The long march to 200 has finally concluded. Politics and metapolitics in the first half, and then we go live for two hours in the second half to welcome listeners on like a good old call-in show. Break: Brick by Brick by The Final Storm Close: Long, Long the Night by John Morran / Robert Burns Go forth and multiply. Support Full Haus at givesendgo.com/FullHaus 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.
In the aftermath of last week's electoral earthquake, I've tried to summon the discipline to not be a naive, gullible rube clapping like a seal at every bit of breaking news about new appointments or policy initiatives.
I've also tried to not be the hyper-negative reactionary skunk at the party, seeing looming doom in every reading of the tea leaves.
And I've even tried to not be the haughty, jaded, know-it-all black pillar preaching the Bible of none of this matters, or that we've seen this movie before and sequels are almost never better than the original, or that we have virtually zero influence on the emerging administration, even if true.
Everything in moderation, including moderation, as that flamboyant Irishman, Oscar Wilde, once said.
But if you've listened to this show even a few times over five and a half years and now 200 episodes, we thank you, first off, and you're definitely older and hopefully wiser.
And it is unquestionably true that almost all of us would be better off focusing on strengthening ourselves, our families, and our personal networks instead of obsessing over the endless carnival in Washington that by its very nature makes shameless opportunism, extreme wealth, and deracinated philosemitism the barriers to entry.
National politics is a lot like sports ball when you think about it, in that your fandom or emotional swings matter very little when it comes to the outcomes.
Now, politics matters, of course.
It's wise to be informed, and this is not advice for you to check out completely.
If you have a toehold in the system, by all means, keep it.
If you have a big platform, by all means, use it.
If you have political aspirations, pursue them without delusion.
But don't lose sight of the fact that this is almost certainly late-stage Roman Empire drama or Soviet general secretary shuffling.
Every four years, half this country thinks it's all over and the other half thinks glory is imminent.
The downward trend remains, and your life and the lives of your loved ones should be your absolute priority, uber alis, in what remains a very dangerous time in history.
And hopefully, we'll be here continuing to help.
All right, it is episode 200.
Finally, the long march is over.
And this week, it is just Sam and Rolo with me in the first half.
And in the second half, we will be living on the edge live and tapping in audience members known and unknown for questions and commentary.
God help us.
and Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome everyone to Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
As mentioned, this is our bicentennial of sorts, and I'm still standing as your proud host, Coach Finstock, back with another two hours at least of dropping useful truths with Mirth and Ilan.
And nobody better call me a fag for inexplicably citing Oscar Wilde and Elton John already in this special show.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, huge thanks to the White Stag Athletic Club over in Old England, King Charles and Ryan Sneedful for their kind support of the show.
I think I mentioned Ryan last two weeks ago, but I missed his comment where he said, thanks for the continued inspiration to be a respectable white father.
Ryan, I hope we are inspiring greater things than mere respectability, but I know what you mean, big guy, and sometimes just being a good dude is enough to get you to respectability.
Being great is another story.
We got a lot of nice compliments after that six-hour marathon on election night two, but not as many material compliments.
So if you'd like to compensate for your Semitic miserliness, visit us at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse.
Yes, you.
I see you listening to the show and feeling guilty there.
I'm smiling.
One last housekeeping item before we get cracking.
I am expecting that new shipment of t-shirts any day now.
Our manufacturer provider was not happy with the proof on the latest batch and is making sure that they're perfect.
So as soon as I get those here, they will be in the mail out to a significant amount of guys who expressed interest.
We'll get them out in the mail lickety split.
And with all that, let's get on to our American white power trio.
First up, if this is show 200, he's probably been on 195 of them.
Sam, simple thank you so much.
You're the Sean Connery to my Nicholas Cage.
That's a rock reference.
I don't know if that works.
Thanks, Coach.
That's really great.
And it has been a really great run and many more to come.
We'll talk more about that later.
But as to your comments about the election, yeah, I'm as cynical as you.
And a lot of things were said as part of the campaign that you just had to roll your eyes and say, yeah, right.
But before the election, you know, I was very ambivalent and was perfectly willing to sit it out.
But one of our friends who was locked up with this January 6th thing, he said in a letter to me, he said, you're going to vote, right?
And that really kind of woke me up.
And, you know, as I said before the election, if there was a couple of percentage chance that Trump really would free these guys, then it's morally, we are morally bound to vote for him.
And therefore I did.
Now, I thought, you know, it may very well happen.
He'll forget about it.
He'll come up with an excuse.
But then after the election, he said day one, the January 6th guys will all be pardoned.
And I literally got on my knees and thank God, you know.
Now, it's not happened yet, of course.
It's not happened yet.
But, you know, he didn't have to say that after he's elected.
He could have just said, you know, well, we'll try to do that or we'll get to it or something.
Locking up Hillary pre-election versus post-election.
Exactly.
So I was overjoyed to see that and a couple of other things that he sure didn't have to say it, you know, because he's already elected.
So I have some cautious optimism on that front.
And I guess I'll just leave it there.
We'll talk more about it later.
I don't want to delay the next introduction.
Not at all, Sammy baby.
Yep.
Totally respect all of that.
Yeah, it's there's almost a first off.
I wanted to say I did not want to come across as preachy, like focus on your family.
Don't, you know, but I'm saying that because I have that scar tissue of being the political equivalent of a sports ball maniac back in those early days and having nothing but sort of resentment and disgust and some scar tissue for being the plan truster.
I was never into the Q stuff, but you know, beware those who put their faith into any politician.
Absolutely.
99.9% of the time.
All right.
Next up, if you were to cook up a reliable, talented, and hardworking producer in a human cloning laboratory in a basement in Beijing, you couldn't do better than Rolo, even if he is prickly toward me on the air rarely.
Rolo, thank you so much to you, pal.
Welcome back.
Oh, Harrow Rackham from Beijing.
Looking yellow.
Ah, me drink a rad of ricker.
Show eyes turn yellow with Jaundice.
Side effect.
Yeah, it's terrible.
Playing into stereotypes and all.
How are you, sir?
I'm good.
I'm good.
And as far as things go, apparently there was some sort of election held recently.
Did you get you mentioned it?
It was like, you know, we started recording the live stream.
And I will say, um, I will, you remember the thing that I said off air?
Yeah.
Uh, yeah.
So that thing is gone.
Nobody knows what happened.
No.
Should have been one of those.
Okay.
Yeah.
Nobody knows.
Drunk in a bar in Mogadishu.
No.
I think the audience can read between the lines.
Yeah.
Well, I don't know.
Well, I know.
Okay.
Well, you know, okay, so I want to tell a little story about our friend, our friend Juice.
He, a guy he knows who works at a gym, as he knows many people that work at a gym.
And a male or sorry, a female to male transgender works at that gym.
And they said that the creature is, they said it's just completely awful.
She is just terrible and stupid and insecure and everything you'd expect a tranny to be.
And it's just a headache for everyone.
And the day after the election, that tranny went up to the manager and said, Am I going to be fired now?
And then the manager was confused.
He said, why would you be fired?
And she said, well, I've lost all my rights.
You're fired.
Yeah.
Get in the oven.
And it's funny because the guy said that he's been keeping a list on this tranny and is looking for an excuse to fire her.
But at that time, he didn't have one.
Yeah.
Well, that, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Not at that time.
It's kind of the legal.
The workout equipment comes to mind.
Sorry.
Well, it's female to male.
Okay.
So it's adding on instead of cutting instead of take picking up, not dropping off.
Yeah.
A little peek behind the curtain for the audience, Rolo.
And I'm serious here.
After, obviously, we record here.
You press the little button.
I've made fun of you for that.
You know, what do you do here?
You press a little button.
But after we record, what goes into creating creating the file?
How much time and editing, et cetera, whatever you're comfortable with sharing.
It depends on what needs to be done and if Smasher's on the show or not.
So sometimes it's much more simple where I just make the file just look kind of good and I try to balance it out so people are audible.
No one's kind of peeking.
And then I and then I balance the EQ to make it sound nice and radio friendly.
Try to give you a little more bass in your in your voice.
So you never just dial it in and just take the file and say, here you go, coach.
No, I don't.
I don't.
I only dial it in when we're recording and I'm playing Magic Together.
Yeah, fair enough.
We noticed.
And Sam, you know, you always have to get up at the crack of dawn.
You're really able to go to sleep more or less right after we conclude because I'm always wired like high online.
No, I do stay up a little bit just to mellow up.
I'll sit up and my wife and I will talk about the show or, you know, make whoopee or whatever.
And yeah, I do have to kind of wind down afterwards.
But, you know, it's the type of thing, yeah, when you, when you have to get up early, sure, it's difficult after a late night, especially if there's been some drinks.
But the way I look at it, you can do anything once, you know, pretty good.
If you had to do it a couple nights in a row, yeah.
But so, yeah, I might be a little, little step behind on my game the next day.
Dragon ass, that's my dad.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But then I catch up.
All right.
You know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
I feel guilty sometimes because I'm like, Rolo, I got to go.
I got to go to sleep.
And then I'm like up beep booping on Telegram and news sites for like another hour or two.
But Rolo is a ghost.
He's like, as soon as he's done with the show, he's like, that's enough internet for me.
Anyway, that was a little self-indulgent.
Hope you didn't mind audience.
Maybe we earned it after 200.
200 episode.
It's basically it's like the full house clip show.
Yeah, right.
Just totally dial it in.
But I did want to talk about reading the tea leaves as best we possibly can on Trump and what we're looking at for the administration so far.
And I'll just rattle off the names to remind everybody real quick.
Obviously, we know the vice president, Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, Attorney General, Matt Gates, Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, who I had never heard of before he was nominated.
That's because I don't watch Fox News.
Homeland Security, Christy Nam Nam Nam out of North or South Dakota.
I can never remember.
National Intelligence, of course, the Hawaii fantasy of many men, perhaps Tulsi Gabbard.
National Security Advisor, Mike Waltz, total hawkish conservative Republican from Florida, House Rep. CIA Director John Ratcliffe, sort of seems like I'll stop with the commentary.
Susie Wiles as chief, Lee Zeldin as EPA administrator, Elise Stephaniek to the UN, who I've probably Googled Elise Stefanic Jewish at least five or six times over the years and I'm shocked every time to find no evidence.
White House lawyer doesn't matter.
Stephen Miller going back as deputy chief of staff, border czar Tom Homan, which seemed to elicit the most excitement.
Ambassador to Israel, end times Mike Huckabee.
Of course, Halon and Vivek with their sideshow.
And then Middle East envoy, just a Jewish real estate developer from New York, Steve Witcoff.
Top, you know, when I look at that at first, I see, you know, when I see Stephen Miller and Tom Homan, I believe, even though, of course, we know Stephen Miller is Jewish, it made me a little concerned that he's the border czar and not just head of DHS or head of ICE, right?
Because czars tend to be kind of figureheads in Washington.
If you don't have a budget, you don't have much power.
But Homan seems to be the biggest source of celebration among our guys as a sign that Trump is serious at least about uh major, if not mass deportations.
He's the glowing eyes guy of the administration so far.
Yeah well uh, we always have to preface anything we say with.
Again, we know, we know the problems with all these people and everything like that, but now let's have a conversation about it.
Um, I would say, in 2016, we were almost always uh disappointed with the, with the team, like he Trump came on and it was just like a new, new boss and everyone was either the same or, you know, not very far removed from being in those types of positions.
Uh, everybody lamented the, that he kept a lot of the same people or the same types of people.
Now, with this time, it does seem like there is a very sharp uh departure and a very, a very uh uh certain tone is being set with these people and even though yes, we know we know these slavishly Pro-Israel people, we know, but there are also other things they are also uh very tied to, like uh,
social conservatism in this country and all the things we hate, with all this leftist bullshit and and trannies and homosexuals and and uh the, the immigration and and all those abortion or other you know, types of uh, moral issues like that that are being rammed down our throat, the drag queen story hour, all that type of stuff.
So it does seem like, if you, if you read about uh, like uh, once again something after the election.
He didn't have to.
It's like he's still trying to get my vote, but he wants to dissolve the Department OF Education and then put all these things on.
On universities, uh, the entrance exams have to meet certain qualifications and then exit exams to to make sure that the people are getting a value for the education they're paying many hundreds of thousands of dollars for, and the rooting out of all this Dei and uh anti-white, race-based admissions policies and anyone that doesn't want to go along with this he's, he's going to tax their endowments.
You know that's.
That's all music to my ears.
Yes, we know what he's really like and everything.
But again these are things coming after the election where you got to take a second and just say well, let's see what he does better than the alternative.
One thing we didn't talk about was, you know, when Biden got elected and named his cabinet, it was overwhelmingly Jewish.
Not even these Christians with the slavish devotion, Israel straight up yeah, and and like that see, I i'm too, i'm too uh, i'm too red-pilled to be black pilled on Trump's picks, because it's like, do you do you think that if, if uh, Harris got in, Harris doesn't know anything?
Like, do you think the cabinet wouldn't also be like 99% Jewish or Zionist?
It's the same thing.
Absolutely.
It would have been Jews and Zionists.
And it also would have been more more taxes for us, more more fags in your kids schools, more more busing, more.
I mean, you're going to get the immigrants and it's also not they're not going to put a spigot on the Indian immigration, too.
It's going to be the same thing.
And even if it wasn't Trump, if it was anyone else, it would be the same cabinet.
Maybe Trump has a little bit of an ego to say like, no, no, I want to be the one that people like me.
I want to do this thing.
They're going to like me for it.
Trump seems like one lesson that he learned real quick, Sam, for sure that's manifest is certainly not to not trust Jews or Israel lackeys, but he learned that he had a lot of backstabbers.
Yeah, he can't learn it, can't unlearn it.
It's in his DNA, but he learned to be to just go with straight loyalists who have bent the knee and will likely not backstab him with some hardcore picks, which is at least he did learn something.
It's rational.
Personnel is policy.
Go ahead.
Sorry about that.
Well, no matter what else you want to say about Trump, I was talking to somebody about this and we're, you know, reflecting on some of the different Republican presidents in our lifetimes and things like that.
And regardless, Democrats or Republicans, but especially Republicans, comparing Trump, Trump is at least the type of guy who could do something or who should be in an office like the presidency.
Not that we're approving of everything or even very much about him, but he is at least the right type of guy.
If you get what I mean there, he doesn't mind striking out and taking a position on something.
Yeah, he shoots from the hip.
He's unpredictable.
I have been personally a little bit disgusted by how many erstwhile WN's prominent guys have been so enraptured with him, like almost doing God Emperor stuff.
Fuentes are signaling against him.
Fuentes is saying that I fall just for pro-Iran.
I find it difficult to disagree with most of the stuff.
I do check his feed every once in a while.
I won't name names to be nasty.
Several of them have been on the show in the past.
You can probably do the math, but it's like, are you just like creating a willful self-delusion here where you're like, sort of like the mouse in the room?
This is fine, but it's not actually burning down or maybe it will.
Or are you just trolling?
Are you just trying to have your kicks before this whole, you know, what goes up in flames?
As Jim Morrison said, it's just weird to me.
It makes me angry, actually.
It is, but honestly.
But here's another way to look at it.
Okay.
In the same way in 2016 and is proving out to have happened now, the fact that Trump being elected immediately the economy takes off.
Now, you know, Bitcoin and stocks, it crossed my mind, Sam.
Like, hell, you know, you just got significantly or to some extent more wealthy if you got money in the markets or if you own crypto.
Yeah.
Well, and even businesses, let's say.
And let me just put it this way.
You had been elected president and you had all kinds of great ideas to strengthen the economy and and build the country up.
Those things might take literally years to materialize.
Uh, some new effort, some spending money in some new way or promoting something.
But the markets are 100 emotional, just merely on the news.
Nothing changed, nothing has changed at all.
But just on the prospect that there will be a more prosperous business, friendly environment, people of this, the markets are up, the stocks are up.
But also, if you own a business now you say, you know what i'm going to buy, that new machine i'm going to hire.
Yeah, no for sure, i'm sorry to cut you off.
How about the tariff threats or the looming prospect of major tariffs on imports?
Uh, when you're listening and, and the and the tariffs, it's realistic too.
For for things that he could do yeah, I would be totally in support.
You know as uh, Tom Massey said, that's how we used to fund our government and build up our own economy was by charging people access to our market and, of course, the doom and gloom free market.
Many of them Jews, and economists and Jewish economists are like, oh, you want a real hard economics lesson there, Maga?
Uh, just wait until these tariffs kick in.
But curious sam, if you've heard any anxiety about tariffs impacting industry writ large uh no no, but it it would seem like uh, there is room for something.
Uh, last weekend I was out at a leadership conference for the Midwest Network you may be familiar with with our UH people and um I, we had, we had planned to do, among other things, some hiking and uh, I left my shoes at the house.
You know, I packed everything except that and I was really angry because because now that meant I was going to buy some new shoes.
So I go over to Walmart and I find nice pair of black gym shoes, you know, with a good sole on and everything.
Do you know how much?
They were?
14.70 something cents.
Now, you know, like I would have been prepared to spend like maybe fifty dollars on a pair of right of gym shoes or sneakers, even hobos yeah, yeah.
So you know this.
This is.
There's something way out of whack with with all that, but the point I wanted to make earlier.
Okay so, just like I said, the the Trump didn't do anything, but the economy took off demonstrably and there's no question, especially looking back at 2016 and 2017.
However, now let's apply that with to the politics.
We know that he's slavishly Pro-Israel and all that stuff.
He's okay with gay people and all that, but in the same respect, look at how these hilarious TikTok videos of these unhinged women with this is it we're living in?
Literat literally Nazi Germany.
We have no right, we lost all our rights, and you know what I'm saying?
Just the the prospect of it being that way, means people.
They think it is that way already, and it's not just on the left, it's also on the right.
You go on any type of media, whether it's Telegram channels or maybe some podcasts or videos or things, you sense an emboldenment happening.
Sure.
Vibe shift.
A significant vibe shift, even so the Overton window has shifted for sure in our direction the way we want it to go.
You might say, well, probably not on Jewish critiques, but go ahead.
Right.
And it's farther now than that's ever been.
And they would say that they're not for that.
Of course, the Jews or people that are pro-Jewish and say, well, we're certainly not for that.
Yeah, I know, but they're just one part of the window.
The rest of the window is gone way the other side.
So it's the same effect.
Regardless of how legitimate Trump is, what percentage of the things he's going to do, how many Jews are in his cabinet, whatever, all those things.
The effect, though, the indirect effect, if you will.
Invigoration.
Yeah, no doubt about it.
To me, it's a little bit like you do one of those spreadsheets, you know, where you're like, should I stay at this job or should I ask her to marry or should we break up?
Is yeah, we're going to get some good things for sure.
They're going to promise good things.
And remember, all this stuff could change overnight.
Like, you know, Reince Priebus, Rex Tillerson, all those first appointments, like there's no need to get too excited.
Trump will just fire somebody at the drop of a hat and bring in new people, good people, bad people, all over the place.
So although you can make some projections here and the projections are terrible, I want to be maybe Sam and to a lesser extent Rolo have deliberate rose-tinted glasses on at this juncture.
But at this point in 2016, we were attic.
Yeah, go ahead.
I just, I just mostly don't care.
I just think that no matter who you are going to get, the same major issues that have been killing us for years have like no matter what it was, it was going to happen.
I just think just take the good that you can take.
And the last four years were miserable.
Yes.
And just, it was socially miserable, economically miserable.
And then now there's a chance we might get something that's economically okay, but all the other bad stuff is just going to happen.
Like I'm not like, no, this is good, guys.
I'm just like, well, you know, I don't know.
But even those, even those bad things might become muted simply for the fact that there's a perception that now it's like this.
Okay.
And even though it's not, we don't have someone in charge who has all our values and is pushing the programs and the terms we would use, but in people's minds, it's that way.
You can even sense it with your coworkers if you work at a place with people.
Or maybe you can't sense it with your coworkers because maybe your coworkers don't want to come work anymore because they think everyone's a right-wing Trump supporter.
Even that, see, even that.
That's like I said, it's his phantom effect.
Trump, I think, if you were to sit down and talk to him for 30 minutes, you would say this guy's a liberal.
You know, his values are liberal values all the way around.
I think.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Pro-gay, against anti-Semitism on campuses.
Remember, he's promised to shut down anti-Semitic speech, which, of course, is ballooned.
And the irony or the contradiction is not lost that in my opener, I was like, focus on your lives, not on politics.
And we're doing, you know, we're going to do maybe a little bit more on this because it's important and because we just went through it.
It's the talk.
It's the talk of the town.
Yeah.
We're not going to be Puritans.
Oh, we can't bring ourselves down to this.
But at this point in 2016, we were excited.
We were viewing everything with the most positive spin.
And it turned into a disaster.
And when you look at those appointments on national security, national security advisor, total Iran hawk, defense secretary, a relative nobody.
Sure, he's got the vet bro and Christian tattoos, but absolutely over the top.
You know, like somebody said, you know, this is this cabinet, this foreign policy cabinet, at least, is more pro-Israeli than like the Israeli cabinet and their divisions.
You really have to think.
Now, what somebody could say, well, Trump is just doing what he did with Bolton.
He wants all these scary bulldogs to frighten Iran and Ukraine and Russia, China, everybody to play nice.
And then he's not going to start a major war like he did last time.
But toward the end of his administration, he was pushing hard on Iran.
He was whacking Soleimani and stuff like that.
So I don't think that we are out of the woods whatsoever.
And there was another Republican who was highly lauded and the stock market shot up and business was booming upon his election.
And then the Great Depression happened.
That was Herbert Hoover.
And our guys have so many theories and a lot of them are reasonable to me or they seem well-grounded.
But again, there's still theories, right?
You're just trying to project what's going to happen out in the future and be right.
And I think it was Durandel saying, I forget what the term he used, but it was like they're setting Trump up to hold the bag when they finally pull the plug.
And all the debt that's been accumulated for God knows the last 50 years, our debt has never been this high pre-wartime.
And then a war comes and they're going to jack that up.
And I said, you know, eventually the music is going to stop on these musical chairs.
And there's plenty of powerful people who hate Trump down to their bones in Wall Street, in the deep state, in the military, in the media.
So he's still got a lot of enemies.
And that's why I give him respect for naming the loyalists.
And the one that I probably found most gross was Marco Rubio because, you know, he's a Cuban, empty.
Oh, little Marco.
Right.
From little Marco to his secretary of state.
Like, come on.
You couldn't find what happened to Big.
Why is Colonel McGregor not named for anything yet?
He'd be a great secretary.
The name of the name for like press secretary.
No, they named some hot blonde press secretary.
I know.
I know.
That's what I'm saying.
It's like, you know, I know you, I know you're gay, Rolo.
You want Tucker Carlson instead of a Jewish instead of a sexy Jew.
Yeah.
It's like, it's not like, you know, Levitt, like Levitt Town.
It's a different.
It looks like she went to Catholic school.
No, it's spelled like that guy who tried to get that girl fired for not letting him buy a $100 toothbrush for a penny.
Oh, yeah, the target, Target Tiffany.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was his last name.
It was the poor Target girl.
She was not able to transfer her five minutes of fame into the potty mouth.
Thank you.
Which, by the way, that girl's podcast went from number two to below 50.
All right.
She lost all.
The one, the appointment that I was actually most enthused about was Gates for the Department of Justice.
Not because I think he is a good, genuine, patriotic R guy, but because he's a good patriotic Zog guy.
Well, the debate's not on that because what happened with him, and I got in this argument with a buddy who is a Gates supporter, and he's like, no, dude, that was a total Israeli setup.
They were going after him because he's not down with the program.
And I'm like, what?
Did they force him to be pals with that guy, Greenberg, and like perhaps buy drugs and perhaps pay for, you know, what, with dubious aged females?
Like that, like, that's pretty gross.
Sorry, if you're in Congress, I understand, you know, I could understand a guy who's in his 20s doing that, perhaps.
But when you're a Congressman, regardless, the fact that they've gone after him and he survived and he has a vendetta, a major chip on his shoulder, and that all like Republicans, Democrats, establishment types, they're all like, oh my God, this is the worst thing ever.
And he's funny.
You see where he called the fat and ugly women and reported upset.
Yeah.
Well, what do you say if they're offended?
He said, be offended.
Yeah.
Now it looks like there's something like 30 senators who are going to be like, no way, Jose, that's a bridge too far for us.
Like he's been a royal jackass in Congress.
Everybody hates him.
I was like, well, if everybody hates you on Congress, you're probably all right.
But I also believe that he's like a perv.
And, you know, I believe the stories that he's like talking, bragging about his escapades and showing videos and stuff like that.
But hey, that's what DOJ deserves, right?
If all those career J6 inquisitors go run for the hills and get ready to retire at the fear of Matt Gates coming in as the attorney general, that's pretty cool.
Good.
Yeah.
Skull crack away if he can get in.
And you mentioned J6, Sam.
I got a phone call from the slammer, always very exciting.
It was a 202 number.
I wasn't going to answer it because it was from DC.
I was like, I don't know who this is.
And I answered it.
And it was a J6 correspondent.
We had shared letters and he sounded downright happy and positive and cheerful.
He was totally glad and shared a bunch of stories from the guys behind the wire.
And they are all, they're not like dancing in the streets because they know it's not a done deal, but they're also very positive about Gates.
Optimistic anyway.
J6 advocate, too.
So that's some silver lining there.
There's a little bit to be optimistic about on the foreign policy and the Iran front.
I think that we're, if it looks bad, it's probably bad.
You know, let's not cope again.
Let's not go into 4D chess.
Go ahead, Rolo.
Expect that there's going to be some kind of World War III type escalation because before World War II, yeah.
Yeah, because we, I mean, we were basically funding the communists fighting National Socialist Germany before World War II broke out.
So, I mean, expect some kind of prelude no matter what.
It doesn't matter.
Well, are you talking about a Spanish Civil War or we were funding?
No, no, no.
Oh, we in World War II.
What FDR was, he sent like $5 billion to the Soviet Union.
For sure.
Lend Lease.
Yep.
And especially once the war kicked off.
Oh, it's a very good point.
The Japanese had gone into Manchuria well before World War II kicked off.
The Spanish Civil War was like a testing grounds, which, of course, makes you think of Russia and Ukraine.
So, and Israel, Iran could happen.
And that is the reason that I was like, oh man, the market, a lot of smart financial people are like, stocks are extremely overpriced and they just got goosed again.
The debt is out of control.
War is not that far over the horizon.
So let's not get too wrapped up in the dramas and the merry-go-round of Washington.
But also at the same time.
But yeah, I got a story later about me going, huh?
You know what?
Let me get off of Telegram and stop looking at Politico and the Wall Street Journal and go do something that I've been meaning to do, which is not chattering news, but I was glad that I did.
And I'll tell you what I found out later.
Go ahead, Rolo.
But yeah, and keep in mind that while they're trying to beat those war drums, it's really not popular now.
And war has never been popular, but now like people really hate it.
And people, people do smell it coming a mile away.
And the only people that are just kind of like pro-war, yeah, let's go fight the war is boomers.
Cause it was all liberal boomers that were like cheering for the Ukraine war.
And it'll be all conservative boomers that are cheering for any kind of conflict with Iran or anyone in the name of Israel.
You know, young people, young, young people that have like a stake in this, like they have children of fighting age or people that are of fighting age.
Like, I'm not really okay with this.
And I don't think Trump 2024 has the same power that 20, like he can't shoot a guy on Fifth Avenue and not lose a single supporter.
I don't think that that's the case.
Like, so be prepared for, especially from the left, like if there's any kind of war, like, oh, Method Americans, you favor President Much, go fight and die for Israel.
Expect massive protests.
See, I agree with Anon Commando.
There's a lot of guys who take that point, Rolo, that like they can't, they're not going even with Trump there and Heg Seth and banging the war drums and rura America, we got rid of DEI.
Now it's time for you to DIE.
I agree that one proper black, not black flag, but false flag would, they'd be able to do it.
You know, like this horrible thing happened.
I think that only works.
But how many, how many, how many younger people are actually plugged in and engaged in the system?
At this point, people who are really gamed with young people.
Yeah.
Sure.
But they also think of Trump as an anti-war candidate.
A lot of people that like Trump don't know what Trump is.
They don't understand Trump.
They don't think that's from Afghanistan when Biden got us out.
Right.
They think, like, I remember that the night of the election, there was a bunch of like big accounts that were saying, oh, you know, let's go.
And a bunch of people are saying like, oh, look, Trump is the peace candidate.
We're already ending the war in Ukraine.
Like, they really think of him as that.
On that point, on that point, I don't know if you guys have read all of the congratulation messages from various world leaders, including world leaders that are like on different sides of a conflict and things like that.
There does seem to be the prospect like his forcefulness of character or his, what's the word, persistence of what he wants to do may be able to be able to, you know, dominate, if I could use that.
Maybe I'm getting way over excited here, but maybe he, it's, it seems like he could possibly dominate and he's, and he has or has had personal relationships with a lot of these leaders where, you know, it's, it's just like you heard some of the funny things said, like, okay, dad's home.
You know, you can't, you've been drawn on the wall with Grant, you know, and dad's home now.
So now you're in trouble.
Sure.
That's kind of the atmosphere of it.
I agree with you, Sam.
I think that they, if they don't take him more seriously, I think they are a little bit more wary of him and realize that he is unpredictable.
And there's value in that from an American perspective.
Dmitry Medvedev, who of course was the prime minister of Russia and now he's like the head of their National Security Council, he said Trump is silk as smooth in negotiations, but when the rubber hits the road, there is still a massive establishment there.
And for all of his talk about U.S.-Russian rapprochement on the campaign trail the first time around, when it came to governing, it was business as usual.
Putin has said that as well.
But yeah, I think he gives pause to foreign leaders that are like, all right, there's a new sheriff in town.
Not this doddering functionary UH, with the standard liberal interventionist, UH foreign policy team.
One thing I wanted to point on before we go and get a little bit hopefully not misty but introspective about what we've done here on the show, and what it means is that we always say we're events have always proven us correct.
Right, we weren't crazy five, ten years ago when we were talking about white genocide, the perils of mass immigration, the Jewish power all of that still 100 valid.
But we were wrong about one aspect of politics and we always said that Republic you know, demographics is destiny.
Republicans were destined to be a permanent and dying minority if they didn't win more of the white vote, because the minorities would never vote for them and it's not crystal clear from this election.
It could have been a one-off due to Trump's machismo or, you know, street cred or whatever it was that appealed to more black and Hispanic men than before.
But he did the thing that Republicans have been promising for a long time.
He won like 44 of Hispanic men, he did a little bit better with black men and that put him over the top.
And white voters overall, taken as a class, still voted for Trump majority.
But Kamala, I just read some Women's LAW Street Journal did a little bit better too.
Yeah um yeah, uh.
So beware, beware the NEW UH, Republican Party, totally Philosemitic.
Uh, as I joked about Amber Rose and Forgiato Blow, apparently that worked.
Um, so if you thought you're going to get a remotely pro-white or hostile Jewish Power Republican Party from Trump this time around, I got bad news for you.
That's where I, that's where i'm like constantly scratching my head, like and.
And then you and you say you.
You say you've seen people doing that, and i'm not saying that you're lying or you're wrong.
I've seen people do what i'm sorry, that are like no no, this time it's going to be good, like from people that aren't drooling retards, like people that are yeah, not not drooling retards, like really excited about this term.
Um yeah, that's what i'm saying.
Is I just?
I just don't know why you would either be excited or be down on it because, like you like, like you know, you know what the president is.
It's of, it's of the USA right, you know it's it's.
It's not like you know it, that the government hasn't changed.
It's the same people in charge simply eviscerate the deep state and lay off 50 of yeah yeah, that's where that, and that's where 10 million people slumber.
Seal the border, or yeah, going to war is a lot easier, ironically, oh yeah, very easy for them to launch.
And and a tax cut for the wealthy, that's also well.
I, I think there is.
There is a uh, an atmosphere of optimism in in all this time.
Even guys like us not that we're wildly optimistic, i'm happy.
Yeah, there there is a little bit of a thing.
Now you could subtract out all the, all the crazy libtards, tards on tick tock, but other than that people, I mean it just i'm gauging it just from going shopping, going to church, working with people, dealing with people in public.
Um, you know, I think we can, we can have a little little bit of optimism in this uh, and and keep working on what we're working on, but I think whatever is bringing things in this direction does help us.
Amen, Sam.
Well, I think.
Well, and also, and it shows that the people are voting that way.
It doesn't matter that Trump's not that.
The people perceive him to be that.
Yeah.
This is the whole thing.
You talk to people and when you start to reveal your power level, they, oh, yeah, yeah, that's right.
And you're telling them things that they don't have the framework to properly understand or put words on or describe the things that they see in society.
It's just like that book, 1984, right?
They get control of the language and start eliminating words.
And then that's the way they control thoughts is because you can only describe so many things or use certain words.
And in the same way, when you talk to somebody who's maybe, you know, like a decent working class guy who's got pretty good values and everything, but then at the end of the conversation, it's, yeah, well, that's why we should support Trump.
You know, Trump's really going to fix that.
It's like, no, do you not see Trump is not the answer?
But they don't have any framework for thinking about the problem and describing it accurately and what is the real solution and all those types of things.
So that's, you know, that's where we come in, you know, or that's, that's the hope is people have kind of, at least a lot of people have a lot of the right type of ideas.
And we got to give them, you know, we got to show them some dank memes is what it comes.
Agree and agree and amplify, steer, you know, it's, it's really small ball when you get down to that interpersonal level, but it matters.
And if you have a social media presence that's, you know, not minuscule, you can steer things a little bit, especially.
Like if we, if we only had a show where we could talk about our ideas.
Speaking of show number 200, yeah, show number 200.
Thank you, Sam.
I was getting ready to pivot.
And I'm like, Rolo, like I joked with my wife.
I was like, every week, Rolo and Sam were like, coach, when's the next show?
I was like, oh, shrunken Wojack meme.
All right.
I guess we got to schedule this sucker.
Not that I don't enjoy doing it.
You know, it's like, it's like a lot of things in life where you're like, you postpone something.
And then when you do it, you're glad you do it.
It's like that every week or every two weeks, whatever it is.
Rolo, why do you keep doing it despite our inability to, you know, just magically have a single beautiful, intelligent, fertile female listener come out of the woodworks and throw herself at your feet.
By the way, I still want that to happen.
Yeah.
It keeps me from tightening the noose.
Does it really help you?
Like, do you feel better working on Full House?
Or like, do you think that we actually add value to you or is it just something to do?
Well, joking aside, it genuinely makes me feel better.
I mean, I'm not suicidal.
I'm not depressed, but I do feel better doing it.
And I, and because it's fun talking to you guys.
And it is fun hearing from people that say nice things about me because I, you know, I don't get that in real life.
So, you know, I like that.
If I could interject the Trump meme where it shows a noose and it says there is a place where Trump isn't president.
I send that out to my co-workers.
I had not seen that one.
That's pretty dark.
I like it.
I like the one I posted on the channel where it's like the two trannies from the Biden administration.
Who's this Pete Hanksif?
does he think he is?
You know, like, have you looked at yourselves?
Sam, 200 episodes, you know, obviously you've been 100% stalwart.
I don't want to fan your balls too much, but it's on from it wasn't literally smokey.
I don't think they allowed smoke, but you know, it was you and me and maybe JO and a couple of guys.
Yeah.
Yep.
Larry was there saying, yeah, I'll help you produce it.
But whatever is on your mind when it comes to doing the show for this long that sustained so consistently.
Well, I was just talking to somebody about the show the other day who's not really a listener.
And I was just kind of hitting a few of the highlights.
And I said, listen, the reason the show is so great is we give people information that is first of all useful to them in their lives, I hope.
And then it's also the type of information you are not going to get anywhere else.
And I think that's the value of the show.
And that's why I enjoy being on it and doing it for this long is because, you know, I've shared different things I've learned in life.
And I like when other people do that too, because it might save me a whole lot of heartache.
You know, I personally have got a lot out of the gardening shows, the financial advice shows.
These are things that have been a little bit blind spots in my own life.
And likewise, I've tried to give different perspectives that maybe people might miss or might not get a real good perspective.
Like if you remember the natural family planning show, you know, this could be, I've had a number of people reach out who wanted to know where to get the book and said that all that was useful or, you know,
just talking about there's things about the white nationalist movement that maybe the current crop of people don't know too much about, but I think that you need to appreciate like the skinhead movement or the skinhead part of this scene or other legacy, if I could use that word, other things that have come from the past, like the Christian identity movement.
You know, whether you're going to exactly agree with those things, maybe you can maybe you can bring something out of that that you can appreciate.
So those types of things, that's why I have thought that was a useful aspect of the show.
You bet.
And in that spirit, one, I always, everybody knows that I'm like, I'm anxious about not wasting people's time and giving them quality, whether it's us just rapping or having on a special guest.
I always thought that having on experts or big names.
Now, when it comes to downloads, the big name guests bring the goys to the art.
That's, you know, our biggest shows are always when we have the Sewells or the Cantwells or the McDonald's, et cetera, all time when you look at the data.
But when I, you know, every week we get comments either privately or publicly, and it's usually private to me or to the inbox.
And we get more compliments on the regular shows where we're just chatting and perhaps not as mission oriented as I would prefer in my heart.
You know, let's do it.
And I guess that is just our sweet spot.
You know, somebody said it's like a couple of guys chatting at a bar or it's a model for how to be, how to hold our views, but not be a Sperg or a weirdo or an obsessive about some of the aspects.
And if that's always great.
But it's a Jews.
It's a Jews.
Gotta talk.
Yeah.
But it's true.
But I would be extraordinarily remiss if I didn't mention the fact that, you know, over the years, and this goes back to the fatherland too, we can't take all the credit.
There were guys and gals who said, we literally have a beautiful baby here.
Yes.
Due to you, like giving full credit, or in large part or in some part, thanks to what you do.
Now, I can be a dour and cold-hearted dark son of a bitch sometimes, but even if we just had one, when instead it's double digits for sure over the years, the idea that there are more beautiful white babies out there and some of whom are probably now six or seven or maybe even eight years old fills me with an unspeakable joy.
I'm not fanning my own balls or slapping myself on the back.
We've gotten that feedback and that is awesome.
I would love if you've listened to our show and something that.
Is it just our normalcy?
Is it the actual specific advice?
Is it the whole package?
I don't know, but we said that back in the day.
Sam right, like that, if we just did that, holy cow, that's more concrete than most commentators or day-to-day you know news analysts could, could take credit for yeah well, or the people who got married right, we have had absolutely not the children a number of those and and other like, just frankly, miraculous things.
People who wrote in and said that they were not going to have children at all and then, based on listening to us, they said no, we're people uh, get the vasectomy reversed or whatever it is and uh, go for another one.
So uh and, and not to mention, you know our friend Mike, he got a kidney transplant and uh, you know all the little miracles really through the years and they, they just keep coming too um yep, uh.
One thing I wanted to yeah, 100.
One thing I wanted to touch on is that I wish uh, that we had a bigger uh platform and more listeners.
You know the people want live stream, a full house studio where we were, you know, if not in the same studio together, at least on camera.
But the reality is uh, I could do that.
Sam and Rolla would not be wise to do that.
And the other thing is, with three still relatively young kids under the roof, I really don't want to be a famous talking head.
Let's be honest here.
Because you know i'm fine spitting truth on a podcast and occasionally doing a live stream or going on somebody else's show or providing sometimes serious, sometimes lighthearted commentary on Telegram and on GAB.
But I, you know, at this point maybe you know the guys always make excuses like, well, once you know, once i'm married, or once i've got the job sinecure, or once the kids are out of the house.
But there really is.
I would just want the audience to know that like, when you have young kids under the roof I don't know how some of the prominent people do it uh, but that is a responsibility that is not to be taken lightly.
They have lives too.
My wife has a life too, you know.
So this is about, you know, I I want to go more and do more, but at the same time it's like, do you really in your heart feel like you're perhaps being overly self-indulgent or grandiose at somebody else's expense.
Yeah don't, don't be reckless.
Don't be reckless don't, don't be a coward, or don't be.
Uh, you don't have to be excessively afraid either.
There's some some big brain centress.
Yeah, there you go.
You have to, there's some middle point you got to calculate.
You got to do the SWOT analysis and do the risks and calculate what you think you can live with.
But don't ever think that they can't hurt you or hurt your family, especially.
Absolutely.
We are close to the 1115 p.m. U.S. Eastern hour, which means that we are about to transition over to live streaming, not the other kind.
And just today, I got a wonderful poem called Fatherly Frequencies from a guy who might join us on the live stream.
And, you know, I want to say thank you.
If this is your first time listening, thank you for that.
If this is your 200th time listening, God bless you.
I know there are a few hearty souls who either have been following us from the beginning or went back to the beginning of the library to listen to us.
Thank you so much for your time.
Whether you donated or not, whether you provided feedback or not, the feedback is almost as meaningful as the guys who decide to share a little bit of lucre with us to reward our efforts.
But from the bottom of my heart, and I know I speak for Sam, Rollo, and everybody who's been on the show, frankly, I don't think we have any enemies who have been on the show.
Maybe the one.
Yeah, don't you?
Don't dare.
Don't you dare, Frick.
Let's not go there.
This is a happy night anyway.
There's plenty of happiness coming from that guy.
What episode number was that?
Everyone, check it out.
I remember before a meal or before both of them.
Two guys.
Yeah.
Well, there's, well, okay.
Yeah, there was the one where he didn't let us release it.
We couldn't.
Yeah, we couldn't.
He vetoed it.
And I think, yeah, like, I let him know what we were all about, you know, and that he was like, like five minutes after recording.
I'm not comfortable with this.
I was like, okay, whatever, boomer.
I don't even, we didn't even say anything.
That was that.
I think you saw the flag behind me.
At that point, I had a certain flag behind me.
Yeah, a rainbow flag.
He didn't like that for some reason.
That just, oh, no, that was a bridge too far.
This guy might join us on the live stream, but I'm going to read it here to close us out in the first half of episode 200.
Then we got to switch over to Telegram.
Fatherly frequencies, tune into the show where wisdom flows, where fathers gather, where learning grows.
A podcast beacon, the guiding light for dads and dreamers, for those taking flight.
Mr. Coach Finstock stands at the helm, his voice a compass in the parenting room.
With wit and grit, he sets the tone, sharing lessons from battles he's known.
Discipline, strength, and humor unite, he says, to raise kids and sleep tight at night.
Then there's Sam with his calming air, the husband's sage with advice to spare.
Marriage is teamwork, a delicate art, a union of minds, a bonding of hearts.
With tales of triumph, of joy and of strife, he speaks of the beauty in building a life.
And let's not forget the producer's seat where wisdom lives in the youngest feet.
Though years are fewer, his insights run deep, a voice for the dreams that we long to keep.
Don't wait, he reminds, to start what you love.
The smallest moments are blessings from above.
Together they form a fatherly choir, igniting passion, stoking the fire.
For dads to be, for families in bloom, their words bring light to every room.
So plug in your headphones, sit back and grow with Full House, a family show for fatherhood's journey, its joys, and its fight.
They're here to guide you to make it all right.
Thank you so much.
It's brilliant.
I mean, it's brilliant the way he like, let's say he was writing about something else.
Just the way that it was put together is, I mean, English ain't his first language.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah.
Brilliant.
Yeah, I gave him total heartfelt thanks, and he might join us here in the live stream.
So we got five minutes, guys.
Let's break.
Rollo.
If you want to play one of your tunes for the break, we can deliberate after the show what it is.
But feel free to tee it up here.
Let's hit the head and then go over and tap in some audience members live on Telegram.
You want to play the cool sort of mellow one that you created the other night or that you shared?
I ended my show with that one.
We could, but I was thinking we play how do I say goodbye to yesterday by boys to men?
Is there a techno-remix there?
Does that mean that we can cancel the show after 200?
I got a funny story about that.
What you're going to listen to will be a collaborative decision.
And Sam, I'll give you the clothes if Rolo wants to be executive producer on the break in addition to his other responsibilities.
But let's not be late after the Odyssey snafu.
We love you, fam, and we will be right back after this musical interlude.
Thanks for riding with us.
We're building more than walls, we're carving out our days.
Together we stand, no storm can bring us down.
In this house of strength, we wear the crown.
Brick by brick, we build it high.
A home of love beneath the sky.
Together we rise, no fear, no doubt.
In the full house, we're strong throughout.
Brick by brick, we stand as one.
A house of hope where battles are won.
The roof above protects us from the rain.
But it's the love inside that eases every pain.
Each room, a story, each doorway.
To guide us through the night you lead us today.
Every nail we drive with every board we place.
We're building more than wood, we're setting a base.
Together we grow through every storm and strife.
In this house we built, we find the meaning of life.
Brick by brick, we build it high.
A home of love beneath the sky.
Together we rise, no fear, no doubt.
In the full house, we're strong throughout.
Brick by brick, we stand as one.
House of Hope, where battles are won With every nail we drive, with every board we place.
We're building more than wood, we're setting the face.
Together we grow through every storm and strife.
In this house we built, we find the meaning of life.
Break by brick, we build it high.
A home of love beneath the sky.
Together we rise, no fear, no doubt.
In the full house, we're strong throughout.
Brick by brick, we stand as one.
A house of hope where battles are won.
The house stands firm, no wind can tear it down.
With love as the mortar is the strongest in town.
We build with our hearts, with honor and might.
In the full house, we'll always fight the good fight.
Break, vibrate, we build it high.
A home of love beneath the sky.
Together we rise and we'll fear no doubt.
In the full house, we're strong throughout.
Break, vibrate, we stay at one.
A house of hope where battles are won.
By white fathers, for white fathers, and aspiring ones, and a show you can play in the car with the kids in the back.
And welcome back to Full House episode 200, second half, live half.
And I'll be honest with you, I'm in a really good mood for a number of reasons.
I once had a boss in DC, and whenever we had to give bad news or like decline something, you know, you're not hired or we're not going with your product, he would always just say, for a number of reasons.
And then he just said, do that and never elaborate.
So in this case, it's a number of reasons that I don't care to elaborate about.
And, you know, am I happy that Bitcoin is up?
Yes.
Am I happy that Kamala didn't win?
Yes.
Am I happy that we have finally completed our March?
What was the Paul thing?
The long road to Damascus or long March to 200?
Yes, I am.
And we had a really nice first half too.
It was just Sam Rollo and me talking for the first half about politics, to be honest, and all the ways of looking at not just the victory, but what the early signs in the tea leaves likely mean.
I reminded the guys that, you know, it doesn't really matter diddly squat because so much changed from early Trump first administration to by the end, you know, every day was almost a laughing stock by the time we got into COVID and Iran war hawkishness and the absolutely haphazard policy changes.
So all these, frankly, slavishly devoted to Israel neocon appointments, they definitely mean something, but they could change at a moment's notice too.
And of course, the people who listen to the first half after the fact will have heard that already.
But for the guys who have tuned in already, just giving you a little heads up, where we're coming from.
As we always have done and will continue to do, New White Life will be at the first at the top of our to-do list.
So Sam, you go first.
Before I forget, you said you got to.
Yeah, I'm giving the information exactly as I was approved to give it.
Sal encrypted from the Blood Tribe just welcomed a baby girl, born November 3rd.
And he says he used to be a more regular listener, but has a hard time listening to podcasts anymore.
And I guess a lot of people go through that.
I know the same as Shimmy.
I have certain favorite ones I try to come back to.
But, you know, for instance, my wife, she's here in the house.
She can listen all day, you know, and some people have a type of job.
They could have something in their air and they can listen.
Maybe they drive a truck.
We have, you know, a lot of, I shouldn't say a lot of listeners, a number of listeners that are truck drivers and maybe are able to listen to different podcasts or more podcasts.
But yeah, I've struggled to get through maybe one or two a week, you know, so I know the feeling of like, you know, but definitely if you're going to listen to one podcast, listen to this one, man.
For sure.
Sam, do you, now, I'm just curious, be honest, do you go back and listen to our episodes or because that's a little bit self-indulgent, but you know, it's like.
Well, it's, I often think maybe I should.
But the thing is, like I said, I do, there are things I want to listen to and it's more of a time constraint.
So I lived the podcast.
I lived the show already once.
You know, I'm going to go through my sometimes.
I catch it.
My wife is listening to it, and I'm doing something I might hear, you know, 10-15 minutes of it.
So, so, yes and no.
I don't sit there and listen to a whole one.
No, definitely not.
But I do that's like parts of it.
That's like Pee Wee Herman at the end of Big Adventure, where he's at the movie theater.
He's like, I don't need to watch it.
I lived it.
Oh, man, look at all these, look at all these guys joining on.
We got to call some of these guys out.
All right.
I see two hands up, and we have a special guest.
We are going to our very special.
Yeah, and I can't read.
He's the one who you see, he's got the special pre-invite because he was the author of the awesome heartfelt poem that we read just before he went to air.
So let's finish New White Life and let's get to it as promised.
And you know, we can chat to ourselves when the Hoi Paloi are not waiting on us here.
But New White Life that I had in the stack, let's say we had a new white life back in July, but I wasn't following you back then.
Shame on you, sir.
No, my third child and second daughter, and we had her in our 40s.
There's still hope for children into your 40s.
Don't ever give up.
And that was from Timmy.
Timmy with Timmy with the old balls.
Thank you, sir.
Hey, you know, I think he said, yeah, don't forget about the Mrs. Eggs, her old eggs, too.
Old balls and old eggs.
We salute you.
No, I mean, no disrespect, just having a little bit of fun.
I got, I got, I got old balls too.
And Sam's got Methuselah balls at this point.
Yeah, I mean, it shows that good health, you know, on both parents' part.
They're absolutely that they, you know, they're both everything's working.
Yeah.
I saw something on Twitter that was interesting.
It looked like a pretty thorough study that, yes, firstborn children generally skew higher on IQ for a number of reasons, whether that's in utero or parental involvement, et cetera.
It makes sense.
But a lot of I saw somebody who was like the 10th, Jack White of the White Stripes, I think was like the 10th of 10 kids.
And we were watching this Loretta Lynn retrospective on TV.
Just sort of in the background the other night.
He was really good.
He looked like a mixture of Johnny Depp and Stryker.
If you ever look at Jack, he had like the black sort of, you know, Bob's big boy hair.
But he spectacular musician.
And of course, seven nature army, seven nation army set to third Reich footage is among my favorite things of all time to watch.
And I've got a new NWM here that's new white marriage or NWE, new white engagement.
And congrats, I'll just say to Dee, who let us know that he asked for and received permission from his hopefully future father-in-law to ask his daughter for her hand in marriage.
And the old man said yes, which we talked about this years ago.
I'm a fan of doing that if for no other reason.
It's very traditional.
It's deferential and respectful to the father of the bride.
And it's kind of, I hope that somebody who asked my daughter to marry him one day does that with me.
And I don't have to say no.
That's well, if it's a beggar, you know.
All right.
Let us stop chatting.
God knows we've chatted enough hours if you wanted to count them up over the year.
And to our first friend, it looks like it is written in Old Norse there.
Good Finner.
I know him as something else.
Original music, poetry, and occasional videos.
Let me make sure you should be unmuted if you are ready to go there.
It's either very early.
There he is.
It's early or late for you.
Hey, welcome on Full House, brother.
Thank you, man.
Thank you.
Ethnicity, religion, fatherhood status, please.
Noob.
Nordic stock, Icelandic.
My name is Skulfin.
I am a traditional practicing pagan, one of the few in Iceland that is not communist.
And I have a kid.
I am actually single, single father.
I have a daughter who is 25 this year.
Next year, I mean, she's a sweetheart.
Sure.
And some of the pictures that you have shared with her out in the Icelandic nature, it looks like you're on like we finally colonize the moon or some other planet.
It's so spectacular and out of this world.
It's funny you say that because the Aleti Moonfelders, they actually trained before the journey in Iceland.
There you go.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What motivated you to write that awesome poem that tickled all three of us and we read just before we switched over?
We read it at the end of the first half to close it out.
Well, you guys, you guys have been a great influence in my life the past three years and I've been very motivated.
Just really like to listen to you guys speak this.
Just an honor to share something with you guys.
Hey, yeah.
Beautiful.
Amazing.
How are things?
Well, do you have a question for us or do you just want to, you know, chat for a little bit?
Let's just chat.
Yeah.
All right.
How is life as a single father in Iceland?
You know, is the mother still involved?
Is it cantankerous or difficult?
Or do you guys work it out pretty well?
We have managed to find a great mutual co-parenting.
Of course, the first months after the breakup was devastating and just one of the worst life experiences in my life.
But you can only feel sorry for yourself for so long.
And then it's time to be a man and get up and start to claim your destiny.
So now I feel like I'm back to thriving.
Seeing some single moms on the site as it goes.
But I know I'll find another one and hopefully make a new baby.
Amen.
Hope you do.
Did you go through the thing where you're depressed and drinking a lot and sleeping all day and then you like snapped out of it and you're like, I'm going to the gym and I'm going to go, you know, get some strange, as we say, get some women, get some other women.
Actually, the first six months were just going to work, going home to bed and sleeping until I went to work next day.
That was like almost six months where I went to this routine of just total depression.
But I have been fit for most part of my life because I trained football for my soccer since I was five.
And getting, you know, back into shape took just one, two months.
And I was back with the six-pack.
And I feel very good.
Well, the thing is, you go through a devastating thing like that, a breakup or divorce, and there's children involved, very sad.
I went through something like that about 23 years ago.
But the thing is, you're a young man who has a lot of living to do.
And I'm just speaking generally to anyone else who might be listening.
If you're going through something tough, you almost feel, as I did, like that's it.
Life is over.
Not that I would take my life or something like that, but just you feel like this is it.
You know, I rolled the dice and life has beaten me and I lost.
And that's it.
It's over.
No, that's not it.
It's not over.
You have a long life ahead of you to live, I hope.
And so, you know, these things happen to everybody in the world is happening a million times a day.
There's fate has not singled you out to punish you or anything like that.
These are things that happen in life, just like other things happen in life.
And you are a man and you are strong enough to overcome this and to even go higher than you were before.
Absolutely.
I also feel that it is absolutely necessary for men that go through this is to also share their experience with other men, because this is for a lot of guys.
They just quit, you know.
They don't want to start a new family, they just go into this, you know?
Lonely cave, yeah.
Get fat drink, yep.
Yeah, that is also.
I think that is more sad than getting divorced, you know, because I never want to be fat and I don't want to play video games, i'm going to stay fit until I die right good, I don't want to probe here, pal.
Is there any lesson learned from what went wrong with the lady?
Either judgment in the, you know, was it great up until a point and then it fell off?
Or looking back on it, was it maybe not the right decision from the get-go?
Whatever you're comfortable with sharing, just in terms of general advice for guys out there dating and trying to find the one.
You know, I said this to you.
I think that this for me, this was love at first sight.
You know, I saw her working at the restaurant and I pursued her for weeks until she went out with me.
But also, there were some signs, signals.
She is half Finnish, half Icelandic.
And Eurasians are a different breed than the Nordics.
They are very quiet, self-aware.
But I would say that Icelandic people are like the Africans of Europe.
We're very outgoing, very social.
And we also have what we call Icelandic time.
We come after sunlight, which is probably because there's never sun here.
But I think that I should have realized there were cultural differences and also personal differences.
But I think that the final nail in the coffin was when I told her that I had joined a movement.
I was a national socialist and my political movements were taken a very extreme position.
And I think she had those feelings from way, way before I, you know, came out of the closet.
Sure.
So I think that if guys feel this hunch inside of them that she might not be on the same page, they should listen to it and approach it with her and just try to talk.
Are you going to marry me?
Hey, coach, and I hate to interrupt this, but we have a great guy who just wants to say hi.
He's got to get off.
He can't be on for more than a few more minutes.
We just let Kexie come on and say hi.
Absolutely.
I see him there.
Let me allow to speak.
Not a very promising avatar there, Kexie.
But I'm going to call you Iceland Men because I don't know if your personal name that I know you as if you want on the air.
And I missed it when you mentioned it.
But hang with us, pal.
You're welcome to stay the whole time.
Kexi with a black leather mask.
Don't make me regret this.
What's up, brother?
Hey, what's up?
That's just part of the Finnish humor and part of the German reality.
This guy's a Finlandic guy, and I was on White Noise Radio with him.
From Iceland to Finland.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've been to Iceland actually a bit over a year ago or something like that.
But yeah, hey, I just wanted to say hello to everybody And really, truly, congratulations on the 200th episode.
I know it's a struggle to get that far and keep the thing going and being as entertaining as it is, you know, by this far.
And you have just kept going and you have a big following and people really, they like to listen to what you are saying.
And you are saying words of wisdom.
Kexi, that means the world, especially, I've said it before, when an international audience member, whether it's Australia, Britain, Finland, Iceland, South Africa, doesn't matter, if we can relate or they can relate to us and if we can add value for them halfway around the world, that fills me with almost as much pride as the people who say that they had another kid in part, you know, due to listening to us.
So thank you.
God bless you.
I do have to say that I've been to Helsinki twice in my life and it was a lovely, clean, white city, at least, you know, this was 10, 15 years ago, but it was a little bit bored.
It was a little bit boring.
There wasn't too much excitement there.
Is that a fair knock on Helsinki?
I don't agree.
Okay.
There is some good stuff in that stuff.
Just don't go to Ita-Helsinki.
Let's let Mr. Iceland.
I said don't go to Ita-Helsinki.
Yeah, exactly.
Good stuff, Kexie.
Thank you, brother.
Yeah, I took the ferry over from Tallinn twice.
Yeah, both times.
Once was for work.
The other one was when I was studying abroad in Moscow.
We did a whole swoop through the Baltics and then did I take, yeah, and just, you know, did a day trip over to Helsinki.
I was a young, dumb kid.
So unfair of me to call Helsinki boring.
Might have just been.
Well, I mean, I think it's a national sport to say bad shit about other people's sins and all together.
But hey, guys, yeah, I have to go now because I have some stuff to do.
But yeah, keep it up and take care.
All right, brother.
Good to hear you.
Thanks for checking in.
So you know him already?
Yep.
You know him, Sam, or he's your friend?
We did a white noise radio some months ago together.
Yeah, like your notoriety was probably responsible for some significant percentage of our audience from the skinhead scene, from the White Power scene, from going back years, and I appreciate you.
I tapped in.
If I recognize your sock name, I have tapped you in.
And I've even tapped in some people who I know are probably not going to speak, but are just hanging with us.
Even the friend father, you didn't, you didn't have to get in the air, apparently.
What's up, buddy?
Anything hot on your mind?
You were a chatty Kathy on the election show.
I gave you a B plus, A minus tops.
I just wanted to do the Puerto Rican drop.
Well, hey, basically, I have given Mike access to a slew of guys who I recognize.
And let's see, I recognize him.
I'll give him the ability to speak.
I know it's Friday night.
They're probably like, coach, I'm watching the boxing match.
Maybe they're Canadian.
And anyway, Cincinnati, I see him.
He's been funny in the thing.
I don't know.
We don't have Netflix anymore.
I helped a young kid get a job in Washington in like the early 2000s.
And he was so grateful.
He was like, the least I can do is give you my Netflix login.
And for almost two decades, we had this Netflix login.
Maybe not 10, 12, whatever it was.
It was a long ass time that we had free Netflix.
And then even when they announced the password crackdown, we were like, I guess we just have been touched by God.
There's no Netflix ban on us.
And then finally they crack down, drop the hammer.
And there was some clamor in this house to get Netflix back for this or that, but I actually did hold fast.
I was like, I am not paying money to get Netflix.
I did ask my parents for their login and that worked for like a day.
You know, it's like, is it, is it really, you know, is it, is it principled to not pay for it and watch it?
Or is it far more principled to not pay for it and not watch it?
You know, when you're talking about the small ball stuff, we don't want to contribute to Zog financially.
If all of us stop doing that, you know, putting a hurt on these people's bottom lines is important.
I mentioned in the first half that I learned, you know, some people are over their skis about Trump.
Some people are like, this is going to be the most pro-Israeli warmongering Iranian smashing regime ever.
Maybe some, part of one, 601, half a dozen of the other.
And I've been generally just tickled by how things have gone.
I'm certainly not overjoyed.
But in hindsight, I think so far as we can tell, this outcome is better for us than the alternative.
Like the only thing that would make a black pillar like, you know, really happy.
Oh my God, Kamala One.
I just can't imagine it.
But I was like, you know what?
Everybody's like, oh, things, you know, happy days are here again and the economy is going to be booming.
Let me check on my preps.
Let me kick the tires on my preps because I've been a come again or on again, off again prepper over the years, just in terms of, you know, first rule of prepping, don't talk about prepping, but basic foodstuffs and stuff like that.
And to the point where I can't keep it all in one spot.
And I actually have deliberately spaced it out a little bit.
But we have a separate structure here in the Mountain Mama.
It's basically an old pole barn that we made habitable and a part of it.
So I had some of the foodstuffs down there.
And Wifey said, you know, I heard some mice in the attic, mice or squirrels, hopefully that's all it was in the attic the other night.
Better go down and check it out.
So I bought this bag of green poison fishballs.
I went to talk to the people at the local hardware store.
They're like, don't mess around with traps.
If it's up in the attic, you don't want to be, you know, climbing over the drywall and stuff to get to those.
Just get these little green fishballs and throw them all over the place.
They'll eat it and they'll die and it'll suck.
So I got those.
And I also got the hypersonic, ultrasonic, supersonic noise machines to drive the mice out.
Totally directions written in China.
It's got a silent mode, a loud mode that you can hear to get rid of the mice.
And while I was down there, I was like, ah, let me, let me check on my food stores.
And son of a bitch, the mice had gotten into one of my, you know, those big buckets with the heavy duty tops.
They call them like a gamma top or a magna top, something like that.
They screw in.
It's not some flimsy plastic, but they had eaten through the hard plastic and gotten in and compromised just in one bucket into two or three of the bags in there.
And I was spitting mad that one, I had neglected them for long enough that mice had gotten into them.
I was really grateful that they hadn't decimated the entire stash.
But that was just a little lesson that I, I stopped and I was like, huh, let me go, let me go check on that stuff that in a doomsday scenario, I would be counting on.
And sure as hell, I was really, I was upset that I found the invasion.
I was really glad that I had checked it because if I hadn't and that had continued, then, you know, what if all the grocery stores shut down and the family's hungry?
And I'm like, don't worry, kids, we got the food in the buckets.
And then you go down there and the mice have shat and shredded everything.
So that was my, that was my little lesson anyway, from not seeing everything through rows tinted glasses.
Hey, hey, Anon Commando, welcome.
Thank you.
I was stalling there for a little bit.
It's all yours, brother.
Hey, brother.
Hey, brother.
Have you considered getting a barn cat?
So, we have a cat that used to hunt and now that cat don't hunt and all she does is sleep and scratch at the door and scratch the furniture.
Oh, yeah.
So, she used to furniture.
You let it yes.
Well, that was, I know, no, I know, but but like our current cat, my wife and I kind of hate it now.
We're not gonna like kill it, uh, but she adds nothing.
Yeah, Rolo is the cat perspective of the show.
And so, like, the idea of taking on a barn cat, frankly, I'm surprised that there's cats all around here.
You see them dead in the road, you know, you see them on the side of the roads.
Uh, but I actually said that same thing: a bar, a hungry barn cat would take care of that mouse problem without me throwing stinky green fishball, poison fishballs all throughout the attic.
Um, but at this point, we're kind of uh, let's be honest, I'm not going to cry when the cat passes on.
We're not going to accelerate it, but if she starts pissing the cat in the house, yeah, we're putting her down.
I remember when I was in school, uh, my uh anatomy instructor telling me that you know, a lot of the donated cats that we were dissecting were, you know, donated by farmers and that they were basically excess barn cats.
So, you know, like uh, when it comes to like living in the middle of nowhere, you know, rural, like cats are expendable, yeah, totally dime a dozen.
Yep, so I wouldn't be afraid to like uh find a nice uh rural barn cat and maybe have that, you know, start hunting the property a little better for you since this one's not working out.
You're 100% right.
If we didn't have this cat, we'd be more inclined to take that on.
And while you're on, buddy, I wanted to say that I gave you kudos in the first half because I agree with you that all it would take would be one very well done, impressive, and deathly false flag to get the AmeriBurgers to sign up again and be ready.
Sam and Rolo, or at least Rolo in particular, doesn't believe that.
He thinks that the fighting generation is too jaded now, they wouldn't buy it.
But I suspect, like you do, that given enough theatrical production and booms and smoke and fire, they could pull it.
Don't forget the fire on your ass from like economic hardship.
That's going to be probably an element as well.
Yeah, I missed that part.
I will look forward to hearing that in the replay.
Appreciate the kudos for that.
But yeah, that's not going to be pretty.
This is the 200th episode, though, right?
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Hey, I've been listening since day one, episode one.
So I'm glad you chime in for it.
Paste.
Thank you, brother.
You deserve it.
And well, I was going to mention something that may give away details.
I won't say it out of an abundance of caution since we're live or whatever, but thank you very much.
I actually said there are some people who have been riding with us from day one, and we salute you harder, more firmly, more properly than the rest of the Johnny come lately.
Hey, I appreciate guys.
Y'all keep doing what you're doing because it's wonderful.
It's great content.
It's something that I even share with some of the guys that I work with sometimes when I feel maybe you're kind of close to this.
And sometimes it's hooked, sometimes it hasn't.
But, you know, and I know it's hard.
We're all busy people that you guys do this is a service to the movement, to our race.
And thank you for it, brothers.
Thank you, brother.
That's really Sam and Rolo keep reminding me to do it.
That's why we've turned to the next episode.
Don't get me started.
I just had my first, yeah, I'm having my first drink tonight.
I kept it dry for the first half.
Thank you, Anon.
Feel free to pop back in later.
We got a question from Mac.
I'll just say Mac.
I saw him there live, but he typed his question in the comment zone.
If you want to do that, if you don't want to come on the air for whatever reason, if you can't or you don't want to, feel free to type it in there.
Hey, coach and Sam.
No love for Rolo.
Mac with the harsh shiv there.
Parent well parenting question.
My five-year-old son just emptied a bucket of water into the car because he said he wanted to see if he could fill it up all the way, and then did something gross on the couch intentionally.
So I threw away two of his old, crappy toys, like I promised the last time.
After much screaming and crying and begging, he calmed down and made some promises and apologies.
So I got one of the toys back out of the bin as a reward for considering and thinking about it, but I refuse to give him back the other toy because he can't unpiss on my wife's favorite pillows.
Am I right to hold the line or is that too mean?
Uh i'll, i'll give that to you first sam, I have a very strong opinion on this one.
Yeah I, I. What was the age of the child?
Did I miss that?
Uh five-year-old yeah well yeah, he's probably old.
I think you got to hold the line there.
I think that's good.
Uh, I wouldn't get too upset.
Sometimes children you know they're they're uh there's, they are yet learning their manners right and uh uh, sometimes a child, even an older child, might do some outrageous thing that you think how could you do that?
Well, that's because you're looking at it through your adult mind and there's all kind of reasons.
So uh, it sounds like you handled it right.
I would say I think he was even too soft.
I those were two willfully destructive things.
I'm not giving Mac a hard time.
You know there's no perfect answers.
It depends on the kids and all that stuff.
But two like one, the the water in the car thing is kind of cute.
If a real mess the couch is a different story.
Five years old should know better.
He's pushing his boundaries.
I can remember being a little kid and doing a couple things that I knew were wrong and getting the hard smack down, including a spanking, and I remember that to this day.
Uh, definitely leave that other toy in the trash.
I think he doesn't get that back and if I were you I probably would have left both of them in the trash to make it a doubly hard lesson because you want to nip that destructive borderline malicious, mischievous stuff in the bud, even though all boys will have that stuff in in their like desires somewhere.
Well, and we?
I recently was uh part of a conversation between a few guys the thing of how you punish your children or should you punish your children, especially so-called corporal punishment.
And the thing is, i've i've heard other people observe later in life that uh, if they were or were not punished, that's how they knew if their parents loved them or not.
You know, you may think you might hated that line as a kid, saying we're only doing this because if we didn't love you, we'd literally eat junk food and stay out forever.
I was like ah, I wish you didn't love me so I could do right.
But you, you would look back now and you would agree with that.
Actually so, and i've said that to my kids too yeah, and they roll their eyes, regardless if you say it to them or not, I would say, don't even say that to them.
But later you know, like someone who maybe got a firm paddling from their father boys, don't, don't hit your girls, don't don't hit daughters, that's I.
I agree with that part.
But boys sometimes can be very willful and and you got to show them who's boss.
So, and of course, in measured ways and not yep out of losing your temper or doing overdoing it or something.
Uh, you know, some small but measured gesture of punishment, whether it's a the ruler on the butt or taking something away, like this.
I think the the the child may get angry then, but they will look back and they will say yes, my father, he disciplined me because he loved me.
Yep, absolutely.
And when I was five or six or seven, whatever it was, and I was turning the TV on and turning it off, turning it on, turning it off, my mom's like, don't do that.
And I looked at her and I did it one more time.
And then she took me upstairs, gave me a spanking.
And I said, that didn't hurt.
And then she gave me a good walloping that I didn't forget.
That's the sort of that age group testing limits and, you know, doing willfully things that are wrong, seeing if mom means business.
You got to mean business.
You don't want to be a total jackbooted authoritarian all the time.
We all much prefer the giggles and the happiness and stuff like that.
Yeah, there's such business.
There's a time and a spanking.
Yeah, there's a time for that.
And if you don't take the correct measures, you are neglecting even your responsibility.
Yep.
All right.
I'm going to the written questions now, which is totally fine.
If you don't want to chime in, it makes it technically easier.
V says, hey, coach, I've been battling rats and mice hitting my garden and my squash.
Poison's good for inside buildings, but I've had the best luck with good old-fashioned snap traps.
Yep, the gold standard, the old school ones, I think I know exactly what he's talking about, can be devastating.
And outdoors, the poison can wreck the food chain and owls and other critters don't eat the rat mouse and absorb poison.
Good hunting.
Thank you, V. Absolutely true.
Yes, I'm not sprinkling.
I told I felt a little bit like the Easter bunny or sorry, how the Easter bunny might feel when he's laying the Easter eggs, you know, out in the yard on Easter Sunday morning or the Saturday night before, because I was just like, a little bit of green poison here, a little grip.
And I had to keep away from the dog because we know the dog ate one like two years ago and I was freaking out.
And then I realized that the dog got car sick every single time.
So it's like, into the car you go, drove her around until she puked it up.
So I had to like hide it to places where she couldn't eat it.
But I have not had a lot of pest problems in the garden with the like rats and stuff miraculously.
It's always been deer.
Deer have been the biggest menace and require fencing out in the garden.
People eater said, hold the line.
Back to Mac.
Friend father says, be meaner.
And I feel like once the promise of a punishment is made, you have to follow through.
Yes.
Now, Matt, that's kind of an interesting thing.
Like the kid had a heartfelt moment where he apologized.
Seems like you realize and like one track, one toy miraculously reappeared.
Not bad.
Could work.
But, you know, if he does something nasty like that again, two toys go away and they stay away.
Jumbabwe says, hello, coach, as a former farm kid now grown into the farmer.
I have a fun question.
What are your kids' least favorite farm homesteading chores?
Mine was having to pick up rocks our cows kick loose in the pastures.
We live in an old river valley and the ground is more rock than dirt.
You've seen pictures of my fields if you can remember my super rich soil.
It's different for all of them.
The youngest one is still too young for anything.
He loves going to find the eggs, which, by the way, if anybody has any advice, I'll answer your question, Jambabue.
But before I forget, at some point during the summer, when it was so hot, the chickens flew the coop, literally, and started perching in trees instead of sleeping in the coop.
And as soon as they started perching in trees, the eggs that were once laid perfectly in their boxes in the coop diminished, diminished, diminished, and now are completely gone.
They're laying them somewhere.
We have all gone out hunting for eggs under the deck, under the front porch, in the weeds, in the crops, everywhere.
Can't find the eggs.
So now my wife says, You basically just have, you know, bird pets running around.
And they all come to me.
They shit on the deck.
They peck at the windows because I'm their sugar daddy.
And I always go out there and give them food in the morning.
So they're literally just hanging around the front of the house and we're not even getting eggs anymore.
And I'm not going to kill them because I can't find their eggs.
But if anybody, there's no magic bullet.
You know, I've looked everywhere and I've had the kids look.
The kids love filling in potholes.
And one of the worst jobs is that on our gravel, it's more like big stone.
It's 56 or 57 stone on the road up to our house.
There's a trench, a pretty shallow trench on one side, so that when it rains, it doesn't wash out the road.
It goes right down into the stream.
And it's a long drive, and the rocks from the road fill in the trench.
So when I say junior, it's time to go get the metal rakes and rake those rocks back onto the road to clear out the trench.
That is hard work for me, and it's good hard work for him.
He rolls his eyes and I will sometimes incentivize him.
And he did not immediately take a shine to mowing.
I still do the rider mower, but I have gotten him into the push mower and he's not particularly enthusiastic about that.
Now, I don't want to have false claims here.
It's not like we're running a farm here.
We have chickens and ducks and property and grass and some crops here and there, but nowhere near something where we're butchering hogs or raising rabbits or anything like that.
We've done some good shows on that and had some aspirations.
And I'll be honest with you, this year, everybody was like, eh, your potatoes don't want more chickens or whatever.
It's like, if nobody in the house is really going to appreciate it or get enthusiastic about it, I'm not super, you know, it's a lot of work.
It's not cheap either.
So, okay, fine.
I'm going to do the things that I like to do.
And if you buttheads don't appreciate it or get into the spirit, then maybe you will when the sky falls.
Go ahead, Sam.
Coach, I live in a more urban environment.
So a lot of those things are just not things that we do or relate to.
But you may remember the story a couple of years ago.
I talked about a friend of mine who has a bunch of chickens and ducks and other animals.
And he said, you guys got to come out here and kill some of these ducks.
They're a nuisance and they're very difficult to deal with, you know, unlike the chickens.
So we went out there and a couple of my sons had the experience of beheading with an axe some of these ducks, which is, you know, say whatever you want about it.
It's a good life experience.
You know, if you can't kill animals, you know, if you ever have to fight men and kill men, you might have to, you know, got to be able to do it, I guess, is what I'm saying.
Sure.
Yeah.
And I told the family too, I was like, hey, even if we're not finding any eggs, those are walking meat sacks on our property if we need it.
But, you know, it's funny, the whole prepping imperative where the sky is falling, it does feel like it took a little bit of a back seat since Trump won.
People are probably at large, writ large, less anxious about the immediate prospects for system sustainability and inflation and supply chain interruptions than they would have been.
Other if Kamala won, I guarantee you, all those, you know, the food buckets, the guns would have been flying off the shelf.
Sure.
Just like during Obama, right?
With ammo shortages and all kinds of, you know, the gun comp gun manufacturers are absolutely killing it.
Yeah.
And when it comes, when it comes to kids and doing stuff like that, beheading ducks, we only have two ducks left.
We had two males and two females, two mallards and two pecans, and predators got the two females while the bros were just like off catching a snooze.
So now I joke that we've got two gay ducks.
I haven't seen them messing about, but it's just the two of them cruising the pond, you know, like walking around.
They come up to the house for the food, et cetera.
It's kind of cute.
But all three kids have been involved with butchering the chickens over the past two years.
And who was most hands-on and least squeamish about it, but was our daughter and just totally in her nature.
Now she comes from a line of doctors and nurses up our family tree.
So that it was totally nature, not nurture.
I wasn't like teaching her to be a tomboy.
She was like, no, let's do this.
And she wasn't grossed out by the guts or the process.
Whereas the boys were like, ew, you know, whatever.
So kudos to dear daughter for if I can add to that similar story, this friend of mine with a, with a farm, so he, and he's just, just kind of getting into it, you know, so you get, you got some animals and over the course of two or three years, he kind of got a pretty good herd of different animals going.
And so, of course, if you have a barnyard, you got to have the big dog, right?
That kind of controls the other animals and chases away pests or barks, at least if there's trouble.
And so they decided to get into goats.
So they got some of these baby goats, which are really, really cute and playful.
And they're kind of smart too, in a way.
They'll call to each other if they're separated from each other.
They're the cutest thing.
Well, anyways, the dog like kind of played with one of them to death, you know, just kind of played it out.
And, you know, and that happened.
So I asked my friend, I said, how did the, especially the daughter, the little one, how did she handle that?
Was that, or the other kids, are they, you know, were they mad at the dog or were they sad?
And he says, well, actually, the daughter, she said, well, goats are, they're, they're not meant to live like a long time like a dog.
You know, that's, that's just what they're a different type of animal, which was kind of a very mature thing to say, if you think about it.
Yeah.
And speaking about dogs too, Sam, the other night I had a realization, and this is sentimentality or whatever, but our second, you know, our first dog, of course, was Mako, who tried to leap along, you know, very sad at the rainbow bridge and all that stuff.
And if I go to her grave and think about it, I can still get choked up quite easily and quickly.
And our replacement or second dog is 100 times more competent, probably more intelligent, more useful, et cetera.
It may be even more affectionate.
Like as soon as she comes in, she comes over, puts her head on your, you know, she wants a good pat, et cetera.
She doesn't hurt a fly, but she's a great defender.
I mean, if she sees or hears anything on the property, she takes off like a rocket.
And we call her rocket sometimes.
But I just looked at her the other night and I'm like, sorry, you know, my first love is with that first dog.
I don't think I can love this dog as much as the first one.
I don't know if anybody else has that experience or it's the way it is.
I can tell you about a good friend of mine.
He recently, and I'm talking about just maybe a week or so ago, had to put his dog down.
The dog was blind for a while too, and crippled and just, you know, did not have a good quality of life.
And he had to put the dog down and was very sad because this dog has, you know, his own life, the way he went, it just, you know, as much as we talk about marriage and things like that, sometimes it just doesn't work out for certain people too, you know, and different had kind of some really unfortunate experiences with women.
And at some point he said like, well, I'm going to get a dog, you know, because it is, it does provide like a kind of a companionship in a way.
Absolutely.
And so you do grow very close to the dogs and dogs are very loyal, you know, and like abusing a dog or abusing an animal that is a good companion like that is almost worse than like a person, right?
Because, you know, they're so trusting of us and they their love is so unconditional and things like that.
So that was, I know for my friend, a very painful moment.
Yep.
Yep.
You know, I can't, you know, let's not even talk about losing a kid, but if you can get, you know, emotional thinking about a dog at the drop of a hat, just imagine the scar tissue from losing a child.
Pray that nobody in our audience or on the panel has to do that.
Friend Father says, hey, going to be a wallflower tonight.
He's got a bees.
He's traveling all over the Caribbean, Caribbean, early in the morning.
Love to chime in.
You guys will be lulling me to sleep as I cheer you on from the sidelines.
Thanks again to everything you do for throwing this together.
Congrats on 200.
Thank you, Friend Father.
You're welcome to chime in.
Reminder for the people in the audience.
If you want to speak, go ahead and put your hand up.
And our Icelandic pal too.
I know it's late there or very early.
Very early.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, one of the, one of the things and to our Finn who chimed in, and we've talked about it too on the show, but the idea that I could go to Britain or Iceland or Germany or France, maybe not France, but South Africa or Italy or Poland or maybe even Russia.
I don't know if I would go to Ukraine.
They might try to hang me from a lamppost there.
But, you know, it's spectacularly cool.
You give up a lot when you come out of a closet.
As somebody, as he said about being a national socialist or pro-white or even just critical of Jews.
White nationalists.
You gain a lot.
You gain a lot too.
And it's an instant ready-made network of people around the world with no nefarious intent when you say network, right?
No.
You know, there's a saying that maybe it sounds trite at this point in history, but there is a phrase we always use through the years, white pride worldwide.
This is a worldwide movement.
We have people in every continent and every place in the world.
There are white nationalists.
And so if you're part of this community, you're truly part of a worldwide movement.
And shout out to the guys who had full house shirts on for the Polish independence march.
That was cool.
Boosted that.
They look pretty badass.
Superman, just a little peek under his business shirt there to show the full house over the heart.
Thank you very much for that.
Let's see.
Authoritarian, you had your hand up earlier.
I know you might be working.
Chime in if you want.
Trokar, I see you there.
Dio Vendiche.
V. Now, if I had to guess, there's probably one Fed in the audience at least.
You know, they still haven't decimated the deep state yet.
I'm going to guess that Mr. I is the Fed listening to you.
I see that.
Congratulations.
Tempt him to come out and say something.
Or people, yeah, people eater.
Grandpa Soap, that's the Fed.
Yeah.
There is no political solution.
All right.
I changed my mind.
Grandpa Soap is clearly the Fed in the audience.
Anyway, it's me.
I'm the Fed, said Friend Father.
All right.
I'm glad you're there.
Yeah, go to sleep already.
Bothering me.
Let me see.
Yeah, Sam, have you, I mean, at this point, you're just, you think that the economy is going to be better and your life is going to be a little bit easier going forward.
So you're feeling relatively more confident today than you were before the election.
Oh, there's no doubt about it.
I talk to business people and I'm just telling you their sentiments.
If I was in some kind of, you know, very powerful position of making business decisions, maybe I would, because of my white nationalist mindset, maybe I would be more cautious.
But definitely coming up to the election, a lot of people were saying things like, oh man, if Kamala wins this, I don't know what's going to happen, you know, which is not, that's overreacting as well.
But I'm telling you what the sentiment of business people that I have encountered has been.
And again, it's, it's all purely emotional.
It's there's decisions to buy that new machine or to hire that new guy.
Those types of decisions are being affected by this election for sure.
The animal spirits being reanimated, as it were.
Oscar ID.
I don't know if that stands for identity something or maybe you're out in Idaho, regardless.
Raised your hand.
Identity Denver.
Yes.
Rarely known bad optics offshoot from identity.
Ev Ropa back in the day.
I wouldn't want to be in Denver, frankly, but regardless, you got the mic if you want it.
You have the authorization.
And there he is.
I see you unmuted.
What's up, buddy?
You are live on Podcast.
We got two live shows in as many weeks.
How do we write?
Yeah.
All right.
Well, so the ID is for the great state of Idaho.
And the most famous thing that we're known for at this point, at least according to all my co-workers who are very big Trump supporters, is that we only had three counties go blue or two counties go blue.
Not bad.
Still little baby steps.
Wyoming and West Virginia, or maybe it was Oklahoma.
Yeah, it depends.
Like there's districts and then counties or whatever, but not a single county in West Virginia went blue.
The one that went closest, of course, was Morgantown, which is the home of West Virginia University.
A lot of professors and the high-earning hoity-toity types there.
But yeah, God bless you in Idaho.
Everything I've heard that Idaho is wonderful, one of the few states I haven't been to, but that the housing prices and the influx of the refugees from blue states is getting a little bit obnoxious, I guess, depending on where you are.
The influx of the refugees is gotten so bad, at least in my area.
And it's actually worse here than most of the rest of the state because about 15 miles west of where of this town I live in is a government laboratory for the Department of Energy.
And almost 60% of the people who work there are imported.
Yep.
Oh, you mean actually internationally imported, not just blue state, like white American Well, imports.
They are imported from all over, mostly actually from other, you know, lower level government laboratories.
And most of the time, they get promoted to here, and most of them are diversity hired.
So, whether or not they're domestic non-whites or poor non-whites, they're non-whites all the same.
What a sweet gig to get the federal job security, the relatively large, everybody thinks that federal employees don't get paid much, but you stay there long enough and you're bumping your way up the GS scale.
And then to live in Idaho with at least formerly low cost of living, having lived and worked and studied in DC for two decades, it's like, yeah, I made my way up the income ladder, but it was one of those cases that you see in the news where it's like, how are these people who make so much money, you know, living paycheck to paycheck?
It's like, bro, you know, it's, it's not that hard to envision.
But it's one of those where I'm talking to this brown lady at the local gym, and she's telling me that she works three days away, three days a week, and makes $300,000 a year.
Yeah, see, that's what's wrong with this country.
We got to fix that.
Yeah, tax her more for sure.
I forgot to ask you, Oscar, as a first-time caller, as it were, ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status.
And reminder, we are live and recording, so don't get too personal.
Ethnicity is white, mostly Anglo.
And I think there's a little bit of some Nordic somewhere in there.
I haven't done a 23andMe because, God forbid, you give your DNA to the Jews.
Right.
I don't.
But I'm mostly Anglo.
I've traced on both sides of my lineage, my ancestors back to coming to America from England.
So I guess I'm probably 95% Anglo.
And then religion, I would guess call myself LDS adjacent.
So Mormon adjacent.
I was never a practicing Mormon, but you know, you've, yeah, you might be familiar.
Anyways, we had a couple.
Remember when we had that show?
We had the Mormons.
Yeah, right.
Yeah.
Yep.
Funny story.
Did you hear that one?
If you haven't heard that one, go back and listen to that.
I've listened to that one a couple of times.
That was a really good one.
Because I would use their point, the points that those guys made to my Mormon buddies that I work with.
There you go.
See, putting it to you.
Paul Hood status is: I have two children.
One is one and a half, and the other one is two months old.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah.
New father.
Congratulations.
Man, it's a blessing.
But the Mormon podcast you guys did really, really good.
And my buddy that I work with, that's Mormon.
When the guy was talking about how it's kind of the unspoken truth that the LDS church uses the, you know, the missionary effort in the South American countries as kind of a way to harvest tithe, he was so pissed about that.
Because he like let the cat out of the bag or because he thought it was heretical.
He thought it was ridiculous.
It was like almost he was, he was a heretic for saying that.
He's like, he's not a real Mormon.
Yeah.
He's a dissident Mormon for sure.
I think I called him that the other day, which is probably fair.
Yeah.
I mean, those, those guys were, you know, what do you call them?
Like OG Mormons?
You know, like, yes, we actually believe in the racial doctrine.
The one guy had what I believe.
The one guy had an ancestor that was like from the most original parts of that movement.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like the lost tribes of Israel.
I actually have an ancestor who was a bodyguard to Joseph Smith, believe it or not.
There you go.
Yeah, shoot.
Go ahead.
And that was I wanted to hear you guys talk about all the insane number of videos that we've seen of liberal women.
Let me let me tell you, there's a channel I'm on and I hope you guys are on it.
If you're not on it, get on it right away.
It's called Woman Moments on Telegram.
Please post in the comment zone if you can find it.
Yeah.
Woman Moments is absolutely, if you were going to be on one channel other than Full House, Woman Moments is absolutely hilarious.
Well, the guy doesn't post a ton of stuff.
Every couple days, there might be five or eight or 10 videos at the most.
After the election, I mean, there was like 30 videos every day of these women losing their minds.
It's, oh, it is too much.
These, these women, you know, this, this thing of Trump being elected, we don't want to put our rubber stamp across everything, but it has been a time of revealing, I think.
It has revealed how kind of weak the establishment really was with the Democrats.
It is, you know, now that Trump is threatening to get rid of all these people, they're scattering like cockroaches.
And these women are revealing the depth of insanity that they have.
Yeah, Ford B, you know, there's, I saw this one video where the woman was saying she's going to get a Glock and she's going to start shooting white men.
Like, how is this woman not arrested?
Or, you know, imagine me saying I was going to kill black people on this live thing right now.
I could guarantee you within a short amount of time, there'd be some kind of agents at my door.
But if you said you were going to kill white people, there'd be agents that you're telling you where to go and how to get away with it.
Probably something like that.
It's like that, that guy that Justice Report exposed as an Antifa member, Secret Service agent.
Yeah.
And somebody was like, no, he probably got a tap on the back or a slap on the back in the office.
Now, I don't actually get on the lip.
I just see it all depends because if, you know, if the SPLC or the ADL writes an article about you, it's like, oh, it's not too attention.
You know, the authorities have spoken.
They found one who can see.
And if a site like the Justice Report or Conservative Review or like the Washington Free Beacon does it does a hit piece on you, it just doesn't hit as well in overwhelmingly center left, even in perhaps the Secret Service.
Now, I don't have too much experience with the Secret Service that way.
That's because normie right-wingers don't care.
Like they, they, they don't, they don't understand how people.
It's not like chatting Nazi racists.
They think that Antifa are just like skinny nerds.
They don't understand that these are like violent, drugged out, radical criminals that will kill you and they'll kill your kids.
They, they, they, well, they can't process that.
And that guy looks retarded and possibly on drugs.
Yeah, go ahead, Sam.
Let's list everybody.
Let's uh let's respond to his question, though.
Let's talk about the crazy women.
Let's hear some, some, somebody else tells some funny stories.
I'll be, I'll be honest.
I, I certainly don't poo-poo those things and I might watch one or two, but I'm so jaded by, I'll say it, white liberal women having social media freak outs for like, you know, to get attention, essentially, that I'm like, whatever, man.
Like, I know those people are freaks.
I, you know, I don't watch it particularly attentively.
It does bear some evaluation though, because, okay, first of all, imagine the way that they're freaking out, the crying, the swearing, the screaming, the one calls her friend up on the phone and her friend voted for Trump.
You're a whore and all this, you know, but then imagine not only freaking out and acting like that, but then like, okay, let me get the camera rolling first.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the, that's the people.
Well, these people think that it's normal to be in therapy and they think there's something wrong with you if you aren't in therapy.
No, you're right.
Psychotropics.
Apparently on the left, that's like a big thing.
Like everyone with their like, I'm, here's what's wrong with me.
I may this, whatever the weird thing is.
Like you see a group of them and somebody's speaking and then instead of clapping, they all like snap their fingers or whatever.
But they, but, and but they say that to you as though that's their justification of being normal and you not having something wrong with you is sign that you have something wrong with you because literally all of them are they're literally crazy.
Yeah.
And they're all so crazy and they're only surrounded by crazy people that they think being crazy is normal.
Like we are at the Mad Hatters tea party.
And then we're just like, what is going on here?
How did I get to Wonderland?
And then they're all skipping backwards.
Like, but you're not in therapy.
Yeah, there's like, you know, there's no self-introspection at all.
Like, okay, I'm making this video.
No, I can't post this.
This is, I'm, I look stupid in this video.
They, they completely cannot see the way that they come off and what they're saying and the way they act only helps our cause.
I hope they keep making these videos for the next four years at least, because anyone who sees this, like I'll show people in my family and stuff, not that they need to be convinced, but it's just like, these people are crazy.
These people, these people don't just have the wrong information or the wrong opinion, or they're not just in error about their politics.
No, these people are batshit crazy.
Yeah.
And I'll just say, and this, I'm not getting up on my high horse.
And it's not the first thing that comes to mind, but I feel like I would enjoy like black women going crazy.
Like, I'm going to fry my hair in butter, you know, like going crazy over Trump, but that doesn't really happen.
There's a lot of women going through.
There's a lot of people.
I'm sure there are, but like white women.
Remember there was the famous one, the black lady that was like, why do you hate me?
Why do you hate me?
Did she go take a bath in Lucky Charms or Cheerios or was that?
That was like an Obama supporter.
Remember her?
Like she was like, she got famous.
She like took a bath in milk and Lucky Charms or something.
But also those women need, they need like a cage at the zoo.
What they need, I'm like alert.
I'm allergic.
I'm allergic to like preaching to women or whatever.
But I mean, the reality is that they need a strong white man in their life and they need to get laid regularly to not go crazy.
No, no, You're wrong about the latter.
Those women, they have sex with like 200 different men a year.
Right.
And that's normal.
No, no, what they need.
What they need is less.
Yes, they need less sex and just one man that they're married to.
That's what they need because that drives them crazy because the more sex they have with strangers, the less likely they are to have a monogamous relationship, which means that they're less likely they are from having a normal, stable, sane life.
Because the whole lies.
I wasn't suggesting, Rolo, that they need to get more strange, like on Grindr or on, you know, Flare or whatever the hell it's called.
I'm not blanking.
They need a good marina.
Tinder.
See, that's a good sign.
I couldn't think of Tinder.
That's proof that I'm not on Tinder.
But the other thing is, like, my wife is very smart and very competent and like the opposite of a crazy cat lady.
And then I look at my daughter and I'm like, oh, God, like, what happened?
What if my daughter turns into one of these like crazy women?
God help me.
I'll do everything.
Right.
Exactly.
So I can't gloat too much.
The reality is, is that I just don't enjoy it that much.
And then if I try to intellectualize it, I'm like, that's somebody's daughter.
Maybe hopefully they're all Jews.
Many of them are.
If you're referring to the same video of the black woman, why?
I saw somebody, somebody took that and they put her like she, the chirps.
Well, no, somebody put her like she's encased in a gem, like from a game, you know, like one of the crystals.
Yeah, crystal, yeah.
And her, the screaming is like muted.
You know, the one that I saw was every time she opened her mouth, it was the smoke alarm chirp.
Sure.
Oscar has a follow-up question there before we can't give Oscar too much time here and we can't stay on here forever.
Sorry, I want to on the mic.
Well, I mean, hell, it's Friday night, Friday night live, but I wanted to give Johnny Cash wrote in that we could spend too much time on this.
And some of the listeners have already responded to him.
But Johnny Cash, I'm expecting my first child, a son, in February.
Very auspicious month to have a firstborn son.
Speaking personally, I was born in February as a firstborn.
But he says, what's your best general advice about raising boys?
Specifically, I want him to raise him conscious of his race and bring on some great European literature, books you could recommend.
Thanks, guys.
You're a huge inspiration.
Part of the reason where I am where I am today.
First thing, Johnny Cash, don't worry about that stuff yet.
I totally understand the new dad expectation.
Like, we're going to make sure that son is at least white, racially proud.
But just, you know, you can get through the first year and not have to worry about too much of the content and stuff like that.
Just be in that first year.
It's all about meeting their needs and the diapers and the bottles and fresh air and walks, a nurturing environment, good night's sleep, et cetera.
And check in with us in a year.
Dio Vendiche said there's a ton of great books, Misty of Chinkotig, Irish Red, Shiloh, Where the Red Fern Grows, My Side of the Mountain for sure.
But with your first on the way, yeah, get through that first year, which is often, I think, the toughest year because you're new at it and you're stressed out about it.
And wifey doesn't know what she's doing yet.
And then once they get in, you know, after a year, between one and two years, you can start reading books to them, even if they don't understand it or whatever.
And there's Thor books.
There's all those golden classics, et cetera.
Godspeed.
Stay in touch.
Ask questions once he arrives.
And we'll give you that life shout out for short.
Family support goes a long way too.
You know, if you have mother, father, siblings, aunts, uncles, you know, cousins, this is not supposed to be like you do it all on your own.
You know, it's not supposed to be that way.
And if you're on your own, you're going to be fine too.
You can make it work.
Yeah, you can make it work, but just realize that that, okay, that that's part of it.
And and and even if you're in a hard spot, if it's difficult for you, recognize it.
Like, okay, I'm in this and it seems hard because it is hard.
And don't have expectations like this should be easier and why is it so hard?
No, no, it's going to be hard.
It's going to be hard for a while, but you will get through it.
And you, you know, talk to us at least.
For sure.
Sleep deprivation was the worst with the first, second, third.
I was like, yeah, whatever.
I know how to deal with this.
First was most stressful for sure for us.
Jumbabwe from the Great Nation bordering Zimbabwe.
It's like Swaziland and Lesotho.
And then Jambabwe with the great ape as an avatar.
If you unmute yourself, I saw you had your hand up before.
It's all yours, big guy.
Welcome to Full House Ethnicity, Religion, Fatherhood status, please.
All right.
Hopefully you can hear me well enough.
I've got a bit of a cold, so my voice is not the best.
It's all good.
Ethnicity, white, like West Coast, Mutt.
We've got Anglo-Irish, some Scandinavian and German in there.
Sorry, religion.
Orthodox, Orthodox Christian Inquirer.
And then Father Starr.
No kids, single at the moment, working on fixing that.
Just got back from date, actually, on the way.
Listening to this on the way back from it.
Good stuff, buddy.
Right on.
What's on your mind?
What's a date?
I believe it's a piece of beginner's class of archery for the two or for her.
I grew up shooting archery a lot, but she was going out to do archery and asked if I wanted to come with her.
Yeah.
It's an easy yes.
Cool.
Sounds fun.
How'd it go?
It went well.
This is like a, what was I, I forget, fourth or fifth time we got out.
Yeah.
Take it slow.
Let's get to know each other.
Any red flags?
Have you done it yet?
Don't let me probe, but you know, it's radio, so I got to ask the answer.
No, nothing like that.
No red flags.
She's both deliberate want to be parents.
She's a Catholic convert.
So both Christian, both wanting to have kids and get married and all that.
So sounds good.
Roughly, how old are you and how old is she?
Broad range.
Late 20s.
All right.
Wheelhouse.
Although I was going to say, you might know some minimal details because you had read off a little thing I'd sent on your lovely poor audio quality cast you did recently.
Yes, yes.
Sorry, the fireside chat.
I knew that I recognized the name.
Yeah.
Oh, that was all good.
I was my laugh.
I was like, aha.
It's pretty funny.
Somebody's wanted to call in and give you all the thanks for what you do in person.
Glad I'm kind of the last one to go because I don't have a big burning topic point to talk about.
No, it's all right.
Yeah.
Funny farm stories or whatever.
But if you guys are near the end, I wanted to definitely give you all a shout out again.
I appreciate that, buddy.
Thank you so much.
And good luck with her.
Sounds pretty promising.
And one last question for you.
How did you meet?
Hinge.
Dating app.
Yeah.
It's got the reputation of being one that's classier, not full of degenerates.
You can set your filters pretty well, which I found.
Rollo write this down.
He knows Hinge.
I'm sure.
I'll tell you, Rolo.
It's better than the bumble.
The degenerate troglodytes I'd see on Bumble being in a blue state.
Yeah, you don't see that on Hinge if you set your filters right.
I would recommend it.
Go get her, Tiger.
Godspeed.
And I'll be honest, Jim Babwe, I recognize the name and I can't specifically remember what I read on the air, even though that was the same thing.
I can't remember what the heck I name I used on all the different things.
Okay, so maybe it was a different name.
Good.
I know this one was a joke of a different one that I probably used to send you the message.
This was some guy trying to read a different one I have poorly.
So I took it as a secondary.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
I wonder.
I sincerely wonder whether the white-wing, right-wing, Nazi, anti-Semitic doxes are going to be like more relevant under Trump or like, is that a passe thing?
I see guys do the rhetoric where it's like, it doesn't matter anymore.
Nobody cares.
It certainly matters.
Yeah.
Like it can still.
Here's the thing.
It matters on a local level.
It's not as big national microscope, but they will contact the people in your town.
They'll contact your employer.
Your employer is going to care.
The people in your town are going to care.
The people two states over, they're never going to hear.
Your liberal family members are going to care.
Yep.
Yes.
Yes.
And you definitely work for someone that's liberal enough that, ah, gee, I'm going to have to let you go.
I just can't have this kind of heat in my company.
You know, man, I'm just trying to run a business here.
You know what it's like.
Sorry about that.
You're a great guy and a good worker, but I just can't have this hit the plant here.
Sure.
So, you know, FO.
Yeah.
Go ahead, buddy.
Yep.
I'm saying like Sam said, there's white pride worldwide.
It's shit liberty worldwide as well.
I mean, they have nothing to do but be spiteful little hobgoblins and ruin people's lives that they don't like.
So it's definitely, I'd say, relevant, the doxing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't want people to get lackadaisical when I see that.
I'm like, all right, now the whole rule, you know, as you know, if you've listened for a long time, ruin your life is up to you.
Nobody's life is instantly ruined by having their true and virtuous beliefs made public or a sock name or whatever.
It can if things go really wrong or you don't have a stiff constitution or if you have literally no support network.
It can make things really shitty.
I'm not minimizing that, but everybody needs to just, you know, if it's a risk or if it might happen, it might fall out of the sky one day.
You just got to look at yourself in the mirror like Stuart Smalley and say, gosh darn it, I'm good enough.
I'm smart enough.
And people like me.
Dio Vendiche, you got it.
And then we'll come back to Oscar's original question.
And, you know, Oscar wanted to know about the crazy single white women who went on to disown their parents.
But Dio Vendiche, you got it.
Did I tap him in?
I think I did.
Yeah.
He's unmuted.
Welcome.
I'll tap myself out.
Thank you.
Thank you, Jumbabue.
Dio Vendiche, ethnicity, religion, fatherhood status, please.
I am largely English and some Irish, a little bit of Scandinavian mixed in there, but yeah, all Northern European fatherhood status.
I am the father of three looking to make that four in the coming year.
Religion, Southern Baptist, dirty prod.
All right.
It's really good to hear your voice.
And you're somebody who is just Joe Schmo, no offense, in the comment zone years ago.
And I was like, I like the cut of that guy's jib.
And it wasn't the wrong assessment.
Sometimes you can get the measure of a man from the way he writes online.
Welcome to Full House, brother.
Well, much appreciated.
Yeah.
I think not necessarily the oldest old head in the chats, but I've been around since I believe it was episode like 30s or 40s.
Good enough.
Good enough.
Yeah, it's been Silvio smirk to that one.
I just had a quick question.
It's a thing that my dad had told me.
A little, I guess it would be a word of wisdom that has kind of stuck with me.
And I was going to see what your guys, something that stuck out to you from your, you know, I guess dads or mentors, anything.
The one that my dad gave me is there's three stages of a man.
There's my daddy can whoop your daddy.
There's daddy doesn't know.
And there's daddy used to say.
That sums up the development of a man as well.
Yeah, that is good.
I like that.
Let me dig into that real quick.
So there's my daddy can whoop your daddy when you're young.
The middle one was daddy doesn't know.
And what was the last one?
I kind of missed it.
Daddy used to say.
Daddy used to say.
Gotcha.
From pride to rebellion to pride again.
Sort of respect, maybe.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Definitely.
You know, I always tell my dad, I'm like, boss, you know, I'm lucky enough to where I skipped over that second one pretty quick and fell into the third category, you know, fairly, fairly young compared to some people I know.
But sure.
You know, I didn't know if y'all are you guys had any chestnuts like that that you fondly remember or like to use.
You can please have had it from Iceland.
So when I was about 13, my father told me that you're not a man unless you have can grow a beard, you have been punched in the face, and you can handle a male ram.
that's good That's good.
I like that.
Straight out of Iceland.
And I want to call we did a show called Wisdom, or it had like SS Full House.
It was, it was the show art I remember was the grandfather from Home Alone and Kevin McAllister sitting in a pew.
And I forget the episode title, but we did do this.
That was a long time ago.
The ones from my dad that stand out both good and bad.
The one is a very cynical one.
And he always said that people don't change.
And that's his accumulated experience with if you're thinking that someone who was maybe a liar or a cheat is going to turn virtuous or somebody who was, you know, a brat or a snob or an asshole is going to suddenly become kind.
Don't bank on it.
Obviously, some people do change, but I always sock that one back.
People don't change.
If you meet somebody and you don't like them, don't bank on them getting better.
He joked that you can marry.
He learned this one working construction.
He went to Yale.
He was a Chad, played football, but he hated it there, took a year off to go work construction for a year and then finally went back and graduated.
And he picked up all sorts of blue collar wisdom from that year, you know, building roads and bridges.
And he said, you can marry more in a day than you can make in a lifetime, which is kind of salt of the earth wisdom I really liked.
And the other one that was actually detrimental was he always mentioned how his father was 30 when he had him.
And he was my grandfather's first.
My father was 30 when he had me and I was his first.
And I took that to heart as 30 was the guideline for when you should have your first kid and literally probably delayed child having and family formation because I was like, well, if it was good enough for grandpa and good enough for my dad, then, and I actually lived up to it.
We had our firstborn son when I was 30 years old.
So sometimes the dad wisdom has to be taken with a grain of salt.
Sam, go ahead.
Well, I was going to chime in something earlier there as far as people changing.
This is not from my own father.
My own father, he left the house when I was rather young and he died when I was a teenager.
So, you know, I didn't get a lot of good things from my father in that respect.
And but just because I was kind of aware of things, I could see when I was getting into my late teens or even early 20s that this thing, like they say, you know, if you're, if you're not raised by your father, you have certain maybe shortcomings or certain weaknesses.
And I could see that I had to learn to kind of compensate, you know, like a certain firmness of character or a certain certain way of acting, maybe things you pick up from your father.
And I have a younger brother who was, you know, he was, he had much less experience of my father.
So I could see, especially observing him, how that like harmed him or hurt him in ways, you know, and he was not so much somebody who was like questioning and things like I did when I was in my teenagers.
So, but the one thing you were saying about people do not change, I think they can change, but only a little bit.
Think of yourself.
You know, you have tried to push yourself to be more disciplined in this way or that way, or think of how hard it is to like lose a few pounds or things like that.
It's very hard for people to change and they can only change maybe like 5% or 10% from wherever their character is.
So like a born liar, like you say, a born liar, we have that phrase is true.
You know, people who are a liar, they're probably always going to have that type of tendency, or maybe a guy who beats his wife, you know, if they do it once, they're going to do it again or, you know, those types of things.
There is a certain truth in that for sure.
I don't want to be too, yeah, don't take that to heart.
You know, like people can't change whatsoever.
They can change, but only a little bit, I think.
They can only change five to ten percent of the way they are.
I totally agree, Sam.
And it was episode 57, Life Lessons was the one.
And you should try to change yourself for the better.
Yeah.
You know, even if it's only, you know, a certain amount, you should definitely try to, you know, take advantage of that percent.
You bet.
Thank you, Dio Vendiche, for the question.
It's yours.
Yep.
I posted the episode.
It was, it was.
Yeah.
I was just going to say, also keep doing the what's your favorite childhood memory.
That's a chance.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
You asked for it.
Okay.
All right.
Because I actually have given some thought to that, like what would be my favorite childhood memory when y'all do that bit.
And I guess my favorite would have to be something that I absolutely hated at the time.
But looking back on it, it's gotten the memory's gotten a lot sweeter.
It was my father had gotten laid off from the place he was working and the way we would make, excuse me, it's kind of cold.
The way we'd make ends meet was my grandparents had some land and we would cut down trees and sell them to a barrel safe mill.
And so they'd actually go to be made into Jack Daniels whiskey barrels.
And wow, it was just dad and me out in the woods with a chainsaw, old tractor to cut these trees down, you know, cut them into logs and haul off.
And, you know, in the time at the moment, I absolutely hated it.
It was just miserable, muddy, you know, nothing wanted to work.
Did we lose them?
Okay, yeah, I thought it was me.
We just lost you, Dio, but thank you.
I can totally see that being miserable at the time and sweet and touching.
I think this experience is what contributed into him becoming the banny is now because this is probably one of the best experiences you can have as a boy to be a lumberjack with your grandpa.
Yeah, and we've talked too about the boomers not passing things down to their sons or, you know, not giving them the hands-on things.
And that was kind of the case.
My dad can fix anything.
I can't fix anything.
And that's partially because he was like, well, my father forced me to do all this stuff and I hated it.
It was always miserable.
He learned it though.
And then he didn't want to subject me to that too.
And I actually looked at Junior the other night and I was like, you know what?
I got to drag your ass.
You know, we've talked about this explicitly on the show and, you know, in my own life and stuff like that.
And I was like, I got to drag you out more because he, frankly, is not inclined to do those things.
He's very bookish and intellectual and smart as a whip.
But when it comes to going out there and getting sweaty and raking those rocks out of the trench, that's pretty basic.
Anybody can rake rocks, but doing the more hands-on stuff, you know, plunging a toilet.
I did get him under the house the other day to show him how the plumbing works and things like that.
So just always, you know, making an effort to get the kids involved, whether it's gardening, whether it's cutting the lawn, whatever it might be.
Hey, coach.
Yeah.
A big boom that we have now, even though the boomers kind of left us hanging with that is YouTube.
I'm sorry.
Sure.
All right.
No, it's okay.
But it's amazing what you can find for like developing your skill sets like on YouTube.
Like whether it comes to working on a car, doing lawn care, like there's so much available there.
And really, like you can just check into that and just give it an attempt, bring Junior out there with you.
And, you know, he's getting the same kind of practice that you are getting.
And so that's a great starting point for just about any sort of physical thing that you feel you've ever missed out.
100%.
Thank you, Anon.
Hang with us as long as you like.
I mean, I can still go for at least another 20, half an hour, whatever it is.
I had one glass of wine and then I was like, eh, I got to stay sharp while we're live.
You reminded me just tonight, our youngest has occasionally gone to bed a little bit weepy.
One, because he's tired, but I don't want to get up tomorrow morning and go to school.
And it's like, okay, buddy.
You know, he's just tired and he wakes up fine.
It's just a little bit of like late night emotion.
And tonight he was like, I want to go to school tomorrow.
I said, what?
What is this miracle?
Because it's Friday night.
I was like, you want to go?
What is it?
Is it a girl?
Is it a pal or whatever?
And he's like, the blocks, they have these stick blocks.
And he's been building these towers with his buddy at school.
And he really wanted to go back to school to build.
Walked right into that one.
But I swear to God, first night he got a little bit weepy because he wanted to go to school tomorrow.
And let's not get into homeschool versus public school right now.
We have a hanging chad from Oscar ID.
I wanted to remind authoritarian who had his hand up before he's got authorization.
tapped in Vrill Smith, who came on with the IQ that was too high for coach to understand what he was putting out.
But the whole audience was like, that guy was great.
So Vrill, you got the Mike White Mormon checked in who may or may not have been one of the guys who came on our Mormon show.
If he wants to respond to Oscar ID, but I'll just go back to Oscar ID, who wanted to ask Sam about the white women melting down about disowning their parents.
Yeah, I mean, what a nightmare.
But I don't know what else to say about that.
Yeah, if you don't have anything to say, we closed it.
Yeah.
Good talk.
Anyway.
Isn't it the fathers that fail in the beginning that turns women crazy?
Absent parents, absent fathers, just the daddy is just, this is, I think the 90% of the women you're seeing online that are going crazy is absent of a strong male father figure.
That's huge.
Or just pass it crazy.
Yeah, it's probably a huge part of it for fifth, it's for a majority of them, maybe.
But who knows?
I mean, like, cause girls, you know, like boys are like mama's boys when they're younger and then they get older and they get closer with their father, I suspect.
At some point, you know, girls love their fathers and then they hate their fathers and then hopefully come back home when they get older.
I guess I don't, I don't have enough expertise in these like bizarre social media white cat woman liberal meltdowns to say, obviously, we've talked about the birth control pills, the SSRIs, the sleeping around, the dating apps, the social media.
Who knows what these women are on?
You know, what are they on?
It's just, it is astonishing.
It's really revealing and fascinating in a weird way to watch these videos.
Like I said, imagine you getting angry about something or, you know, even maybe something mundane.
You kind of lose your temper for a minute.
But no, hold on.
Let me get my camera and get this, get rolling.
Like all women are batshit crazy at some level of their DNA, right?
Like even the most grounded, normal, healthy, like will like will turn into a witch on a broom some nights during a full moon, right?
And we like to think that we're above that, but we know that.
And the lesson I'm taking from it is, so imagine if you knew any of these women in real life and you've had maybe some kind of debate or argument about the facts of whatever, you know, but then when you see this, this, it's pointless to attempt to debate somebody like this.
This is literally like the throwing your pearls before the swine.
Do not attempt to engage people like this.
These people are just nuts.
Don't let your daughter get there.
And if you see the first signs of it or whatever, you gotta, it's sort of like with that five with the with the young boys and nipping things in the bud.
You know, and I'm knocking on wood here too.
I'm not preaching because who knows?
A lot of young people, when do they start to have, you know, mental illness manifests in the early 20s in many cases, whether that's genetic or whether that's chemical or society or social media induced.
So your sweet, perfect baby boy or girl could go through life and be going to college and then one day is like ranting and raving like a lunatic, whether it's politics or literal mental illness.
No, we're all we all have a certain amount of free will and we are all subject to the effects of other factors.
You mentioned many of them already, whether it's drugs or, you know, weird things in society.
And once your children are adults, yes, there's, you know, they may wander away.
You know, I have two daughters that are living worldly lives right now, and we really don't have anything to do with each other, which is a sad thing.
And you might say like, well, why don't you do something about it?
And I'm not sure. what it is I'm supposed to do about it except pray for them, of course.
But and I do pray for them every day.
Do you text them every once in a while, Sam, or give them a call?
Or is it is it bad enough that like that would not be welcomed without probing?
Yeah, I haven't for a while.
I haven't for a while.
I have at different times and there's been different levels of communication, but right now is kind of a silent time and not just since the election.
I mean, let's say, you know, last year I had a text with one of them, you know, and so at some point, I'm also a human being who has to live my life and not be mired in some kind of stupid bullshit and all that.
And I have enough friends and family who do love me and who do respect me in the right way that I don't have to, you know, lower myself, let's say, to running somebody down to get some word out of them.
So I think at some point you could do more damage than good that way too.
And maybe you need to back off for a while.
Like you say, a lot of people, they go and come back.
I remember some years ago, I used to tutor this one high school age young man.
And I was a coworker of his father.
And so I was tutoring him in a couple of subjects, help him get through high school.
And this co-worker was very worried about him, you know, and I said, well, okay, yes, you could be worried about him.
He's gotten in trouble in this way and that way.
But I said, look at you and your wife.
You're both successful people, smart people who are successful in your careers.
Your children probably, yeah, even if they go through some rough moments, they probably are going to fall into that just because as much as we think we have free will in a lot of ways, we're just living extensions of our parents, just like they are living extensions of their parents, right?
You know, literally cells from our parents' bodies became us.
So we like literally are our parents, right?
And so if you look at it like that, you know, just you got to be patient and think, you know, maybe they'll kind of, you know, mature a little bit and come around and, you know, don't, don't be reactive.
Yeah.
And I suspect that the audience doesn't believe this, but I hope that we have not been ever preachy or high on our own supply because we are not the ultimate paragons of fatherhood.
Everybody makes mistakes, of course.
I'm sure there are thousands.
I don't know if there's millions of better fathers than me, but there's certainly some quota of thousands that are better than me.
And one of your Dio asked about life lessons and he went back and he lost his connection.
He said it was miserable, muddy work at the time, but looking back, I can see my dad was treating me like a man in high school and relying on me.
And I didn't let him down.
Feeling the genuine pride of your father and your work ethic is priceless.
100% so true.
And same goes for when the kids play like warriors out on the fields.
But I was going to say Maybe one of my life lessons that I'll pass down to the kids is that when it's not when you see something, say something, you know, harkening back to the big brother stuff of post-9/11 and the subways and packages and stuff.
But when you see a problem to jump on it and address it at the time and not let it fester, we all have some sixth sense in our brains that knows when something is amiss, whether it's in the house and you're like, I don't recognize that sound, or you recognize a little habit of the kids.
And I alluded to this maybe 10 or 12 shows ago, but we had a minor but significant problem with one of the kids.
And wife and I, we were angry and upset that it got to that point.
But once we realized that it was happening, we basically ripped it out root and branch.
And it has been very calm and steady since then.
You know, you don't want things to get to the point where you have to like take serious action.
But once you see it, the worst thing you can do is pretend that it's not there or glad-handed or sugarcoat it and pussyfoot about it, I guess.
And we'll see how that plays out in the years to come too.
All right.
We're coming up on three hours here.
So I want to say it's almost like we're not going six hours here.
Rolo, how is Magic the Gathering going?
He's up from his catnap.
I quit like two hours ago because I couldn't focus on it.
You son of a bitch.
Yes.
Like I won all my games.
Just be happy.
Come on.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Yeah.
So last call for comments, guys.
Thank you for the wonderful turnout tonight.
Really, it's just fun having people chime in, hearing some people for the first time gambling on a stranger.
No feds chimed in.
I always thought maybe like an anti-foot type, you know, be careful what you mentioned that maybe an anti-foot type would come on and be like, hey, you know, listen in or ask a gotcha question.
And I imagine that I would engage and be like, all right, yeah, fine, let's talk.
Let's rumble verbally.
But anyway, I hear somebody may have chimed in if you want to go for it.
Bro, Smith, there he is.
What's up, brother?
Hello.
I just wanted to ask.
I've been out of the loop.
Is this format going to be like a regular thing?
You know, for $5, it can be.
I got $5.
Shut up, Brill Smith.
The money speaks louder than words.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just for episode 200.
I went back and listened to the election night live stream, which was live from the beginning with tapping people in left and right.
And it's energy was great.
The energy was great.
The guests were great.
And I was nervous that we also started much early.
Yeah, we started.
You got to put my wife on there, coach.
Oh, are you sure, Sam?
Sure.
I'm happy.
I'm happy to.
All right.
I tell you what, I'll give her authorization to speak.
But to answer your question, Verle, you know, the live stream stuff doesn't happen too often, at least with the cameras, as people are used to watching it because both Rolo's internet sucks and my internet sucks.
My anxiety, there's an OPSEC risk to going live and recording it.
Obviously, we could edit things out after the fact, but bad actors could be listening.
So both for the audience as well as for us, it's a slightly higher risk.
Yeah, there's a risk.
Yeah, somebody misses other lives, other live streams.
I remember two particular guests.
They come on within like the first minute.
They said doxing things.
So sure, too.
And somebody could be totally well-intentioned and just let it.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, no, we can edit that out.
They're not careful.
Yeah, I went back and listened to most of, I didn't listen to all six hours, but I had some trepidation about it.
And I was like, son of a bitch, that actually sounded like a reasonably intelligent, not too harried conversation with the, you know, tapping people in and out.
So I said, what the hell?
200 is coming up.
Let's do it.
And I think this has been pretty good.
I don't know if I'll go back, even go back and listen to this one because I'm pretty confident about it.
But Vrill, anything else new in your life?
We got to have you back on to talk childhood psychology at some point.
You're welcome.
Yeah, that was a great one.
That was a great episode.
Yeah, that would be good.
You know, at that time, I was kind of between gigs and had been for a while.
I had been traveling around and living off of unemployment.
So I wasn't really in, I wasn't in the trenches at the time.
And I mean, that's why I was able to meet you guys.
And so I've been working now for about a half a year with a kid who's now 18 months old.
I have a couple other clients less regularly.
And my previous work that I was kind of had in mind a lot when I was thinking about it and talking to you had been mostly with a girl of about a similar age, but over a pretty long period of time.
And so working with a boy now, it really reminds me of how stark the differences are.
Oh, yeah.
Definitely.
Sort of the developmental implications and things like that.
And it's really fascinating.
And so that's kind of allowed me, as well as just kind of being back in, you know, working every day.
It's kind of allowed me to hone my ideas.
I'm constantly thinking of like new crap is like occurring to me all the time, but I'm back in the trenches on a daily basis.
So it would be interesting to come back in and talk some more.
Amen, brother.
Is the old adage that they're either walking or talking, is that fair that the littlest ones tend to develop verbally or physically, like almost as if their brains are focusing on one over the other?
Or is that kind of an old wives adage?
I don't know.
I don't know that my experience is really extensive enough to be able to say.
I tend to be so focused because most of my recent work has been with one or two families instead of big groups.
So I get hyper-focused on the one kid that I'm working with.
And so I don't really have that kind of a broad view where I can think about large numbers and tendencies in that regard.
You know, I like you for always answering clinically or scientifically and not just taking the easy, you know, good radio bits.
Sorry, can't make an educated conclusion on that one.
All right, Sam, your wife has tapped in.
She's welcome to chime in.
I just worry about the risk vector is my only concern.
So I thought maybe she just should just say hi as she likes.
Let's say we got maybe five minutes left here.
Yeah.
Mike is on.
All right.
All right.
Hello, dear.
Hi.
Welcome to Full House.
Ethnicity, Religion, and Motherhood Status, please, ma'am.
Ethnicity, Czech, Spanish, Catholic.
All right.
And I know, and we know you got kids, of course.
Have you ever been angry at Sam after an episode?
Or are you always proud?
Is he ever in hot water for oversharing?
Or is it all smooth sailing over there?
Oversharing or just not sharing the right details of the story or not giving me credit.
Like, why didn't you mention I was in the story?
I know sometimes we can't.
Sorry, I used to get in trouble.
She'd be like, why didn't you say this?
I was like, because I didn't want to, you know, rope you into the story.
And then she'd be like, why did you say that?
I was like, you know what?
I can't win here.
It's hard being a husband and a podcaster.
Well, sometimes I try to like just leave enough information, you know, just because I am concerned about, you know, revealing certain details.
So sometimes I do give a kind of more of a skeleton type explanation of things, which that's just the way it is, you know, with these Jews in control.
And Sam mentioned off air before the mic, but he's mentioned on the air before that his mother-in-law, your mother, is coming into town soon and he loves cracking a beer with her, which is one of, you know, for we've said it before, anybody in the audience.
If you have a mother-in-law that you enjoy spending time with, it's awesome.
It's almost like having a second mother or another friend.
Are you as excited to have your mother under the roof?
Yes, I am.
I am.
Yeah, she's a dynamo.
You know, she just, she knows what to do to make the household go.
She's got the kind of old world values about family and keeping the house and stuff like that.
Right.
Yeah.
Mother-in-laws or mothers, just in general, grandmas, you know, despite their best intent, I think they're probably always like, we're just going to go with the flow when we visit.
We're not going to be critical or whatever, but they can't help themselves go be like, this needs to be done.
That's out of place.
They need to do this or that needs to go in the trash.
They, you know, even in the best of intent.
It's just what they do.
As an example, one time a friend of mine came over here and we were sitting and talking and then she went and put out some snacks for us as though like to say, oh, the men are talking.
You know, they need some snacks.
So that's kind of the little touch, you know, that maybe a modern woman might not think of.
I don't know.
That's right.
Quick question for the peanut gallery.
Did Mike Tyson or Mr. YouTube win tonight?
I saw that like the Netflix.
Mike Tyson's too old.
He lost.
He was just too old.
He just, he was clearly gassed after the second round.
He was just.
Was it a knockout or a decision?
Decision.
Decision.
Yeah.
I glanced in the full house channel and they were people were narrating it.
Jo, who's not coming on our, not coming on our episode.
I know.
We literally went up against the interversal boxing match.
Well, the white man rides again, right?
You know, he's Jewish.
Tyson goes down.
Is he really?
Yes.
How does, how does nobody know that?
So we talked about the show that I'm on.
No.
Yeah.
Which is what's the show called, Brola?
I don't remember.
You're the worst program.
Yeah.
I have been promoting it for nine years and our listener count hasn't changed.
Well, I listen to it.
Yeah, exactly.
We got one listener, Sam.
The greatest listener anyone could want.
So why plug it when I know that my base is here?
It's one o'clock here on the Mountain Mama, and I don't want to get too greedy here with our live stream or take too much time.
I'm going to fix myself a drink after this and see if my wife is still awake.
Thank you very much, Sam's wife, for coming on.
You know, we love you.
And thank you.
It's not like you let Sam do the show, but thank you for being so supportive over the years.
Of course.
You bet.
All right.
To everybody, let's see who's still on.
Very smith chimed in to our pal from Iceland who sent pictures that do look like the moon came to life where he says Apollo astronauts prepared for the moon there.
I don't actually have a bucket list, but going to Iceland and having a tall pint of whatever beer they drink there is high on the list for sure with the family too.
So look out.
We'll get a hotel room.
Don't worry.
We won't be too high maintenance.
And Matt got some people just signing on right now.
Look at the digger Kaddafi.
Tuber.
Tuber.
Yeah, I know.
It's like Grimlock.
The fight is over.
So now they're like, okay, second priority.
Thank you to People Eater, Mr. I, Kirk, Grimlock, every day for riding with us, V, Trocar, Authoritarian.
I hope it's not a big deal that I just dropped your sock names following the live stream on Telegram.
It was fun.
We will do this again.
We're not going to do it every week for sure.
No.
Just because, yeah, it's frankly a little bit easier to do it off mic and then have the control after the fact.
But I dare say that Rolo only has to edit out one F-bomb from a non-commando.
Shame on him.
And I think I knew.
I'm just, no, well, I'm just going to edit every time a non-commando said anything.
That's his punishment.
Deservedly so.
So this has been Full House episode 200.
We started on November 15th.
It's now November 16th.
It was November 16th for the entirety of our friend from Iceland.
And I keep saying that because Goodfinner shows up in the chat and then I know him as something else elsewhere.
So just playing it safe there.
No offense.
To all of our listeners going back to 2019, April, or if you just showed up tonight, or if this is your first episode, we salute you.
Thank you.
If we do nothing else, if we accomplish nothing else here, live better.
Love your wife or your husband.
Love your kids that you have.
Find the wife or husband.
Have perhaps one more if you think that you're maybe tapped out.
If you think you can handle it safely and healthily.
And I don't know what else to tell you, but just because Trump won doesn't mean that Jewish power is still not the greatest menace in the world and the white race is targeted for destruction in every country where we either were native to or we founded through exploration, conquering, and establishment.
That has not changed.
Definitely don't go back to sleep.
Don't rest on your laurels.
The big collapse, the big kaboom could be around the corner, and you don't want to be caught with your pants down like Matt Gates at a Jewish party.
Matt Gates at a brisk.
Yeah.
You know, I joke that Trump is going to welcome me back to Washington with a Rose Garden ceremony.
I'm going to say thank you, but no, thank you.
Wild horses couldn't drag me back to Washington.
Mostly joking.
But yeah, I don't think that the change of the guard there will change things too much when it comes to welcoming back true heretics.
Some people, Ricky Vaughn.
Yeah, Ricky Vaughn might get secretary of shit posting or something, but I don't know how, you know, some of these guys were shitlords back in the day, and then they clammed up real quick and started to march to the Pipers tune.
I'm either too stubborn or too stupid or too proud to do that, to do anything, but call it as I see it.
Regardless, thank you, Sam.
Thank you, Rolo.
Sam, do you want to make a call on the fly?
We gave Rolo the break.
Well, this is yours.
You can call it now or after the fact.
Yeah.
Well, I'm going to tell you this.
Our buddy Kexie that came on, he sent me two brand new songs that he's just been working on.
He's like a producer and he sent me two songs.
So we'll listen to those two songs after the show and pick one or the other.
Good deal.
Yeah.
Take that to be something from Kexie.
People Eater says, thanks, boys.
Great show.
You're welcome, People Eater, and to everybody else who made it this far.
Three hours back.
We love you, fam.
And we will talk to you next week if for no other reason than Sam and Rolo cracking the whip on my ass virtually to put another one together.
Love you all.
Blood and honor from Australia.
Right back at you, Mac, and all the lads down under.
Don't go wobbly on us.
Not that I have the slightest inkling that that's in the offing.
And enjoy this track.
Is it from Finland, Sam?
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
One of them, it's in that language.
I'm not even going to try to pronounce it.
And the other one is Pure Hearts, something in English, maybe.
So we'll pick one of those songs and play it.
Amen.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you next week.
Rolo.
Did I go to Rolo Le?
Yeah, what's a Rolo Less?
Sam, it's all yours.
Okay, well, first of all, White Power, Hail Hitler, and see ya.
To language.
Why my darling fear is on the couch.
He languish long, long the night.
Heavy comes the morrow.
While my soul's delight is on her bed is all the night.
Every fear is terror Slumber, even by dread, Every dream is horror.
Long the night, Heavy comes the morrow.
Why my soul's delight is on her bed is all The night.