and wallets in a Ziploc plastic bag, which floated and didn't get into anything wet.
So that was, you know, we were thankful that we had followed that advice.
But then once you're over, you know, then there's a procedure for riding your canoe.
And, you know, you push under it, you lift it up overhead, even if it means you put yourself underwater, but you lift it up overhead and you throw it over and you get it upright and you get back in it and so on and so forth, which we did.
But, you know, everyone had a good laugh because we paddled out in front of everybody.
No, we were going to make it.
But we got capsized.
But we were close enough to the end of the run where they actually sent out boats and kind of got everybody else, dragged them into shore because it was that choppy, you know?
So, yeah, those are good things to do.
And if you have a good river that's running well.
Yeah.
Would you guys ever go to Lake Michigan, either when you were growing up or when you were when you were absolutely was that like going to the beach?
Because I'm a little bit mid-Atlantic like supremacist.
I'm like, please, I go to the real beach.
Like I remember when I first visited my wife dating in Chicago, I was like, it's a beautiful lake, but this isn't a beach.
There's no way.
Maybe there's little baby waves or whatever, but not to be snooty, but is a Midwestern beach vacation going to the lake and chilling out?
Yeah, oh, absolutely.
There's a lot of beaches where, you know, we are right along.
If you look along the southern edge of the lake there, I mean, this is all very close to where we are.
And there's beaches everywhere.
And yeah, you could have your saltwater ocean.
We got freshwater here, which is a lot more pleasant to swim in and fool around in and everything like that.
There's a lot of different beaches, all with different features.
Actually, if you slip into Indiana, there's a lot of beautiful beaches on the southern end.
And talk about waves.
It's along that southern part of the lake there, Lake Michigan, where you will get some waves that are not to be trifled with.
Legit, okay.
Yeah.
So, and there's some dunes that are, I think it might be maybe some of the biggest sand dunes in North America are right there in Indiana on the southern shores of Lake Michigan there.
There's one called Mount Baldy.
You could look it up.
It's amazing.
I remember when I was a very small child, I don't know, let's say third or fourth grade.
And I can remember maybe two years or three years where school trips we took to Mount Baldy.
And so they have you going up this sand dune.
And I mean, I could remember the adult male teacher, you know, grabbing kids and whipping them up the thing because it was so difficult.
I mean, you know how it is to climb in sand, right?
It's just, it's tough.
It's hot.
You're climbing up the sand dune.
You feel like you're going nowhere, you know?
And so later when I had my own children, I took them and we climbed the sand dunes and Mount Baldy and we went to the beach there.
And I can remember one of my youngest daughter, she was coming down the hill and she just, you know, the going down is maybe more treacherous than the going up.
And she lost her sandal.
You know, once it goes in the sand and a little bit it goes over, you just don't, and she just went, you know, legs, arms all going, you know, like windmills and she landed face first, lost her sandal.
And I said, hey, that's that, that sand dune is nothing to be trifled with.
So, yeah, I, I, uh, yeah, I was mostly, mostly joking, you know, about yeah, you know, I know it's, it's a, it's a beautiful lake.
I'm glad you do have some.
I don't know if they're boogie boardable.
And at least it's better.
It's better than Rollo.
His summer bucket list is to visit the Dead Sea, which is very close to the southwest corner of the of the Dead Sea is his preferred section.
It's Israeli territory for the never made that Sam joke I told you about.
Sam, Sam, damn the man.
Go ahead.
What's the Sam joke?
Well, it was supposed to be one of your intros, but I'll just say it.
A man who's been in the movement so long that when he first started, the Dead Sea was still sick.
Yeah, it was still alive.
Yeah.
Still alive.
I remember.
Blast from the past.
Yeah, well, you know, I don't want to go back to that old chestnut too often.
You know, like, we get it.
He's old.
Try to mix it up a little bit.
But as far as the bucket list, you said the bucket list, there's a few things that you know when, when you have homeschooling students, you really try to line some things up because they're yeah, because they're uh.
You know my youngest son, his resumes is not it's, it's on the thin side, let's put it that way and um, so i've tried to line up a few things for him this this summer.
One of them is um, the uh, the order of priests, that uh says the Latin mass, where we go, they are having a uh, they have a summer camp for kids and it's all segregated by age.
So the older boys up until you know age 17 they, they have a there, and then younger boys and same thing with girls, older girls, younger girls.
So I have got i've got them lined up to go to that.
Um, there's an industry group puts on a, a camp for kids to teach them about things like metal fabrication, welding and metal finishing coating electroplating, things like that.
And i'm only mentioning that because, whatever interest industry that you, the listener, might be in or interested in, you know there's a lot of industry groups that put on camps for kids because there's a lot of focus on bringing people into these professions because like, let's say, with the construction trades, for every three guys there's three guys retiring for every one guy coming into the industry.
So there are things um, whatever I I remember even when uh, my one of my daughters was much younger, she was maybe interested in nursing and there was actually like a nursing camp, like high school students, that were thinking of going into that.
So think of that, look into it, search the internet, you know, for your, your children that might be getting into the later teenage years.
They they, might be interested in certain field.
A lot of times there's an industry group who's putting on a camp for four or five days, maybe in a week that you know, to introduce them and uh, teach them some things, and at the end of it they get a nice little certificate.
And that's why i'm saying when you're homeschooling, there's not a lot of credentials sometimes and and it's nice to have a certificate with your name on it that says hey, I was to a, an architecture camp.
One of my sons, he went to an architecture camp.
Some of my sons, they went to a you know another camp that was of a different industry group.
So i'm trying to line him up with, with uh to do that and uh, so that there are.
There are those those things.
Uh, when you're thinking of the bucket list, what to do in the summer, when you're thinking of your kids, think of those types of things to get them steered into maybe something of interest, of a career or something if they're later teenagers.
Absolutely, and and I won't go into detail because it's a little bit personal but you know, uh Junior is no intellectual slouch.
He quot, you qualified for something for advanced kids and he's going to one of those courses sort of like what you know, you may not know.
Think you want to be this when you grow up, but you might and that would be certainly a lucrative, accomplished career path.
So he's gonna be one of those.
The summer little feather very good hat as well.
And it reminds me Sam, I was a electric and gas meter reader two summers during college.
I've told some of the stories of reading meters and Camden on the show previously, but you brought to mind that the PSEG was the utility in New Jersey and they actually went to the work to bring all of the summer meters who are generally sharper kids up to Newark, New Jersey, into the conference room with like mid-level executives to try to sell us on considering working for that utility as a professional, not just being temporary summer help.
But hey, we're interested in you people, we see potential in you and I remember my buddy and I looked at each other.
We're now, you know, he went on to be a lawyer and I went on to college and all the rest of the stuff.
We looked at each like we're not going to work for this utility and looking back on it, you know, would have kicked myself in the teeth for being so snotty and dismissive.
Right, one of the most vital industries and, you know, reliable employments in the world uh, is to literally deliver power energy, to sustain peaceful civilization.
This is the difference between a first world society and uh, you know, Africa.
So yeah, just a little little vignette from past.
If I was of that and it was uh, youthful ignorance and arrogance and and sneering uh, I voted in the West Virginia primary on tuesday this week, which is, I guess, was just yesterday, and uh, it was I.
I do it even when i'm angry about politics or whatever, just because I like stopping into my local citizens who are working there, saying hello, how's it turn out, etc.
What's the process like, etc.
And uh, I actually did homework.
I'm sure most people don't do this and they just look at the signs or whatever, but I looked at my simple ballot, these down races, etc.
But I actually, on the presidential Gop, I said I was a Gop voter, so sue me uh, but it was Trumpy, Nikki Haley and then three names that I never heard of uh, and I actually looked at those other three names to see if maybe that you know there was like a diamond in the rough and they all it was like vanity projects and they were terrible on immigration.
I was like, screw it.
So I I wrote Trump's name in there.
Uh, the people were super friendly.
They were like you should work the polls next year.
I was like, but does it pay haha?
And they're like, oh yes, it does.
It absolutely does.
No yeah, and I knew that I was being cutesy.
And then they were like oh yeah yeah, please.
Like yeah my, my brother, my brother went and he became an election judge and he was telling us about it and one of my sons went and he also did it.
And you get paid yeah, and you're literally meeting your neighbors all day long.
If you work for one, that's in your and in the case of somewhere like around here you, if you do go and vote, all everybody that's working the election, it's all niggers, every single one.
So definitely, if you have a mind to do it, get in there and do it, even if it's a whatever it's going to be part of a day.
You have to attend a class or two, I guess, and then you do it, but you do get paid.
I think it's like substantial too, as I recall.
I don't remember what it was, but it was not like here's 50 bucks, it was maybe like 500 bucks or something it was.
It was substantial.
Yeah, for a day, that's not that.
That's not bad, something like that.
Yeah, the one interesting aspect of it, or more interesting than the rest of it, was, I came in and he said uh.
And I said, yes, of course, ma'am.
And I pulled it out.
And one of the other women said, thank God he didn't complain about having to pull his ID out.
And I was shocked.
You know, I was like, I could imagine like, oh, no, no hablo inglés.
No, no, you know, no passport.
No, like I could see that in a diverse area.
But like, apparently, I'm guessing that that is a latent sort of libertarian, like, you know who I am.
You don't need to see my ID, you know, right?
Like, I've lived here for 50 years.
Whereas I, of course, was like, thank you.
I'm so glad that you check my ID to vote.
Whereas around here, there's still that latent, like, screw your, screw your rules.
I'm putting that John Hancock down for whoever I vote.
But it after I, long story short, I did mark off Trump for the West Virginia GOP primary.
Totally irrelevant.
None of the races were close enough for my vote to have mattered, although they have in the past for the really super local stuff.
But I have seen and heard enough from Trump on Jews, on Israel, on Comics, on October 7th, on the Holocaust, on I take it back.
You know, it's very, very rare in life that I have to ever admit that I'm wrong, especially in marriage too.
I'm never wrong.
And I think people who have listened have noticed that I've been very distinct and cynical.
And like, look, it's just comparatively what is better for us, what is better for white Americans.
And my gag reflex, my disgust trigger was just kicked over into five counties over when Trump went on Hugh Hewitt and said, yes, all Jews should be grateful to me.
I've been the greatest president for Jews, Holocaust, blah, blah, blah.
And I want.
And I, yeah, I'm just like, it's so tone-deaf.
Like, do you realize that Michigan and Minnesota, like, you might actually like put points on the board by not being a 100% cocked faggot to the Jews.
Right.
And don't excuse my French.
And to put out the two big radio cons, Pompeo and Tom Cotton, for his for his future natural national security positions.
Pompeo, I would have guessed, would get Secretary of Defense this time.
He was state last time.
Cotton had in the Senate for probably a decade and a half at least now.
I just, I, I couldn't do it anymore.
I'm like, no, not even paying lip service.
I'm not even doing these intellectual games anymore.
I'm done.
Like he's brutal.
I don't think, I don't think he's learned anything like getting betrayed by Michael Cohen, you know, persecuting him in Georgia and New York.
Like, I like, it's, it's just, it's boomerism.
It's the rote stuff.
He's promising the world on immigration and he's promising even more to Israel and the Jews.
And that is just antithetical.
I can't do it anymore.
Yes.
I'm sorry I even tried to be cynical and opportunistic about it.
I should have stuck with my 22 blumps.
What is the calculus?
Because this is not a dumb man.
I mean, yes, it looks one way from us, but I try to look at it.
Okay, what is he trying to go for?
Like money.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, but even if he just kind of played it cool, doesn't he see that that would get him more support?
Right.
Yeah.
And he's done that on other issues too before.
You know, he's going to do the interviews where you're like, well, you know, the f ⁇ is, you know, or like, you know, he can triangulate.
Yeah, like abortion, abortion.
That, that should be cut and dry.
No, but he'll say like, well, you know, a certain thing.
Yeah, yeah.
For the idea, like he waited on this.
Oh my god, he's perfect.
Oh, bingo big guy.
He's perfectly willing to triangulate and prevaricate and obfuscate and all the other gates go halfway and everything.
Yeah, yeah, in order to not offend mothers and stuff like that.
And when it comes to Israel and the Jews, it's pedal to the metal, glowing eyes, you know, king of Israel.
King is a Jew.
Well, here, here's here.
Well, and here's another thing because you raise an interesting question.
Who is this for?
Like, what are they thinking?
But they're going to let Biden debate Trump, where Biden will literally read off a teleprompter and even say things like, pause for applause.
And I don't think it's going to be entertaining.
I think it's just going to, it's, it's like that line from one of my favorite movies, Observe and Report, when they're trying to embarrass the guy and someone's waiting in the closet thinking like, oh, yeah, this is going to be funny.
And then he's just too embarrassed that he just, he comes out and says, you know, I thought this was going to be funny, but it's just sad.
And that's what I think is going to happen here.
You're going to see Trump talking about how much he loves Israel.
And then you're going to see Biden like having like mental shutdowns and just like, come on, man.
Hey, man, come on, Jerry.
Yeah.
That's right.
I mean, clearly they're going to.
We're going to see the most embarrassing debate of all time.
We're going to see that Donald Trump is completely useless and pathetic.
And we're going to see that Joe Biden is a doddering old child molester with dementia.
Yeah.
It may have been Charles who said, what world is this?
Like, what nationalists are going to vote for Biden because of Israel?
And then like the leftists are not going to vote for.
I mean, I think that's that's, I honestly think that they want Biden because they want Trump to be the guy that starts World War III.
Because he absolutely will.
I'm coming around to it that they actually do want Trump and you know, the polls and and like, yeah, I mean, because he'll do it, no question.
Oh, no question.
War for Israel.
He's signaling, signaling the, you know, with the Home Depot guy, whatever it is, Bernie Marcus.
Bernie Marcus.
He's basically like bending over and spreading his ass cheeks and saying, like, please put, you know, shekels here.
I will do your bidding.
It's crude and I'm happy.
No, this is true.
It's true.
And when we, when I or we, you know, Sam was kind of on board.
I had a couple of people reach out.
I was like, you make sense about Trump.
It was like, but he had been quiet on this stuff.
You know, even after October 7th, he wasn't going over the board.
And now it's all out there.
And the weirdest thing is he's doing it after so many people are turning on Israel.
He's admittedly the politically worst move to make.
And it's like there's a bear trap on the ground and he's just not just stepping in it.
He's jumping both feet into it.
Right.
Yeah.
It's not even a reasonable position.
Let's say I was some kind of, I attained some kind of high political or high public position.
And then they cornered me.
I was, hey, you know, it's bad what's going on over there, man.
That war and killing and everything.
I just makes me feel bad.
It's just, you know, people should like you could say so many things that would be correct without like stepping in it.
Yeah.
And he's in the polls.
So here, let me alienate like possible Michigan, you know, like, hey, I believe that he's made inroads with blacks and Hispanics.
You see it in the Nevada poll data for sure.
And it's not insane to see that, you know, Muslims could get whatever.
There's a significant Muslim population in Michigan, obviously.
Dearborn, et cetera.
It's one of those.
Yeah.
There's seven that they have to free us on.
Maybe eight.
If you're in North Carolina, Nevada, North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Arizona, Arizona.
Texas.
Yeah.
Somebody said, are you dense, coach?
Like, he married his kids off to Jews.
I was like, yes, I know that.
Shame on me.
Shame on me.
Well, hold on.
I'll defend you in this instance.
But he did like his whole life.
He did everything the Jews ever wanted to.
And he always got rewarded.
This was the first time he did everything right.
And they all turned on him.
So there is reason to think that maybe possibly he's thinking, you know what?
Out of the question to a normal person.
And you know what?
Here's my 7D chess thing.
What if he's saying all this pro-Israel stuff to warn us that no matter what, you're going to get Israel?
That's the cope is that no matter what, you're getting Israel and you're probably going to get him in office.
You're putting that finger and your thumb together.
Israel has you under control.
He'll do that guaranteed on his in the on the debate stage.
Yeah, like he invited Kanye and Fuentes to visit him in Moral, right?
Like, does he literally have zero veterans?
Like, did he not understand what was going on there?
You know, like, maybe, maybe it's much of an amateur hour.
I'm sorry for like geeking out or chipping out about this.
A man, you can only, like, I was willing to hold my nose for the greater good.
You know, like if what Rolo said, like, if you got 50 million deportations and war for Israel, would you take the deal?
Yes, I would take the deal.
But that deal that I can't take abject genuflection, which is one of my favorite.
Yeah.
Well, I think that's the thing.
And the deportations, the deportations are going to be like nationalists from like Germany, Sweden.
Homeschooling Germany kind of got hit the road.
Yeah, because another thing to point out is how he's thinking like, oh, I'm going to go ham on immigration.
And he's trying to appeal to non-whites.
Well, who do you think those immigrants are, you fat retard?
Well, to be fair, a lot of the brown legal residents and citizens are not too keen on mass invasion.
Yeah.
And a lot of them are also.
Oh, for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
More than merrier.
No, but I'm not cucking on that.
But yeah, it was too much.
And it really only matters for our members of the audience who are in those handful of swing states.
I'm not going to give the data point.
I just can't do it.
Like I hated my, I was like driving home.
I was like, you cowardly son of a bitch.
Like, why did you check his name?
You could have left it blank.
And I didn't like the idea of leaving it blank.
And the other ones sucked even more.
But yeah.
And here's the other thing.
Vote for Biden because you get more Gibbs and it might accelerate our decline even further.
And it's a total trade-off.
I don't think you're going to get more Gibbs.
If you like a vote for Biden is more Gibbs for brown people, it will probably be acceleration further, but how much acceleration do you want?
Because we're heading for acceleration in a white minority state.
So it's not necessarily safe acceleration.
And economically, we've had 5% interest rates or whatever the Fed rate is, 5.5 for well close to a year now.
They jacked it up and it's been there for six months.
And the Fed is clearly desperate to, and the politicians, of course, are desperate to have that interest rate drop to kickstart economic activity.
And yet the inflation rate remains stubbornly high enough that the Fed and Jerome Powell, somewhat to his credit, they're like, sorry, like we're not going to drop that rate when there's still evidence of inflation.
And the higher that interest rate is, the more the treasury is paying out in interest on all those T-bonds bills and the rest of it.
I can't remember what, you know, two-year, 10-year, 30-year bond bill, whatever.
But yeah, rockets.
I think that's where acceleration is.
Yeah, well, you're getting a war with Israel no matter what, or war for Israel.
It's just right now, it is politically safer for Democrats to take a stance that seems to be anti-Gaza war because their base is so vocally against it.
Now, Trump, it's probably not across the board, people being pro-Israel.
There's probably a lot of people that are like, I don't know, they're killing a lot of innocent people.
And we've had so many wars over there.
I don't want to bury my last son that have, because the other six have died in these pointless wars.
There's enough people that are probably like that.
But at the same time, things are going to get more expensive and more brown under Biden.
So if you're a single issue voter of just like openly supporting Israel, then sure Biden is your guy.
But never forget Hillary Clinton said it's good to have a public and private position.
And do you honestly think that Democrats aren't pro-Israel?
Like you have to be, you have to have a huge brain tumor to think that Democrats are like Fox News is telling you Democrats are anti-Israel.
Did you see this Biden quote where he was talking about, oh, the biggest thing to influence all of us, us, me, is the Jews over the last hundred years.
That's the most important thing.
Oh, thank you.
Wait, hold on.
Wait, hold on.
I just breaking news.
I just looked this up.
Turns out Biden's grandkids are Jews too.
Oh, did you know that?
Oh, my gosh.
Nobody knew that except for me just now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Both Biden and Trump in a generation.
When you say the name Biden and Trump, you'll be talking about Jewish families.
And this reminds me of the there's okay.
So this thing happened on Twitter where a guy named Lomez got doxxed by the Guardian.
And it turns out that he's he was publishing books and he had some minor thought crimes and he had like his, you know, he was a Jew.
And there's a whole, and that got me, I would never know about stuff if I wasn't lurking on Twitter.
As I'm like looking at all, I was like, this is my life would not be impacted if I didn't know about this fag with his book publishing operation.
But there is an entire universe or constellation of anon-Jews from BAP to Lomez to second city bureaucrat or whatever.
Oh, yeah.
They're all obnoxious.
And I remember tangling with some of these people, just Loki back in the day and fisted by, who the hell names their account fisted by Foucault.
This is real like Twitter automatically.
Sorry.
That Foucault and, you know, it's just, it's just gross.
And then it's come, you know, I always knew BAP was a fag and I was like fisted by Foucault.
It's like shitting on white nationalism because he's a Croat.
It's like, okay, maybe I could excuse.
But then it turns out that like there's, it is an actual like mass boosted psychological op of all these anon semi-anon Twitter Jews that are like sucking air up into the room and trying to cast shade on white nationalism.
Oh, stupid Nazis.
But the point was the emphasis on Jews and whether we're like, you know, obsessed about them.
And that's all you think about.
It's all you tweet about.
And it's like, I'm sorry, but when the Republican Party and the Democrat Party in the United States, even if I didn't know any of the backstory about World War II or 1965 Immigration Act, if I was just born yesterday and I watched the news and I knew that Jews were like 2% of the population and I knew how much wealth they possessed and how much actual discrimination or like intimidation they face, which is virtually zero, I would say,
what the F is going on in this world?
I would be red-pilled instantly, even if I didn't know the backstory, because it's so over the top and crazy.
And that's why I don't blame, in fact, I insist.
Like if you are not severely and explicitly hostile or counter signaling or naming them or whatever, you're on their payroll, you're retarded, or you're one of them.
Because it's just so over the top, it makes me want to spit in the street.
That's the least bad thing I could think of right there.
More than ever.
And it's been there for a long time, but it's so over the top.
All their agents and this guy, Lomez, like, oh, he's so brave.
He's so handsome.
He's an ugly effing Jew with a little tiny bookshop that Steve Saylor, who's a Mishling, by the way, all these guys are like fawning over so brave, so handsome.
Oh, look at him.
Yeah.
Because I can think of like one Jew who ever suffered the consequences of a dox from being anon on Twitter.
And that was the Ebola American like lawyer guy.
And that was because he was actually like, you know, helping Paul Nealon and like kind of doing Nazi stuff online.
All these other guys were just dabbling in thought crime and thought policing and tone policing.
And then it makes the Groypers look better too, because the Groypers are like, Juju, Jew.
And then the Jews are like, you are all a multiracial coalition of morons.
It's really, it's depressing.
I should just like delete the lurking account and like move on with my life because, and, and the election and all the rest of it.
We're just going to make Full House a self-improvement and like financial Bitcoin.
Movie reviews.
Well, yeah, there you go.
Well, all I would say is not to make it sound so futile.
You know, you feel like it's futile after everything you just said.
But, you know, we have a very vibrant, growing community of great people that are doing things.
I would say if any of that is getting you down, don't pay attention to that.
That's all bullshit.
Pay attention to what we're doing.
We're doing great things.
I want to add on to that, that thing of all these Jews saying, like, all you talk about is Jews.
Well, here's the sad reality is because those people are, you know, quote unquote, right-wingers.
And everything that they complained about, though, Jews are behind.
So all we talk about is Jews because all you talk about is Jews.
We just are identifying who's doing it.
You're just saying porn is bad.
And we're saying, yep, the rabbis that own Pornhub is bad.
Oh, all you talk about is Jews.
But we're not lying, though.
You are.
You're leaving out crucial context.
That's we talk about Jews because we're addressing a problem.
We're not, we're not like some guy, a friend of mine.
When I first got red-pilled years and years ago, and I like, I learned that, oh my gosh, yes, everything is the Jews.
He did the whole straw man.
He's like, you blame everything on Jews.
Like, you stub your toe.
It's the Jews.
That's how they believe.
That's how they're doing.
I don't believe it's the Jews.
I mean, in that case, it was that the Jews did cause me to stab my toe because two rabbis, you know, they pulled a string together and, you know, I tripped on it like in Return of the Jedi.
But still, that's how they frame it.
They don't frame it like, gosh, you guys are complaining about porn and immigration and censorship online.
And corrupt politicians, child molestation.
They talk about what do you want me to complain about?
What do you want me to complain about?
Shit, that's not Jews.
Like, you want me to complain about the percentage of Catholic priests that molest children?
Don't think about it, Goen.
How did all those gays get in the Catholic church?
Oh, gosh, am I going too far again?
Oh, I just, oh, oh, oh, gee, what do I do?
Like, okay, all right.
So, you know what?
Okay, I got it.
Oh, the dar, it's too hot in the summertime.
You know what?
That's not the Jews.
Maybe I could talk about that.
Is that what you want?
I know.
Like, what do you people want?
No, really, because like, cause as a normal, like, not super informed person, I was like, okay, immigration is clear, like non-white immigration is clearly bad for this country.
It's bad for this neighborhood.
It's bad for economics.
It's bad for blacks and blah, blah, blah.
And then once you realize, okay, well, how did we get to this situation?
It was Jews.
Okay.
You find out pornography, Jews.
To all your points, Rolo.
And yes, and they expect you to not like go up the chain to the source of the problem.
Now, that comes with the implication that Jews are very competent and powerful and vicious.
I hate to break it to you, but it's true.
They're very good at what they do.
Subvert, destroy, enrich, leech wealth, and support.
I actually think I don't think that they're good at what they do.
I think the biggest problem with whites is we're very gullible and naive.
And then when someone says all you talk about is Jews, then enough whites are nice enough to say, yeah, they're just like me.
You know, love your fellow men and all that.
Yeah, there's a people full of hate because I watched all these movies made by satanic child rapists and they would never lie to me and they don't manipulate Dunning Kruger too, where like middle IQ people are like, anti-Semitism is from morons.
Look at me.
I'm a Jew respector.
You know, like, you don't understand all this.
Jonah Salk.
It's a process because even the Fuhrer himself, if you have read his book, the opening chapter, he's talking about how he thought these anti-Semitic tracks he would get handed out on the street were just so shameful and ridiculous.
But with enough time, you start to see those things are all true.
Yeah.
And real quick back to the Biden-Trump thing, the guys who think that like Biden's better or Trump's better or whatever.
Biden made a big statement that he was pausing arms shipments to Israel to try to discourage them from going into Alpha, right?
That was like a week ago.
And by the way, what you're about to say is my whole point on Biden, like picking Biden.
Biden better than Trump.
Oh, yeah.
You want to bet?
One week later, you know, the meme, one week later, five seconds later, one billion, one billion in new arms.
I don't even care if they bought them, right?
Because it's like, we're going to loan you money so you can buy our weapons.
I was like, why can't we just say, why can't we just give you the weapons and cut out the money probably?
Because there's somebody shaving points off of that and interest and all the rest of it.
But yeah, yeah, what is Biden going to do?
Like, like literally just tap the brakes and then Trump is just going to like, you know, cut the emergency break and cut the brake lines and be like, no, everything must go to them.
War with Iran.
And, you know, and Russia is starting to really break the dam in Ukraine too.
Yeah.
They're starting to get their groove.
And I was, I was disgusted by the Russians with attitudes, guys.
Maybe they were celebrating May 9th, but Victory Day, but they were like, white nationalism is what people need help.
It's like victimhood or whatever.
And I wanted to say, like, but what if that's true?
You know, like, what if that's true?
You guys complain about Jews all day.
What a bunch of losers.
What if they deserve to be complained about all day?
Like, I have no interest in wasting my time or my energy or my thoughts on things that are stupid or rabbit holes.
I don't think about flat earth.
I don't think about the landing.
I don't think about, you know, chemtrails.
I honestly don't.
So there may be like individual points about those things that are interesting or whatever.
But the evidence of the past two decades and especially over the past six months from Republicans and Democrats and the money that they get from Jews is that the United States, Washington, politicians, both parties with very few exceptions are owned, hook and sinker, bought and paid for agents of Jews in Israel.
And I don't care about your, well, Jews are different.
Some are Zionists.
Some are anti-Zionist.
I don't care.
Jews shut up.
I don't care.
Don't care.
Yep.
Also, have we brought up that after one of those big packages was passed, Mike Johnson got like a $95,000 donation from, I can't remember what one of the Jewish groups, it might have been the ADL.
I'm not sure which one, but it was right after that.
Yeah.
He just like stuck in his back pocket.
They were like, make sure you report that in your financial filing the next day, Goy.
We don't get, you know, shameless, shameless, foreign, influenced by a hostile, tiny, disproportionately powerful, wealthy, vicious, savage group of people.
Wave the, you know, leave it to, leave it to see Steve Saylor.
I had no idea that Steve Saylor was a Micheling.
I got bored of him years ago with his like boomer pontificating about noticing and stuff like that.
But somebody was like, no, here's the blog post where he's like, no, I was adopted and my wife dug up that more than likely I am 50% Jewish.
My hair got curly, et cetera.
And I'm like, what do you know?
Like, leave it to Steve Saylor to make Ron Uns look like a Nazi.
I like Ron Uns more now than Steve Saylor.
That's the kind of upside down world that we live in.
And Trump and Biden are debating who's hosting on CNN on CNN, Jeff Zucker's old network.
I guess he got booted for inefficacy or sex stuff.
What's his name?
Jake Tapper, Jew, and Dana Bash, Jew.
So it's going to be two Jews entering, debating or hosting, moderating two philosemitic presidential candidates.
And we're supposed to eat the slop up.
This has been kind of fun, a little bit self-indulgent to rant and rave about this stuff on the dad show.
But it had to be said.
It had to be said.
Absolutely.
An interesting thing about this is asking who wants this.
Well, who else is paying attention to mainstream politics that's on CNN?
It's probably just for boomers.
It's probably for the no joke, 300,000 people still watching that.
That number, I don't even think I'm exaggerating it.
No, no.
And they made a big deal on the, oh, we're not going through the debate commission this year.
We're just going to hold it on CNN with two mainstream leftist Jew moderators.
Like, what?
What happened to like, you know, like having have Tucker do one?
Like, like Trump should pick a moderator and Biden should pick a moderator.
Sean Hannity.
Have it as normie right wing as possible.
That would even be better.
Yes.
Tucker would do a good job.
I know, but they would never pick Tucker.
They would never pick Tucker.
No.
They could pick Sean Hannity.
They would never pick Tucker.
It's demented.
It really is.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
I was going to say, and this is why so many people are checking out of all this stuff because it's so apparent that this isn't serious.
Yeah.
And I don't think people are checking out necessarily and then just coming to our side and coming to the truth, but they're just disengaging from politics.
Like, you know what?
It's not worth it to have all these arguments with my extended family come Christmas and Thanksgiving.
You know, it's not worth it to have these dumb arguments with my coworkers.
I'm just going to be more concerned about me because, you know, I'm spending $200 a month on gas and groceries is now over $1,200 a month.
So I don't care about two old people talking about a country that I don't care about anymore.
Yeah, what a difference eight years makes because 2015, 2016, this is the way that we're going to actually save the country, do the right thing through the process, through this rogue billionaire who's willing to consistent.
What a moron.
Sorry, I was wrong.
Me at COLPA audience.
Yep.
It happens.
But we've talked about that before.
And Biden-Trump system.
Oh, the last thing I wanted to say personally was that there is a point, though, where you become Jew obsessed and Jew autistic and endless about the Jews.
And then you start DMing people madness.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It can lead to a certain type of dementia or obsession that is even if justified, you know, Bobby Fisher, the greatest critical mind, you know, the greatest pattern of was obsessed with the Jews.
And of course, he was in Michelin.
But you can't lose sight of, like, you can't let that consume you and drive you crazy and make you like just running and raving about that.
And you want to rant and rave about them online, I guess, live it up.
But it is important to remember that you two have a life, even if you can't change it.
Naming them is a start, and you know it bothers them because they have their absolute clear ops to counteract it.
And their baps and their lomez or whatever, clearly soft peddling Jews.
They wouldn't do that if it was insignificant because they're getting it from right and from left now.
They're obviously very concerned about us, the amount of time that they spend on us, the amount of persecution.
There's been never persecution that you could name in history like what we go through.
The amount of censorship and persecution of different forms.
Come on.
Yep.
And now they have a second front too because the lefty Browns are getting worked up.
And I almost forgot this.
This is totally in keeping with what we're talking about.
We got a nice email, and Rolo is going to love this from a longtime listener who I recognize the screen name.
I'll just say it's Jonathan.
He said, hey, coach, longtime fan of the show and of the fatherland before it.
My ears perked up when you and Rolo were discussing the Palestine protesters and whether nationalists can find common ground with them.
I have some experience on that topic.
I've attended over a dozen free Palestine protests and marches here, and I'll leave out where he lives.
I think Rolo is right about the mentality of the organizers.
These are hardcore anti-white communists, many of them students who are not in any sense JQ aware or opposed to Jewish power or Jewish supremacy.
And they are, generally speaking, more committed to their anti-whiteness and to their communism than they are to the situation in Gaza.
Many of the participants in the rally don't even outwardly support Palestine at all.
They just carry communist party flags and they're welcome there.
Yep.
So little, and he gave some signs that he holds that jam up the signals.
And I don't want to read them.
He seemed pretty laissez-faire or blase about whether I gave the details.
But he said, these signs drive the organizers crazy.
I've watched two anti-foot punks thrown to the ground by police after they grabbed one of my signs.
I lead the march.
Thanks for all you do.
My only criticism that after five years, I go to the merch section, it still says, stay tuned, coming soon.
Please give my regards.
Yeah, you know, we did have something set up where you could buy a t-shirt or a hoodie.
I have one of our ladies from our local community right now is actually working on t-shirts and hoodies and things like that that will be all under our control.
We had set up a little thing through one of those places where they make it for you, but we had kind of mixed results and it was a little, and it's not us.
It's not our thing.
We are setting up something very, very soon that people can get a t-shirt or a hoodie with the show's logos on it front and back.
So we will have something like that soon.
Totally my fault.
I have been both lazy and not shekel grubbing to my credit.
I was like, ah, merch, you know, it's going to be more headache than it's worth.
How many are we going to sell?
You know, I don't want to like make the audience for it.
But I did see a full house logo in one of those Midwest Network shows.
This is awesome to see.
So that was one of those homemade ones.
And one more to piggyback off of Jay, who gave us his experience.
I got a separate message from a lawyer.
And I'm going to, he tried to.
Oh, we'll see you in court, Goyam.
Yeah, things that don't usually end well.
I had this conversation with a lawyer.
But basically, he said, oh, man, let's see.
I've been kindly excluded from participation in those protests so that more local Jewish liberal attorneys can help the group.
People talk about the Jew lawyers with excitement.
Bo, let's find some common ground with these people.
Come on, man.
So this is interesting.
He says the kids thought they were going to BLM.
They never thought they were going to Steveville.
They never thought they were going to have to cover their faces.
You'd use code names, get arrested, learn OPSEC.
Jew spheres are obviously comforting.
So Jew lawyers are like, oh, what's going on there, Mr. Balaklava, you know, Free Palestine protester.
Do you need some free help, some free advice?
You can't see it, but I'm making retard face right now.
I'm not, I don't say this stuff because I'm like, hot take, this is what I think.
I've been there.
I'm not talking to you.
I'm talking to the audience.
I've been to these areas.
I've interacted with these people.
I've talked to these people and they think I'm one of them.
Like, oh, yeah, you're anti-capitalist and all this stuff.
They really let it on.
Like, they'll say, like, they would give me a gun and say, like, hey, you want to go kill some white people?
That's what those people are like.
They're not like, yeah, you can find common ground with them.
They might like this.
They might like a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
They might like this.
They might be an actual anti-when here or there.
Yeah.
Good luck.
Good luck finding that.
Another thing is if you've talked to these people or you observe them once in a while, they get interviewed or something.
These people are not smart.
No, they're not.
They're just, they're mentally ill psychopaths.
Yeah.
They're not, they're not, they don't understand what Jews are.
Jews to them, it's a type of, it's an older Christian religion where they're just as imperialist as all white people.
And they think Israel is doing the bidding of white Republicans in America.
If you think that those people, you can find common ground, you have been listening to people that are terminally online that have never had any real interaction with them for at least 10 years.
These people are insane.
They are so dangerous.
They are indistinguishable from BLM.
They do all think it's the same thing.
Would you go to a BLM riot and try to find common ground?
Well, of course not.
These are the exact same people.
And they are holding up the exact same cause.
Brown, good, white, bad.
It's the same thing.
We're going to make an indie flick with Lord Wolfshield where Rolo and I like sneak undercover to college and join fraternities.
Rolo's going to join the Frat Bros and rally around the flag.
And I'm going to join the Palestinian protesters.
You're going to join the Mexican fraternity.
I think I could make a difference over there.
I think I could bring them to the light.
But Rolo, what we have here is a case of idealism and optimism.
It's a case of people that are terminally online.
Listen to people that are terminally online.
That's all it is.
It's the same mind poison that was done to boomers.
Like you don't even realize that those the left of old, it's not the same.
Those are hyper-radicalized.
I chatted with one black guy who knew the score.
So therefore, your point is invalid.
Oh, no, you know what?
I chatted with one white guy who hates all white people.
Therefore, I guess we should stop supporting white people.
See how stupid this logic is?
Ron Ons.
Ron Uns publishes Andrew Anglin, Ergo, Jews can be our friends.
Yes.
No, you're right.
You're right.
I think it all back.
No, actually, I guess everyone's wrong then because we can find the one case that disproves anything so that everyone can.
Yeah, I only get heated when I'm like really certain about something.
And yeah, I did not, I was like, I get heated when people like it's the same thing.
Like when you see like the boomer con saying like, oh, no, no, these these Palestinians want to kill the gays.
Okay.
And yeah, it's like, how do you not see that gays are the ones that I hate the strag queen story hour?
Okay.
Why are you cucking for gays?
Yeah.
No.
No, you think that you're pushing this on my kids.
Okay.
But you, but you want to protect them?
It's to me, it's, it's the same thing.
It's just like, it's right in front of your face.
Why are you choosing not to see it?
It goes, it goes for any side of the political spectrum.
Like down with bankers, like, oh, you're anti-Semitic.
I'm not a Nazi.
You fascist.
Shut up, Loop Tard.
Yeah.
No, but I think people need to go through the development, the maturation to see that, you know, the whole dynamic out there is just ridiculous and fake.
And most paying attention to it.
Well, what most people don't realize is because they live their own very healthy lives with their family and their job.
You know, they're probably struggling.
So they're not worrying about these things.
And they have no, they've never had to interact with college campus leftists.
And I've interacted with a lot of them.
A lot.
And I don't mean like, you know, like seven, no, a lot.
And it's the same thing over and over.
Like you, maybe you might find someone not on a college that might be somewhat J aware.
But at this point, how could anyone be J-aware and be on the left?
Right.
Yeah.
Like you're Jay aware, but every single thing that you believe in comes from Jews.
So you can't be anti-Semitic and then be pro.
Like the left isn't pro like workers into healthcare and all this.
They're not.
They're pro abortion, child transgender surgery, open borders and just open just white replacement.
That's what they're pro now.
Yes.
It's so weird because on one side, you have the left that's pro that.
And then the right is just anti-racist.
Like that's it.
Like the left is out there saying like, we're going to kill white people.
And then Republicans are out there saying like, but we're not racist.
And we're choosing between.
And there is progress because I still subscribe to Chronicles and the front page cover of Chronicle was anti-no paleo con Christian publication.
Front page cover was anti-white racism, which contrasts greatly with probably four years ago they did an anti-white nationalism cover.
Now it's still cucky because racism is natural, healthy, and it's a preference for your own over others.
That doesn't mean that you necessarily have to.
If it were unnatural, they wouldn't be encouraging every non-white to do it.
Sure.
But to your boomer who was like anti-Palestine because he was pro-gay, it's like, you know, I used to argue against immigration because it hurt black interests without even recognizing what I was doing.
I've done that too.
My programming said, well, it would, you know, like, I didn't even think about talking about white workers.
I was like, the victims here are really the native blacks who are going to get their wages displaced.
And I didn't even go there with the work ethic and the rest of it.
And just to say, they don't want to work anyway.
Who does in this big system?
But yeah, I mean, yeah, I was checking out a Walmart today.
Overwhelmingly white area.
Yeah, you still see some diversity dripping in here or there.
Strange faces, Spanish language, obese, BMI obese, not like spilling out of her shorts, but fat and like all the stretchy stuff, probably half Indio, half Spanish, with a legitimately cute, well-behaved girl in the cart.
And she's got her gigantic iPhone Max on the like self-checkout counter, speaking very loudly in Spanish.
And I'm looking at the like Walmart people who like, you know, police the self-checkout line and they're like rolling their eyes and they want to like chimp out.
And then she checks out and she leaves the scanner like right on the on the table.
And the daughter says, mama, mama, you know, and she's pointing to it.
And then the mom like sees, oh, I left the scanner, the handheld scanner on the thing and she just waves it off.
She is like, it's not, I forget what she said, not it doesn't matter.
But she was just like, like her daughter pointed out that her mother had just committed a minor offense or left the scanner on the thing.
And the mom was just like, yeah, that.
And continued on with her loud blabbering in pig Latin.
And I was just like, God damn, if that's not a little microcosm of everything that's happened to this country over the past 70 years.
Yeah.
Now, granted, you know, there's poorly behaved white people too, but we, but like, there are people.
Plus way different.
Oh, sure.
And they're, yeah, the majority white country perpetrators are going to be white.
And if I move to another country, you better bet your ass that I would be on top of the top behavior.
I would get dressed to go.
I would get dressed to go to the dump, right?
Because I'm not from here.
I need to be on my best behavior to make sure that the locals accept me and recognize me as a valuable addition to my society, not like blow off the little Hispanic girls like, mom, you stupid bitch.
You left the thing on the table.
Yeah, whatever.
And what did that, what lesson did that girl learn in that one little moment?
I don't know.
Yeah, that doesn't matter.
Yeah.
I'm out of steam.
Let's bring it home, gentlemen.
Yeah.
Last call, Sammy Baby, over to you.
And thank you.
Yeah, no, that's, I'm, I'm waiting to announce Nate's song that he wanted to play for the closing music.
You got it?
Let's go over to roll.
And seriously, when you proposed this, Sam, I was like, man, I'm not sure what angle.
I hadn't met Nate's mom, et cetera, but I'm damn glad that you did.
It was really.
Yeah, it was special.
It was touched me many times during that hour.
Same here.
Oh, my friend.
Mi Amigo, my Dead Sea denizen.
It's good swimming.
Good surf too.
Would you care to add anything here?
You do do like, you know, more work than anybody who does.
Yeah.
Forget I ask.
Forget I asked.
Thank you, guys.
This was Full House episode 186.
Started May 15th, now May 6th.
The road to 200.
Oh, God.
Free me from my bondage.
Free me from my bondage.
Please donate so that I feel like I have to keep creating content for you.
Or please do not donate so that I could say F all you guys and hand the show off to some of you.
Mostly, mostly kidding.
We're on Gab.
We're on Telegram.
I did put in the appeal the other day to try to get pro-white fam back from Twitter, thinking maybe it had a Snowball's chance in hell to get re-engaged there.
You know, it's like a double-edged sword being on Twitter.
It's so addictive.
You get sucked up into so much time wasting and stupid garbage between Jews and morons and non-whites.
But it is a fun playground.
So we'll see if that happens.
Maybe a miracle will happen.
And that means that it is over.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Sam, the DJ Booth is yours, sort of as a proxy for our buddy Nate.
Yeah, for our brother Nate, he suggested a song by the band Thumbscrew.
Thumbscrew is from Spain.
And Nate's band Wellington Arms goes at least once a year, maybe twice a year.
He goes and plays over there.
I hear they are planning to go over there sometime in the near future and play a gig in Barcelona.
So good on them if you can get over there.
You know, I keep telling them next time they're playing over there, I'm going to get over there and see them play in Europe, wherever it is.
But so anyways, the song that is proposed is by the band Thumbscrew.
And this song, as you listen to it, you will recognize that it contains the Johnny Cash song when the man comes around.
But the name of the song is Rebel Within.
So this is Rebel Within by Thumbscrew.
Hell yeah.
And is this in English, not Spanish?
Yeah.
All right.
And don't forget, audience, to buy Wellington Arms swag, CDs, et cetera, because I can't say enough things about Nate, not to mention his lovely mom, Sarah.
Yeah.
We love you, Sam.
Talk to you next week, most likely.
See you.
Go ahead, Rulo.
Yeah. Still news under. Yeah.
Take your testes while you were young.
Life is so very breathless.
And you only get one sun.
Don't need to feel bad even when you're wrong.
Reducing brightening, be rebel to lead your life with freedom level within.
You have to reckon.
We're hungry swear fire and gather sandbury.
The flicker of a nice design.
My life was gone.
No need to feel bad.
The recycled sand.
Reducing brightening.
Be a rebel to lead your life with freedom level within.
You'll be back and you get the prize.
So now you look for one to save your time.
It's all with my fate.
It's to stand up.
And if you keep out, Be irrebeled to live your life with rhythm never within.
There can be no dangerous in this layer.
When Darren is a good way, faith has to burn the press around your wheel.
Let me working today.
I'll damn your rebels turn a swing from hell.
Remove the grind and be rebel.
The noise of thunder.
One of the four beasts saying, Come and see.
And I saw, and behold, a white horse.
Everybody won't be treated all the same.
There'll be a golden ladder reaching town when the man comes around.
For hairs on your arm, we'll stand up.
Let's terror any sip and any sup.
Will you partake of the last of a cup or disappear into the water's ground when the man comes around?
Feel the drumbeats, still the vibers.
One hundred million angels singing.
Won't you do so much into the big and voices calling, voices crying?
Some are born and some are dying.
It's alpha and omega skins of gone.
And the world win is in the thorn stream.
Rebellions are all driving the weight.
The world wind is in the thorny.
It's hard for me to kick against the brakes.
Tell me no sudden, no sudden that the father's hand is called to take his home.
The wise man will bow down before the throne and at his peacefully roll the crowns when the man comes around.
Whoever is unjust, let him be unjust still.
Whoever is righteous, let him be righteous still.
Whoever is filthy, let him be filthy still.
Listen to the words long written down when a man comes around.
Hear the drum beats, hear the vibrance.
One hundred million angels singing.
Roll down to summons into that big altar.
Voices calling, voices crying.
Some are born and some are dying.
It's alpha and omega's kingdom come.
And the world end is in the thorn dream.
The millions are all draping the weight.
The world end is in the thong dream.
It's hard for me to kick against the brakes and mess a hundred weights and many bounds.