Couldn't resist squeezing in another Halloween special for one more show before the election night livestream (November 5 at 8 pm eastern on Telegram & Odysee). More spooky tales, horror movie endorsements, investing & the economy, Sam's new senior citizen dining discounts, coming of age birthday parties, and eventually we succumb to the temptation of politics in the second half of the second hour. Bumper: The Farthest Star by VNV Nation Break: Theme of Laura by Akira Yamaoka (DJ Rolo) Close: We Will Rise Again by the Hope County Choir (Choir Version) FH-endorsed GiveSendGo for victims of Hurricane Helene. 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're just over one week out now from the Super Bowl of American politics, the debauched bacchanal of nationwide bluster and bloviation.
And I hope we can avoid adding to it this week, especially since, in case you missed the news, we are going to dust off the live stream machinery on Tuesday, November 5th, starting at 8 p.m. Eastern, broadcasting live on Telegram and Odyssey as well.
Now, we had a blast doing the same four years ago.
And I dare say we also did a good job.
And we've already lined up a bunch of big names and lesser known pros to not just call the horse race, but to discuss what either outcome might mean for us and the world over the next four years.
International talent as well, I might add.
So mark your calendars, hang out with us live, and even get tagged into the show on Telegram if you'd like.
We'll be use Telegram as the home base.
You can join the broadcast and put your hand up if you want to get in and hopefully have something smart to say.
Arguably more importantly, we still have a few days left here in October, king of months for its natural beauty, spectacular weather, crunchy leaves, and of course, the perfect synergy of kid and parent joy alike as Halloween approaches.
We'll see if we have any good yarns left in the tank this week, spooky or otherwise.
So, Mr. Producer, please hit it.
On to Full House,
the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole BioFam.
It is episode 198 on the relentless march to 200.
But whatever you do, don't divide our total number of shows by a number of years broadcasting to get our average number of productions per year.
It's actually not that bad when you add it all up.
Regardless, I am, as always, your honorific, horrific host, Coach Finstock, back with another hour, probably two, of audio that at bare minimum will be better than last week.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Ryan Sneedful and Anonymous King for their courageous contributions and kind compliments to keep us cracking.
If you'd like to be like them, just go to givesendgo.com slash fullhouse or drop us a line to fullhouse show at protonmail.com.
And with all of that, enough of me.
Let's meet the lads.
First up, he might not have the pipes of plant yet, but increasingly he does have the fingers of page.
Sam, another treat letter to sting along to you last weekend.
Yeah, man, that was really great.
I was going to talk about that a little bit later, but yeah, what a treat.
And you can't be any more right than you were when you mentioned about the weather and the time of year.
You know, I love that little bit of a wild autumn wind that gets in the air and the smell of leaves and bonfire.
We had a backyard fire in our fire pit last night.
I finally received my full house hoodie, which is beautifully done.
And we were celebrating my wife's birthday.
So it was a great time to be outside.
And I just love that wild fall weather.
And I know coming up here, we got we got the election coming up, but if it's not too early, I want to remind people, you know, Crystal Night's coming up November 9th.
And that's for us always a great day, great evening to be outside with a with a wildfire and roasting some meat and singing some songs, playing some marches and stuff like that.
So make it your own.
Yeah, burning some books.
Make it a family tradition in your house too.
dear listener.
Amen.
Yeah, the October winds, they're sort of refreshing after a hot summer and they're also foreboding too of the winter imminent.
And the other day, Sam, I was driving in western Maryland, which of course, Maryland gets a bad rap and it deserves it.
But the little peninsula or isthmus, the western, the furthest west extremity of Maryland is spectacularly gorgeous.
I made a wrong turn because I wasn't paying attention to the GPS and I could have just turned back, but it was so jaw-droppingly spectacular with the hills, the fields, the leaves, everything.
And I just rolled, I just rolled with it and I drove half an hour out of my way through God's country.
So which does exist in Maryland too.
And I was listening to Bench Seat at the time by Chase Rice, the one about the dog.
And may have gotten a little bit misty, but everyone knows that's not a particularly rare occurrence around here with this big soft.
Thank you again, Sam.
Let's talk.
We'll talk.
We can talk about the playing too.
I mean, you had all those lyrics memorized and that's the biggest thing.
It's one of those things that, you know, when somebody's playing at, it looks easy.
Maybe they're not even that good.
Maybe I'm not that good.
But just remembering, remembering all the lyrics, remembering all the songs in order, remembering all the words.
Yeah, it's, it's, I'm telling you, that's the hardest thing about if some, oh, wow, you have a nice voice or you, you know how to play the guitar.
The remembering is the hardest part by far.
That was a song by Tom Diddy, I think.
And you have to, you have to keep doing it and it must become like muscle memory, not only your voice, but your, your, your left and the right hand.
It's got to become, and it does get to a point.
It feels like that.
It feels like I'm not even playing the song.
It's like I'm listening to a record and it's playing itself.
But that's, that's the way you have to do it to even make it listenable.
Because when people listen to a song, they expect it to be like almost perfect, even if you think, well, that's, that's like unreasonable.
But yeah, we'll chat about that.
Honestly, impressive.
And next, the rumors are true.
He has assembled his homebrew Cray supercomputer made possible by two full house hero donors.
I see you there, fellas, smiling deservedly.
The only question now is whether he plans to use it to reenact the weird science premise or inject malware into Israel's Samson option targeting software.
Rolo, congratulations.
Well, until I get married, it will be the weird science.
Adding more imperative to getting you wifed up so you can move on to bigger things.
But you're, yeah, you just like, you know, you got the box and you just put all the little pieces in there and it's alive.
Oh, yeah, it's plug and play.
I haven't done anything with it yet just because I'm I need to transfer everything over.
But what I want to do is some guy told me that I can do it where I can pretty much take my program files here and put them on the other computer.
Because the thing I don't want to do is have to re-download everything just because those are big files and it's going to take me a while with my primitive internet.
You know, it's how it goes.
And if that's what I have to do, then that's what I'll do.
But until then, well, you know, we'll see.
But I have a story I want to tell.
Okay, before you tell the story for the audience's edification and to assuage their annoyance.
Uh, what happened with our uh audio engineering last week?
And why am I dumb?
Well, you're dumb because you eat paint chips and um sorry, i'm getting okay on to your story.
No no no, I mean I swear like we literally went into the control panel and disabled the laptop microphone and we had the yeti in the middle of the table.
We were tapping it as if it was picking up the sound, but it sounded like garbage and it was all over the place.
What?
Yeah, my my best guess is, uh, Windows decided, no no no, you're gonna use the laptop mic.
That's my best guess.
Because it?
Because it would have been one thing if you sounded crystal clear and everyone else sounded terrible right, but that wasn't the case.
You sounded bad.
So my best guess is it would just defaulted to the laptop mic, which it does happen every now and then i'll, i'll be talking and like what's going on here, and it switches from you know, this mic that i'm using and it it picks another thing that's plugged in like yeah, that's not only mic, but hey, whatever.
Sorry about that, guys.
It was a brand new yeti.
The light was on, it had two very weird uh buttons in the back settings.
One was like a perfect circle, one was like a circle with a Pac-man wedge taken out of it.
Thought maybe that was directional.
We messed around with that.
Regardless, you're a true trooper.
If you soldiered through that, audio hats off to you.
Uh, fire away with your story please roller, all right.
So I saw a girl not too long and uh, she had a very good body.
So I said i'm gonna go and talk to this woman.
And now she did turn around.
Now, this is uh, it's kind of a game.
Uh, everyone i've told this story to they've gotten it wrong.
So if you, you see a girl's face, what would be the one feature that would immediately turn you off?
A giant nose, start with you.
Okay, that's, that's coach's answer.
Sam, it's one feature.
Uh yeah yeah, frizzy hair, a wide nose yeah, one feature.
You only get one.
One feature.
And no no no, I mean you one feature, immediate shut up.
One feature immediately turns you off.
So coach goes with big nose.
Yeah uh yeah, prominent Jewish shaped nose.
Okay, all right, we haven't we well, okay.
Well our, our unannounced guest to date can chime in, of course, you to Brow.
Okay, all right.
Well, can we keep going with this really bad acne?
Oh no, you're okay.
I was gonna say um, our unannounced guest was the closest.
Uh, her teeth were stained brown, oh man, and it was very obvious, chain smoking.
Yeah, a bunch of people say Jewish nose, like that you.
First thing that came to mind.
Uh yeah, but that would have killed her genuine.
Okay, facial hair is a better answer.
But yeah, her teeth asymmetry.
I've i've seen yellow teeth before, but i'd never seen a like a woman that's near my age that had nicotine brown, stained teeth and it was.
It was bad because the rest of her face looked fine, but I was like, oh my gosh I I my, my mouth cannot go anywhere near that.
That's, that's weird, awful.
I'm not sure that that's smoking rollo, because even when I was like a pack a day in college my, i'm not three packs a day It was very obvious that she was like chain smoking.
Yeah.
Maybe she's like mouthwashing with coffee because coffee will stay in my lower teeth.
So here's here's the thing with a lot of people that drink coffee and smoke cigarettes, the nicotine and the caffeine cancel each other out.
So you need more caffeine and you need more nicotine.
So those people tend to drink more caffeine and smoke more for nicotine.
Chasing the dragon.
So it probably it probably is both.
Okay.
But yeah, that was that.
Yep.
So, you know, the search is still on.
So she was attractive otherwise.
Yeah, I know, right?
Well, yeah, but the habits that cause it aren't, though.
That's the problem.
It's, you know, emblematic of a bigger issue.
Now, is this the same one, not to share too many personal details, the one that like was asking about you, but she was older and with child already?
No, that, no, it was not.
Okay.
Okay.
Different one.
So yeah.
All right.
No, that girl's teeth were white at least.
Yeah.
Good point, though.
Third or fourth and final special guest, I guess, were a foursome this week.
But I want to talk more about the like deal breaker things with women roller because I want to talk about women this week and their problems and our advice to them.
We're always giving guys advice and dads advice on kids and stuff.
I think it's time we give the ladies some advice.
Sam might know more about their pipes and plumbing than they do.
But regardless, finally, parachuting in from far right field.
And by far right field, of course, I mean the ecumenical patriarch eight of Constantinople.
Justin, welcome back, McKay.
Thanks for having me.
Appreciate it.
The best I could do on short notice.
Happy to have you.
Real quick here at the top.
You're a father of several.
Are you a Halloween respecter?
And do you have anything cooking this time of year?
Yeah, I let my kids enjoy it.
I've never really been a fan.
My older son is not a fan either.
So I appreciate that for him.
I do have some concerns about attitudes around it.
I don't want to get too dire, I guess, or too.
Dour.
Yeah.
Dour.
Dour dire.
Yeah.
But yeah, it's a fun holiday.
I think people can take it too far and it can definitely color some people's attitudes the wrong way.
But yeah, no harm, no foul, I guess, in most cases.
Fair enough.
Yeah, I never really cared about it.
Well, there's when you're a kid, you get excited to go get candy.
And then as an adult, I didn't care about it until we had kids and watching, you know, your firstborn at two or three walk around the neighborhood and go to neighbors' houses and stuff.
That was, I was like, okay, I'm a respecter.
I'm a fan now.
And as you mentioned, our oldest is maybe going to come out with us and walk around like a skunk.
And the other two are still excited.
And I'm super excited because our youngest wants to be Frankenstein this year, which is a relatively easy costume.
You know, he's about.
Well, yeah, all you need is a lab coat and some regular clothes.
I mean, he's just the regular doctor.
Dr. Frank, not Dr. Frankenstein.
He's going to be the reincarnation.
Oh, Frankenstein's monster.
Oh, oh, gosh.
I forgot you eat paint chips.
Yeah.
testy this week.
Well, I think for kids.
We need you for this for the live stream.
I can't give it back.
You got me over a barrel.
Go ahead, Sam.
For kids, I think it's nothing more than a costume party.
And who doesn't like to dress up and be something, whether it's a superhero or an animal or a ghost or whatever it is.
But my concern, if I was to voice a concern about Halloween, is it's another part of the infantilization of adults that is done in this country as people are focused away from families, from having families and being families.
They care about dressing up and investing.
I think I read that Halloween is the holiday that people spend the most money on when they attend all their costume parties and things like that.
And I understand.
Preparations for outside your house, the gigantic skeletons with the light up eyes.
They're pretty cool.
But that's just several hundred bucks a pop.
Right.
And so it's focusing away from kids towards this.
Like I said, there's nothing wrong with having fun, but this is a, you can see this is a problem in our society.
And I remember many years ago, I'm a comic book collector.
And I can remember when the comics switched to where it would say they started putting the little thing on there for mature readers.
Like, aren't comic books for kids?
You know?
And, you know, when we started focusing all these things that would be otherwise for kids for make it making it an exclusively adult thing, that that does say something is wrong to me.
Yeah.
And I wouldn't blame Halloween or the culture around it for that, right?
It's just, it's the comic books and what the part of the Christmas sweaters and that whole stuff.
Yeah.
It's it's part of the shift in society that is, I think, an unhealthy one.
Yeah.
I don't wear a costume when the kids go out and trick-or-treat for me.
My wife has encouraged me to, but I just like to watch them runner around.
Yeah, I do like that it I remember this now.
My oldest son is too old by a number of years to go out there.
They have guidelines now in the community for many years that above age 14, you're not supposed to be out there and people will even deny you the candy or whatever.
So, but when the kids were little, I thought it was nice walking around the neighborhood and seeing the other residents, the white ones anyways, and having a nice little chat with them.
When else would I encounter these people?
I don't know anyone in this whole neighborhood.
And I lived here for a long time now.
And I always liked that part of it, that people are outside sitting out on their porch and you would just get to know the neighbors.
So that was good about it.
Absolutely.
Justin, think about this one.
I'm not going to filibuster or waste time, but this occurred.
One of the unexpectedly positive segments that we've done over five years, it's been plus five years, was when we talked about our supposedly supernatural or spooky experiences, probably two, maybe three years ago, including several that we had here on this property or in this house personally that overlapped in a couple cases with my wife.
And we were sitting there watching a movie the other night.
The lights were out.
The candles were lit.
The leaves were blowing outside.
The dog was off howling at something like a wolf.
And I said, you know, we, I don't think, have you experienced anything weird after that first year or two here when we both did?
And she said, no, I have not.
And of course, you know, we had a glass of wine and we're watching a spooky movie.
I said, you know, maybe they moved on.
Maybe they were like, these are good people or we didn't scare them or our service here is done.
But I did.
When I shared our numerous weird interpretations or experiences here those couple years ago, that was 100% true.
I was not trying to be spooky for the purposes of the show.
And I thought that it was just interesting now that we are here two years later.
We're much more firmly established.
It's not like we're less superstitious now than we were then.
We weren't then, but absolutely nothing after a sort of series of weird occurrences here.
So food for thought.
For those who are really spiritual or into that stuff, maybe there is something to ghosts moving on or exercising their own demons and then getting a move on.
I don't know.
But Justin, you are a man of Christ.
I think that's fair to say.
Have you, in your many years on earth, experienced anything supernatural or spooky or ghost-like or dead relatives, anything of the sort?
Anything remotely supernatural that physics couldn't explain?
Yeah, I've had a few experiences.
All right.
Good answer.
Yeah, let's get into it.
Okay.
So I guess one.
I didn't know.
You could have been like, no, yeah.
Okay.
Like on the spooky level, the previous house we lived in before a couple evenings we did have some interesting experiences where myself, my wife, and my children have all experienced it where we felt that there was or we heard like a small child playing in the hall upstairs in our house when no one was awake to play.
So all the little boys were asleep.
Yeah, you had kids at the time.
Okay.
Yep.
We had kids, but no one was awake.
And I went and checked and there was nobody there, but they all heard the playing of a little boy and the mother talking to him or, you know, whatever.
So there's some interesting stuff there in that house there.
It was, there was nothing malevolent about it.
It didn't feel negative.
It was just we experienced some interesting sounds and some stuff that could be explained by our behavior.
Same here.
Wife had one menacing one, but she wasn't sure if it were.
I don't mean to cut you off, but yeah.
Same rough experience.
Go on, sir.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So the other two, let me go into at least one of them.
One of the other situations I had was when I was a young kid, I was like 12 years old.
I was screwing around.
I snuck over a fence and I was at like a country club somewhere and they had a closed pool for whatever reason.
And I was screwing around the diving board and I slipped and I hit my head on the diving board and it knocked me out and someone pulled me out of the water.
And this person, you know, just made sure I was okay.
And then as I came to, like, they were gone.
No one was there.
Oh, I think you told me this one.
Yeah.
I remember online.
And so, so I kind of got back to my senses and I realized, oh, I'm in this place.
There's nobody around.
There's no people there.
I'm on the edge of this pool.
Was your guardian angel?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I do believe that.
And that whatever being or person that was protected me from my own stupidity and got me out of the pool.
And I went back and I talked to my mother and she didn't believe me.
She's like, okay, whatever.
That sounds weird.
My grandfather was like, yeah, I felt something was happening and I didn't know what it was.
And I was, he's like, I felt really anxious and upset and I didn't know what was happening.
And now you come tell me the story.
Now I understand that there was something going on.
And so he felt something was going on.
He didn't know, he didn't understand it either, but he was like, I definitely, you know, I felt something going on.
Disturbance in the forest.
Yeah.
And that was something pretty interesting for that.
And my grandfather was a if I could just ask real quick, do you?
Uh, can you give any description?
Was it an ethereal, like foggy figure?
Was it a specific figure?
What would you remember?
No, it just, it was just like a person, right?
There's no, there's nothing supernatural.
It didn't feel supernatural in the moment of being recovered, I guess, from the water.
It's just like, oh, a person pulled me out like a lifeguard.
And I was like, oh, that's weird.
There shouldn't be a lifeguard.
This pool was supposed to be closed.
And I went and like talked to people in at the country club and doing whatever.
And they're like, oh, yeah, there's that pool is closed.
There's nobody there.
No one's on duty.
Everyone has a guardian angel.
You should talk to your guardian angel.
And certain people are favored with the experience of either seeing their guardian angel or learning their guardian angel's name.
Is this Catholic canon, Sam?
Yes.
Yes, absolutely.
It's Orthodox canon also.
My youngest son, who seems more attuned to these types of things, he says he's seen his guardian angel.
So I'll give you that.
Yeah, please carry on.
I'll do the second one, right?
So that was the pool story.
That was when I was 12.
I was a little older.
I was in the army.
I, this is a, this is a, this is a difficult story, but I, I was at a party and there was a young woman there who was having, she was in distress, had some issues.
She's like, I need to ride home.
And I was the only sober person at this party.
So I drove her home.
It ended up being, I crossed the state line to give her a ride home.
She implied that it would be a very short ride and it was more like 40 minutes.
But I give her a ride home.
I pull into her driveway to drop her off.
I knew something was not right.
Something was very not okay at the situation.
I pull in her driveway and a vehicle pulls in behind me and blocks me in.
I'm like, this is not good.
And this guy gets out and he's screaming at us and yelling at me, you know, and he's like, oh, my daughter's underage.
It's a whole thing.
It's a big story.
And you're, he had all these, he was spouting like rules and regulations of the army at me.
I'm like, so this is like obviously not the first time this girl has been involved in problems with military guys.
And I'm like, I don't know what's happening.
I'm just giving her a ride home.
I don't know what's going on.
And luckily from the party, another guy I'd never met before said, hey, let me ride with you on this, on this, this drive.
So he just sat in the back of my car on our drive home and on our drive to drop this girl off.
And I was freaking out there.
This guy was yelling at me.
I'm like, I'm going to get out.
Like, I'm going to call, I'm going to call my parents, basically.
So I called my mom and I said, hey, so I'm in this place and I think I'm going to get arrested soon.
And so I need some help because I don't, I just gave this girl a ride home.
It's a whole, I don't know what's going on with this situation.
Like clearly, there's some issues between her and her father and her history and whatever.
And this guy was like, hey, just let me talk to this guy and I'll take care of this.
I'll talk to him and see if we can do whatever.
And so I talked to my mom.
I'm talking about, get an attorney, call somebody, figure something out because I'm probably going to be in jail.
I'm going to need help.
I'm freaking out.
Like, I'm like losing it.
And I hang up with her.
I walked back to the car and this guy who rode with me was like, hey, we're good.
The guy's dad, like, he understood.
You know, he's like, hey, I talked to him.
He said, you just gave her a ride home.
You didn't really know her before this.
He said, we can go.
I'm done where this ends up.
Yeah.
I'm like, okay, right.
So I get in my car and we like, he moves his car and I pull out.
We're two blocks away.
The sheriff drives by us.
I'm like, I am never coming back to the state ever in my life because I just don't want to have anything.
And we drove back and I dropped him off at his barracks and I went back to mine.
And that was the end of it.
This is like a Saturday night.
And so the next day was like a Sunday.
Did my bit, went to church, did the whole thing, came back, went to his barracks.
I was going to like give him a thank you.
I'm like, hey, let me buy you brunch or something, you know, like you saved my ass on this whole thing, pardon the language.
It's all good.
But he was gone.
He's like, oh, yeah, he got, he got picked up.
He got reassigned to wherever.
I'm like, on a Sunday?
You're like, yeah, I guess, you know, whatever happened and he was gone.
Like, that was a, that never happened.
That's not a thing, right?
Like, you don't get orders and then go anywhere on a Sunday.
It's just not a thing.
But apparently that's what they told me happened.
And, and so I feel like that was probably the second time that the guardian angel guy, again, like the person that I knew from that view did not look like the same, I guess in my mind, the same person that pulled me out of a pool when I was 12, but it was definitely the same energy, right?
It was like someone who was there for no other reason than like, I need to be here to like help you.
And then they did.
He doesn't exist.
And they're just gone, right?
They moved on.
Their task is over.
They're moved on.
So that was those two instances.
I mean, those were formative instances that definitely shaped the way I see the world and made a big impact on my life.
Make you a little more spiritual.
Yeah.
And I've met you and you're among the least or among the last guys I would expect to tell like a hocus pocus phony story.
And I'm also relieved too.
I thought you were going to be like the girl turned to look at you and it was like large marge and Pee Wee's big adventure.
But instead, you had your guardian angel, not riding shotgun, but in the back seat.
And to that sort of guardian angel plus, you know, angels and demons, whatnot.
I can't remember if I shared this on the Halloween show two or three years ago, but it was my wife's experience.
There's a gate to our property, and the original gate was old and rickety, but it had been there for probably 30 years.
And 99.9% of the time, nobody's at that gate.
We're not driving through it.
We're not hanging out there.
But she was leaving the property one day and she called me.
She stopped before going up to the gate because she wanted to know whether I wanted it locked or open for when we got back.
And I didn't answer for one reason or another.
So she said, well, I'll just play it safe and I'll walk up and lock it.
And in that brief, you know, 30 seconds out of that gate's 30-year lifespan was when a massive gust of wind came, blew the gate, if it was open, blew the gate shut inches or a foot from her head.
And it's a big ass metal sharp gate and crashed into the post and demolished the post.
And then the gate collapsed right in front of her eyes.
And it was probably an October day, a windy October day.
And she just said, Holy cow, what are the odds of that happening?
If I hadn't called you and paused to ask, that gate could have decapitated me or really wrecked my head.
And in that one, she was like, was that an evil spirit that just swung it missed?
Or was the guy who built, lovingly built this house and died in this house?
Was he on my side that time?
Who knows?
But the odds of that happening are infinitesimal.
And it worked out in her favor.
And that one still spooks her when she thinks about the odds.
Just my little contribution to the spookiness section of the show as well.
And I also realize that I'm tempting fate here by saying, oh, they moved on, nothing going on here.
And tonight, if I see red rum on the walls, I'll let you know during the election show.
But thank you, Justin, for sharing that.
That is a really cool concept, too, that you've got somebody riding shotgun with you spiritually when you're in a pinch.
I hope you're not in any other pinches and he doesn't have to make an appearance.
Sam, one of our pals who's very religious and I also believe is not a BSer whatsoever was telling us about night terrors once and being completely incapable of movement and seeing that dark, foreboding figure at the foot of his bed, not being able to say a word, completely incapacitated and not forgetting that and believing in evil for sure after it.
I forget the phenomenon.
There's a very specific, I don't know if it's night terror is like a really bad dream, but to him, it was 100% real.
He was awake and conscious and in its grasp at the moment.
I'll spare the name drop.
Anyway, yeah.
Sam Rollo, anything else on that one?
Rolo, seeing a girl with really brown teeth who otherwise might be attractive does not qualify as a spoon.
Kind of a scary story.
It was very scary.
There's got to be, I'm thinking of a movie where, like, oh man, she's hot.
And then she smiles and her grill's all busted up.
But probably one of those like, you know, boys in the hood or menace to society.
I mean, I think she's fine.
She smiles and she's black.
Yeah, I walked right into that one.
Well, there was people back in the day, like when they used to give tetracycline as an antibiotic and it would stain people's teeth, you know.
So there's that.
Maybe, maybe she was on.
Maybe she was on tetracycline.
Okay.
You should ask her.
What is wrong with your crown?
You're otherwise hot.
Yeah, I'm interested.
You know, you've got white strips these days.
You got, you know, the caps, the crowns on, whatever.
Rollo, this is total catnip for you.
We're not going to do a huge movie section here, much to your chagrin.
But every year for like the past three or four years, you know, you do the doom scrolling on Amazon Prime or Netflix, searching for something that will actually be scary, be high quality, and have a reasonably compelling plot.
And for about the past decade, I, we, I have scrolled past Tucker and Dale versus Evil as being probably stupid or crappy or just a joke.
And we watched it the other night and loved it.
Funny, creative.
We got your friend.
We got your friend.
Oh, you kids going dipping?
It was really good.
And they bring the fingers and he goes, oh, Tale, those are your bowling fingers.
But I don't know, no more spoilers.
Yeah.
That is a favorite at the Final Storm.
One, one of the most quoted.
Good, good, good.
One of our most watched.
I should have known that already, but I'm gratified to know that you approved.
It flips the hillbilly, you know, it's like deliverance backwards, you know, the out-of-towners, the college kids are the opposite of Jewish subversion.
Yeah.
You know, there's some profanity.
There's some like slaps.
It's still rated R.
It's very violent.
Yes.
And Ceri from 30 Rock is in it.
And oh, possibly her finest performance of her career.
But if you just need to pass an hour and a half with a quality, funny, creative movie, Tucker and Dale versus Evil, full endorsement.
Rolo, over to you for one that the audience hasn't heard.
Friday the 13th, Nightmare on Elm Street, something other than that.
Well, if you're if you're doing the Amazon, I believe From Beyond is on there.
Go on.
It's just called, well, it's a HP Lovecraft adaptation, which they did is they took a short story and then they turned it into a full-length movie.
And the movie has nothing to do with the short story, but it's about these people that they're, I don't want to spoil it, but it's, it's a, it's a body horror movie.
I think it's more fun to go into movies and not know anything about them.
What's the name of the movie again?
It's called From Beyond.
It's made by Stuart Gordon, who did Reanimator, and he wrote Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.
And did Amazon make it for Amazon?
Don't really know.
No, It's from like 1986, I believe.
Ah, good year.
Yeah, it's yeah, don't watch it.
Don't watch it with your children.
It's a very, very R-rated movie, like very much may have even been unrated.
That I'm not sure of, but that's it's one of the ones that doesn't get talked about enough, but it's a very good Halloween movie.
Actually, you know what?
Screw it, I take it back.
I think that that's my Amazon one.
If you're on Amazon, if you, if you want to just like, I thought you were going to be like, nah, I take it back.
It wasn't that good.
Okay.
No, no, no.
I don't take that.
I don't take it back.
But my go-to is Demon Knight.
Okay.
I don't think it's a Tales from the Sam.
I think you'll enjoy that one.
I mean, the only problem is that there's Jada Pinkett Smith turns into the protagonist.
But the rest, everything else in it is great.
Did she have hair or was she bald back then too?
Oh, she had no hair.
She's doing her best, Dennis Rodman cosplay.
Your George Lucas movie XT-146 THX.
THX 1138.
Oh, man.
Great.
That was a hard movie.
Well, yeah.
My wife was in a movie recently.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
Not an adult movie.
Please.
No, Europa, The Last Battle.
We would never recover from that, Sam.
No, no, definitely not.
That's not suggesting that that was in the ballpark, but you know, I know.
No, yeah.
It's an Our Guy movie.
One of our guys is putting out a movie.
I'll just leave it at that.
And she had a bit part in it.
And it was a treat to be part of it for her and to travel out there and be part of it and see how it was made.
Even though she was just a small part, you know, she's part of the group.
They've been talking about this movie and what's going to happen and all this thing.
So, but she played a cult member in the movie.
And And when she came home, they let her keep the cult members costume.
And it was, you know, like a full, like a cloak with all these mysterious symbols on it.
Yeah, these mysterious symbols.
And she wore a mask.
So they let her keep this kind of like, it reminded me of like eyes wide shut, you know, type mask and all that.
And when I saw it, I was like, my wheels started turning like, because I like these like sex scenarios, you know, as I've said before, we like to have the, you know, I'm the, I'm the sleazy carnival barker.
She's a vaudeville girl that's down on her luck.
You know, we have these little short role-playing things just to make it funny, you know, and I'm the train conductor and she's got to shovel the coal into the engine.
There you go.
Your mind's working the right way.
You're the capitalist and then she's the Chinese woman building the railroad.
That's a good one.
I liked him writing that down.
You're the concentration camp superintendent and she's ineffectually savage in addition to the labor projector.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Sorry.
Something like a lot of ways with that.
Yeah.
Well, I like those little, you know, we have a couple of little funny scenarios like that.
And so I thought, oh, she could be the cult member and I'm, you know, she could be torturing me.
So I don't know.
That's kind of a strange way to think of it.
But I thought, oh, great.
You know, I like new outfit, a new element, you know, to work with.
But yeah, the movie will be coming out.
I'm sure if you're in our thing, then you already know who this is and you will know where to go see it and all that type of thing.
But I'm not going to provide too terribly much data on it because, you know, enemies don't need to know about it.
And if you're in our thing, then you're, you probably already know about it.
That's really cool though, Sam.
Hats off to her for going for that and contributing to it.
Sam, you and I have different marriages.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's, and that's okay.
You know, everybody has got to find their own thing that makes sense and works for them.
You know, it could be maybe it's creative, maybe it's passionate, maybe it's elaborate.
Maybe it's, you know, the frequency could be different, all those things.
And it's fine.
You know, there's no wrong or right answer up to a certain limits, of course.
But yeah.
Well, I like to take a playful approach to things like that.
And that's just an example of it.
A healthy approach.
Yeah.
I'm probably, I'm a little too uptight for role play.
I'm like, come on.
But, you know, it's happened.
It's happened in the past.
I won't say when or how often.
Sam, real quick, you've definitely given give one Halloween or scary film recommendation if you have anything in the hospital.
Oh, boy.
We'll move on.
Or Justin can jump in to give Sam a second or two.
Yeah.
Well, I'll just go.
You know, it's one of those things where you could answer a lot of things.
So it's kind of like what comes to mind.
I really enjoyed.
I really enjoyed some years ago an adaptation of the movie Nas Ferratu was put out there with typo negative as the soundtrack to it.
And it was very well done.
And every once in a while, I will bring that out and play it.
I have a DVD copy.
And David Carradine does an introduction of the importance of the movie Nas Ferratu and talking about it.
And then the movie plays and it's with typo negative songs as kind of as they're appropriate for the scene.
So I like that.
Typo negative was real like industrial metal, right?
No, no, no.
No, I would say they were very much more accessible and more, they really had quite a following up until Peter Steele's death.
Maybe died, I don't know, 10, 12 years ago, something like that.
And now the band that they started was when they came out was Carnivore and they played with.
Yeah, and that was much heavier.
And they played with the racial symbolism and lyrics and things like that.
And supposedly Peter Steele was a sympathizer in our cause, but they went on to a couple of different iterations with different band names.
And then eventually Typo Negative was the band they settled on that motif and that name for many years.
And I would put that as kind of a very much more accessible to the average listeners.
Not a very extreme sound or heavy metal or anything like that.
It's kind of a heavy thing, kind of a dark gothic kind of a feel to it, I would call it, but with a certain pop sensibility, I would say.
Yeah, Rollo was kind of nodding his head when I gave it that description, but I'll go back and listen to some stuff.
Justin, your one movie recommendation here before we move on, please.
Yeah, I'm not a big scary horror, whatever kind of guy, but I did like Tucker and Dale versus Evil.
It's like a comedy.
It's like a dark comedy.
I had a good time with that one.
That was a lot of fun.
Absolutely.
And you, my friend, are up there in the pantheon of Coach's most valuable friends.
One for recommending the peanut butter Falcon, which is possibly in my top 10 films of all time.
Yeah, Sheila Boof, who cares?
It was absolutely touching.
And to the power of WN networking or just having friends online who communicate regularly, Justin, we often talk about stocks and funds and money and the economy and interest rates and all that stuff.
And one of the things that we do is we look at the S ⁇ P 500, which of course is the, this is totally off topic, but I want to give you kudos.
I won't even say what the stock is to not crow or whatever.
But we were looking at the S ⁇ P 500 and the worst performing companies in the S ⁇ P 500.
And Justin was like, you know, that one that's beaten down into the mud, that's a pretty real company with, you know, it's not probably going to go bankrupt.
So I, you know, made a little gamble in the IRA on it and it mooned virtually from that moment.
So it was a, it was a hall of fame call, even if you didn't act on it and you were certainly not acting as a personal financial advisor.
But thank you again, bud.
That one is up big and I owe you more than a beer next time we hang out.
You're very welcome.
You bet.
Are you now real quick?
I have to milk your brain.
Are you nervous about this market and this economy going into election with the Middle East churning and the S ⁇ P and the NASDAQ at virtually all-time highs right now?
Seems like a time for caution and not big moves.
But then again, if Trump has this in the bag, as everybody thinks, is the market then going to go on another ramp with a loosey-goosey pro-business politician?
What are you feeling?
I think we're good.
I think, so get, I don't, I don't necessarily, I have my reservations with Trump.
I think Trump wins for a lot of reasons.
I think the people, the right people or the wrong people, depending on how we look at it, want him to be president.
I think he will be.
I think it's going to be okay until maybe 2026.
There's some bigger market movement that I May historically would bring some kind of correction in 2026, give or take, or maybe the end of 2025.
But honestly, like with how insane everything's been the last few years and how much money the Fed's been printing, they may be able to just ride right through it.
It's hard to say.
We've never experienced an economy like we do right now, where literally the entire world is under the same economy.
The Fed has as much power as it has.
The United States is dictating trade terms to literally everyone on the planet.
Still, it's really going to come down to the people who oppose the American hedgman.
If they want to make a move, they can make a move whenever they feel like is the right time.
And if they don't, I think it's going to keep riding.
And so we're in a really, really strange and unique spot, at least in the last hundred years.
We've never seen anything like this.
I don't think it's easy to predict what's going to happen.
Fair enough.
And I shared recently just a piece of wisdom for the audience.
I made the terrible mistake of looking back in my IRA sales, the stocks that I sold dating back to 2007, 2008, and looking, you know, most of them were.
Never do that.
And I was like, oh, it was kind of a kick to the belly, but whatever.
You know, I sold for small profit back then, listening to Peter Schiff and thinking that the big one's coming.
You know, this, this bubble economy is about to burst 2013, 2014, blah, blah, blah.
And if I had simply held on to those damn things, most of them, some of them crashed, the vast majority of them continued to moon.
God knows.
Now it's all still, you know, theoretical gains because it's in my retirement account.
I can't really touch it.
And it made me look for this quote from Jesse Livermore.
This is quick, quick.
I'll be finished after this with the finance because we're going to move on with more family and holiday stuff.
Jesse Livermore, one of the great stock market operators of all time, said, after spending many years in Wall Street and after making and losing millions of dollars, I want to tell you this.
It never was my thinking that made the big money for me.
It was always my sitting.
Got that?
Sitting tight.
Men who can be right and sit tight are uncommon.
I found it one of the hardest things to learn, but it's only after a stock market operator has firmly grasped this that he can make big money.
In other words, for our audience, the probably vast majority of which is young 20s or 30s, buying and selling stocks, trying to time the market, thinking that the big crash is coming, even it is coming eventually, or maybe just a medium crash.
If it's for retirement, if it's long term, if it's Bitcoin, if it's gold or whatever, you're probably safer buying and holding than trying to buy, sell, buy, sell, make profit, move into this, move into that, keep track of all these different stocks.
Buy and hold is a legitimate strategy, especially if you're not particularly savvy.
And if you're conspiracy or collapsitarian, you're going to be disappointed more times than you're not.
So just a bit of advice or wisdom for the audience.
And I, God knows I've made that mistake in spades.
Give me a couple minutes here.
I got a quick thing.
Yeah.
So one big example, I'll put this out.
And this is a great movie.
It's a great dramatization.
They have some great actors in it.
The big short.
I don't know what year the movie came out.
It's a couple of years after the big 20, 2008, 2009 crash.
Yeah.
That movie does a great job making what happened during 2008, 2009 understandable.
It makes it interesting.
As the Steve Carell, Brad Pitt was in it.
What's his name?
The guy that Ryan Gosling was in it.
Christian Bale.
Christian Bale was in it.
Anthony Bourdain.
Christian Bale was the guy who discovered the mortgage.
Are those two different movies where Christian Bale is Barry with the mortgage detector?
Maybe it's the same movie.
Yeah, the other one was called The Dark Knight.
So yeah, I mean, the big high point of that movie, if you look at the details of it, is this guy, right, Barry, that he's that Christian Bale is playing, knows what is, he 100% knows what's happening in the market.
This guy is smarter and more in tune about what's happening than anybody else.
And he gets it right, but he still almost goes bankrupt.
Yeah.
And almost bankrupts like a bunch of other billionaire people that are investing with him.
Because there's a quote, and I don't know what it is offhand.
Essentially, it says, like, the market has the ability to be insane and do nonsense longer than you have the ability to be liquid, to have enough assets to hold on to the market.
So even if you know what's happening, you're still going to get screwed because people can be stupid and insane long enough to outweight you.
And so that's kind of what almost happened to him.
He almost went bankrupt.
So the story is like, oh, you can make all this money if you know the right thing.
And, but even if you're right, you could still lose everything because the market is such an insane place to be.
And so just being right is not enough.
And I have a friend of mine.
I'm not going to obviously name him, but he has been betting against Tesla because Tesla, if you look at their fundamentals, it's absolutely terrible.
They don't sell enough.
They're way overvalued.
They don't sell enough vehicles.
Like their numbers are incredibly suspect, right?
There's definitely some kind of either bad numbering or fraud going on at Tesla with their numbers.
So you can be right about that.
It's been happening for multiple years.
And he has consistently bet against Tesla and has lost tens of thousands of dollars.
Sorry for him.
Yeah.
Musk can come out with a press conference and just like, you know, say some things and jit up a billion dollars over 19% a day.
Yeah, a ton.
Yeah.
And so he's like, well, I'm right.
I'm like, but you being right does not mean that you're going to be profitable.
That's not how it works.
Right.
And so that's what I try to, you know, if I talk to people, and again, I'm not going to get into my specifics, my industry and what I do exactly for the show, but if you being right is not enough, right?
And so there's this game of what you're investing in.
And a lot of it is just if you invest a good majority of your stuff in a broad spectrum SP 500, maybe spread around some bond funds or something like that.
Like those bonds have done terribly lately.
So like that's hard to recommend.
But if you just diversify really well, you insulate yourself from all these weird market situations where there's like someone who's getting protection, obviously, from something.
My guess for Musk is that like he's doing SpaceX.
He's the only person who can get anything into space.
So he's going to get a pass on all the crap he's pulling everywhere else.
And Boeing's about to throw in the towel on their space business.
Yeah.
And so as long as Musk is the only guy who can get astronauts out of space, like he gets to pull whatever nonsense he wants in his other companies.
And so yeah, if you're across the spectrum of the entire market, as long as the country's doing well, you're going to do well.
If it's doing badly, I mean, your investments don't matter anyway if your country is going to collapse.
So you might as well just roll with, you know, the overall market.
It's probably your best strategy.
Your stock market buddies might help you grow potatoes one day or roll deep into enemy territory too.
Yeah, either you just put your money in stocks or you buy land and grow potatoes or cows.
Like that's kind of or buy a lot of lead.
I just wanted to give you a hat tip on that one because, you know, God knows everybody's made bad recommendations.
We always go back.
Oh, look, I nailed this one.
And the ones that are stinkers, you're just like, oh, let's, let's forget I recommended that one or bought it.
But yep, but it's one absolutely concrete way that we can educate ourselves and enrich ourselves as well.
Sam, before we get too far, you've got binders full of women and notes.
And, you know, call me morbid or not lacrimose.
I'm looking for another spooky adjective, melancholic, whatever.
But one of your, one of your Rolo.
Come on, man.
I thought we were saying.
You said something spooky.
Jeez.
Lucky I'm a nice guy.
You have could have said Negro.
That's kind of spooky.
If I can pick from your list, I'm going with a grim milestone having no.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Well, you know, we were, we were both at an event last weekend, which was very wonderful.
And it just came at the right time.
You know, it was nice to get out of town and be in the beautiful surroundings.
And you were there.
I was there.
And no bullshit.
It's something very fun when all of us are together.
There's been times where Rolo and you and I were together.
And, you know, we don't even talk nearly as much as we talk on the show, the before, during, and after it.
But, you know, just there's something, there's some chemistry there.
There is some energy there when we're in the same place and we just kind of hang out.
No kidding at all.
It was a treat to be there together like that.
But, you know, I'll just say, Sam, too, you know, that I am semi-black pilled or a little bit dubious of the cycle that I maybe have mentioned in a previous show.
You assemble a great group of men, you come up with all these things to do, and one thing or another, the wheels fall off, and then you're back to square one.
So that is my fatigue with the process, but it was really wonderful.
I went into it.
I was thinking, maybe I'll stay home.
I don't need to go.
I talk to Sam every week.
Like I hang out with these guys online and I'm damn glad that I went.
Yes.
And I will get to touch on one or two of those points that you just mentioned in a moment.
But I right before the day, one of our fellows, Nick Knickerbocker, who we all know and love, he said, hey, you're going to bring your guitar and play some songs, aren't you?
And I said, oh, well, you know, I really wasn't planning to because I've never traveled with my guitar.
I've always had a moment of envy when I've, whenever I have been in an airport and I see somebody traveling with their instrument, whether it's a guitar or a cello or a violin or some other thing, whatever it is.
And I always think like, oh, man, that must be wonderful to be carrying your instrument with you.
You know, there's an intimate relationship you have with your instrument.
And I used to travel for a living and that's when I would especially feel it because I honestly, I didn't like it so well traveling and being away from home as often as I was.
And I would see somebody with an instrument and that would touch me.
I would say, oh man, that would be great to be traveling with the instrument with my guitar.
And I never did.
But if I had a driving trip, I would bring my guitar.
And there would be those times where I would play in the hotel room when I had some free time.
And anyway, so I did travel with it.
So I brought it kind of really last minute.
And I had a set that I had recently performed.
So I said, well, I just kind of brush it up a little bit.
I'm sure I'll be able to do that set.
So I brought the guitar and I was very happy to have it.
They did crack the case, but the airline, the handling of it, they did crack the end of it.
But this particular case is not long for this world.
And I've actually been looking at replacing it because it's had some problems for a few years.
So I wasn't too upset.
I said, well, maybe now I can really justify buying a new case.
Anyways, went out there, got out to God's country.
It's truly beautiful area.
It was the camp selected was perfect.
And we said, oh, yeah.
Pennsylvania.
Yeah, okay.
Pennsylvania, you know, hilly.
I don't know where we are in that relation to the Appalachian mountains, but somewhere not too far from it, you know, in the foothills of it or something, you know, rolling hills, very beautiful.
And what a what a great time.
Went too fast, if anything.
We did have the sing-along finally.
And there's, there's just something very inspiring about that to me to do it as we were talking before.
You know, just remembering all the songs is a feat to me anyways.
And we did that.
And you had, afterwards, we were talking about you had kind of an existential moment there, like, what does it all mean?
You know, where are we going?
And all that type of thing.
And I couldn't help but think of, I was thinking of the story of El Cid.
If you know the, you know, to Spanish-speaking people that they would think about El Cid like we would think about King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table or something like that.
El Cid was a knight that led the Reconquista in about the year, he was born about 1040 something.
And he was part of that.
But he himself would have been familiar with the story of going back into the year 700 where the Palio, he was one of the king's men.
He had rode into battle with King Roderick, one of the Visigoth kings to fight the Muslims.
The king was killed.
The army was destroyed.
Cavalry was destroyed.
Spain was taken over by Muslims.
And it was Palio and his nearest men up on the mountain by themselves, besieged.
Here's the Muslims, thousands of Muslims climbing the hill, scaling the mountain to attack them.
Palaio is in his cave and he sees a vision of the Blessed Virgin and she's holding a shield, a red shield with a white cross.
And she says, now you're going to attack.
In the name of Jesus Christ, you're going to attack with your men.
So there was a flash of light and he goes out with his men and they slay these Muslims, thousands of them, and drive them back.
And with that moment, that was what freed up the northern Spain, which remained free of the Muslims.
They were able to drive them out.
And then it wasn't until the time with El Cid, you know, that he grew up knowing these stories and they drove the Muslims out and ultimately was capped off.
We know in 1492, Queen Isabella, you know, they kicked out the last Muslims.
They kicked out the Jews and then they funded things like the exploration of the new world with Christopher Columbus and so on, so forth.
But I just felt a little bit like we were up on that mountain, you know, and there are men, there are men who are going to swear not to give up and to fight on, you know, and the songs, sure, it's just music, of course, but it's it's the inspiration that comes behind it.
And you could hear the righteous anger in the shouting of certain lyrics, you know, that really is, that's what it's all about.
It's, it's that we, we will not give up, not, not on our lives, we will not give up.
So, but I do understand and appreciate that moment of reflection of, you know, what is the commitment of this man next to me to this cause?
Where does this cause go?
Yeah, that's right.
We don't know.
We don't know the answer.
We don't know how it turns out, but we do have our commitment to it, you know.
And anyways, that wasn't really, that's not even the point of the story.
That's just a step in.
And let me just add real quick, Sam, because just the other day I came across a quote from White Stag Athletic Club on Telegram, which corresponds with what you're describing there, as well as what I felt.
And it's from our pal, Ash Podsiad Sharp.
And to quote him, most important is to never give in to the idiot of despair that seeks to consume your soul.
Now, a jaded person could say, okay, sure.
Yeah, easier said than done.
But that really does nail it too, because it's really easy and tempting and almost pleasurable to give in to despair and to the black pill and say, you know, this, this ain't going to work.
I'm just, even if you tactically decide, you know, I'm just going to focus on my family or on my income and trying to insulate me from everything that is out there.
And God knows I felt that temptation often.
And a lot of guys have felt that temptation and just ghosted and returned to the hinterlands or anonymity or whatever.
And you never hear from them.
Hundreds for sure, probably that you and I know that are just blown in the wind right now if they're still around.
And despite that I've felt nagging doubt, what are we doing here?
Now, part of that said I'm not going to break out my violin.
I could and should be doing more.
But at bare minimum, stay the path and stay connected.
Sort of like, you know, go to the meetup.
Continue doing the show.
Don't ghost from chats.
Check in with somebody you haven't heard from in a while if for no other reason than to maintain that continuity without knowing what's coming down the pike, who's going to be helpful, who you're going to need, who you can help, et cetera.
And you may not think that we're about to take the mountain like El Cid or attack the enemy forces, but you're still in a better position if things change.
I'll stop there.
Yeah.
Well, the journey is the point of it.
You know, we, we, we, I enjoy fighting the enemy just because for the sake of fighting, you know, win or lose, we fight on.
Just like in the Third Reich, they had a good idea that they were going to lose.
But anyways, you fight on, you do the right thing because then a future generation has the opportunity to pick up the cause anew.
As long as the cowardice, the cowardice has not entered the blood of the people, then another generation will pick up the banner and carry it forth.
That's the whole thing.
We fight because we love to fight.
We fight because we love to defeat the enemy.
And it's we I, I'll just say for myself, I hate for hate's sake.
And that's good enough for me.
But legions of evidence of all the new young personalities and activists coming up in the wake of the alt-right crash, too.
It's not like the alt-right died and then everything went away.
It's arguably more intense and more involved.
Yeah.
And we are committed in the knowledge that whether we win or lose on some short-term scale, we win on a long enough timeline because we are the sons of God and we will win.
But I met met, well, I'll start out by saying made fresh acquaintance or reacquaintance with many people that I enjoyed wonderful conversations with.
And we did so many things on that weekend.
But I also met a couple of new people, which is also great.
And there was at one point I walked in the room and I saw it felt like almost everyone was wearing a full house t-shirt.
And that was really cool.
And I hope, Coach, that you were proud in that moment.
Absolutely.
I mean, I did bring a box of shirts and, but they want, I wasn't, we weren't hustling them.
They were like, no, I wasn't.
Yeah.
Well, I brought a bag of shirts and I sold all but one of them.
And you were either selling them or a couple guys that were big donors, you're giving them away.
So it was, it was great.
It was just great.
Everything was great.
The food was great.
Camaraderie was great.
The classes were great.
The singing around the campfire together was incredibly great.
And no matter what, fighting, winning, losing, anything else, you need that sense of belonging to your people.
And you need to know that there's other guys like you also believing and fighting.
We say fighting in whatever way, you know, if it's making a hot stock buy, that's fighting in a way.
But whatever it is, you know, we're all doing the best.
Anyways, I met this one fellow, very, very nice guy.
And he turned out he was Catholic too.
And I said, oh, well, where are you going to Mass on Sunday?
Because I know that there is Fraternal Society of St. Peter Tridentine Mass in there in the nearby city in Pennsylvania.
And I'm planning to go because I was actually several years ago, three, four years ago, I was at a skinhead gig in the area and I went to Mass at that church.
So I know that it's there.
And our dear mutual friend Walker recommended it to me and he was not wrong.
So I said, I'm going to that.
And he didn't have any firm planning.
He was just, you know, going to look for something in the area.
So we ended up going together, which was wonderful.
We went to Mass.
We kind of got there really early because on the internet, they give you a time, but they always say, you know, call and check, make sure that time is valid.
Turned out it was a little bit later.
So we had some time to hang out.
There's a body of water very nearby there.
And we just talked and had fun, had laughs.
And we went to Mass, which was amazing and beautiful, a packed church, very fervent people.
The color ratio was exactly right.
You know, it had to be 99% white people there, very fervent.
We were very blessed to be there.
Anyways, so we just, I said, well, we haven't had breakfast and all that.
If you don't mind, let's grab a bite, whatever it is, coffee house or otherwise.
So we found a Perkins, which there's Perkins is not everywhere in the country, you know.
And I think I've been to one, but they don't have them in our area.
So I said, well, let's finding a Ponderosa or something.
Yeah.
It's kind of like a gimbal or a Kmart RBF.
But we have Denny's around here and it's kind of like that.
I would describe it like a diner type place.
So we go in there and we sit down and we're, like I said, having a wonderful conversation.
And so I go to the menu and I'm flipping through and I see, what does it say in the last page?
The 55 and over menu and the grim realization.
I never, I've never taken advantage of something like this.
Yeah.
Well, it was.
It was.
The price was right and everything.
And I've never, and I cannot honestly say I've ever remember seeing the 55 and over.
Like I can remember seeing like seniors, seniors or 65 and over, but I've never seen 55.
And I'm like, and I said, I am over 55.
You know, I am over 55.
And I can, for the first time, I can take advantage of this menu.
And, you know, I hesitate to even tell this story because, you know, the listeners, they want to picture me in their own way.
I'm this, you know, young, virile, hot shot, you know, guys shooting his mouth off.
But it's in damn good shape there, big guy.
Well, thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah, we had the physical fitness test, which I've been training for, training push-ups.
So I was ready.
I was very ready.
I got a good score.
It's really bad when you come home from a men's weekend in the woods walking like a homo.
You know, raise a certain question.
No, no, no, no.
My legs are dead.
Yeah.
Well, my legs hurt from that too, because when do you practice air squats?
You know, that's not something usually in anybody's repertoire of what they're practicing on a daily or weekly basis.
But otherwise, I was good.
I was very happy.
I'm going to start doing sets of push-ups.
And you know that whatever thing you do, if you want to be able to bench press, you have to bench press.
If you wanted to be able to do pull-ups, you got to do pull-ups.
Whatever exercise that you want to get good at, you got to do that thing.
So if you want to do push-ups, you could have a great bench press, but can you do push-ups?
You got to be able to, you got to do push-ups to be good at push-ups.
So I started doing push-ups, you know, 20, a set, a couple sets, 25, 30.
You know, I started building up from the beginning of the year, 35.
I was doing two sets of 40, among my other workout, you know, two sets of 40.
Yeah, and then 45.
If I can do sets of two sets of 50, then I should be able to handle whatever this test is going to be.
Well, it was about at three weeks before the event, I was doing sets of 55.
So I had surpassed my goal of 50.
And so I was ready.
Yeah, I was ready.
And I have to ask, did you have to show ID?
First off, I was like, Sam's doing the politician thing where like I raise a grim milestone and he just gives the answer that he wants, you know, totally disregarding the interlocutor.
But about that grim milestone, yeah, you know, maybe a little bit rough in the morning on a Sunday.
Oh, yeah.
Did, did they check your ID to no, no, that made me work even worse.
Yeah, I was like, you're not 55.
Show us some, show us some.
In fact, and to be honest, I'm over 55, but this is the first time I ever saw 55 and over.
And I, I kind of hung my head and I said, I'm going to order off this 55 and over.
I got to go to a Perkins on a rough Saturday morning.
I don't know.
You look young.
You look young.
But that was, that was my grim milestone anyways.
Fair enough.
Appreciate it, big guy.
All good stuff.
And El Cid, of course, was also Keith Hernandez's nickname from the epic myths in the 80s.
Oh, yeah.
I don't.
Yeah.
Well, his real El Cid was Rodrigo Diaz.
In those days.
In those days, you know, it's like America, like kids would be like, oh, El Cid, yeah, that's Keith Hernandez.
And they never learned about it.
Yeah, they never even learned El Cid in school.
I definitely, though, even pre-Red Pill was like, huh, 1492, Reconquista basically summed up the epic voyage and the Jews are given the edict to get out.
What a convergence.
Great auspices for the Kingdom of Spain.
Good stuff.
Yeah, go ahead, please, and then we'll get out of here.
Yeah, just quickly, I actually, I have the book, El Cid, his whole story of his life, and I liked it so much.
And I've been giving them away.
So I bought an extra copy at the party.
I was talking to somebody who got on this exact conversation, El Cid.
And I said, here, I'm going to give you this.
And he even said, hey, can I take that book?
And I said, yeah, absolutely.
Cause I just bought a second one.
So great, great book.
You want a great read that will just thrill you and inspire you.
Go read the biography of El Cid.
Hell yeah.
Our white Hispanic, white nationalist audience members.
Not to be confused with Don Quixote, of course, another epic character in Spanish literature.
All right, guys, let's go to the break.
And Sam tried to force a new and I'm sure awesome Wellington arms track down my throat at the last minute heard it, but I stuck up for my erstwhile pal, Rolo, and said, Rolo has very special feelings about October and Synth Wave and spooky movies and stuff like that.
So I'm going to defer to our valued producer here, Rolo.
It's all yours.
Now, I can't give you a blank check because I still have scar tissue from JO's track, whatever it was, Laverne.
Oh, you're going back to that one.
Okay, so you're picking from that?
Yeah, they're all good enough.
Lauren Ashur, that's what it was, not La Vern and Shirley.
Could have been.
So all right.
Lauren Ashur.
I'll never get over that one.
Rolo, please take us to the break.
What are we listening to?
Theme of Laura by Akira Yamoka.
Enjoy.
Be right back.
Second half.
We got the whole crew riding with us again here.
Went long in the first.
Hope you didn't mind.
And we'll see where the wins or the Gustav wins will take us.
Roller reminded me was his good Russian sock name here.
Before, Sam is the only one with New White Life, unless I am grotesquely irresponsible with the inbox this week.
But when it comes, we're not going to talk about politics, but I knew I couldn't resist just right here at the top.
When we do the live stream, we are going to have on Trump haters, Trump cynical supporters, maybe even a genuine believer that the second time around is going to be better than the first time.
I think that's delusional.
But personally, if you're supporting Trump because you think it's the better outcome, I fully respect that.
If you are staying home because you are absolutely disgusted by the spectacle and you hate the RN Charlatan, I 100% respect and probably agree with that more.
I was frankly surprised at how many guys around the table said they were voting for Trump or they already did vote for Trump with fairly genuine enthusiasm.
The only guys in the thing that I am dubious of, not that they're bad actors or whatever, are the guys who are like, no, I really want Kamala to get elected.
I want her to win through cheating and then have everybody get angry.
I just think that that is a very bad strategic gamble or wish or fantasy.
That level of worse is better is to me dubious and wrong headed.
I think my wife wants to check.
I hope some black guy has sex with her.
Then I can justify a divorce.
People are already there.
People already think that 2020 was, you know, because of cheating and all that.
And the thing is, of course, we know it's cheating, but we have, if we want Trump to win, we got to have more than enough of what cheating can accomplish, you know?
Sure.
Yep.
If there's one thing in this world that I'm good at, it may be hosting a show, not being the best or whatever, but just sort of managing things and steering things in a productive way.
I don't want it to descend into another, not stupid, but repetitive debate over Trump good, Trump bad, this good.
Yeah, bad.
Definitely.
I agree with you.
Things will be different under one or the other for sure.
You could argue that they're both going to be bad, just in different degrees.
Well, it's always different for as far as like whoever's in power, how people on the ground act.
Like the Democrat and Republican voters will be different based on who's in power.
Like if Kamala is in power, liberal voters will act a different way than conservative voters will act, no matter what.
Whether if a Kamala or Trump presidency, they have the exact same major issues or whatever, the perception of them will be completely different by the people.
And that will affect you more directly than policies.
Fair.
And speaking of what difference does it make the mic drop person, remember who was leaning toward voting for Kamala?
I was like, why don't you just say that you want my kids to grow up in a browner, more violent and savage country?
Yeah, that person did end up going for Kamala.
I unloaded with two barrels with a smile again today over the phone.
And, you know, whatever.
You can't fight City Hall sometimes.
Let's go to New White Life and Sam real quick and then get on with more good stuff.
Yeah.
Well, I received the very good news of a new conception.
So the birth has not happened, but I thought it was very exciting.
Our guy, Wolfman, Wolfman and his lady friend have conceived a child.
God bless them and good luck to them.
You know, they are, they're not married, of course, but They've had a whirlwind, whirlwind romance over these last, since, I don't know, maybe the beginning of the year, something like that.
And they were surprised and happy to find out that she is with child.
And so I'm wishing them very well.
And they have a challenge ahead because it's not exactly everything like planned out and everything all ready to go.
Sure.
But they have a plan.
They have a plan.
They're actually moving and they have, I'm not going to give details on that, but they are setting up a homestead somewhere a little bit out of the area, to say the least.
224 Elm Street in, yeah, Benton Hill, Arkansas.
No, go ahead.
Yeah, they're kind of going rural.
They're kind of getting out of the city area and they're moving into a rural area.
I'll just leave it at that.
But it was, yeah, it was a surprise and we all wish them very well.
Nature found a way in the Jeff Goldblum voice and now they need to find a way to match.
There you go.
Congratulations.
Wolf man and wolf woman.
Good stuff.
Thank you, Sammy Baby.
So speaking of New White Life, this one is a little personal.
So I won't share too many details, but our lovely only daughter had her birthday since the last show.
And we joke in the house that she always gets top billing for birthday planning because of the timing.
You know, this time of year, it's beautiful.
It's lovely.
All the kids are around, et cetera.
Junior is in the dead of winter, somewhat in the aftermath of Christmas.
And then junior junior, I should stop calling him potato.
The other junior, he's in the middle of the summer.
So we went all out also because it's our daughter and want to make her feel happy.
And she's the social butterfly of the family and loves everything.
Regardless, a little bit of anxiety about, you know, it's not little kids are easy to please.
And then teenagers are maybe a little bit more jaded or whatever.
It's sort of entering that tween hazy area where the, you know, the pinata and the ring around or, you know, musical chairs doesn't work, but you can't exactly like, you know, crack open a can of beer and say, you know, when kids get older, they could have a beer on their birthday.
You know what I mean?
Long story short, we did all the prep and the kids started showing up, but one of the kids was going to be late.
So we couldn't really start the planning.
If you've ever met my wife, you know that she jumps in headfirst on planning these sort of elaborate parties or scavenger hunts or whatever.
So she had this whole thing set up and they couldn't get started without an important kid who wasn't here.
So we're sort of milling about and my daughter's like, dad, this is kind of lame.
I'm like, I started a fire.
We got the music playing.
You got the go-kart.
And I'm like, oh, God, it's going to be a disaster.
And the sun is starting to get low in the sky.
And I'm like, I got to go pick up the pizza for this thing.
So I drove to get the pizza for the party with this sort of sinking feeling in my gut that we were going to host a stinker, a dud.
And I was going to have a sad daughter on my hand when I got back.
So I'm waiting with all this sort of negative energy and apprehension.
And while I was gone, this goes back to the whole like things can turn on a dime in two seconds.
Apparently, you know, the last kid showed up almost immediately as I drove off.
They got started on the scavenger hunt plus riddles, plus physical challenges as soon as I left.
And that was a hit.
I got back, brought the pizza.
Everybody's in good spirits, having a good time.
She's all smiles.
I forgot to mention that my wife took her out to get her hair done for the first time in a while, just before the party.
And when she, when she came back, I said, oh, she looks beautiful, you know, and just getting a little bit older.
And it was a wonderful thing and also a little bit of a sad thing to see her getting older.
And she knew it too.
She was glowing.
Like, I'm fresh back from the salon.
Real pro moment.
And so the party healed itself, right?
Parties are sometimes slow at the beginning, right?
Everybody's milling about ended up being a smash.
And then I took all the kids to a haunted house.
Oh, and they were all really well behaved.
And they're like, can we go to get a snack after the haunted house?
I was like, well, that depends on if you guys are good and if you stick around.
And as part of my wife's elaborate stuff, she bought these cheap, but really awesome LED skeleton gloves.
So, you know, made in China, of course, they got a battery, but each hand is lit up with a different color, looking like metacarpals and stuff like that.
So we wore them because it's dark.
And I was like, this will help us keep track.
You know, if you see the glowing hands and probably a dozen people were like, those things are awesome.
Where'd you get those?
Like doing raver hands or whatever.
So having a daughter, as anyone who has one or many of them knows, is probably more challenging than a son.
There's a lot more psychology and perhaps emotion.
I'm not being unfair to women and, oh, you're all emotional, but there's more emotion involved there and more care and concern from a father's perspective.
And that was present in this brief day that passed by in a flash from foreboding to joy and happiness and the cake and all that and the trampoline.
It worked out really well, I think.
And she was still smiling today.
So you could do it, parents.
And yeah, I focused on the nuts and bolts in our relationship.
I was like, I will get the supplies and do the prep.
And then my wife focused on the making it special for.
And it worked out great.
Complimentary stuff.
I think you did as best as you can.
Like you say, there's always an element of chance in there about, you know, what's her, what is her mood like?
And especially as our children start to take on more adult attributes, right?
Sure.
You know, I shared with you some pictures.
My youngest son attended this formal dance.
Of course, we are members of a homeschooling, Catholic homeschooling community.
And because these kids do not have all the things that you might do if you were in a public school, the homeschooling group provides some of these things.
And one of them is a formal dance in the fall, which gives everyone a chance to dress up and dance and things like that.
So I shared some pictures with you, Coach, and you had pointed out that it's kind of the same note that you're saying.
You could see the maturity and the adult qualities coming out.
This is looking like a young man.
More like a man than a boy.
Yep.
Yeah.
And because we see each other every day, he and I, it's maybe a little bit lost on me or lost on our family.
But as soon as you said that, I said, oh, you know, I do see that myself as you said that.
I looked at the picture again and you can see there he's dancing with some nice young ladies.
And yeah, there is a bittersweet moment that you have as a parent, because as that person leaves behind their childhood, there's something about that childhood that is becomes part of your own life.
So you are losing their childhood.
You know, you'll only have memories of their childhood.
And there's some, there is a twinge of pain in that.
But we had this Catholic homeschoolers formal dance.
And from the pictures of it, if you recall, I mean, the amount of care and detail put into preparing the tables with the decorations and the amount of food is like five times as much as they need, you know, and all the exquisite dessert table and just everything.
And then everybody lines up and the highlight is the dancing, which goes on for absolutely two and a half hours, I would say.
They're out there dancing and they do things like the Virginia Real and line dancing, square dancing, and probably other names.
I don't even know.
But, you know, the dancing is an important thing because it's something our society has lost.
You know, if you've ever seen people, adults, especially dancing, let's say at a wedding or at some other occasion where there is music and people are invited to dance, it's kind of sad in a way because no one knows how to dance anymore.
And this is an important thing to be able to relate to the opposite sex in a wholesome way.
You should be able to dance with the opposite sex and know how to touch a female if you're a man.
And you should be able to dance with your mother.
You should be able to dance with your sister or your cousin or your friend's wife or whatever it is.
And that is a social grace sadly lacking because when you see people dance at a nightclub or at some other event, it's like lewd to, you know, for lack of any better word.
And this is something our society has suffered.
So I think it's wonderful that we have the opportunity for young people.
They go and they dance together, learn how to dance.
Notesworking was notesworking.
No, and they even give a little bit.
Breakdancing.
They even give a couple of warnings.
I'll use that word before.
They say, you know, you are, especially to the boys, you are gentlemen.
You're expected to ask, act like well-mannered and nice young men that you are, which was good.
But just to make Don Juan under the roof they were following.
Well, he's, you know, it's funny how different children are different ways.
You know, I have some other sons that have, they've done all right.
I mean, my one son got married this year, but, you know, like quite late in life is what I would call it in the 30s.
And my other son, he's been telling me, oh, I know I need to be thinking about getting married and having a family.
He knows like he's at the time of life where that should really be happening.
So some of my sons are not exactly like go up and talk to any girl and they could have a nice conversation.
They're maybe more introverted where my youngest son is, you know, he's able to be that kind of a guy who can, you know, but he's, he's not.
Yeah, he's, he's a natural with girls.
He can talk to them.
It doesn't mean he's trying to, you know, he's, he's very, very Catholic, very serious about that.
So it's not that he's trying to be, you know, trying to get around or anything.
He's, but he's, he knows how to talk to girls and girls seem to like him.
And he's, he's got, you know, he talks to girls.
He knows a couple of really nice girls that, you know, who knows, maybe someday it'll lead to something.
But one point I wanted to make about this topic here.
So I volunteered.
I was the I was a chaperone.
And this is actually the weekend my wife was out of town for three, four days making the movie I mentioned earlier.
So I was there by myself, essentially, and I'd volunteered as I have at some other events that were hosted by this group.
And there's this one particular couple that I can feel them triangulating on me.
You know, they have maybe I'm making it up in my mind, but they're they're saying things to, yeah, they're probing.
And so I don't know how to handle that or what I should think about it.
I am, I try to be diplomatic and evasive too, by the way.
But also I'm not a good liar.
And I'm so it's it's you know you think they're on to you or yeah, basically.
Yeah.
I think I think they with Will and Pent, not like trying to be like, maybe he's one of us, but it's like a they they live thing.
They're spotting you.
Yeah.
And maybe they they smell smoke, you know, and they're looking for fire.
I don't know, but I don't want to mess up, you know, that my son enjoys interacting with this group.
So I am trying to be careful.
And I don't know.
Yes.
Hedging your answers and what I what I do with with somebody who is problematic, my tactic is to cut them off totally.
Like I'll just make it so that we don't have to interact.
I don't know if any of the anyone on the show here would care to offer any good tactics or how to think about this type of thing, but I do struggle with it because there's part of me that wants to share.
You know, when I meet somebody and I think I have a moment to share, I do definitely bring out the truth and the facts.
But with this type of situation, it does it does make me uncomfortable.
If you have what if your spider sense is telling you that it is a hostile probing and not a curious or an innocent or a possibly supportive probing, I would trust that instinct.
Yeah.
For sure.
The fact that it's intertwined with faith and family makes it all the more hazardous for you and every, whether it's, you know, they're going to go nasty on you or whether it's just going to be awkward socially.
I've mentally prepared for those situations and they have not come to pass in the, you know, so I haven't had to put them into practice, but I've always thought, you know, when am I out and about and interacting with normies or potential hostels?
It's usually in a public situation at school or at the fields or whatever.
And my expected plan would be, you know, if anybody ever confronted me or started asking me questions, just be like, look, I would be happy to discuss to discuss these issues ad nauseum in great detail, but this is not the place because for this thing, we're not here to talk politics or race or religion or culture, but it's never come to that.
And whether that would fly or not, or God, you know, would they even take me up in the offer?
Probably not.
What most hostels want to do is confront you and try to get you in a gotcha or make a scene or basically just inflate their own ego to feel like they're conducting their own personal inquisition, which maybe these people are, maybe they're not.
And as, you know, as much as we want to say, oh, give it, you know, give it to them with two barrels.
In your 20s or you know, maybe early 30s, you'd want to do that, but you're like, No, that will cause pain and scar issue and social fallout.
And I have to, yeah, bite my bite my tongue essentially.
But I'll shut up.
No, that's all good.
That's I appreciate that.
I, uh, and that's those are some good uh things for me to keep in mind.
Like, as you say, hey, uh, maybe we discuss this some other time, you know, and I'd be happy to, because there is a part of me that's like, let's go right now, you know, including if it involves a fist fight or words or whatever it is, no problem, you know.
But but maybe like in a give them, tell them, yes, uh, we can, we can go there, but just not here.
And and and then that puts it on their uh um in the ball in their court, so to speak, if they want to uh risk that and especially in your and in your case, you know, that there's multitude of ways to discuss our issues without using slurs or without going over the top or without the right arm going up reflexively, like uh training, love.
And you can use script, you can use scripture to justify your views, too.
It's faithful, sure.
Um, so yeah, they're probably they probably wouldn't take you up on the offering, it probably wouldn't make a damn bit of difference if if you if you think if you think they're sneaking around, they probably are.
Well, here's the thing: it's not the first time, uh, it's been a couple of times where I've had to be very careful and uh and I can feel that they're trying to get to a certain point, but uh my my strategy right now is going to be avoid them, yeah.
And you know, nothing could happen if we don't talk to each other, so let's let's do that.
Yeah, you're swallowing your pride for the betterment of uh the family and you know, social interaction.
It reminds me, Sam, uh, of course, in my previous employment, um, there were actually anti-Israelis or Israeli skeptics, or perhaps, you know, you know what I'm talking about, leftists who opposed Israel for different reasons.
Uh, so occasionally in the office, you know, there we'd have happy hours in the office or conversation with this or that person behind closed doors.
And every once in a while, that would come up: Israel's actions in the Middle East and the blowback and our support for them, which as you well know, people have resigned from government in opposition to our slavish support for Israel.
And in those situations, it's sad to like go into meme think, but I always felt like Willem Defoe and that, you know, I'm somewhat of an Israel skeptic myself for different reasons.
Uh, and in those situations, instead of going, you know, yeah, let me tell you about this or that, you know, just sort of agree and perhaps moderately agree, yeah, amplify, yeah.
Leftist anti-Israelism is a complete horse of a different color from white colonial evils as opposed to no.
And in the case of these, in the case of these people, these are the Judeo-Christian types, you know, yeah.
And uh, I don't have a problem uh fighting with those people or anything like that, it's more of the venue is the problem, exactly.
Yeah, you're not good territory.
And speaking of uh, the Judeo-Christian thing, uh, I did possible full house advice for women facing issues such as morning sickness, PMS, or uh, things like that, just to see where it goes, either serious or unserious.
But another example, a buddy recently shared the RSS feed for Tucker's extensive interview collection, which has already grown.
It's in the hundreds already from when he left Fox News because I can never sit down and just watch a video for two hours, whatever long it is.
And the one that I picked out from, I was like, ah, now I can shop and listen to these while I'm driving or while I'm mowing the lawn was his interview with his mainer neighbor.
50-year-old guy, salt of the earth, right-wing, obviously pals with Tucker.
And the first thing that I'll get to the nature of his Achilles heel, but it struck me that it was a little bit of a low-rent full house interview because Tucker was asking him questions about shotguns and like wood and stuff like that.
It was all over the place.
Maybe he was just playing easy or kind with somebody who was not perhaps ready to be grilled about his political inclinations and stuff like that.
But this ostensibly, you know, salt of the earth backwoods mayner neighbor of Tucker, who's worked all over the place and went to college and dropped out.
At one point, he said, I almost fell out of my chair as I was listening to it.
They were talking about trannies or whatever.
And this guy said, you know, I mean, I'd let them babysit my kids or stuff, but I just don't want them marching in the street and parading it.
Now, granted, this guy doesn't have kids.
I said, because, and of course, that's ludicrous and we know better.
Like, are you, do you know anything about transgenders?
You let them who you don't, yeah, you don't even have kids.
Maybe if you did, yeah.
But that concept of it's okay as long as you don't parade out in the streets and do the grotesque, you know, leather chaps and sucking dildos off in the street in front of kids.
Right.
Absolutely moronic.
And Tucker didn't challenge him on it.
That was the other thing.
I was like, what kind of milquetoast, you know, new right rebel, rebel bullshit is this that he didn't like, you know, Phil, whatever his name was.
Episode list.
You don't actually want a transgender person babysitting your kids.
No.
So, you know, there are no ones.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There are no good ones when it comes to any of these groups, Jews, blacks, queers, transgender, whatever.
There are no good ones.
You're thinking, well, the good ones are, no, no, there are no good ones.
That's a normal, that's a normal man pretending to be a woman or vice versa.
It would be, he or she or it would be fine watching my kids, but it just, it really got down to the sort of brain dead and defensive, you know, I don't want to be offensive.
In some ways, you'd be like, no, I would rather them be out in the street parading their perversities instead of watching my kid.
That helps our cause much more.
And that's on the defensive thing.
And then, and you can go listen to this on your own time if you want.
Maybe I'll post the Tucker RSS link in the show notes.
And then finally, toward the end of the show, he said one of the things that really angered him about leftists was he was a big John Wayne film fan.
And at some point, John Wayne films were accused or, you know, labeled racist by this person.
Yeah.
Probably are implicitly in the way that everything was racist.
Well, especially like with, they definitely would be sexist, you know, which is any old movies.
You see, like where the guy forcibly kisses the woman and she's struggling away.
And no, no, I don't want it.
And then she gives in slowly.
Finally, she's passionately kissing him as well.
That's what the feminists, they hate to see that type of thing.
Feminists hate to see reality.
Come on.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, they don't want it, but they really do inside.
And so they get forced to and then they like it anyways.
And the way that he was so go ahead, Berla, please.
I want to add on to Sam's point.
See, feminists hate that because they basically are children.
And sometimes, you know, you got to, you got to feed your child like the food.
I don't want it.
And then they eat it.
They go, ooh, I like it.
So it's, you know, that's what it's like.
You know, you got to give them, you kiss them when you're masculine, man.
Like, oh, I like it.
Yeah.
See, that's what they hate about it.
This guy was angry that they would call his, you know, personal semi-hero John Wayne racist because in this guy's mind, he wasn't racist and that's offensive.
When, of course, our worldview is whether he was or wasn't doesn't matter.
It was a different time and it would be that things were better then because racism, healthy, normal, natural, procreative racism was the norm back then.
And there's nothing wrong with this.
How do you think we ended up in this?
And it came back to the beginning when they're talking about prepping.
And being in Maine, you instantly think of New Yorkers.
So there was a semi-constant refrain of, you know, what if, what if a dozen New Yorkers show up on your property?
And I couldn't, Tucker, of course, probably knows what quote unquote New Yorker means.
And I don't think he's worried about like Jewish stockbrokers showing up with shotguns on his property.
They're thinking blacks, Puerto Ricans, Hispanics from the city showing up when the SHTF.
And so they play footsie with racism incognito there when it comes to prepping stuff and who would be the most likely perpetrators crawling out of urban centers to come menace them, but then never actually fundamentally talk about white identity or black criminality or transgender sexual perversion and their certain preponderance and disposition toward abusing children.
And it just made me think, Jesus Christ, this is the number one or number two podcast in politics in the land.
And then you Rogan and Trump doing their thing.
I watch the highlights.
Whatever you think of Trump, we'll put that aside.
Did Rogan challenge Trump on the vax or on his immigration record or on the absence of a wall or on he didn't even really probe on neocons and John Bolton.
Trump's like, yeah, John Bolton sucks, but it sure was good to have that crazy bulldog next to me.
And some guys ate up the Trump interview and were like, yeah, he's really good.
Okay, maybe he's really good, but I'm just so sick.
I don't believe a word.
It shows how far away they are from any kind of real position.
Ken O'Keefe with Jake Shields talking about the realities in Germany and Weimar and what the National Socialists were able to achieve in the span of two or three years.
That's real dope.
That's the good stuff for the masses.
All that other stuff.
I'm shocked and surprised that so many guys are falling back how low the threshold is.
Yeah.
Yep.
Really.
And I want to defend some.
I'm going to defend some of those guys.
It's probably on the like the Trump scale, like, you know, or like the Trump curve.
So it's less like, oh, he's doing so good.
It's more just comparatively.
Yeah.
Because it's not like, oh, no, no, this time he was good on, he was good on podcasts.
So he's going to be our guy this time.
I think it's, it's more just like, you know, he was really sleepy in 2020, where now, like, four years later, which means four years older, it's like, okay, okay, okay.
Maybe, maybe, maybe it will at least be entertaining with him being in the White House.
Very possibly.
Yeah.
When he gave his announcement that he was running again from Mar-a-Lago in, was it late 2022?
Everybody was like, he's, he's trying to lose.
Like, he's just going through the motions.
He's just going to find it was empty, dead.
It looked like he hadn't even prepared.
And it was like, oh, God, what's going on?
And now.
Well, that shot in the ear was a shot in the arm.
Yeah.
All sorts of FUD out there, too, about what's the late October surprise going to be.
For me, I'm running out of time here.
The October surprise was a bunch of podcast appearances.
Yeah.
I don't know if Justin is going to join us on the election night stream.
Got to ask, buddy, what's your meta view on Trump Kamala and the election, if you have one?
You're a cynical supporter?
Oh, man.
What a question.
I don't know.
I'm not a supporter.
I'll say that.
I think the establishment structure, deep state, whatever you want to call it, is happy to have Trump win because Kamala's a train wreck.
I think that they kind of embarrassed themselves with Biden.
Some segment wants Trump.
Right.
There's definitely some competing interests for sure.
Yeah.
Right.
Trump, Trump gives them what they want, or at least part of it, what they want.
Kamala is useless and can't really give them that.
It's just like there's like the Trump haters.
I don't think either way that we really get anything.
There's no chance that our guys get anything we want out of it.
What about the pardon of the January 6th guys?
Because that's near and dear to my heart simply because we know a guy, we've been pen pals.
And do you think there's at least some percentage chance that Trump will pardon the January 6th people?
I think if you're banking on, I think it's a non-zero chance, but I don't think it's something I would put any weight on.
I think he's throwing everything in the damn wall to get elected right now.
Oh, income tax, gone.
Tips gone.
Like, there's going to be no.
You look at his first pardon when he had office.
It was some Jewish guy who was running a shady meat packing plant in Iowa was hiring like illegal underage immigrant labor.
Portville, right?
That's the town was, but yeah.
It was like Shlomo Rabashkin, right?
Yeah, that's the name.
Yeah.
No, that dude, that story's crazy because it's some Jews.
They bought like an abandoned slaughterhouse and then they set up their own slaughter, like kosher slaughterhouse.
They completely ghettoized themselves from the rest of the town.
And because they don't work, they didn't hire any white people.
They just brought in a bunch of illegals.
And then the illegals slowly took over the town.
The Jews left.
And then now that town is completely destroyed and full of beaners.
And Trump's hardened.
Yeah, there were like nine-year-old immigrants working there with like knives and all kinds.
It was just like, I mean, like, okay, the libertarian part of me is like, okay, cool.
All right.
Nine-year-olds are putting some work in, but like, realistically, like, yeah, 10-year-old immigrants.
Yeah.
It was incredible.
And so, so he did that, and he didn't really pardon anybody else that deserved it.
So I don't, I just, I don't believe he will.
If he'll pardon January, I'd bet against him.
I think he pardoned like one or two people that actually deserved it, but he pardoned like a hundred people.
And then it was like it was like all criminals that did not deserve a pardon.
It was like choosing rappers.
Yeah.
It's like, okay.
All right.
Well, I think, I think there was, and it, and I maybe think it like maybe General Flynn was one of his pardons.
And that guy, I do think genuinely got screwed.
Like that was a that was BS, what they did to that guy.
But I think it was like him that may have been him and one other guy through all the pardons that were terrible.
Yeah, that's the thing.
The Jan 6 thing, like he had this is the thing that frustrates me with the Trump things.
It's like he could have pardoned the Jan 6 guys already.
That was the thing he had the power to do.
They have some argument and rationale.
He couldn't do it because they weren't at this point or the way they were charged.
And you know, so and I don't want to carry water for, but they do have a comeback for that.
They have a cope.
I just, yeah, it's a cope.
Yeah, I kind of feel that way too.
I mean, it's possible he does.
And I guess on some non-zero possibility, like, obviously, Kamala's not right.
She's never going to do anything like that.
So there's like a non-zero chance Trump does.
Maybe you bank on that.
I mean, betting on that's better than betting on nothing, I guess.
So it also kind of doesn't hurt Trump at all to pardon those people in the terms of his base.
So it's like an easy thing for him to do where Hillary Clinton was obviously guilty.
And right.
And putting her in jail is a politically bad move in Washington, where pardoning J Sixers can help him in the eyes of the people.
Obviously, Hillary.
The process is the punishment, right?
So all the people for Jan 6 have already been punished the way the system needs them to be punished.
So him pardoning all of them doesn't hurt him, right?
That's what I'm saying.
It's like he can do that for a cheap political victory.
The difference between Trump and Kamala right now, and it's not even like the devil you know versus the devil you don't.
Is we all know that Trump is lying about like 99% of the things that he's saying to try to get favor with the public.
But Kamala Harris, I don't think that she's lying about all the terrible things that she's going to do.
Like she, with both of them, you're going to get a bunch of browns regardless.
But I actually have a novelty take for why I think Trump will be better for us.
I think the right has been generally conditioned to just accept a loss, where the left kind of they kind of have this fake, rebellious spirit to them that's been there since like Woodstock and all that crap.
Where I think a lot of people overestimate devotion to Trump from his base.
Where like if, you know, if Kamala Harris says like, we need to go to war for Israel and fight Iran, China, and Russia, I don't think there will be that many people that would, that will, on the right, that will say, like, oh, I'm not doing that.
And like, you fight your own fight.
I think there's only a small amount that would actually protest versus if Trump is like, my fellow Americans, Israel needs us more than ever.
Your favorite president needs you to fight Russia.
China and Iran, the greatest evil the world succeeded.
I think the entire left would be up in arms about, I'm not going to war for this dictator.
And then just like a huge chunk is just not fighting.
And there were no days of Obama when he was bombing Libya or Syria.
Exactly.
And who is the left in America right now?
Like the young left of fighting age, it's Puerto Ricans.
It's blacks.
It's Mexicans.
It's Guatemalans.
And those are the ones like, I'm not fighting for Trump.
He's a dictator.
He's a racist.
I'm not going to war with him.
And then they're just like, no, okay, we don't have an army now.
I think that is a genuine positive.
And like, we will not get anything really directly, but there will be more bad that will come with a Kamala presidency.
And this whole idea of like, well, Trump will put people to sleep.
I don't think so.
I think the avalanche, the snowball that we're seeing on Twitter of the race realism, the anti-Semitism, it's not going to be like people are like, oh, Trump's elected.
It's not going to stop.
It's too much momentum.
Honestly, all of you, just think about it.
You don't even have to answer it because it's so stupid.
What would it take for you to just say, you know, I think I was wrong.
Jews actually are not a problem.
They're pretty cool guys.
What would it take for you to put that genie back in the bottle?
Impossible.
And all the people that are noticing this, like you might get, you might get some people to dial back some racism, but you're not going to get people to dial back anti-Semitism.
Like once that door is open, that does not close.
I don't believe in the Christian piccolinis of the world.
I think those are just paid assets.
I don't think anyone just naturally just decides, I think I was wrong about that.
Nah, Jews, you're fine.
I'm somewhat sad that I broached this topic because it's catnip for us.
And he could talk for hours about this stuff.
I'll disagree with you, Rolo, to some degree.
I think that assuming Trump wins, he is clearly the anti-anti-Semitism candidate.
What?
You think the woman married to the Jew and who she may possibly be Jewish on her father's side herself?
She's just not saying it.
Because it's smart to not say it.
I think it is dumb to think that they're both not a huge level of phylo Semit.
I didn't say that she wasn't, but the left has to deal and manage and assuage their own bases opposition to pro-Israeli stuff much more than the Republicans and the right to.
Now, of course, increasingly it's a problem or whatever, but if Trump gets elected, especially if it's a blowout, he has campaigned explicitly as the pro-Israel candidate, as the pro-Jewish candidate, as we must blow Iran to smithereens.
And yes, if he, if he wins big, that's going to be a mandate.
And I suspect strongly that it will be bad for white nationalists, anti-Semites, enemies of war with Iran, critics of Israel.
Well, yeah, but this is all obvious talking points.
Yeah, we, we all, we know all this, but, but the thing is, just as much as the normal.
You don't think he'll be able to do anything with his.
Well, it's, it's like I said, like the normies on the, on the Twitter, you go to like anytime a politician does anything, it's like, okay, now do Israel.
Just like you can't turn that off, the establishment.
Censor them?
Of course you could just.
That's not what I'm talking about.
Neither here nor there.
That's not what I'm talking about.
Okay.
Okay.
Yeah.
You censor their accounts.
You think, oh, my Twitter's censored.
I'm not racist anymore.
No, obviously not.
That's what I'm talking about.
Those people, and I'm just using that as a basis.
You see all these people saying it on Twitter.
You think they're not saying it to their family and friends?
You think like everybody that first discovers race in the JQ, they're like, everybody, look what I just discovered.
It's like they found El Dorado.
This is the most mind-blowing thing I've ever discovered.
Everything you hate, Jews are behind.
That's everybody.
And I'm just saying you go on Twitter and then you see it.
It's a reply and everything.
How many times do we see in our chat?
Like, hey, check out replies.
It's like someone says something.
It's like, Jews, Jews, it's Jews, Jews.
It's Jews.
Just like you can't turn that off.
Those in 2016 too.
Blah, Let me get to my point.
Just like you can't turn that off, the establishment is not going to roll back.
They're cracking down on that.
That's not happening with either of them.
But Kamala Harris, that administration, it'll be way easier.
In the name of freedom, we need to censor speech.
That'll be way easier because the right rolls over.
The left, we've seen the left fights.
They don't know what they're fighting for or what it's about.
They just do what they're told.
Those are brain-dead, zannied up, drug-addicted, porn-addicted soldiers.
They will have the organs of the state in place.
They have the infrastructure in place and the agents in place to implement their agenda way more thoroughly than Trump would come in.
I don't believe any of the Hitler, Mussolini, whatever fascist dictator or whatever.
He's going to have all the good things that you want him to do are going to have to happen with a hostile bureaucracy, deep state.
No, no, no.
Of course.
He's not going to do anything good for you.
That's the thing that a lot of people get hung up on.
No, the only thing that's good right now, would all of you agree we're in the looting phase?
For sure.
For decades.
Yes.
Okay.
Okay.
So I think wanting Harris to be there is essentially like, okay, we need to get out of the looting phase into the next phase.
So it's basically giving up on our chance to loot.
So under Trump, we would, there's no, I don't think a social pressure release valve, but we may get an actual some breathing room financially as far as lower gas prices, possibly even lower groceries, because we're still looting.
And this is the looting that we need to do because we are in the end game.
And I think going to Harris is just basically saying loot phase over.
Let's let's go to the end.
In addition to other problems that are going to come with her being there.
That's a very bit of a pivot from what I thought you were saying earlier.
No, no, no.
Okay.
The economy will certainly get a surge if Trump wins.
I think already you're starting to get a little gust of, you know, expectation.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah, because it it's.
I'm not saying it makes sense or that it's good logic or anything like that, but we saw this in 2015, 2016.
You know if, if any of us were made president today and we said well we're, we are going to do certain things that will enhance the economy and get people good jobs and all that stuff, it would take maybe years for for the effects of those things.
But Trump was elected boom, the thing turned around like practically overnight, because there's the emotional sense that uh oh, this is going to be a business friendly government and the economy will be allowed to to uh, grow and things like that, and and it did and, and the same thing could happen here.
I, I would suggest that it is happening a little bit now, because all the indications are that Trump will win will he or not, we will see, but if he does, I think you will see the same thing and you can, you can say well, that's one factor that doesn't argue for all the other important effects of things.
Yeah, I get it yeah, that's true exactly, but uh, having jobs and having an economy that's going somewhere is something that makes our lives better.
I, I think here's my and we need, oh, go ahead, go ahead, just let me toss this out.
So I think.
So this is my Anti-trump take right, it's not necessarily I think he's worse than Kamala, because I don't really think that's true, but both Kamala and Trump are pushing this whole Israel first thing.
They're both doing it.
Trump harder, so right, Trump harder, and in my opinion, he wins right, so he wins.
He's president, he pushes Israel first.
Now, like what all this is done on a macro scale is given the left breathing room, because now Kamala was too Israel heavy right.
And so the left gets to play this game of, oh, we tried to help Israel, but they didn't like it.
They can tell the Israelis that.
And they get to play this game of, oh well, actually Trump is like, so psychotically Pro-israel and evil nationalist, fascist Israeli.
Now the left gets to win right, because they're like, well, we didn't win because America is a bunch of racist, fascist Israel loving douchebags, and we can love Jews without loving Israel.
They have to play this game for four years where Trump's the evil bastard who supports this genocide in Gaza yeah, and then they just inherit all of all of that right.
So now we have to play this game on our side of, well, we don't like Israel, we don't like Jews, but like, the left is actually the winners of this, because they are the ones who they're Anti-jewish and so they get to win in 2028.
So all Gavin Newsom has to do is come in and say yeah, I think that like, Israel is a little too like fascist or a little too aggressive, and you know, we shouldn't have supported them as hard but like, he can still give them money and weapons and whatever else, and he gets a free pass in 2028 2028.
They just write out Trump, wait the four years, and he gets a free ride.
So I don't, I don't know that we manage.
I'm assuming that the wheels stay on the left.
Yeah, I assume the wheel stays on the bus, right?
Yeah.
And I think, well, I don't want to underestimate the power of.
This is the inherited British Empire, right?
The British Empire collapsed, but not really in the sense that America just inherited it.
There might be another couple hundred years on this train where they can manage this thing.
And I think if they play their cards, they just get to burn Trump.
Trump's this crazy analog that just does his bit.
They let him absorb all this Israel nonsense.
Maybe let him start a war with Iran.
Why not?
Yeah, he's the asshole, right?
He gets it.
Obama came after W.
Yeah.
You're getting the war regardless.
I mean, that's what's going to happen.
Whether Trump 24 or 10 eats the war now, right?
So the right wing eats the shit sandwich.
The right wing eats the shit sandwich for everything.
Let's be fair.
And the right wing.
We're willingly doing it.
Yeah.
The right just.
I think that's what's happening now is that Trump's going to win.
They're happy to have him win because they want to do the not the nasty, dirty thing and they want the right to take responsibility for it.
They can put it on Trump.
They control everything anyway.
Okay, fine.
Like, again, at the end of the day, like, I don't think Kamala wins, like, that don't have some play they can just pull.
Like, I don't think it matters, honestly.
I don't, I don't care.
I don't, I don't think it makes a big difference for us, but I don't think it's, I don't think it's necessarily, I don't think there's a strong case that Trump winning is like good for us.
I think they have this thing played out pretty well on both sides.
Very well.
We're going to eat it either way.
I really, I actually don't think they have it played out.
I think October 7th was a big variable that they were not ready for.
And I do not think they were prepared for all of the negative backlash that Israel's gotten.
There has, like, I was thinking of the moment in The Simpsons where Mr. Burns says to grandpa, like, can't you go five seconds without embarrassing yourself?
And then grandpa's pants fall down.
He goes, How long was that?
Like, I just think of that.
It's like Jewish media.
Can't you go five seconds without embarrassing yourself?
And then, like, some terrible article comes out and then people celebrate all this stuff that's happening to them.
And it's just like, how long was that?
I'm happy for the Democrats to be the one who takes shit for the next four years for the nonsense versus Trump doing it.
I'm happy to get it.
Yeah, that's not ideal.
I'm happy with Trump taking it because then people can't say, Daddy MAGA, save me.
Because then they'll say, all right, this is your second term and you did nothing.
And people know that things are getting bad and they know that things are going to get really bad quickly.
It's not just us.
Everyone has this dread.
People see what's happening in the Middle East.
People see what's happening in Russia.
And people have not forgotten that China is a serious country with a serious military.
And they have a lot of people.
If your argument is, I want Trump to be president so when he screws it up, everyone blames him.
Like that's another argument.
Okay, I'm Trump pro-Trump winning now.
That's my supportive argument for that.
There's a lot of things about it, and that's one of them.
I think it's much better that Trump eats that than if a Democrat eats it, then we get Vance.
And then the next one will be Vivek.
And then the next one will be gay black woman.
That's going to be the progression.
And then it's just, and then who knows how bad it will be.
But I just think, I think it's this game until like, this is like the whole, what's it the aristocratic whatever thing, right?
Either there's a Musk or there's an Eric Prince or there's someone who is at some point, it doesn't matter which party is doing what because it's the same thing.
Eventually one of those guys is going to be like, okay, we're going to derail this train or we're going to do something different.
And I don't know when that happens.
It might take 50 years, but there are people in the wings who could do that today who are not doing it.
Trump could have been that person.
He just wasn't.
People voted for him thinking he could have been that person.
They wanted that to happen.
Whether they knew it or not, that's what they were looking for.
They wanted someone to disrupt the system.
And there was a lot more reason.
And there was a lot more reason to suspect that he would deliver on that good stuff back then than there is now.
Yeah.
And now this second election for him, he definitely is not that person.
Right.
So it's like, I don't really care if he wins or not because he and Kamala Harris, in my mind, like they're the same thing.
They're just system pigs checking a box to move the thing forward four years until someone has the stones to do the thing that no one else wants to do.
Because if you try it and you fail, they're going to kill you.
And no one wants to risk that until to some point where someone is like, well, let's just do it.
Let's roll the dice.
And that's the guy I want to vote for.
I don't even care if I agree with him.
I could disagree with him on 50% of it.
But if that guy wants to put those things out there, like, listen, I don't know what the hell I'm doing.
This isn't working.
Let's do something else.
I'll try something.
Maybe it'll suck.
But then it's like, oh, I don't agree with you on half the stuff you do.
But if you win and you try it and it fails, well, they're either going to hang you and I win because you suck or you fix it and do something different because you have the ability in your mind to do that.
And then we're good.
You fix it or don't.
And then so you get these, we need a man out of time, right?
It's not, it's not a Trump or Kamala thing.
These, these people are just, you know, bit players in the systems game.
They're not real people.
They're not, they're not real participants in the greater scheme.
2016 small dollar donations were a large percentage of Trump's haul this time around.
They're way down.
Billionaire donations are way up.
A couple of quick thoughts here.
One, I'm glad that we are working this out a little bit before the live stream.
Blood sports perhaps is going to ensue.
And Lord knows I've given Richard Spencer a lot of deserved shit on this program here and there because he's an execrable human being.
But his tweet tonight, when fascism comes to America, anti-Semites will be put in camps kind of struck a chord with me.
The fascism of what the left sees in Trump is actually a vicious anti-anti-Semitism.
And be careful what you wish for when it comes to Trump getting elected.
Not that I can possibly envision a good result from the other thing.
It's a real bitch.
It's kind of depressing if you look at it, but it's exciting at the same time.
We got to land the ship.
Hopefully we will still have a producer and an editor exposed at the end of this.
I'll check my bank account at the end of this.
I'm getting shaken down.
Shake me down.
I'll throw a few bucks your way.
Yeah, Justin, you take this one, please.
My money's no good with the producer anymore.
Anyway, Rolo, you need a new scooter, Rolo.
I'll buy you a scooter.
I need a Vespa.
A Vespa.
Oh, man.
That's pricey.
I can get you a down payment on a Vespa.
That's all I'm asking for.
I'll cover the rest.
Rollo, the people are going to expect big things from this new computer.
A lot of pressure on you.
Thank you, buddy.
I am sorry, sincerely, if I unfairly interrupted you, but you know, late in the second half and talking politics, it's going to happen occasionally.
And maybe I wasn't listening closely enough.
Perhaps.
When are you ever listening to me?
I just pounded the table there.
Bad mic discipline.
That's see, I listen to you.
Lay off the table.
That's your own criticism of yourself.
I don't have a problem with it.
Fair enough.
Thank you, Rolo.
Justin, thank you for popping in, riding with us.
The whole show, damn pleasure.
Yeah.
Thanks for having me.
You bet.
Anytime.
Sammy baby.
Lots of good heartfelt stories in there.
Yeah.
I wanted to quickly say I did a show with White Noise Radio for the Halloween special.
And I checked and it has not come out yet, but be out in a couple days.
White Noise Radio.
We are White Noise Radio is the name of the Telegram channel.
And I was on there with a number of guys.
We talked about music.
We played some Halloween themed songs and just talked about different things.
I think it was good.
I will post the link when the show actually becomes available.
So I just wanted to mention that.
And I had, you know, a couple of guys maybe were, you know, had a few drinks in there.
And I talked to Jay afterwards, our good friend, and I said, good luck editing this thing.
It was wild.
It was, I'll just warn you, if anyone says, yeah, I think I'm going to check that out.
It was kind of wild.
But so that, and I wanted to promote the new CD that's come out.
It's called Skinheads, The Skinheads Come Back, Volume 5.
It's on old school records.
And our dear friends, Wellington Arms, have a couple of tracks on there.
And there's a couple of Russian tracks with a hot chick doing the vocals.
But overall, the entire thing was great.
I listened to the whole thing last night at the party.
But Skinheads Come Back, Volume 5.
It's on old school records.
Check it out.
Amen.
Thank you, Sammy Baby.
If you made it this far, you are certifiably a full house fan and devotee.
We thank you.
Definitely check us out on the live stream election night Tuesday, November 5th.
I think it is maybe the 6th.
You know where we are and we try to do our best.
Thank you to everybody who's bought shirts, helped us out over the years, this project or that.
Don't let the black pills seep in.
And we started October 27th.
It's now definitely October 28th.
And have a wonderful time with your families, with your kids, if you got them on Halloween.
If you don't got them, keep working, never despair.
And if you're too long in the tooth to have young ones under the roof, I don't think I ever trick-or-treated with my parents when they were grandparents.
But, you know, I'd be interested in that too.
My wife and I often have this conversation that when we're the age of our parents, we won't have any compunction about taking the kids for a weekend, for a week, whatever.
Go take the grandkids.
Not quite so much enthusiasm from the boomer set from what we've seen, but it's easy for us to say that now.
Maybe when we're into golfing and living in Boca Ratan and, you know, Fed posting at the retirement home, we won't be the way.
But hey, you say it now so that you remind yourself when you're older to live up to the ideals that you had back in the day.
We love you, Fam.
Sam, we're going to go with Wellington Arms and we got a backup of other people and topics and stuff like that in a future one.
But I wanted to pick, we've played the Hope County Choir before, but it was more of the formal one.
And I don't know if We Will Rise Again was in your playlist or the other song.
Do you remember?
You played that one around the fire?
Was it that one?
Yeah, both.
Both.
Yeah, we will rise again and keep your rifle by your side.
Yeah.
Beatrice Meredith does a really wonderful kind of alt-country version of We Will Rise Again.
That's a good version if you can find it and play it.
I was going to go with the choir version because I know we did keep your rifle by your side.
Maybe we did We Will Rise Again, but not the choir version.
But send me that version compared to this one, whatever.
Enjoy, fam.
And yes, whether it's phony or real or phony and real, it has real consequences.
We will talk to you on election night on Telegram and on Odyssey, God willing, if we can make the pipes work.
We love you and we'll talk to you then.
Sam, over to you.
See ya.
See ya.
In the West shall rise a sinister creed.
The rich will get what they want.
The poor will lose what they need.
The devil goes out of ears.
He told all his friends they'll block the sun with their lies.
Darkness descends.
Oh, Lord, the great when the world falls into the flames.
We will rise again.
We will rise again.
Let the wars begin.
Keep our crystals near.
Our neighbors stand and frail as they disappear.
Let the chaos come.
Let our houses freeze.
The lights will all go out.
But we'll finally see.
Oh Lord, the great elast won't be our end when the world falls into the flames.
We will rise again.
We will rise again When the sky has cleared and the storm has passed.
We'll walk arm in arm down our promised path.
We'll watch the sun come up from its bed of black.
We'll enter Eden's garden And never look back.
Oh Lord, the great elast won't be our end When the world falls into the flames.