Dems pivot to "Americana" - The Subcontinental Menace - Tips for First Time Fathers of Girls - The Best Fan Mail/NWL - Global Fertility Collapse - Russia's Sanctuary Offer - Retirement Counseling - Feds Meeting Feds - Rare Hate Mail for Sam! *Second half has a couple NSFY (not safe for youth) moments thanks to Smasher's exuberance.* Bumper: "Show Don't Tell" by Rush Break: "Digital Secrets" by The Final Storm Close: "Althea" by The Grateful Dead 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.
We have virtually zero power today, despite some significant gains over the last decade.
Sad but true.
At best, we have a track record of two steps forward, one step back, and sometimes worse.
But our influence in the war of ideas, as gay as that sounds, is bigger than ever, despite the massive censorship and oppression.
From playing a significant role in defeating the Clinton crime syndicate in 2016, to now scores of millions around the world who obviously know the truth about white genocide and Jewish power, our haphazard labors have not been for naught.
There is an awakening proliferation underway, even if we have no coherent structure or path to power for now.
And with another election season afoot, the crazy, the dumb, the shameless, and the passion is pouring forth again.
That's a good thing.
A built-in quadrennial churn, high-energy season, tailor-made for making hay.
But remember, your vote matters infinitely less than the serious multiplier effect of what you say to family, friends, neighbors, and the propaganda you post or signal boost online.
And this November, yet again, you are presented with two Jew-owned Zionist candidates in different cloaks.
Undeniable.
One pretends to stand up for white Christians.
The other doesn't even try to pretend.
You're tempted to support the first one because he's less bad, or you might actually be simple and believe what he says.
If you vote and chill for Trump despite the manifest failures of the first term and his even worse rhetoric this time around, though, you will be complicit in getting a never-ending stream of similar garbage poured down your throat politically forever.
You will not get better candidates, let alone results, if you insist on still supporting shameless suits like a lobotomized cow.
They use you, not the other way around.
They over-promise and under-deliver.
They lie to you in the campaign and then answer to donors in office.
And today's Republicans don't even bother with pandering to you.
They take their gullible, aging, and dying white base for granted while shamelessly seeking new black, brown, Asian, gay, and Jewish votes.
We got Trump by rejecting Jeb.
We might get something better one day by rejecting Trump.
Now, if you live in a swing state and you want cheaper gas or more time to prepare, that's fine.
Go ahead, be pragmatic, and formally endorse the lesser of two evils.
I wouldn't entirely blame you.
But because you have virtually no power, I posit that your best option is to opt out of this kosher sandwich that is the only item on the menu this year and sit on your hands in the absence of a remotely pro-white national candidate.
Trump would be better on the invasion a little bit and judges, sure.
The cackling brown Hillary in the offing this year might inspire stronger resistance to the beast.
But life is short.
Honesty and candor are far superior to compromise and cunning.
And I bet you suspect in your heart that this is all deck chair shuffling on the Titanic anyway.
To throw our votes or our voices or our social media influence to say nothing of our honor or self-respect to this shit show sham sequel would be criminal cuckoldry.
We may not deserve to be taken seriously yet, but the GOP can pound sand until they take us seriously or they go the way of the Whigs.
So be principled instead of a stooge.
Call spades spades.
Make better use of your time than playing in a rigged game.
And don't be a sucker the third time around.
Because I guarantee when you meet your maker, you'll wish that you had been more idealistic in life and not more compromising.
So, Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's least politically preachy show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofan.
Don't worry, we are not going to talk all politics this week.
I promise.
I just had to get that opener off my chest after being bombarded by dumb, bad, and evil politicians and political news for the past month or so, and certainly with much more to come over the next two.
And by the way, if you want to get involved in local politics, if voting in your state really matters, that's fine.
I'm talking about the federal bizarre nether world that we are observing at this time of the year.
This is episode 193.
I'm your sincere, if jaded host, Coach Finstock, of course, and we're back with two hours of a potpourri of topics for a dog's breakfast, if you prefer.
It's designed to educate and titillate.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Rusty R and WSAC, whatever that means, for their kind support of the show since our last one.
If you'd like to be like those Titans of Taste, please visit givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
And I am overjoyed to give a huge thanks to an anonymous king, in addition to those other two who stepped up to the plate over the past week and made Rolo's autistic dreams come true, not in any gay way.
That's right.
An angel investor stepped up.
We had never met him so far as I know, and he purchased a bunch of the PC components that Rolito needed.
He sent a kind letter too that we're going to read you later on in the show.
What a champion.
Yep.
Ask and ye shall receive.
Okay, Rolo just says thank you, but he was delighted.
And yeah, keep us posted on that build, Rolo.
All right.
That was a lot of me.
So let's get cracking.
First up, when he and I are not collaborating on Full House, we're also recording White Noise Radio together as well.
Yeah, that was a great episode.
You know, there's something magic about when people are just talking and the thing kind of takes off and the topics just kind of come very naturally.
I felt like that was a really good episode.
And I hope listeners have checked that out.
Plus, a ton of great music in that episode.
That was a lot of fun.
I hope we'll do it again sometime with somebody else.
Absolutely.
It was my delight to be in the co-pilot seat and let you take the reins because I felt like I'd be too phony for me to chair an episode of White Noise Radio.
You're the master in those regards.
Yeah.
Yeah, it was really good.
It was a lot of fun.
And I think we were going to post it in our channel and everything too.
So I did.
Yep, for sure.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, you really hit it, I thought, with that opening monologue there.
You know, in a sense, we have no power, not in the way that it might be framed.
Traditionally.
Yeah, traditionally, that it might be framed.
But it sounds funny, but passing the memes around is very powerful.
And years ago, I used to lament that I would try to convince somebody, you got to read this book.
Read Mein Kampf.
Come on.
Read This Time the World by Rockwell, something.
And people just don't read books, you know, but the meme is actually more powerful than the book.
I don't want people to read books now.
I want them to look at memes because they're more powerful, really.
And if you doubt that, well, the system will send you to prison or take away your job or whatever, depending how and where you post it and what it is.
So don't let's not think we have no power.
We have a lot of power by posting the memes, passing them around or making posts or even just short posts.
That is very powerful.
And as far as what we are doing, the thing we can do is trying to form some kind of one layer thick bedrock, you know, of a community that people can actually know exists and feel that it is legitimate.
You know what I'm saying?
Like people say, people would privately agree with our sentiments very readily, but maybe they've had an idea that these people are goofy or it's too dangerous or whatever.
So the very basic thing we can do is also the most important thing we could do, which is be friends.
You know, we have podcasts like this or other, you know, local communities like we have over here and nice events that families can go to and things like that.
So that people, especially people that are maybe in positions of responsibility or authority in society, they could look to that there's some kind of white nationalist community that is good and viable and safe and things like that.
So those are the things, yeah, things we can do.
You know, we don't have to think about political party or some kind of dangerous or illegal thing or whatever.
We don't have to do those things.
We don't have to do those things.
And I, you know, I had, I had written the monologue before I had an interaction with a, you know, center.
I wouldn't call him a normie, but, you know, a right-wing Republican Trump voter today, just pure happenstance.
And, you know, some days I'm like, oh, yeah, I'd rather, you know, drill a hole in my head than talk about the vax and, you know, but I was like, you know, I'm going to sit up and, you know, have a serious conversation with this guy and play it carefully.
And we, it turned out we agreed.
I'll just, we agreed on a lot more than I suspected.
And he was, you know, not a dumb normie.
You know, there was a lot.
He knew that he knew that Trump was, you know, he probably cut him more slack than I do, but he was disillusioned by that and realized that we were in for trouble and that immigration.
I didn't, I didn't mention the JQ.
I was like, let's just talk about immigration to start with, but, you know, total nods and agreement.
The invasion, the invasion is total common ground for almost all these people.
Absolutely.
Well, you can see that people are just going as far as they think they can go.
So people who are supporting Trump or whatever.
I just think to myself back in like 1995 or so, when I discovered the Trad Catholic scene, my reaction was like, wait a minute, there's really something like this out there.
Yeah, there's a whole, there's a whole thing going.
So, and there's a lot of parallel things or equivalent things like that, where people they just don't know.
They don't know there's people like us.
They don't know there's a show like Full House or whatever.
So this is the good we can all do every single day.
It's like a rhetorical tango where you're trying to figure out who's where, tap dance, I don't know, some metaphor like that.
All right, Sammy baby, welcome back.
We're already at 10 minutes.
Holy shit.
Great to be here.
We got a lot to cover all over the board.
Next up, he is not only the producer of Full House, I will have you know, he is also the host and proprietor of The Final Storm, which you should at least sub to on Telegram.
Absolutely.
Check out on Odyssey.
Rolito, what's up?
Thank you to everyone who has donated towards the Rolo PC Foundation.
And it's been very helpful.
I would be putting out more content, honestly, but there are many days when I feel the PC is just not ready to render a video or an audio file.
Better not.
So just every thank you for that.
Yeah, several guys, several guys stepped up with contributions and then we had a cleanup hitter come in essentially to get, I don't know what the percentage is, but you're probably three quarters of the way there now.
I'd say about half.
Okay.
Yeah.
It's, you know, not it's not cheap.
But the gentle, the gentleman did probably pretty close to half with that package.
But other than that, I have a whole new perspective on this election.
Oh, boy.
Well, maybe we'll start off of that and get it out of the way.
You know, it's like, you know, there's more, it's all a puppet show.
I think as you said, last week or two weeks ago, and somebody was like, yeah, I'm really coming around to Rolo's thing.
And I stand by that too.
And the guy I was talking to today actually said the same thing.
He's like, what's with this, you know, back and forth and nothing really changes or it gets worse.
He's like, I'm starting to think it's all a charade.
And I thought of you and I sort of agreed and amplified.
But yeah, I still stand by that, but I just have a, I just noticed something else that I was like, huh, I haven't really seen that yet.
And it was something that I thought they were going to wait till 2028 to do.
But I'm like, I think this is the point here.
Yeah.
Sam says there's a helicopter flying low over my house.
That reminds me, Sam, there's a wonderful app that my dad just showed me the other day that has, it's made me a little bit obsessed.
It's called Flight Radar 24.
And you can literally just open it up.
Like if you hear a plane going over your head, you open it up, you know, press your location, and then it shows everything that's around you.
And you can click on the specific helicopter or plane and it tells you its origin, where it's going or whatever.
So it's really cool.
Can you hear it?
No, I can't hear it at all.
No, it's, it's, it's very perceptible from where I'm, I had to take my headphones off.
I thought it's something coming from through the through the show here, but no, it's something is very loud out there.
It's like if I see it, it'll show you the majority of flights, but there's still flights that aren't correct.
Not every flight has to be like, you still have to file like your flight following, blah, but they don't all hit the I'm sure the black helicopters are not registering now.
They're not.
Yeah.
If that window glass breaks and black boots go through your window behind you there, Sam, I will cancel the show and go to Red Alert.
He couldn't stay quiet.
I was going to give a pleasant surprise to the audience coming from far right field on late notice, but we did promise this last show that you were trying to get on.
His laptop has miraculously repaired and he is still in the happy full house family.
We are delighted to welcome back Smasher.
How are you, brother?
I am great.
I'm very happy to be here.
Yeah.
So we were all set to go last, whatever, two weeks ago or whatever it was.
And yeah, I just, my laptop wouldn't work and I just didn't touch it for like four days, but I left it plugged in and now it just turned on.
It's still floor, actually.
And it didn't work for, it was almost a month it didn't work for.
And I was really distraught.
I can't remember what game had just come out, but there was a game that I wanted to play.
And I was very butthurt about it.
And then just after like you can only do one, one, one computer fundraiser, you know, per year.
Sorry.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
No, not asking, not asking.
But yeah, man, I was really butthurt about it.
And then the other day, or yeah, I guess not the other day, but like two weeks ago, yeah, it was just like not working.
I, I had it all apart.
I replaced the Ram like I did a bunch of other whatever bullshit troubleshooting on it and just nothing.
Couldn't get anything.
Leave it plugged in for like four days and now it's back.
So, you know.
Yeah.
Glad to be here.
Absolutely.
Glad to have you back.
You look like you lost a little bit of weight.
You look good.
And I wanted to have you on for the, you know, England uprising show, our most recent one with the caveat, like, you know, Garth, your pills, you know, keep it together.
The oldest kids are six now and the younger ones are three now.
Oh, my.
And besides that, like just, you know, working swinging hammer real good.
And found a cool niche working in very expensive houses in Pittsburgh, you know, a lot of historic districts, a lot of weird approvals for things.
And sure.
Things are, things are going swimmingly, you know?
And we mentioned it, but you weren't on the show, of course.
You were considering going to the Trump rally in Butler.
And either, either you or wife, you know, actually witnessed the endless stream of ambulances and SUVs and cops.
A little bit about that.
Yeah.
So the Butler Farm Show grounds are like a three minute, four minute drive from my house, straight up the road.
Like you leave my house.
I live on like a semi-private drive, but it's connected to a road that's connected to the main road or the main vein, I guess.
And you can see that main vein road.
It's 68, PA 68.
And so the Butler Farm Show grounds is like four minutes up the road from my house on 68.
And I'm sitting in the yard, in the front yard, watching the kids, drinking a beer.
And I see two state troopers scream by on 68.
And usually I've seen the cops like respond to stuff before.
And they're usually going like 50, you know, maybe 60 miles an hour.
Like they're, they're going pretty fast for that road, but it's not anything.
Presidential speed.
They go screaming by.
I mean, maybe 80 miles an hour.
And the wife is inside, like grabbing a drink and whatever.
And I call her because she's still on Facebook and she's in like all the groups to find out the drama going on in Butler and whatever.
I call her.
I was like, babe, get the F outside and open up Facebook and see what's going on.
Because the cop just went screaming by.
She comes outside and just as she gets outside, the Secret Service escort with the like Tahoe or whatever it is that he was, that Trump was being transported in comes ripping by.
And like, if those state troopers were doing like, you know, maybe 80 miles an hour towards the farm show, these guys are doing 100, 110 miles an hour down 68, like insane speed.
And we're sitting in the yard just like, holy shit.
You know, my first thought was, you could have been there to witness history, you dumb bastard.
My second thought was, oh, oh, well, you could have been, you know, killed.
So it's good that you weren't there.
And then my third thought was they might have made you a suspect if you were there, you know, not knowing before they had the guy and we saw that he was dead and all that.
So yeah, probably that was it because we were talking about going.
We were talking, we were like, look, it's like, like we're not really rooting for Trump.
Like, you know, I'm full on Trump is a guy.
It's a really shitty Zionist Jew-loving race trader.
Like legal immigration advocate now, too.
He said it multiple times.
Yeah.
Like, I have very bad things to say about him that I won't say on a recording getting put onto the internet.
Just him.
He's a, he's a piece of shit race trader, right?
Like, sorry, I know I'm breaking the rules immediately, but just to get the point across.
Yeah.
You know, but still, it would have been worth to go there, see your neighbors, get the vibe, talk to people.
Yeah.
Right.
And like, love him or hate him.
He's still like funny and stuff.
You know, he's still entertaining.
He's still a character.
It's worth a little bit, but he still has a little bit of the old charm.
Yeah, exactly.
So like it would have been good crack to like just go and see it.
Yeah.
And you could have booed if he said like open border stuff or, you know, for will be a little bit more.
Right.
Exactly.
Right.
Like there, there was really, we weren't doing anything better.
It's just like, we were like, you know, getting the kids, right?
Getting the kids looked after.
And like, how much of a pain in the butt is it going to be to wait for him?
He was like an hour or an hour and a half late to, yep, yep.
So it was just kind of like, eh, you know, nah, screw it.
It's not worth it.
We'll just hang out at home.
That's wild.
Now I'm like, damn, I wish we would have gone.
I know.
Maybe you would have been a hero.
Maybe you would have been like, hey, there's a guy on the roof.
Never know.
Well, and that was, that was the other thing was, because we were talking about going and I was like, well, if we go, like, we don't really have to go like into the venue.
We can go like where the building was, where the shooter was.
And then the farm show grounds, it's just like a chain link fence.
I was like, there's a bunch of people just like camping out there.
We could just go there instead of having to like actually go into the thing.
Magnetometers and all that.
And if we had actually, if we had gone to like that kind of no man's land between the shooter and the farm show grounds, I'd have been carrying.
Not for any like backwards input, just because like I pretty much carry everywhere we go, you know?
And I hate to say it, but like if I saw a dude point a gun at Trump, like I wouldn't have missed the opportunity.
Would have done something.
Yeah, you could have been a hero.
Unfortunate to be like a hero for an Israeli show, but at the same time, like cool story.
Yeah, I'm like of two minds about it.
You know, oh, you missed out on an awesome opportunity, you dumb bastard.
Or then also, like, yeah, just it's another lesson, like, don't go to big gatherings of public places with lots of people when politics are involved.
Yeah.
I'm like, I'm sitting in my front yard, like waiting for a cop to show up and just be like, hey, man, what's up?
You know?
Yeah.
Little notes at the door.
I mean, I'm sure I told you guys about the time I went to the Trump rally in Chicago in 2015.
It would have been.
Did I mention it?
I mean, at least it's not ringing itself.
Yeah, I don't know.
Maybe I didn't.
Yeah.
But it got shut down because the leftists were out.
Oh, that was.
Yeah, that was the famous one where he's walking like reservoir dogs in the alleyway.
Right.
It was scary in a sense because we were in a parking garage and it was, we were completely surrounded.
I mean, and so we just had to wait until the cops got control of everything.
And it was, it, it was not easy.
They were, the cops were literally chasing these people.
And, you know, it's scary.
They come up to the, your door and they try to open the car door while you're in there.
I mean, like, what would have happened if I had not locked the door and they opened that door?
You know, it was, it was, in a sense, scary.
And, and just the volume and the, the, the violence of it, you know, it, it, it, it was, I didn't learn anything new by that.
I know how they are, but I think it was a real lesson for the Trump supporters who are maybe kind of milquetoast people who don't really understand the hatred and the vileness of these so-called people.
And speaking of which, of course, the DNC in Chicago, uh, 50-some years later, there was supposed to be a massive anti-flush showing of 50,000 people and pro-Palestinian violence and the nothing ever happens, guys.
Well, there was a hundred.
Most interesting thing was there was a hundred thousand of them out there, but they kept them so far away.
And to see these, these gigantic black wrought iron-looking fences, you know, very foreboding.
And even it was the word was put out to area residents, don't come out, don't come to this, stay at home.
And like, wait a minute, what not participate in democracy?
Is that what you're telling me?
I don't, I can't understand what, what is, what's going on?
The room is spinning.
I, I, you know, for, for the people, for the people, yeah.
No, I mean, the whole thing is completely a scripted event, of course.
We, we all know that, but anywhere she goes, they kick all the people out.
She went to some kind of restaurant, they kick all the people out, all actors go in there to uh, yeah, it's it's really remarkable.
And not to mention, you guys have seen the memes of the uh, you know, the AI people, the fake people in the uh audience where the, you know, the guy turns his head and there's a half a head because the AI didn't fill it in properly or people with too many fingers on their hands or whatever.
Yeah, I didn't know how much of that was right-wing FUD versus uh reality.
I'm sure they do.
I heard it from a Normie.
Normie was telling me about it.
Like, oh, yeah, did you hear about this?
And that, so it's uh it's funny, though.
Yeah, the memes, the memes are thick and and heavy.
I didn't pay attention to any of the DNC, except I did watch Kamala's speech last night.
Of course, I saw that, you know, the Republicans had their freak show.
The Democrats one-upped it a little bit with the Stephen Hawking character and the clearly Adderalled out, you know, meth mouth, uh, cottonmouth lady basically saying what they're doing right now is not how we do it in America and the Brown similar bizarre prayer.
But I watched Kamala's speech and I was pretty disappointed because she actually toned it down.
And I think I noticed this tangentially throughout the rest of the DNC: lots of USA, USA chats, lots of red, white, and blue.
Oh, I believe they have deliberately toned down, you know, no, no Palestinian nonsense.
They fewer mentions of DEI and race-based equity and stuff like that.
Yeah.
So I think the Democrats have made a deliberate decision to pivot to the center and normalcy just to be able to do that.
Well, they campaign and they saw a tweet.
Go ahead, Smash.
I saw a tweet that said, I watched, I watched the DNC and it was full of American flags.
And you watch any Republican gathering and it's full of Israeli flags.
And right, I haven't seen, I haven't watched anything of the DNC, but i'm like I can't say that the stuff about Republicans is wrong at all.
Yep, the Israel cult is far more alive in the Republican Party than the Democratic Party, at least among the base.
Yep, and that's especially true because there's so much support from like, the Democrat voter base for Palestine.
Absolutely, it would be extremely alienating to come out and do either anything you know, Pro-israel or Pro-Palestine.
If they come out Pro-Palestine, they piss off their donors.
If they come out Pro-Israel, they piss off their voters.
So it was a very good strategic pivot to the middle.
Oh yeah, it was very, very orchestrated on.
Uh, I don't know if it was Monday night or Tuesday night.
The talking points were out, were going out to say how electric everything was.
Did you hear that?
Oh, it's electric.
Atmosphere so electric.
We've never seen anything like this.
It's electric.
All the commentators repeating the same lines.
And then I was over by my mother's house last night and she had it on and I just just caught a few minutes of it, but they were talking about the American flag, just like you were saying, oh, look at the so many American flags.
You know, this is great to America blah blah, blah.
It was so meaningless what they were saying, but they just kept saying, American flag red, white and blue.
It's great to see that they're red, white and blue.
It's, it's.
Uh, you know, I guess they're counting on most people being stupid enough to have that work on them.
And they may not.
And our pal Brackson said they can do that because they have essentially taken over what it means to be red, white and blue and patriotic.
So they're not even.
They're like.
Yeah, we like this place now because we have totally posed it up just the way we like it.
You know, abortion featured so prominently throughout all the stuff I heard.
January 6th still looms as this drug strict.
Think of the free abortions and free vasectomies.
Oh yeah yeah yeah oh yes yeah, they said they did 25 abortions and I don't know how many vasectomies.
But uh yeah, these people are Satanic.
But but think of back in the 80s when it was the issue of uh uh, the court case went all the way to the Supreme Court about being able to burn the American flag.
You know, look at how far we've come now.
It's like oh, American flag, we love the American flag.
Yeah oh, American flag is great.
Essentially the rainbow it's well.
Yeah, exactly.
That's the funny thing is they?
They were pretty anti the American flag for a while because they were putting out that ugly brown rainbow, tranny homo flag, but they but they dropped that as well and basically like, no, the American flag yeah, they got it now.
I love the.
Uh, what's what's the deal with this African country like, why are the women from here all so ugly?
And it's the tranny flag?
Because it looks like every like crappy African country.
Yeah right yeah, I saw one.
It was Ben Shapiro holding that flag and pointing at it and said hey liberals uh where, what country is this flag from and why are the girls from it so cute?
I'm not so.
I'm not so ghoulish as to celebrate the abortions on site, the vasectomies.
You have to say, if you're a leftist white man, go ahead get, get a vasectomy.
Oh, I mean, look the people that were getting abortions at the DNC and the people getting vasectomies at the DNC.
You don't want either of these groups having children.
That doesn't mean it's good.
You know, it's still.
Well, I actually, I like the linkage.
I like the linkage of the vasectomy and the abortion that those, they think that's what people should be doing because that makes it easier.
You know, I sadly, I know, I just know of a guy recently.
Yeah, I'm getting a vasectomy.
He went and got it.
He's all proud.
It's like, man, that is bad.
One of our pals, our pals who sent our pal who sent maple syrup said that getting the old ball tubes reconnected was the best decision or whatever.
There you go.
Just like I was telling this guy, hey, the man, the ladies, they like to play with a live wire.
You know, it's high voltage.
Rolo, what was your brilliant insight epiphany that you mentioned at the top?
The epiphany that I got, it was when there was like the weirder Indian demon prayer.
And then I really thought that they were going to wait for 2028.
But there was the woman that basically said at the RLC that white men, or I think she said white people, aren't going to win us an election anymore.
And that's why they said they pivoted so hard to Browns.
I think this is the first election that is exclusively for non-white people.
And that's why JD Vance is the VP.
And then there was, you know, Kamala Harris.
I think they wanted Vivek.
And I think they really wanted this to be very Pajit-centric.
And I think no matter what, with Trump, you're going to get a flood of Pajites.
You'll still get Mexicans.
But with Kamala, you're going to get a flood of Mexicans and you'll still get Pajites.
There are 1.5 billion Indians in India.
They could flood every country in Europe.
Oh, yeah.
You know, maybe 10% of their population or something like that and still have an insane amount of Indians left in India.
And yeah, we were talking about homegrown blacks versus Pajites the other day.
And we are from America.
I will take the violent retarded niggers over.
Well, at least from moves themselves.
Yeah.
The Indians have a way of massing, you know, like having like individually, they're not necessarily dangerous like a nigger is, but they have this way of massing.
Like, did you read about this article?
This Indian doctor woman, she was like, something about rights for something.
They raped her to death.
Like hundreds of guys raped her and killed her.
But even so.
Like Indians are all the time.
Indians are less violent than American blacks, right?
Individually, individually, but they have this mass effect.
A big problem with Indians.
So, okay.
It's been a while since I looked at the actual stat, but most of the insurance fraud in the United States, it's something like 85% is done by foreign-born doctors.
Most of those foreign-born doctors are Indian.
Same thing.
Subcontinental street shitters, like who gives a shit?
The difference is like the language, please.
Do they eat beef or not?
I don't care.
Either way, they go down Main Street and rape a woman.
Exactly.
And then a large portion of the opiate over prescription also attributed to Indians.
And a lot of it ties into insurance fraud because they're like, well, if I prescribe the opiates, then I can get like XYZ kickback from the opioid company.
Yeah, doesn't the pharmaceuticals, they give like incentives for the doctors to write prescriptions.
And you, the white boy, you walk in there and they just don't care about you.
They don't.
No.
That's just what it is.
They don't.
And I will say, I will say I don't blame them for not caring about the white boy because if I was a doctor.
I wouldn't care about them either.
I wouldn't care about an Indian outside of like basic human.
I want to make sure that like you're okay.
But if I can get a kickback on it too, why not?
There's so many things about being a doctor that has to do with like when you walk into a doctor's office, they are like sizing you up and analyzing the way you react, the way you're presenting.
There's so many like subtle cues that have to do with your culture and your race that how could they possibly understand us?
How could they possibly read the little tells that would be, you know, like if I ask you, hey, Smasher, how you feeling?
You say, oh, I'm fine, but I look at you, I could see you're not feeling fine.
Why?
Because we're both white men.
You know, I could read that.
But these aliens, they don't get us just like we don't get them and we're never going to.
I really don't get them.
No.
So they don't belong here.
They're going to have to go one way or the other.
Hopefully these, you ever see these reports about these remigrations that are supposedly happening with in Russia?
We'll get to that later.
Yeah.
No, in the West, there's, they say like, you know, a certain amount of Indians or Middle Easterners or whatever are some people are going back for various reasons.
And the thing is, come on, dude.
What?
You don't want to go back to India?
You know, we go down Main Street and we see a girl there and we all take turns gang raping her, dude.
You can, you can incentivize these people leaving.
Oh, yeah.
I got a couple things in my motives.
But it really, there's a lot of Indians to rape.
It really helps if you give them shocking pictures of getting forcibly removed.
I was just going to say, you know, aesthetics aside, and we are all familiar with the mass of Pajites and the pushiness and believing that they're funny and occupying beaches and defecating on beaches.
As we know, a Canadian woman got arrested for stating the obvious that it's because they're there and crapping on the beaches.
But there's no need.
There's like, I could understand the elites saying, okay, look, this black thing and, you know, 50 years of civil rights and affirmative action, it's really not working out for us.
They're not really that great for advancing the purposes of Zog.
So let's welcome in the Mexicans and the South Americans and the Central Americans because they will work harder.
They will be a little bit easier to manage, et cetera, et cetera.
And they'll probably vote less, 70%, 80%, whatever.
They did that.
But to welcome in Indians who overwhelmingly, they're not doing manual labor, right?
They're call center employees or they're coders or whatever.
That stuff, it's not in short or high demand.
Yeah, exactly.
So it's like this, they're what is what national security, what economic imperative is there to let them in in Canada.
And here in England, maybe you could say the old empire, they make an excuse, you know, bringing the old Commonwealth people back to the imperial homeland, but especially here in America, it makes no sense.
And it's not just like the middle income jobs that they're taking in coding and stuff like this.
Listen to this list of Indian CEOs.
Oh, they run every hotel.
They run every donut shop.
Well, that's on the low end, but they run every public school bank, gang rape.
They're the kings of chain migration.
Chairman and CEO of Microsoft, Satya Nadella, CEO of Google and Alphabet, Sundar Pichai, CEO of Novartis AG, one of the biggest pharmaceutical companies in the world.
Vasant Narashiyam, chair and CEO of Adobe.
These are multi-multi-billion billion companies, of course.
Chairman and CEO of IBM, Arvind Krishma, CEO of Starbucks until recently, Laxman Narash Simahan.
I think they replaced him with a Chipotle Goy.
And then on and on, Micron Technology is also a massive one.
Palo Alto Networks, and I'm sure there's others.
So, you know, somebody said, you know, they're bringing them in to create a new, if the Mexicans and the Hispanics were here to like replace us at the working level, then they're bringing in the Indians to replace us at a managerial level.
Exactly.
Yep.
With arguably more offensive results.
So, and that's one like, and that's one, I was already off the Trump train, but when he's talking illegal immigration, bad, legal immigration good, you could make the argument that it's almost, you know, it's backwards.
Like if Trump was like, well, I don't care if the border is open, but we're going to have zero legal immigration.
You know, you'd have underclass people working jobs.
It would still be terrible or whatever.
But legal immigration, we've said this for years, is just as bad, if not worse, both in terms of the numbers and in terms of competition for our middle income and high income listeners in the audience for sure.
So and there's nothing.
What are we going to do?
Like, I'm a single issue voter.
You're going to run for Congress against immigration?
I guess you could.
Somebody should do it.
Go for it.
Good luck.
But it's not like they're going to listen to us.
This has been an issue for at least 20, 30 years, seriously.
And here we are with both parties still.
Yeah, at least, you know, in terms of advocacy and immigration restriction, really kicked off with Peter Brimelow and the Jordan Commission in the 90s.
And here we are and they're talking about adding more.
I'm not even talking about Reagan famously gave an amnesty.
Like they're so useless.
You just look at these groups and just looking at how are they a net gain in any way.
And it's like at best, some of them commit less crime than others at best.
It's literally all of them are a net drain.
Well, you're not going to rape my daughter, but you will rob me for all of my money.
Yeah.
The crowd strike was probably was almost certainly an Indian coder.
And there was something else about it.
Yeah, it was a Pakistani.
Yeah, it's all over the place.
It's a nightmare.
And talk to people about it, if nothing else.
Let's pivot off of politics and Indians because I'm starting to have a bad taste in my mouth that I'd like to clean out.
Well, you don't like the taste of morning gang rape, dude.
I do like Indian food.
And my wife can cook it quite deliciously at home.
But if you're ever hungry, oh, Indian buffet.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Shame on me.
I know.
But you're ever hungry.
And it'll curb your appetite and you won't want to eat anymore.
We will keep their recipes, but we don't need them.
They sell the Indian spices in Walmart.
I've had that aisle quite often.
Chicken.
We conquered the world for Indian spices.
I know, right?
Tips for first-time fathers of girls.
We had a question from the audience and a couple of people said, yeah, you guys haven't talked about that in a while.
We haven't done a show on it, of course.
And we've mentioned it multiple times.
And I'll take first stab at it.
And obviously, Sam and Smasher are fathers of daughters as well.
I only have one.
So I can only judge from my own experience.
But the overall theme in terms of being a father to a daughter, if you're already experienced with sons or if you have anxiety about having a daughter, is first off, have no shame and no anxiety.
Daughters are a delight in numerous ways compared to boys.
The roll of the dice, Alpha Chads have all daughters and beta males have all sons.
So don't let that get to your head.
But I would say most importantly from my perspective is your role as a father with a daughter is to be strong and nurturing and comforting and that rock and that model for her.
You want to be the kind of man that you want your daughter to marry one day in practice in all of the things, aside from certain things.
But yeah, it's different with boys.
With boys, you kind of want to teach them and make them warriors and stuff.
And that's not to say you don't want to teach your daughters.
But I feel like nurturing is more important with them, whereas with boys, you can be tougher love as opposed to girls.
Go ahead, Sam.
Yeah.
Well, there's a few things.
I mean, with girls, I would say you never strike a girl.
They just don't work like that.
More damaging.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And you can crush them with a word or a look.
So you don't need to, you know, you need to go a lighter touch with them, just like you should treat females in general the rest of your life.
You should always at least make a first effort at being chivalrous and kind and strong.
Like you say, I agree with all that.
My daughters, you know, and I've heard, you've heard it.
I'm sure many people say it.
Oh, girls are the hardest to raise, especially when they're teenagers and boys are easier and all that.
I don't agree with that.
That's at least not my experience.
I have three daughters and they were never any trouble all the way through up until adulthood.
They were never any trouble.
Right now, painfully, sadly, I have to admit that two of them, we are not on good terms at the moment.
But so they're in their mid-20s.
And all I can say is no matter what you do, you might go through some kind of phase like that in life with people that you would wish were, you know, you were on good terms with, but you can't control people.
And when people become adults, they're going to do and think their own things.
And, you know, we all make mistakes or things that we wish didn't happen the way they did.
And people hold, you know, hurt feelings and stuff like that or subconscious things.
You know, if the parents break up and stuff like that, then, you know, you can't undo those things very easily.
You would hope in time that whatever you're holding against your parents, you would eventually realize like, well, they're people too, and life is messy and complicated and stuff like that.
But my daughters never gave me any trouble.
There was never any sass or talking back or acting out or any of those things.
And I think that it comes from just the feeling that you're part of a family.
When you are part of a group, part of people are relying on you.
You are relying on other people.
You don't have that same impulse to just go do something against the interests of the group, I guess I would say.
I don't know if that makes sense.
Yes.
And Sam, I just wanted to say that I think almost all parents will first blame themselves if things go south or bad in a relationship with their kids.
Or even if their kid makes a really stupid, dumb mistake, a parent will often, you know, say, well, where did I go wrong?
Or why didn't I, I should have done better?
Maybe this wouldn't have happened.
But it's not always.
Yeah, we have autonomy and sometimes they come out differently and they make bad decisions despite your best efforts.
Yeah, especially as an adult.
Like I said, when they're growing up, if you're setting the right tone and you're being a loving person, a strong person who, you know, you have fun together, you do things together, you're interested in each other in what everybody's doing.
I think that things will go right.
But once they become adults, you know, they're subject to all the forces of, you know, all the wicked forces of these Jews and these queers and everything else and all the degeneracy in society.
And you would only hope that with time, they see through it.
But people do get caught up in it.
Probably everyone here has, you know, at some point.
So before we say how somebody else should be, we should realize we're not perfect ourselves and, you know, be patient and pray.
Not to probe, Sam, but important question that the audience might be thinking.
Were your politics a factor in the, you know, damaged relationship with two of the daughters?
Are they angry at dad because he's a right-wing Nazi or is it something else?
Maybe more so in one case and less so in the other, but I think it's it's more of a just a, you know, that, that their parents are not together and that creates confusion and resentment and a sense that I love a little bit.
Yeah, or a sense of like illegitimacy.
Like, you know, I thought we were a family, but I guess we're not a family.
You know what I mean?
Those types of things.
Yeah.
So, and again, it's not the way I wanted it to be.
That's for sure.
And, but not, you can't make everything go the way you want it to go.
You know, there are a lot of forces in the world, a lot of forces in your own life, and you can only play the hand you're dealt.
Amen.
Smasher over to you, buddy.
General impressions, tips, practical stuff, whatever.
Your daughter's lovely.
She's the sweetest one of the bunch.
Of course, she's the girl.
She is.
She's very sweet.
Oh, shoot.
One daughter advised her.
Well, she wouldn't.
She wouldn't participate in making fun of Rolo, so that's good on her, right?
I mean, you said, you said, you know, years ago, obviously, you know, you treat her differently than her twin brother.
And I assume you still treat her differently than her, than her younger brothers.
She's really the gym in the boy and the boy pile.
Yeah, she absolutely gets special treatment.
She doesn't, she's not excluded from discipline and yeah, you don't want to raise a spoiled princess.
Right, exactly.
If I'm like, hey, daughter, do this and she doesn't do it.
It's like, well, why didn't you do that?
You know, she, she gets that same treatment.
If I'm like, hey, clean your room.
Hey, do this, do that, whatever it may be.
Speak of the devils.
Yeah.
That's one of the younger boys.
I don't know.
Fighting with mom, apparently.
But, you know, she doesn't, she's not exempt from discipline and I don't know, the expectations of like not being a gross, disgusting pig.
You know, like I make the kids clean up.
Dude, I'll blow my lid.
Like the other day, I found a bunch of Tootsie Roll wrappers out in the front yard.
I don't even know where they got Tootsie Rolls.
Probably, probably from Easter.
And then they like somehow.
Right.
They got hidden somewhere in the, in the like coat closet or something.
And then they like, I don't know, Jerry rigged a way to climb up there and find them.
And it's a garbage candy to begin with.
And then you're leaving your trash in the front.
Yeah, we're not doing that.
And like was it her?
It was both of the older ones.
And I just, I was like, I marched them outside and I was like, what is this doing in the front yard?
And I didn't, I, you know, in fairness, I was like, okay, I didn't catch you in the act.
I'm not going to ask where you got the candy.
Maybe it was given to you.
I don't know.
Okay, fair play.
You got it.
You win that one, but I'm not going to let you leave trash all over the place, you know?
And so I made him clean it up.
And then I made him pick up all any other garbage that was in the front yard, which I actually don't think there was any.
But they're really bad about like taking their socks off outside or leaving a pair of shorts outside.
Clean up after yourself.
Yeah, yeah.
And I'm just like, you clean up all this stuff.
And she's not exempt from any of that.
But when it comes to being like, you know, maybe extra nice, she certainly gets first selection when it comes to being extra nice.
Yeah.
I want to say, you know, it's funny that you mentioned the Tootsie Roll wrappers because there was one point where our daughter, we were at a party or at my parents' house or something.
And there was one of those big bowls of Andy's mints, you know, just sitting around afterthought almost.
And she had sat there and sneakily consumed every single one of them.
And we looked at like chocolate all over.
We're like, what in the world?
And she just looked like a wet dog, you know, like she got like, what in the world?
But yeah, she gets this one.
It's been easy street with our daughter.
Sweet, helpful.
Sam has mentioned before how much more helpful daughters are by nature.
And that's certainly been our experience here too.
But as we are on the cusp of double digits, I have definitely noticed the first budding of challenging or becoming a bit of a prima donna, starting to think way too much about clothes and hair and stuff, perhaps to the detriment of things that she used to do, like read more or whatever.
So I am now entering not a danger zone, but like a calibration zone where I don't want her to grow up too fast.
And I don't want her to, first of all, rebel too, because I was a sweet, good, innocent kid up until I was a teenager.
And then I deliberately rebelled against it.
I was like, I don't want to be some, you know, goody two-shoes.
I want to have some fun with my life.
So I'm going to be keeping an eagle eye on that.
And back to the early years too.
I remember, you know, in the very early days, first week, two weeks, thinking how miserable it was to change a baby girl's diaper on the number twos because of all of the involvement there.
And then it just becomes second nature and you don't think about it for two seconds.
And there's, it's like with boys and girls, there's various aspects of the poopy diaper change that are unpleasant and the stuff going on down there, but it just becomes second nature.
You get used to it.
And, you know, I'd say net net girls are easier than boys, even though you probably have to pay a little bit more attention to them, especially as they get older.
Maybe I'm wrong.
I don't know.
The diaper changes which ones are.
It's like my daughter, the boys are all more disciplined than my daughter.
I have to cough.
So if I snap and I'm just like, hey, knock it off.
Hey, do this.
Hey, do that.
Done.
Hey, clean.
If you don't clean your room, all your toys that are on the floor are going in the garbage.
You know who cleans up?
Older boy.
You know who goes in the room and puts around?
Older daughter.
It's the opposite here.
I will, I'll ask Junior 10 times to do something and then I'll get angry.
And if I ask her once, it's usually done.
But so yeah, the individual variation.
But then she's so much more helpful in other areas.
And like, yeah.
You know, I, oh, it's hard.
I, it's really not that different.
Having a boy and a girl so far has not been that different.
It's just been they excel and suck in different areas.
And that's kind of it.
Yeah.
If you're an expecting father of a first-time daughter or you have a new one on your hands, the takeaway I would say is that you should arguably have less anxiety than with a boy.
Anxiety will come later.
You'll have plenty to worry about down the road.
But my experience, Sam's experience, and to a certain extent, Smasher's experience, I think, is that daughters are easier.
Daughters are more lovable.
Daughters are more cuddly and helpful.
And fatherhood, when you have boys, even from a young age, it's almost like two bulls to a certain extent.
You know, you're established common rebellion and you must do this.
And if you don't, then I'm like a cuck father.
Whereas with a daughter, it's like, hey, you know, we're, we're pals.
I'm, I'm your big model here and I love you.
It's just not that I guess the reverse of that is that with boys, they might, with the father, there might be more activities in common that they would have, you know, a natural interest in.
And that's okay.
That's all, it's all okay, you know.
And as I think as long as you, you have a good family identity and feeling and all that, then it's going to go fine.
You know, I think some of those things like worrying about the clothing that you're going to wear and stuff, that comes from when you're going to school and other people are looking at you and you're getting feedback, negative and positive from people.
I mean, you might say signals.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A lot of signals.
And you might say, well, that's normal.
People have to learn to deal with that.
Yes, but I think that it comes later, just like being teased.
Like, let's say you wear glasses or the child is overweight or I don't know.
It could be anything.
I think that those, that type of teasing and those types of having to endure the approvals or disapprovals of colleagues and things that can be very damaging when the person is immature.
When you're older, you know, like if you're wearing glasses and somebody teases you about your glasses, you'd laugh in their face because you're, you're older, you're mature, you have a sense of yourself.
But when you're younger, those things can be very painful and damaging.
And that's why I think homeschooling is really the way to go.
Sure.
And if the other, the other thing, too, is don't think that like with a girl, it's going to be all tea parties and dresses and all feminine stuff.
My daughter plays sports and I love watching her play sports.
She plays, she plays hard.
We can have a soccer kick.
We had baseball catches back in the day, not so much anymore.
I'm a little biased against softball just because I think of you know, like bulldykes and stuff like that.
So not too big of a fan of that for girls, but following soccer, swimming, yeah, gymnastics.
Different girls have different sense of how much, you know, how girly they are or not or whatever.
That's all okay.
That's okay.
Variation in people is what makes people who they are.
And daughters love daddy daughter dates, even if it's a trite expression or whatever, just like, nope, you and me are going out for ice cream or you and I are going going for a walk to have a talk.
There's something that is slightly more special about that than with your sons.
Not to denigrate sons.
Having sons is awesome.
I have a lot of sons.
Different.
Yeah.
It's just a different thing.
It's a different dynamic.
Absolutely.
In that spirit, I wanted to read this letter that we got in the mail from our Rollo angel computer investor, Racky Rassi.
I don't know if we'll call him that.
I told him I wouldn't read even his sock name on the air.
But this is out of right field.
I don't think that we had any interactions.
You know, somebody just came out of the woodwork and said, love the show.
Anyway, here we go.
Coach, I hope this finds you and your family well.
Previously in our messages, you asked why so generous.
I was just curious, like, hey, who are you?
And why are you willing to pony up for Rolo's computer equipment?
He says, well, there's a couple of reasons.
As generous as you think I was, I find your generosity as well as the generosity of Sam and Rolo to be much, much more.
I can only imagine the amount of time and effort and dedication it takes to make a show every single week.
You put in parentheses mostly.
This donation pales in comparison.
This donation pales in comparison.
I've listened to your show for some time now and gone back through the library of past episodes.
You all provide a positive influence through your messaging and wisdom and positive guidance needed to navigate this tumultuous world in the waters ahead.
And here's where it gets really touching.
My wife and I have hit some pretty low points in our struggle to help populate our race.
Costly specialists after costly specialists produce little to no results except for high fees, only to be followed by crushed dreams.
She felt like a failure as a woman, and I felt like a lesser man as we struggled to no avail.
Real quick.
Yeah.
My wife is really great with that sort of stuff.
She's fertility.
She's a fertility spurg.
Are you offering her for side advice, perhaps?
I was just going to say not to put her on the spot, not to put her on the spot, but like I'll make her, I'll make a reply.
That sounds bad, but you know what I mean.
I just know where the one piece of equipment goes into the other piece of equipment, and then you cross your fingers and hopefully you get a big one.
It's good, good, good thing.
Yeah.
After all of Sam's lessons and my wife telling me, hey, it worked.
Yep.
Yeah.
Let's see.
We were at the point of giving up on both our procreative desires as well as our marriage.
Your show, Sam's Wisdom, and the message you put out led me through those dark days.
Your encouragement through our seemingly insurmountable struggle has helped us both improve our lives.
And we kept on with the struggle, improving ourselves with iron-fisted intent.
And now we have a beautiful baby girl of 16 weeks.
When I hold her and she holds my gaze, I can only think of how foolish I was to ever think of giving up the struggle.
At our ages, he's high end of 30, she's mid-30s.
We might not get, we might not get to the motor cruise, which is of course for four kids, but that doesn't mean we won't try.
All of this is to say this donation pales in comparison to your encouragement to remain steadfast in the face and struggle.
So I thank all of you.
Hail victory.
And that's from our pal.
Yep.
Thank you so much, buddy.
For the note.
Very humbling.
Absolutely.
And congratulations.
That's a new white life announcement, by the way, not announced.
Congratulations.
Yep.
God bless.
Great.
Wish you many.
Can't top that to go out at the end of this first half.
So let's go to the break.
Rolo, may we play one of your gems?
Yeah.
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
I, okay, and I don't know how I'll let you describe what you want to because I don't know how nervous you are about this music, but these are really good.
Like, really good.
When he sent them to me, you know, when people send you homemade music and you're like, you haven't, Smasher hasn't heard him.
You're like, okay, I'll listen to it.
And you're like, oh, God, this is going to suck.
And sometimes it's like, okay, that was pretty good or whatever.
And no BS.
I loved it straight out of the gate.
So I have my personal favorite or a couple favorites.
Do you want to pick one or you want me to pick?
No, you pick.
It's your choice.
It's digital secrets.
What's the name of the band?
Or the group or the maestra?
the group is the final storm is written by the final storm and sung by oh yeah I love that song.
Mr. Monster.
I was playing that for my family.
Everyone was like, wow, this is really good.
What is this?
I said, hey, it's Final Storm.
New themes.
Our youngest still, every once in a while, I catch him going, digital secrets for sale.
And I was like, that's how you know you got a catchy jingle at least.
Sam has the song confused.
It's not Final Storm's theme song.
Which is also awesome.
Yeah.
Okay.
Written by the three at the Final Storm.
Have you played Digital Secrets on The Final Storm before?
I don't think so.
Is this a world premiere?
It might be a world premiere.
Hey, I really, I really don't remember.
I don't think we have, honestly.
Oh, all right.
Yeah, because I wanted to play this for a while, but I didn't know how cagey you were about it.
Regardless, digital secrets from the Final Storm Collaborative, and we'll be right back.
Got the answers you won't see in the dark when we breathe.
I'll profit for the week.
Digital secrets foresale.
Empty whispers through the live truth in a low-long tale.
Digital secrets fulfill in the gloom of cyber space.
I wear a mask you can't trace cryptic smiles on my face.
I claim to know the secret face had a handling with a criminal lies to pull you in.
Click the wind just once, my friend.
On the path, there's no end.
Digital secrets for sale.
Empty whispers through the lip.
Fake truth in a little long tale.
Digital secrets fulfill.
Sell lost to all you in.
Could believe just once, my friend.
On this isle, there's no end.
Digital secrets for sale.
Empty whispers through the lip.
Fake truth in a little long tale.
And welcome back to Full House Episode 193, Smasher Special Return Edition.
Rollo Global Premiere Musical Maestro Edition.
Grab bag of topics there in the first half.
And if you were looking for a coherent theme here in the second, I'm sorry, but you're going to be sadly disappointed because we got a couple important bullet points to cover here, but we will do it maybe a little bit more casually than we did there in the first.
And I just wanted to highlight something.
You know, Sam gets a little misty when we get those awesome letters from the audience.
I certainly never do.
And he raised a good point.
He said, you see, coach, you see the difference that we make in these people's lives.
And, you know, this is just, you know, one guy in the audience who took the time to write in.
And I said, it always surprises me.
I know that we have a good show.
I know that we do good work.
And I know that we keep it positive.
You know, for the most part, everybody can blackpill and get a little Fed posty in their thoughts sometimes or doom scrolling and doom posting.
But when you get something like that, you go, wow, it surprises me, but thank you so much.
God bless.
And if it makes that much of a difference to one or two or three or a dozen people, then I agree that is time well spent.
So thank you, dear donor, and to everybody else in the audience for riding with us for as long as you have through 193.
Correspondence, that is exactly why Fed posting is important.
Why is correspondence like that make Fed posting important?
So that we don't get too enamored with ourselves or too lovey-dovey.
Because that man's child is worth more than any Jew on this earth.
Having a child.
Yeah.
You know, that's a very good point.
And I saw, I think, you know, I hear Mariana's Trench is beautiful this time of year.
Just to throw your car's batteries in them.
God, Rolo's going to hit the roof, but I think it was even, you know, Owen Benjamin was making some really stupid point.
He still appears.
He might be a digital.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I know who's Jewish.
Who's Jewish?
Owen Benjamin the Jewish?
Owen Benjamin the filthy kite.
Smasher, your pills.
You can take your choke pills.
I know, I know.
But I he for some reason, the algorithm is throwing him into my feed.
And he said something like, you know, having, having a child.
Yeah, I should just block him.
But sometimes it's curious to what, because he really was a train wreck there for a while.
But he said something like, you know, having one child is worth just one child.
Any child is worth more than all the money in the world.
And, you know, whatever he's on and whatever his game is or whatever his conflicted ideology.
Power is he says like. one sane thing out of every a hundred crazy things.
And then all the retards that follow him say, no, he just says this.
And then you actually look at the full 17 hour stream that he did and you realize, wow, this is full of madness.
And he's just hypnotizing people with standard cult speak.
And he said one thing that these retards latch on to and broken clock and all that.
Blah, blah, blah.
He sucks.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
No argument.
Everybody was like, look at the screenshot.
Oh, he's saying bass thing.
Screenshot, I was saying basing.
And then it was like, oh, he admitted to being Jewish.
And I was like, look, I literally never need to consume another second of his content.
I never need to read another word that he writes.
Sooner or later.
Yeah, because even if he's hit, they sometimes hit all the right notes and then give it enough time or put a little stress or maybe a hangover or some drugs or whatever.
And then they start calling you a stupid, filthy goy, even if they say it's ironic.
Yeah.
Right, exactly.
On a long enough timeline.
There's never been a Jew that wrote anything that I needed to read.
Except for like by Jew for Jew stuff is beneficial to read.
Buy Jew for goy stuff, never beneficial to read.
You know, like Philip Roth and Portnoy's complaint or anything.
I'm just kidding.
But to that point, we, you know, we've been pro-natalist for a long, obviously since the beginning of this show.
And a little trick, little trip down history lane.
You know, the show started April 2019 in the sort of doldrums when everybody was disillusioned with Trump, the Charlottesville hangover, the movement divisions or whatever.
And, you know, Sam and me essentially saying, let's do it.
It's a good thing to do.
One thing that we can do honestly without reservations, without cucking is advocate for our people to have more white children, not just to save the white race or, you know, to have a breeding competition because it's good, because it's natural, because it is a concrete, absolute contribution to our future, for our likelihood of survival.
And frankly, there's, you know, I feel bad saying that, but, you know, I can't imagine going through life without kids and the gaping hole that would be there that all three of mine represent and however many you have, even if they turn out to be big jerks.
Yeah.
No matter how many gaping holes you fill, the gaping hole left by not having kids can never be filled.
There he is.
Vaguely dirty sounding remark.
But we haven't, you know, we've done the boosterism thing and it's awesome for all these reasons.
And here's how it can be more manageable.
And it's not that expensive.
But the whole global, you know, Elon Musk is on this depopulation, lowered fertility, not just in Europe and white countries, but in Asian countries everywhere worldwide.
Yeah, basically.
And I just happened to come across a thread today by a guy who goes by Johan Kurtz.
Doesn't seem to be Jewish, seems to have a decent following or whatever.
And he posited that of the very few countries in the, there are lots of countries that have tried to take on their fertility crisis.
South Korea, Hungary, Russia has to varying degrees.
Yep.
They know that it's a problem.
Japan.
The problem with Spain is that it's full of Spanish people.
They're still white.
They're still white, but they're Spanish.
At this point, every country is full of a lot of stuff.
But his interesting theory, and I didn't, you know, I read through it.
I didn't, you know, give it a vigorous analysis, and I probably never will.
But he pointed, and I had never heard this before, that of all the countries that have tried and failed, Georgia has succeeded.
And he claims that low birth rates are a status issue and a sort of social pressure issue, a peer pressure, go along to get along.
You know, if my peers aren't having kids, then I'm not going to have kids.
If the system is too demanding, if the housing is too expensive, it's just not worth the hassle.
And how Georgia went from a, again, don't take this as scripture because I didn't dig too deeply under the hood, but it was an interesting theory.
The patriarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church basically said, I will personally baptize and be the godfather to all thirdborn children in the country.
And apparently that really hit pay dirt with the mothers and fathers of Georgia and marked an increase in population.
Go ahead, Smasher.
I would, I mean, there's a lot of things that go into why people do or do not have kids, right?
Like part of that thread was that North Korea, or not North Korea, North Korea doesn't have a birth rate problem.
South Korea spent $200 billion on trying to get people to have kids.
But the problem with South Korea is that it's full of South Koreans.
Joking, it's full of actually basically autistic people.
They're very status-seeking, but they're also very autistic, like NEETs and like extreme partygoers, like people that don't have sex and people that have nothing but sex and have no interest in children.
Hard situation, hard circle to square right there.
Sure, but what about all the other countries?
I mean, it spans Europe too, like, you know, NATO countries, Eastern Bloc countries.
The Bible are among the worst.
This is something that I've been thinking about a lot, not necessarily getting into like HBD spurgery.
I've been doing a lot of listening to stuff about human biodiversity, Anatolian farmers, et cetera, et cetera, right?
And like people start eating wheat and then they become weak and gay, you know, whatever.
Memes aside for the longest time, like you get into like our case selection, people had a lot of freaking kids.
And even when we kind of settled down and stopped being hunter-gatherers and stuff, we still had a lot of kids.
Like we basically had a lot of kids up until kind of semi-recently.
So what is it?
Well, it's the birth control is first and probably available.
And it's modern.
You look at people.
You look at families.
What is it?
This is something that McNab pointed out a while ago, but something with Mexicans, like Mexicans in Mexico have like, I don't know, maybe three kids or something like that.
And then they get to America.
And within a generation, it falls to like sub-white Americans.
I think exposure to technology.
That was Jazzhands.
Maybe.
Yeah, sure.
It was McNabb did.
It was him and write an excellent article about whoever, whoever deserves credit for it, McNabb wrote a really excellent article about it that you should read.
But, you know, whoever pointed that out, like credit to them, there are just certain things about living in the modern world that cause birth rates to collapse.
And again, getting into like what I've been thinking about is like the modern world and all of our technological advancements are basically like we discovered fire.
And since we discovered fire, we've not stopped thinking about how to harness fire in the best way possible.
Fire essentially being a replacement for energy, right?
And so like our entire world is like, how do we conserve, how do we create more energy while spending less energy?
Like, how do we beat the like one for one equation more or less, right?
Make things more efficient, more, more comfortable.
Exactly.
And that kind of feeds into like either having kids or not having kids.
Like if I know that I need to have more kids in order for my race to survive, then I have more kids.
And that happens, I would say, largely on a subconscious societal level.
And then if I'm like, okay, I know that really I only need to have one kid and like things will continue to be okay.
If I only have one kid, then I'm only going to have one kid.
And again, that's kind of a subconscious societal level thing.
And it's like, well, okay, I know that I burn fire really good right now.
So I'm only going to have a kid and a half versus seven.
Well, before control, it's, you know, fire not burned so good.
People have sex and babies come from sex.
I mean, that's, that's just normal.
And that's obviously, you know, massive factor.
Reproduction is not a single factor issue.
You know what I mean?
Right.
There's so many things that go into it, whether it's birth control, whether it's people's comfort in the economy, whether it's people's belief in the future.
People's worry over their job, even if they're not on birth control.
Are they actually healthy and fertile?
Tons of people trying to.
But then we also know that there is a huge disparity in the amount of people that are having sex, both male and female.
Yep.
Yes.
You know, yeah, I don't agree that status or like peer pressure is the root cause to me.
Obviously, like unhealthy lifestyles and contraceptives and financial, financial stresses seem like the biggest one.
And I will look into the hood under the hood on Georgia later, but that is fascinating to me that like somebody coming along and saying, look, do it and you'll get glory and you'll get this blessing.
Yeah.
At least in that small, Georgia is a small country.
I would wager that Georgians probably have a stronger identity than a lot of in that.
Feeling like you're part of something.
Yeah.
Yeah.
My experience with Georgians, I did some training with Georgians, hung out with them and whatever.
Not a ton of exposure to them, but a little bit.
And they all seemed very comfortable in the fact that they were Georgians and like they were who they were and whatever.
And it's like, okay, you know, now a couple of years later, looking back, I'm like, yo, I get it.
You know, I would say that having a real identity is a huge part of having kids.
That's really why Richard Spencer's wife, you know, bailed because she wanted to have a lot of kids.
And he just.
Sorry.
He just wanted, he just wanted to blow loads into her ass.
I was going to make that jump too.
Bonk, bonk, punk.
Time to watch Bond movies.
Fucking faggot.
He sucks so bad.
All right.
Yeah.
What I would say to young people, especially, hey, having children, having a family, it's an act of rebellion.
Highest status.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
This is.
And yeah, you're not going to be able to have the lifestyle and the vacations and the sports cars or whatever it is, but you'll have something more valuable.
And I can't tell you how many times people said the most ignorant things when I was, you know, we were having, have another baby and they would say things.
It's ridiculous.
One guy said, oh, there's, there's too many children in the world already.
You know, just stupid.
Yeah.
Just hear that all the time.
Like, but imagine saying it to the father that's announcing proudly the next child being born, saying that directly to the person's face.
I hear people say that in that situation all the time.
Literally, someone's like, I'm having a baby.
And then someone will say, how could you bring a child?
They say it all the time.
Like, it's like, they think they're so edgy and so cool.
So much smarter.
That's probably one of the best arguments against having children is like, Jews around the world.
Why are you having kids?
That's probably the best argument against having kids.
Yeah, forget money.
Like, forget like being too young or forget, you know, preparation or, or anything else.
It's literally just like Jews around the world.
Are you sure you want to like, you know, don't listen to our audience?
You need more kids.
Have some take over.
Have, have kids.
Have kids.
Like, how can you afford it?
Oh, I could never afford it.
Oh, it's so expensive to have children.
How could you do it?
And then, so I would come back with an equally ridiculous remark.
I'd say, well, you know, when they're little, you teach them to steal.
And like, even if they get caught, they don't get in trouble.
So they can like steal, you know, apples out of the grocery store.
Oh, so that's how blacks get by.
I get it.
Yeah.
I mean, really, if that's what we're talking about.
Yeah.
Well, you know, I'm certainly not the patriarch of Tbilisi.
You should steal.
You should absolutely steal.
Have kids.
Have kids and steal from your grocery store.
Yeah.
If that's, if that's what, if that's what we're talking about, it's so ridiculous to even say that.
So we're going to steal it.
We're raising the bar here at Full House.
And I'm putting this out there mostly seriously.
If someone in the audience right now has a fourth child, if you're pregnant now and you're having your fourth, or if you're thinking about going for fourth, you're going to be the godfather?
No, I will personally welcome you on the show.
You and wife George.
And Sam can be, Sam can be the godfather.
I'm not qualified.
Putting you out there on the spot, Sam.
I'm a confirmed Catholic.
I could be a godfather.
There you go.
I'll be the Catholic.
I'll be a Catholic godfather.
Can pick the godfather.
There you go.
Two guys.
Children must be entirely white and with no Jewish admixture.
Sorry.
Right.
Oh, oh, yeah, Coache, let me on.
I got some stuff to tell the audience.
I just had my father.
Otherwise, Bob the Apple with them.
Yeah.
But I'll post the thread in the show notes.
It's not earth-shattering.
I just found it very interesting.
And yeah, money alone, it can help, right?
Because there are a lot of parents out there for whom daycare and bills absolutely is, they might have one and they would consider having more if they feel more financially secure.
Yeah.
Because of course, now the wife has to work thanks to, you know, equal rights amendment or whatever.
I do think that one is the hardest kid to have.
Oh, for sure.
I've never had a child is very hard.
I've never had one kid life changing.
Like your first mind-blowing. Child.
You know, that is the hardest one to have.
And I think after that, like, including conception and birth too.
Yeah.
You know, after that, it's kind of the biggest, the biggest thing is that people are afraid of the unknown.
And like, you don't know what it's like to have a kid until you have one.
You have all the babysitting experience in the world.
You have a little brother, little sister, like, you know, you're a real family person surrounded by family, surrounded by little kids, exposed to little kids, your whole life.
That still doesn't prepare you for having your own child, you know?
Yeah.
And so it is pretty daunting.
And I don't, I don't know the stats like offhand, but I would be curious to like, if it's even available, how many people with multiple children said that they basically weren't super keen on the idea of having more than one kid?
And then after they had one kid, became familiar with it, then decided like, yeah, screw it.
Like this, that's not as bad as I thought.
Like it's way scary.
It seems it was way scary in my mind.
Especially later, like if you have an only child, which you may very legitimately find yourself in that position of having only one child, but do you ever try to entertain one child?
It's very, very hard to do.
I was going to say it's a piece of cake managing more.
Well, no, they need to play with each other because it's they say, yeah, let's play shoots and ladders.
And then like one minute after you get the whole thing set up, they don't even want to play it anymore.
You know, it's, they need to play with each other on their own in their own way.
When you like, as an adult, they will let you know when they want you to read them a book or play a game.
They are more happy to play with each other.
True.
The only thing, Sam, is, and I should have mentioned this when we were discussing having girls, is that I distinctly remember before we had our daughter that I had a lot of special one-on-one time with Junior, making little train sets.
You know, they're roughly three years apart.
So he was a little bit more.
When they're little, yes.
I'm talking about as they get older.
For sure.
But he's sharp enough that I suspect that either consciously or subconsciously, he resents either me or his sister based on I had the, you know, the world in the palm of my hands when I was an only child.
But even so, that's an important lesson for him to learn is that.
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah.
You know, you are not the only member of this family.
Yeah.
You do not get to monopolize everything.
But I bet maybe I'll ask him one day when he's a little bit older.
You know, are you a little bit bitter that I like loved your sister so much or that we lost our, you know, so much train building session in the basement.
And the other thing that came to mind too is imagine what the birth rates would be if those countries didn't try to do fiscal stimuli, tax trees, child care.
You know, it would probably be worse.
It's not the magic bullet, but at least that they're trying makes a difference.
And in Russia's case, which we're going to pivot to in a second, a big part of their fertility, I suspect, was not related to government intervention, but a general societal increase in health and safety, in a sense that things were getting better instead of worse.
I don't know how, but they're pretty hard to probably put this into quantitative data, but if you think that the future is going to be worse than the present, oh yeah, it's kind of master presses birth rates like uh, you know, slaves or whatever things like that there's uh, populations that are under oppression.
The birth rates go down just because people are not optimistic about their odds of survival.
Well, North Korea has slaves.
They, they literally sell their people as slaves to various parts of the world.
Do you think that they create children just to sell?
No no no, that's a fact is provable.
Are you talking about children?
The workers that go to, like the Uae and Saudi Arabia, like the Filipinos, and i'm not, I don't know about South Korea.
North Korea, oh oh, North Korea yeah like, North Korea sells its people as slaves.
That's not mine, I don't care.
Those rockets ain't gonna pay for themselves.
Rollo, i'm okay.
I didn't say it was a good or bad thing, I just said that you brought up people that are slaves and oppressed.
As long as they keep frowning at K-pop like whatever dude they do, they said faggots, go home balloons full of crap down south.
So that brings me to what was a brief, momentary talk of the town and spurred a lot of good discussion and some spurgery.
Russia offers safe haven for people trying to escape Western liberal ideas, and this is straight from TAS, the Russian news agency.
Uh, Moscow will provide assistance to any foreigners, and this is straight from Russia.
This is not like some Western summary of it.
Uh, august 19th, Moscow will provide assistance to any foreigners who want to escape the neoliberal ideals being put forward in their countries and move to Russia where traditional values reign supreme, according to a decree signed by president Putin.
Under the document, such foreign nationals will have the right to apply for temporary residence in Russia outside the quota approved by the government and without providing documents confirming their knowledge of the Russian language, history and basic laws.
So they're basically creating a workaround for people to come in who can claim uh, some sort of political or ideological oppression.
Uh, seems to be a lot of people out there, right for fraud.
I highly doubt that the Russians are just going to wave through any Tom Dick or Harry who says that they're oppressed.
Applications may be based on the rejection of their country's policies aimed at imposing destructive neoliberal ideals on people which run counter to tradition, traditional Russian spiritual and moral values.
So total absence of race reference there.
The values are listed in the foundations Of Russia state policy.
Uh, Russian government's expected to compile a list of countries uh, imposing unhealthy attitudes on their citizens, and the foreign ministry has been instructed to start issuing three-month visas to such applicants Applicants as early as September.
In February, Putin is almost done.
Supported the idea of Italian student Irene Sicini that Russia should ease entry rules for those who share the blah, blah, blah.
Head of state agreed.
So I'll kick it over to you guys in a second here.
Whatever you think about this, on the one hand, I saw they need bodies for the meat grinder in Ukraine.
This is a trap to, oh, you're pro-white.
Yeah, try going over to Russia and snapping a Roman or being a Nazi to my take is that this is mostly propaganda, consistent with Cold War back and forth always, winning hearts and minds, showing who has the superior values.
God knows we did it.
And so how many people are going to sign up for it?
Like very good.
And that's the other thing is I certainly wouldn't want to be the first one to go over and try out this new system, right?
I think you get a three, like a three-month visa and like, are they like evaluating you there?
And it was interesting that we saw our old pal, Charles Bausman, who has been on the show twice.
He's back on Twitter.
I don't know for how long he's been on Twitter, but he said essentially this will be white people coming into Russia.
Now, just like with a new car model, you really don't want to be the first one to test out the system, a three-month visa.
I don't know what's going to be going on during that three months, whether you're going to be getting evaluated.
Responses to this have been across the spectrum from Russia needs meat for the meat grinder in Ukraine to, oh, you're pro-white.
Good luck going to Russia and snapping a Roman or having a 1488 tattoo to something.
My take is that this is part of the propaganda war between Russia and the West that certainly was waged hotly during the Cold War back and forth, trying to show values and stuff like that.
I think it's very interesting that they name neoliberalism, which is pretty on point, traditional values and things like that.
And just the fact that Russia is willing to put up the bat signal or the double-headed eagle signal as a possible sanctuary.
You may think it's, you know, cynical or a ploy or whatever, but the fact that they're doing it, that they are painting themselves in opposition to what we are living under right now is certainly noteworthy and worth taking note of.
And if you ever think about that German family with eight kids, they were homeschooling and just the other day they got their doors knocked down by the new Dazi, essentially.
That seems, I don't know what Russia's policies are on homeschooling are, but that's a crystal clear case.
Like, yes, actually, we would like to move to Russia and not go to prison for trying to be good parents to our children.
I don't know.
Do you guys think this is all BS and Russian machinations?
Or is this a good thing, even if it's not something that we should be leaping at or making plans to get plane tickets?
I think everybody should visit Russia.
You have to be careful.
You don't want to be one of those prisoners that they use as leverage to get their own people back.
But it's a big, wild, fascinating country that is on the uptrend, I think, unequivocally.
Hey, don't worry.
Anybody listening to this podcast?
Anybody listening to this podcast, the United States would not trade anything for you.
Russia would not rush you.
It wouldn't be worth their time.
There's no negotiating for any of us.
The U.S. would be like, oh, you arrested them?
Shoot them.
Thanks.
How could you possibly trust Russia to be in good faith with this, though?
Honestly, not because Russia is our enemy, but Russia is not our friend, especially now after all that America has done.
I don't think that they're trying to trap you, but make more interesting using you as a propaganda prop at minimum.
How do you like, like what, what does Russia have to gain by just taking in a bunch of American refugees?
Virtue signaling.
Yeah.
I mean, if it happened to be a lot of people who are not going to do a lot of, no, I know, I agree.
I think it would be literally propaganda points or like geopolitical virtue signaling, essentially, to start with.
But if things keep going on their current trend, both here and over there, it's not inconceivable.
I mean, remember, all of our ancestors, if you're an American white, like one of your ancestors decided to pack up and leave their ancestral homeland, like packing up and leaving to go to a wild place is not out of the ordinary.
But they packed up and left to a wild place.
They didn't pack up and leave to a place that where you're coming from is openly declaring, or I guess not openly, but like without using the words, declaring war on them.
Because it's not like there was some kind of giant war with the.
No, don't say that.
If Putin wants to give you an acre and, you know, Labens Rom to be a healthy family, unencumbered by, you know, alien hordes.
Yeah, but hold on.
Hold on.
You asked a serious question.
Well, how about giving a serious answer?
Okay, if Putin wants to, Putin didn't offer any of that.
He just said, if you want to escape liberalism, they'll give you asylum.
He didn't say, I'll give you resources.
I'll give you land.
And there's, and there's no reason to suggest.
He's stuck in some like butt.
Well, they had that was the previous program.
They had a Siberian settlement.
They had a Siberian settlement program basically offering what I was mostly joking about with McKevitt to take the edge off of his Fed post there.
But nobody probably took it because everybody was like, why the why the heck would I want to go to Siberia?
That place sucks.
Right.
Yeah, because so they take, they take you in and then you become a prop and then they just throw you in the garbage part of the place.
They might even throw you where there's all the trash Muslims too.
Like they, I don't care what happens.
They're already here.
What's going to guarantee that you're going to come back?
I'm not saying you're going to go there.
They're going to hold you hostage, but.
Yeah, I think that would undermine the whole purpose of the thing.
I think in the in-house, how would anyone know, though?
That's what I'm getting at.
Because it's not actually the Soviet Union, Rolo.
Like, you know, I'm sure what would be, to be clear, I'm not saying that anybody should be like, you know, doing their research.
I do think now this, it's even dangerous to say you should visit Russia because of the risk that you get caught up in something stupid or you actually become a pawn or whatever.
But certainly you would want to visit and see the country before you even consider this.
Again, this is all hypothetical.
I don't think anybody's 99% of our people are not in bad enough straits to consider fleeing to Russia.
But what would make more sense?
Like they put out the proposal assuming they're going to do it.
Why would they do that?
And then like be like, stick you in a Muslim hovel in US.
Well, you know, if we can raise 10, go fund me, gifts and go, whatever.
Raise $10,000 and I'll sign up to do it.
Swear to God, I'll do it.
No.
Never been to Russia?
Don't speak the language?
I won't even read the terms of service.
I will just sign up and do it.
You might have some enemies who would come up and come up with that money and send you everything.
I will vlog and live tweet the whole thing.
And Rolo, and I do mean to treat your deserved cynicism and skepticism seriously, but I know personally of a prominent WN who's been doxxed, who's done activism, who went to Russia for tourism to see it with his own eyes, sent me videos.
Yeah, but he said it was a completely different thing.
Talking about something completely different.
No, He didn't take them as a point.
That's not what I'm talking about.
You're talking about a WN there.
I'm not talking about white nationalists going to Russia.
I'm talking about American refugees.
Or European refugees or Europeans.
Sure.
Putin didn't say, if you are a base 1488 red-pilled Nazi, I'll let you come over here.
He's just talking about people from these countries.
And there's nothing to that.
He's not promising that he's going to put you up in a five-star hotel like they're doing with every Mexican person in New York.
Yes.
Yeah.
He could just put you somewhere saying like, I'm not going to hurt you.
I'm just going to, I'll keep you safe from your government.
So if your government says extradite this person, what you have is a dangerous man.
His name is Michael McKevitt.
He was a three-minute drive from where Trump was the day he was shot.
Now, I'm not putting two and two together, but Russia, you need to consider.
No, no, no.
They don't have traditional treatment.
You know how don't make me regret my decision.
Fair enough, Roll.
There's a tons of question marks.
Like the only people who this would remotely make sense for are people who are, you know, I almost want to say like Ash's family, but they have Poland to go to or the German family that got raided for homeschooling their kids.
Like if your situation is in such dire straits in your home country, they're bankrupting you.
They're arresting and imprisoning your father.
Your kids are getting raped, whatever.
It might make sense for you.
I'm not talking about somebody just being like, this sounds like a good idea.
Let me go to Russia.
It's an example on this.
If you have nothing else where you are, and I don't mean you're just like, hey, man, they teach gay stuff at my kids' school.
I'm going to go to Russia.
I think that's got to be the stupidest thing that you can do because you are walking not into unknown territory because Russia is pretty much known territory.
But I'd be very skeptical that Russians have positive things, positive feelings towards Americans at this point, especially if they're just, I'm going to leave America and I'm just going to live off of Russia.
We gave $600 gorilla to fucking Ukraine.
Well, they can't imagine.
And they imagine they know.
Oh, you're American.
The people that gave all that money to Ukraine and killed my cousin Vasily or whatever.
I mean, I want to bring up Edward Snowden.
He's obviously a special case.
He is not some random neoliberal sufferer from a bunch of insider secrets.
And I'm not, and I'm not an anti-Snowden guy.
I mean, he.
Yeah.
Well, he claimed he didn't and that they didn't ask for it.
He probably told them a bunch of illicit, illegal things that they were doing.
Probably didn't.
He told the whole world that.
I mean, he.
Yeah, right.
And then Putin's going to heck on, bro.
And he found and it's not inconceivable to think that just as Edward Snowden has become a global cause celeb from Russia, that other people would be treated perhaps with less, you know, grandiose or whatever.
You know, I don't think like, I don't think that Edward Snowden's living in like the Trump Tower, Moscow, right?
They're probably like, here's a flat.
You'll be safe.
Don't cause any troubles for us and we won't cause trouble for you.
It would be better.
He had more to offer.
I honestly do think you would not, you're not the person to ask on this subject because I think you went to Russia multiple times and you had a very good experience, but do you think, well, whatever.
Do you think you would have had that same experience if you went post America funding Ukraine specifically to just destroy Russia?
And Russia, Russia's about why America did that.
I think possibly it would be even better.
I think it would be even better.
Like, cause no American would go to Russia on tourism and be like, look, I'm not like, you know, if you go to Russia after in Russia as a young adult.
Yes, I did.
With my now wife.
Okay.
You are the only sex I had in Russia.
You are not a trustworthy witness.
Your entire perspective is.
I was infatuated with my wife for the majority of my time in Russia.
Yeah.
I should have been studying Russian much harder instead.
I was courting my future wife.
That's a true Russian muslim.
Instead of studying Russian, you were studying something else.
The other dark arts.
Yeah.
Anyway, Russia.
Something even worse.
Russia Rolo, Rolo, the Russian.
I appreciate your cynicism and skepticism.
I think that absolutely it is well-founded.
I'm just not there.
And I would look at it in terms of realpolitik.
And they're like, look, we might actually get some propaganda wins.
We would treat these people well, assuming that they weren't lunatics.
I think that's so.
I think that is so naive.
I don't think they would treat people poorly.
Like they wouldn't be treating them like the prisoners in England.
But to think they'd be treated in my history.
Here's my thing.
Like, you know, I don't think that Russia is going to quote unquote treat you like well.
Yes.
But I'm also not worried.
Like I wouldn't be worried that somebody's going to be like, oh, he said nigger, fire me.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
Yes.
I agree with both of those statements.
Yes.
That's that's kind of my thing is that Russia could be a better place to live a quote unquote normal life.
You could not, you absolutely could not engage in politics in Russia, I don't think.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
You could even pro-white activate activists there.
Yes.
If you, if you, if you wanted to do this program and move to Russia, drop politics, shut up, delete your Twitter account.
But hey, but Edward Snowden, Edward Snowden gives speeches to Bitcoin conferences and security conferences over video cam.
They certainly haven't silenced him.
And he's not exactly out there shilling for the glories of Vladimir Putin and the Russian state.
He's speaking pretty freely, but they recognize that he's useful as a dissident.
If you're useful as a dissident, now he's also not like a white nationalist or Nazi or anything like that.
He's giving speeches to bit.
He's saying nerd stuff to nerds.
Who cares?
Who cares what Edward Snowden says, except for all them classified documents?
The one article I read was, in light of all the DEI initiatives in this country, that China was hiring white, you know, qualified executive type guys you know that that who have maybe lost their job or who are looking for a better opportunity.
So I would look at this Russia thing maybe in that light that they could be looking to attract some you know engineering type people or you know professional level people who are, you know hey they're, they're fed up with this or maybe they've lost their job to Dei hires or something like that.
That could be a component in this.
That, and somebody who is, who is a professional, who is relying on that type of income and things are not looking good, maybe they would consider hey, I could go to Russia, I could be apply my professional trade over there and uh, maybe have a good life and not be treated all this faggot shit.
You know yeah, for somebody who's been screwed by the system or by the state, if somebody's coming along and saying look, you know we, we want you either for propaganda purposes or for your talents and we'll pay you well and we'll treat you well, that's an attractive proposition to a lot of people.
Well, and I want to clarify that I don't think that this would be.
It's not worse to live in Russia than it is here.
I'm just talking about specifically a country that is on extremely bad terms with not not just America, basically every NATO country saying yeah, we'll welcome you here.
I I think you should be extremely skeptical if you were independently thinking about moving to Russia, like maybe your wife's family is from there or your family or something.
That's a completely different thing.
But if a country that's not your friend currently says that we'll welcome you, you shouldn't automatically take that as like, oh, look that here, here's the, the yellow brick road, we'll, follow it to odds.
I think that is very silly, unless you are in such dire straits that there's nothing else.
Like really, it has to be like very, very bottom of the barrel.
I have nothing, constant door knocks they're, they're harassing my children, they're.
I can't get a job because of whatever.
But apart from that, like you should not be thinking like oh, a country I know nothing about and you know I I say bad words online and then something, yeah, that that I think is completely retarded.
You basically have to be at the point of like, i'm going to go to actual act of war with government or move to a different country.
And yeah, and never once, to be clear for the record, did I say, hey guys, you should really uh look at this and consider moving to Russia.
Of course not, it's.
It was a major news item, it's absolutely newsworthy and and I agree, and I agree with Rollo on that, but I wasn't suggesting it's just fascinating to think about what they're doing, why they're doing it and to whether it's legit or purely propaganda.
I mean, I would, I would consider doing it.
Like honestly, I would consider doing it.
Uh, the biggest problem is like i'm not going to be the first dude to do it.
I'm probably not going to be the I don't, I probably don't even want to be the 500th dude to do it.
Well, they probably have furniture that needs assembly smasher and you know I could, I am capable, you'd be the guy that that is below me.
Oh, and for those who haven't heard the show before, in our extensive commentary, I was there, real quick, Smasher, 99, you know, ruble crisis, end of Yeltsin, like whatever.
I was in Moscow for a couple of days.
2001, study abroad, drunks, pretty dangerous, seedy, early Putin years.
Fast forward five years, it was noticeably cleaner and safer and more sober.
I can't imagine what it's like, you know, 18 years later or whatever the math is, 2024 minus 2006.
Regardless, it's interesting.
It's fascinating.
We'll see how it goes.
Let's see.
The whole Siberian homesteading thing didn't go anywhere.
Maybe this will go nowhere, or maybe we'll have a case study.
And you bet your ass that if they find a good candidate or a good family that's legitimately oppressed, that they will be treated well and will be faded and might even become minor celebrities as like the Westerners who found healthy, safe refuge in Russia.
If I were the Russian government, I would do that.
Yeah.
Honest take is that I think this goes nowhere, not because probably.
Not because Russia is like bad or would mistreat people or anything, but because it's a hard sell, right?
How do you convince a Westerner, you know, because Russia is, you know, kind of a Western country.
Like, how do you, but how do you convince a true Westerner to move to Russia when they're not you're kind of they're kind of looking for people that want I'm gonna kind of invent a term here, but like passive refuge.
Like Edward Snowden was an active refugee.
As active as they come.
Yeah.
You know, turning his back on his country or betraying state secrets, however you want to, you know, kind of couch that.
He needed somewhere to go that wasn't the United States, wasn't loyal to the United States.
This kind of shtick is like, it's not quite anti-American, but it's very obviously not pro-American.
It's like, you know, it's kind of reaching for people that are like, are you kind of sick of America?
You think America kind of sucks, but like.
There's millions of people who are suffering.
You know, from banyules in France to Malmo citizens to Americans in the ghetto or whatever.
It's almost like an advertisement to the average like Trump voter or their equivalent in European countries.
Yeah.
Like, do you feel like your country kind of sucks and it's not going to get better?
And it's consistent.
Russia has the third Rome ideology in which from Rome to Constantinople to Moscow, Moscow was always going to be the third Rome and the inheritor to the grandeur of Christianity.
Largely a fantasy, you know, for Orthodox Russians, not the case.
But it's, you know, with Putin getting back in the spirit of classical Russian grandeur, it's not entirely crazy that this is not a purely cynical thing.
Regardless, I think, yeah, we've covered enough.
We're at 50 minutes on Russia.
We're going to squeeze it in here real quick, Sam, because I think I might be able to add value.
You asked for a show on retirement, which is certainly a big, and maybe we can come back to it.
But I've been to several retirement, well, at least two retirement seminars.
And I paid how many retirement ceremonies?
When I worked in DC, I went to a bunch of retirement parties, actually.
Bureaucrats were like, We never got any parties.
We just went and stood at parade rest while the army gave Gadud's awards and were like, no one care about this.
Yeah.
But not real quick, Sam.
We don't have to rush this, but in 10 minutes, I think we can cover a lot of ground.
The three legs of the retirement stool traditionally, this is like Financial Advisor 101, are, of course, Social Security, which having a good time, having a lot of having a way to purify water.
There is no retirement where we're going.
I hope you enjoyed it.
I hope you enjoyed your return to Full House, Smasher.
It was a full house.
Look, okay, it wouldn't be, it wouldn't be a return to me on full house fulfilling my role if I wasn't interrupting you and dropping F bumps left and right.
So, Sammy, baby, we got, of course, Social Security.
Second, we would have either the 401k or the pension, right?
You know, in the olden days, it was a pension defined benefit.
The company will give you this based on X service or the 401k, which they transition to.
You will get what you put in plus the company match and then your private personal investment savings, retirement savings, which is usually in the individual retirement account, traditional or Roth.
Obviously, Social Security is dicey.
You can take it as early as 62.
You get the most benefit per month if you wait until 70 as of right now, as of today.
They might shift that older in the coming years to save money on that.
The whole idea of it going broke.
Question for you.
Are you, I suspect that you maybe have like a blended thing where you have a pension from a previous job and an IRA or sorry, a 401k with your current employer?
What's that?
What's that situation from previous employment?
Yeah.
You know, I'm of an age or of a generation where we were for a time, especially in the early 2000s, people were working like just for their wage.
No benefits at all.
I mean, not even insurance, not even health insurance.
And that was not unusual.
And I would hear of people going for jobs, let's say at John Deere, and they would offer like a nice wage, but that's it.
No benefits, nothing, you know, and it's not.
That contradicts our understanding, Sam, that you're from the generation where it was like, okay, here's your job and you're going to get a pension with it and you're going to get full benefits and you just have to show up to the factory every day for 40 years and then you're then your golden.
That word pension was never said in my presence during my entire work life.
So anyways, raising a family and during hard times and things, I never really had anything going for myself until maybe, let's say, 15 years ago.
And then I started to, you know, get things going and set up, like you say, an IRA and annuities and profit sharing and, you know, matching funds with the employer.
So I'd say, you know, in the last 15 years, I'm probably on a very good track, but I've started way too late.
And even the idea of retirement, like one of our friends and a listener proposed the idea.
And I said, ooh, that would be really good.
But even at my age and at this time, retirement seems like extremely far away and remote.
And when it was posed to me, I laughed.
I was like, yeah, retirement.
Yeah, that would be a good one.
You know, I kind of laughed, but in reality, you know, it's something that I should take more seriously.
And probably others are in the same boat.
But in my case, it especially goes along with I've lived my life as like in my chronicle age, chronological age is one thing, but my like actual age is like I'm in my late 20s, let's say.
You know, that's the, that's the way I kind of live my life.
Oh, I got you.
Yeah, you're financial aged.
It occurs to me that it's perhaps unfair to try to shoehorn this in at the end because it's so serious and there are a lot of issues to talk about.
But do you get a 401k with your current employer?
And do they offer the contribution match?
Are you maximizing your message?
Oh, yes.
Yes, absolutely.
That's the golden rule.
Very good.
Do you have control over the investments that that 401k makes?
Is it like whatever?
Does the company do it for you?
Or do you, can you say like some in the sector, et cetera?
There may be like maybe a choice of three different strategies.
Like you want the risky one or the middle of the road or the more conservative one, which would probably be based on your age.
There may be a, you know, you can sign up for the type of plan that you want to believe in.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And at your age, of course, you're not long in the tooth exactly, but you're not a young buck either.
So you're probably middle of the road there.
You don't want to go like all in the most conservative thing that earns the least amount of return, but maybe the most impressive thing is probably, again, not personalized financial information or advice.
We're just doing this generically.
I do have a mix.
There are some things.
I worked for a company for a while in the past where they had a very good program and I eventually transferred that into like a different type of investment, which was a put into a more aggressive type of a program.
But then I also have annuities that are very, very conservative, like the most conservative that it could be.
And then I have a current arrangement with the employer where I'm getting a, I think a very generous match, which I maximized.
And the performance and just, I haven't worked for this company a very, very long time, but just the few years I have worked for them, it's impressive the amount of gains that I've made.
So, yeah.
Do you have, you mentioned IRA, individual retirement account.
Do you know if you have a Roth or a traditional or both?
I think Roth.
Yeah.
Good.
Because I would suggest I did.
Roth is the gold standard for building your war chest for retirement at the most tax.
Obviously, you're sacrificing tax advantages on your contributions.
At your age, you can put up to $8,000 in there, assuming that you and Wifey are not richy-rich.
I have the tab open.
Yeah.
No, I know.
I'm being mostly facetious.
It's the limit to maximize your Roth contribution is $161 per year for single and $240,000 annual adjusTedros income for married couples.
And if you're over 50, you can contribute up to $8,000 in that.
Now, that's $8,000 out the door right now that you may or may not have.
You don't have to answer that.
But the magic of the Roth IRA is that everything that you put in there, first, you decide where it goes from conservative to like, you know, gambling on stupid stocks.
When you don't have to take the minimum required distribution minimum yeah, something like that.
You can just leave that money there forever if you want.
You don't have to take from it from the traditional ira.
At a certain point you have to pull it out a minimum amount every year uh, and the the biggest benefit of it is is that it grows and it grows dividends, appreciation etc.
And they won't tax it.
So if Kamala like, drastically jacks up the income tax, All of this is to say, if you're already making the 401k match contributions, so far as I know from what I heard, if you have extra scratch and you're worried about retirement, maxing out your annual Roth contributions, again, you got up to 8K.
Everybody should invest in the IRA.
The Roth IRA, that's actually the new name for the Irish IRA.
The RIRA, also known as the Real IRA, founded by McEvitt.
Yeah.
I'm sorry.
I've been sitting on that joke this whole time.
That's all right.
And, you know, we can revisit this, Sam, for sure to cover more waterfront and give more personal advice.
Or we could do it offline with one of our pals who I had a specific question for because I was looking at taking some of my traditional IRA and doing a rollover to the Roth.
So basically, that's a penalty.
I guarantee you'll pay a penalty on it.
You will pay income taxes.
Yeah, basically, you're taking the traditional IRA.
The government has already, that's pre-tax money.
So you got a benefit.
Exactly.
When you move it over to the Roth, it becomes taxable income.
But if you're relatively low income, that might not be a big deal.
And you might be like, it makes sense for me to get money into a Roth.
But Sam, you know, wealthy people want to pass money down.
The Roth is the gold standard to build money tax-free.
And if you need it, you can take whatever you want from it.
if you don't need it, you can leave it there and leave it to your kids.
Um, so a big Roth IRA war chest is so much suspense.
Well, yeah.
I hope it comes back.
Anyways, a big Roth IRA war chest is a huge benefit for retirement, but also potentially for your children.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, and I know enough just to be dangerous.
And that's the thing.
Like, I would wish I could sit down with somebody.
I mean, a big thing about it, you guys didn't say it, but a big thing about it is that you're basically prepaying your taxes on it.
Yeah.
Which is good.
It's huge.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And taxes are relatively low right now compared to everything from the past.
So well, and then too, like, I mean, most people don't have kids under 18 when they're retiring, but like paying taxes or including it as taxable income, etc. while you're younger, like, you know, any of the gains or whatever that you have that you would have to potentially pay taxes on, like, can be totally neutralized.
Those retirement seminars that I went to was given by a very savvy lady, and she did the whole traditional, you know, save on taxes now versus save on taxes later.
And she was like, honestly, sometimes I advise taking the bird in hand.
Take that benefit right now.
You know, you've got kids, et cetera.
But in the long term, no taxes on all of that capital growth.
You know, even if you just stick it in the SP 500, assuming that the sky doesn't fall and the system doesn't collapse, which, of course, we often wish that it would, that is way bigger than your little like, you know, tax deduction in year 2024.
So, yeah, absolutely.
Yeah.
Roth, Roth IRA is the way to go.
You might not like it.
You know, you might say that it's Jewish or whatever, but that's how they play the game and how they're intergenerational wealth.
Yeah.
For listeners, too, like this is all kind of long-term, right?
Like, we're talking about retirement.
We're talking about ways to have money when you stop working.
This is all kind of long-term stuff.
I know we've, we, when I was a regular on the show, have talked about accounting and like personal finance in the past.
Uh, but some short-term financial stuff would maybe be a good episode topic, or some middle-term financial stuff would be a good episode topic.
We talked about the Ramsey and stuff, yeah.
I love, I love revisiting, yeah.
Let's do it up.
Um, all right, we are definitely at an hour, and I had a really good run of a few months with my internet not glitching out.
And tonight, it just went haywire.
I was hardwired into the router.
You're welcome, crapped up.
Go figure.
Yeah, cameras off.
Uh, it was a delight, Smasher.
Welcome back.
I'm very happy to be back.
I'm sorry for Rolo and having to do a lot of bleeps, but uh, it was good to have your energy.
Good to have your energy.
Fuck him.
Thank you.
You've been extremely hostile to me several times.
I appreciate it.
Especially since we lost 13 minutes, so I lost the time stamps for everything.
Yeah, that's going to be a lot.
Hey, hey, Rolo, I've never been hostile to anybody I didn't like.
There's a difference between being violent and being hostile.
You got to think about that one.
Reminds me of the early days of the show when half the time I'd be pulling my hair out over a smasher, and half the time I'd be glad that he was here bringing some necessary fire.
Sammy, baby, my parting words: short-term financial hack for poor people.
When you fill out your W-4 for your taxes and how you're going to pay your taxes, even if you're married, fill them out for married filing by yourself or fill them out as a single person filing singularly.
You'll pay more in taxes and then also add $20 or $50.
Why?
So that you get a fat return at the end of the year.
Oh, that's terrible financial.
Smasher is the Fed poster thing.
Give the federal government more money to hold of yours.
Yes.
No, But hear me out.
I know because I come from poor people.
And while I am doing better than the poor people that I come from, it's still things that you pick up on, still things you know about.
Well, if you want to avoid poor people are really at the end of the year, right?
Poor people are bad with money.
This is something that Hitler talks about in Mein Konf.
As soon as somebody, as soon as the poor workman gets money, what's he do?
He wastes it, he drinks it, etc.
That's the party.
Right.
Him and his family, they have a party and then they don't have any money, right?
And so the thing with poor people, and you kind of have to be honest with yourself, like, are you a do you use money like a poor person?
And if The answer is yes, if you spend your money to celebrate because you because you struggle so and and the justification is there like you struggle so much that you as soon as you get a little scratch, you spend it on something pleasurable, right?
Yeah, because you don't know when the next time you might get to do it.
So exactly.
And so the way to beat that is like invest in your tax return, which is I totally know where you're coming from, but I totally, it's bad advice.
It's not, it's not bad advice.
It is good advice for a bad lifestyle.
It's good advice for people.
It's good advice for people who would be woefully unprepared to get a big tax bill when they file their taxes.
But most people are low income.
That's very low likelihood too.
Sure, sure.
But even if you're low income, even if you're low income, if you pay the extra money in your taxes right now, you'll get that much bigger of a return and it'll be that much sweeter at the end of the year.
You're not going to miss that party.
Right.
You're not going to miss that 50 bucks in your paycheck, but when it's like $2,000 or whatever it ends up being at the end of the year, like that's going to be way better.
No, if you're poor, you need that extra $50.
That's a lifelong.
No, you don't.
Like an extra mentality user provo.
No, it is not.
Well, if you're poor, you should be getting food stamps for sure.
Oh, absolutely.
Oh, yeah.
This is this is really for like people that are too poor to afford to live, but make too much money to get food stamps, which is a huge amount of people in America.
That's a real issue.
Yep, yep, yep.
You are the ones getting screwed the worst.
You're missing out on the sweet Bennies.
You're working hard as hell.
You've got some massive deductible on your Obamacare health insurance, right?
You're too rich for Medicare, too rich for food stamps, but you're working like a dog.
That is a really, real phenomenon.
Now, your tax rates are still pretty low if you're in that situation, but you're absolutely getting hosed.
And there's a real moral hazard there where you're like, screw this.
Like, it's better to be almost like a derelict poor and get the Benny's than like work like a dog.
Right.
Right.
Yep.
It's almost better to just actually be poor than it is to like get the Medicaid, get the EBT and get the, you know, if you make a certain amount of money, you get an earned income tax credit benefit.
You still get the child tax credit, you know, have a lot of kids, make a little bit of money.
There's, yeah, there, there's, there's still teach them to steal.
Don't forget about that part.
If you make, if you make more than like $32,000 a year or less than like $120,000 a year, you might as well just like stop.
And that's not, I mean, that's not a ride on anybody.
It's just like, no, no, no, no, I know.
Yeah.
There's some way that it's, yeah, right.
The way that everything is set up is just like you're going to lose in that situation.
Like America wins, you lose.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sam, you should also know what your net worth is.
I've actually been listening to an audio book stocks for dummies, which I'm not a dummy on stocks, but like I had the audio book for free and I was like, I'll just go through the basics or whatever.
And that's one of the first things is, and we discussed this on our previous money shows, you know, the whole budget and knowing where everything is going, but all of your assets and all of your debts, your liabilities, and see where you are.
And see if it's a negative number or not.
Is that what you're trying to get?
It should be a positive.
Should be a positive number.
And the other thing is too, Sam, like, you know, whatever you're banking with.
Well, it could be a negative number if you own a house, right?
Whatever your IRA is, you might get a free consult with whether it's Schwab or Fidelity or Vanguard or whoever it is, whoever you're with.
And I don't want to know.
They very when I was like 23 and starting out, I remember I went into Fidelity and they like sat me down and talked.
It was like a young person.
It was mostly bullshit, you know, low value client treatment.
But somebody would probably walk you through that for free and give you recommendations.
Now, of course, they want you to invest in their stocks and their funds, et cetera.
But yeah, you can definitely get some professional advice as well.
But know where you are.
Max out that Roth if you can every year, although getting the matching on the 401k is more important because that's obviously the free money.
And hold off.
And if you stay in good health, you hold off on social security for as long as you can.
That's the general common wisdom is if you can make it to 70 and more or less good health and you're not like, you know, scraping by for food, it makes sense to get those fat social security stacks waiting for until 70, as opposed to taking tinier ones at 62.
And then the investments of your 401k are important too.
There's a lot of 401ks and stuff that will just be like, yeah, you're stuck in this like bucket of garbage or middling garbage when everybody else is getting rich on like Broadcom and NVIDIA, et cetera.
And sometimes you just go with the herd, right?
Just because there's like buzz stocks doesn't mean they're like, you could say that that's like a craze or a phase or whatever to invest in NVIDIA or Costco or Apple or whatever.
But all that matters is growing your money and having a good retirement.
And then finally, real estate is usually one of the biggest components of most people's net worth.
And, you know, looking at possibly making if, you know, when you get to the point where you're not working anymore and it doesn't make sense to live in your big, beautiful house anymore, put some capital improvements in there before selling and get the hell out of Dodge and relocate to a whiter, cheaper, perhaps, you know, smaller house.
And that'll, and that'll give you a huge financial comfort in the years to come.
Still with space for your kids and your grandkids.
But sure.
And we did this partially for the benefit of the audience to talk about the three legs of the stool.
And I'd be happy to talk about it.
And there are plenty of guys in our thing who are better situated to give you personalized advice off the books.
If you're better situated, send money.
We do know some financial gurus who, anyway, they've been kind enough.
All right.
Rollo, you are a saint and a savior and about to be upgraded technologically.
Thank you, buddy, for my IT issues, smashers, indiscretions, and no criticism of Sam this week.
Never any criticism of Sam.
No, no, that's not true.
I've got criticism of Sam.
I got a nasty gram in the email.
I'm going to get to it.
I mean, there's okay.
Look, no criticism of Sam from people that are no good poopy pants and liar liar pants on fire.
Oh, I got criticism today on Twitter.
Somebody called me a degenerate.
But it wasn't Sam.
No, it wasn't Sam.
No.
I told them to cry about it.
I also, oh man, I also missed a feds meeting feds announcement.
I'm going to do it.
It's really quick.
Hello, coach Sam Rollo and Darrell.
He's a true fan.
I don't know if you're still doing feds meeting feds, but I'd like to throw my hat into the ring if you are.
I'm a 35-year-old white Protestant man living in Maine looking for a suitable lady to marry.
Thank you and God bless.
I'm sorry.
Don't listen to him.
And I said, Yes, absolutely.
I would do it.
That's not a lot of detail, but there you go.
35-year-old white Protestant man living in Maine.
And he's looking to get it on.
Hit us up, ladies.
If you made it this, I'll do this one again.
Next show.
We need more.
We need more.
There he is.
Yeah, we loved him to get it on.
He ain't be looking at us.
You know what I'm saying?
Niggas, we keep it on the download button.
You know, you rolling the ride behind the back alley.
Hey, you know, I'm a big Judy Rottweil.
You know what I'm saying?
Shut up, Derek.
We need more info.
Okay.
It's hard to look at that.
Yep.
That was pretty vague.
Not exactly enticing.
Yeah, is he like a bodybuilder or what?
I'm a 35-year-old Protestant living in like the most depressed white.
I am a man.
I am a man living in a country.
Any women looking for man?
It's super white and super depressed.
Like, oh, great.
Wow.
So who knows?
Some lady in Maine might be like, that's exactly what I'm looking for right now.
You know, I don't.
People from Maine are weird.
So maybe that's how they communicate.
Yeah, this might be the right thing for the right person.
Including Protestant was kind of strange.
Like, well, that's part of it.
He just picked the three most important things.
I respect that.
Yeah.
35-year-old white Protestant Mainer.
Yeah.
It's all that matters.
Yeah.
All right.
On to the hate mail.
Coach, what the hell is the subject?
Coach, I couldn't believe my ears this past show.
The worst part wasn't your intern.
That's a reference to Rollo, but rather Sam.
Oh, it is?
I had no idea.
Well, he was even, he was even nastier there, but I'm not going to say it.
Oh, wow.
Oh, I bet.
Oh, my God.
But rather, yeah, Sam can handle it.
Who seemed to be implying that we shouldn't.
Well, yeah, he was insulting to you and he was on the topic with Sam.
But rather, Sam, who seemed to be implying that we shouldn't root for Israel to lose control over the Palestinians because then they'll come for us.
If anyone is so afraid of being banned that they wouldn't root for the Jew to lose anywhere and everywhere, what does that say about Sam?
I can't believe who isn't rooting for Jews to lose, though.
Yeah.
We don't misrepresent everything we're saying.
Oh, no.
I remember Sam saying that and being go, I'm not sure about it.
I heard in my ears that Sam was being like, well, we don't want them to lose.
And I'm, I'm paraphrasing.
It sounded a little bit like, we don't want them to lose Israel.
Then they'll be nastier to us here.
I do remember that.
This guy's not totally off his rocker.
No, What I was saying is anyone, anyone who thinks that we have something to root for over there is not thinking clearly.
I just saw the clever meme and memes say it better than anyone else.
And the top was a picture of the guy and he's saying, the question is, Palestine or Israel.
And then the bottom is there's the guy with the American flag and he says, no, America.
You know, that's, I guess, my sentiment is, you know, and also to clarify, I will represent the gay sex version that has been co-opted.
I'll root for anybody that shoots RPGs at Jews.
I mean, I'm not the social media.
I'm not going to be America.
I'm not going to Palestine.
What's the difference?
Yeah.
Right.
I'm not going to pretend that like Palestinians are my best friends or good for like white America in like paragon.
Right.
Like, no, dude, they're, they're, they, they are who they are separate from us.
They are Jew victims.
They are Jew victims and they are actively firing high explosives at the people that are killing white Americans.
And that is cool.
That's true.
And I stand by the enemy of my enemy is not always my friend.
So, you know, if the Jews die, oh, oh, oh, wow.
Oh, geez.
Oh, is oh, no, whatever.
The enemy of my enemy is not always my friend, but the enemy that kills my enemy is always working in my favor, even though that's not their intent.
That's a good way to put it.
That's a good way to put it.
McMahon, you know, level two memes.
I guess what I would see is be the thing to cheer for is white people galvanizing some type of cohesion with each other in this country.
And if there are less Jews in the world, that becomes easier.
So like I would, I would say that anti-whitism in America has lessened since Palestinians started firing RPGs at Jews.
I don't know about that.
I don't know about that.
I really don't.
I think they are thinking.
I really don't think so.
Jews are busy fighting for their own survival against Palestinians.
That's just that from what I've seen.
Correlation.
Maybe not causation.
I know what you mean that they've taken the heat off of Whitey a little bit like Robbie Starbuck has gone after John Deere and Harley Davidson and big companies are backing off.
Yeah, Jack Daniels, like a bunch of people are pulling like a bunch of huge corporations pulling out of gay stuff.
Tractor supply.
Yeah, but I would chalk a lot of that up how big of a failure DEI product has been.
And I mean like movies, TV shows and video games, like all the D stuff.
They're still pumping out shit like the acolyte, though.
Yeah, but that stuff went into production two, three, four years ago.
And then Acolyte season two just got canceled.
And they had no reason to cancel it.
Let me just finish.
I think Roma Victor is a sock name.
He goes on to say, as for the idea that the Jew will come for us after they crush Palestine, they're already coming for us.
And if when they completely genocide or displace the Palestinians, they'll no longer be fighting that enemy within and will have more money and time to focus on us.
Also, one of the ways they're seeking to destroy Palestine is to deport them to our countries.
I see no way that Israel defeating Palestine helps us in many ways.
It would hurt us.
And no way am I saying that that was my position on this is because this is exactly the reason why I take up the position that I take up because there are these people that basically, when we, Sam and I, I think, have a similar position where we're like white first.
And I don't care.
I'm not going to champion Palestinians.
So these people say, oh, you're pro-Israel.
Oh, you're pro-Jew.
Oh, no.
No, I didn't say that.
And that's my whole problem is these people, they go, I'm pro-Palestine, because if I'm not, then I must be pro-Israel.
And I'm not pro-Israel.
No one.
You know, the most faced, 1488 red Tiller and the entire Telegram.
Okay, you don't have to be pro, you don't have to be pro Palestine, you just.
And then me saying, and that's going to get cut from the show, just so everybody knows.
Okay, all right, we don't need to be talking about penises anymore.
All right last, last sentence from Roma Victor.
And come on, and this might be directed at me, because I mentioned the like swarthy hordes waving the Palestinian flag.
Nobody can think that all those brown rioters in England are Palestinians.
I certainly don't think that they're all Palestinians, obviously no, they're waving that.
They're like Pakistani and like yeah, they're like, they're merely waving Africans and random sand monkeys because it's the flag of a Muslim Arab country and they've been told that the Jew is White.
England is in a race war masquerading as a religious war.
So hey, take that for what it's worth.
It's a rare ball that we got.
Yeah um, but I, but yeah, and and and again.
People like this they, they get so hung up on being Anti-jewish that they like, they hinge ever all of their beliefs on it and look, yes if if, if.
Think about every single major problem with, if you, if you, if you, if you eliminate Jews from everything.
Like, then we can have a country.
Like we can have manufacturing, we get crime.
Yeah yeah yes yeah, but but at this, but at the same time.
Just because, like you're, you're Pro-Palestine doesn't mean, like that, that benefits white people, just because Jews find it annoying.
Because I'll go back to a question I saw a long time ago, like what would Netanyahu want?
Would he want you to be pro or Anti-Palestine?
Well, if Palestinians are fighting Jews, they want you to be Anti-Palestinian, but if they're sending them to your country, they want you to be Pro-Palestine.
Like oh, do you not want to welcome these people and get more culturally enriched?
I want.
I want Palestinians to have a state so I can send them all back to it.
They're better than anyone.
Okay, with no one asked.
No one asked.
I know I believe it.
I believe in a one-state solution.
Um, Palestine only, all the Palestinians have to go back.
Uh the, the new state for the Israel right of return is Mariana's Trench, I hear this time of year, and we'll send them all there.
Good, good snorkeling, I hear.
I hope you enjoyed your time on the show smasher, because it's not coming again for a while.
Look look, don't.
Donald trump got shot three minutes from my house and an FBI agent still didn't show up.
I don't know what I have to say publicly to clear somebody to show up.
They know you didn't.
They know you didn't do it because they planned it.
It's been.
They had a cell phone track there, like that's.
It's been near a decade of me FED posting and everybody saying the FBI is going to raid your house and take your kids and do this and do that, and they still haven't even shown up to ask me any questions.
Careful yeah, can't we talk about like puppies or something already next.
No, i'm not.
I'm not allowed to talk about.
I'm not allowed to talk about puppies, because the last time I thought about a puppy, I bought one without telling my wife he's got a fourth dog.
Just just what you need.
Yeah four, four kids.
Not only is it, not only is it a fourth dog, it is uh, like roughly one-third wolf.
All right let's, let's wrap this puppy up before we get in any more trouble.
I just want to never wrap it up.
Drudge Report sucks balls.
I keep telling myself i'm But, you know, I've been going to the Drudge Report.
He's not involved.
Probably actually makes it worse.
I think he still sucks balls, coach.
He's never quit that.
Yeah, no, but yeah, I think he sold out.
There was an article like, where the hell, what the hell happened to Drudge?
He sold out.
He doesn't suck balls anymore.
I've been clicking on the Drudge Report at least once a day for two decades.
And I know that it's been going downhill.
And now I'm looking at it and it's wall-to-wall, Kamala Harris.
I don't care if you turn against Trump.
That's fine.
But like, they've just totally turned into lionizing Kamala Harris.
It's remarkable.
And that was once the conservative right-wing go-to anti-Obama.
Is it Kamala or Kamala?
Kabala.
Kabala Horetz.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I remember seeing stuff about, oh, people are saying her name wrong all of a sudden.
Well, you know what?
Here's the thing.
If it was just a white, if it was a white person, we'd know how to say her name because it would be like Annie or Lucy or Judy.
It wouldn't be like some kind of stupid monkey name.
True.
All right.
Thank you guys.
If you've made it this far, you are a true trooper.
It is now 1.20 a.m. on August 24th.
We started on August 23rd.
I was out in the gazebo.
Internet's been bulletproof up until halfway through the second half.
Thank you to Sam, Rolo, and even Smasher for making it through this dog's breakfast of a content show.
We will revisit a lot of this stuff.
Russia, retirement, girls, DNC, you name it.
We covered it.
The IRA.
Something about Roths.
People name Roth.
Yes.
Now, I have been.
And how the IRA would handle them.
Wifey and I have been watching my so-called life just for the 90s nostalgia.
A.J. Langer from Arcade.
A.J. Langer was the like wild girl, etc.
Was Megan Ward in that?
I don't know.
Of course it was.
Player Danes.
Yes.
It's actually Jared Letto.
Yes, of course.
A lot of big starts there.
The point is, it's not a gay guy.
It gives a lot of 90s feels.
It's not actually that good.
It's, you know, Jewish producers.
It's like all this drama and like the parents and stuff.
A lot of 90s.
There's one scene where the father is up fixing the gutter and he's had troubles with his teenage daughter in high school and she comes out and the dad is listening to a Grateful Dead song.
I am not and I never have been and I never will be a deadhead.
Obviously, there are some good dead songs.
Grateful dead sucks.
The song that he is listening to in this 90s nostalgic series is a beautiful.
Nope, nope, nope, nope.
It is an acoustically immaculate song that I love and I wholeheartedly endorse.
You can call me a faggot, a prick, a shiller, or whatever.
It's a good song.
It's called Althea.
It's by the Grateful Dead.
And the audience can judge for themselves.
Suggested accompaniments include hanging out on the porch with your wife, a family fire pit in the backyard, or maybe a long car ride.
I'm staking my reputation that this is a good song.
It's Althea by the Grateful Dead.
And Rolo, you certainly earned it.
It's all yours.
Please take us out.
Sia.
God bless if you made it this long.
Althea told me I don't screw to me, like my back, mine need protection.
I told LD that treachery.
Stare at me, him from limb.
Althea told me I'm cold and born, Settle back.
Easy, kid.
It may be a cloud in the burying ground or just another pretty face.
It may be the fate of a feeling Sleeping and prechance to dream, Honest to the point of recklessness, Self-centered to the extreme.
Bye.
Lose with the truth, Baby, it's your fault Baby, don't get burned When the smoke has cleared, She said.
That's what she said to me, Wanna wanna be to lay your head and a little sympathy.
There are things you can't replace And others you can learn.