The long march to 300 begins! Emerging merch empire, Coach's Comfy Corner (the last first tooth loss), adventures in Thanksgiving, the official FH position on Wifejack, Andreeson & Rogan on debanking, NWL & audience input, and Sam delivers a history lesson. Bumper: Down for Life by XLoveSF Break: We Can't Turn Back by New Arcades Close: The Architect by Kasey Musgraves And the official Full Haus playlist on Spotify 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.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's comfiest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole bio fam.
It is episode 201.
I guess we are now on the long march to 300.
The Lord help us.
And a belated happy Thanksgiving to our fans, the few haters, and perhaps the neutrals as well.
I am, of course, your mostly sanguine host, Coach Finstock, back with another hour or two of perhaps more relaxed, family-friendly commentary this week than usual.
No profound or perhaps overwrought monologue this week.
We're well into peak holiday season.
We've been on the road here.
It's also been cold and dreary as hell.
And in the big picture, we're in that weird political interregnum of a literally dying lame duck president receding into the bushes with some gifts for his family on the way out, just as the big new boss re-emerges from his Jewish chrysalis.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to King Charles and Rusty R.
Now, are you tired of hearing the same names week in, week out at the top of the show?
Because I sure as hell am.
But I also want to thank the Proud Kings who ponied up for now the third tranche of Full House t-shirts.
The hand-rubbing merch empire is growing.
Those are going out in the mail today, essentially, if you're listening to this when the show is released on Monday this week.
Our system is not exactly on the cutting edge of e-commerce, but if you want something tangible for all your years of listening to us yap, just drop us a line at fullhouse show at protonmail.com or DM me on Telegram.
You can get in touch with Sam or even Rollo if we've got an East Coast merch empire, Midwest merch empire, and perhaps Rollo can run up and down the Rocky Mountains or the desert selling t-shirts on the side of the road.
And of course, there's always gibsendgo.com slash fullhouse.
If you are feeling the Christmas spirit already as well, you should.
So with all that, let's get cracking and meet our pals.
First up, I literally drove past his house this past weekend within a mile or two at least, and I waved out the sunroof in his general direction without stopping in.
What a jerk I am, Sam.
Sorry about that.
Yeah, well, hey, you're on a mission and I get that.
That's all good.
But don't forget it's not just t-shirts.
We're trying to start and get into this hoodie business.
The hoodies are beautiful.
The hoodies are for wintertime.
You want an extra layer, you know, between your bomber jacket, you know, and your Fred Perry.
It's the evolution of all podcasts, right?
We start out, you know, very principled, audio only, and now we're getting greedy.
Yeah, you gotta have a nice hoodie.
You know, they're very handsome.
I can't tell you how many compliments I received on them.
And so, yeah.
And there's, and there's mugs now too.
Our lovely mug or manufacturer or whatever sent me a mug.
So I have a full, I don't know if it's the first, but it's among the first rounds.
I think so.
Yeah, it's white.
It's got the beautiful FH on a shield there.
So you've even got some plausible deniability.
I don't think anybody's going to recognize you at the office from our single initials on your coffee mug.
So if you want one of those, I don't even know what the pricing would be on that, but hit us up for that.
We will stop showing here.
I promise you, but it's an awesome mug.
I loved it.
So big thanks.
I didn't even ask for that.
Yeah.
And Sam, real quick, I mean, I would have stopped in, but, and maybe I'll talk about Thanksgiving a little bit later, but I was racing.
I wanted to beat the sundown.
I was going to lose an hour heading east.
And there was a winter storm warning or watch in effect over the whole area.
And I had an indoor soccer game to get to too.
So I beat all of that.
There was no time for chit chat or popping in to have a three Floyds with you and your mother-in-law.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, no, I get it.
That's fine.
Not that I'm offensive.
No, but it's, you know, first day of Advent here that we're recording.
And so I have brought out the Advent wreath and I have lit the first candle.
Of course, purple candles.
The first two are purple, then a pink, then a fourth one is a purple.
Advent is penitential season.
We should not be, no one should be moving on to Christmas yet.
We have Advent to get through, which is getting yourself ready for Christmas, you know, purifying oneself, a little bit of extra penances and things like that.
But it is exciting that last Sunday before Advent, there's so much excitement and what's the word?
Expectation coming on.
And then when you hit that first Sunday, it's just the excitement builds through each Sunday.
So it's Advent season, as you mentioned, Thanksgiving.
Maybe we could talk about that, even though it's now we're looking back at it.
But later in the show, perhaps we can talk a little bit about that.
It was, we had a great, excuse me, all of a sudden I got a cough, but we could talk about that.
I got some things to say.
And it was also my son's birthday recently, turning 18.
My youngest son turned 18.
Right in passage, congratulations.
You got grown now.
Yeah, it does kind of hit you in a way.
I was chatting with a friend and I said, oh, yeah, yeah, he just turned 18.
And, you know, that floored my buddy.
He was just, you know, he remembers when he was born, you know, and here he is all grown up.
And yeah, there is something momentous about it.
You're happy and everything, but we want our children to succeed and to find their way in the world.
And, you know, there's no guarantee of any of that.
So, you know, it's a happy thing, but some trepidation there.
And the last thing I'll say here in the intro part of the show is I have two Christmas songs coming for you, coach.
I wrote a brand new song for Christmas.
And because I wasn't too sure about how successful it will be, I also recorded a cover of a well-known Christmas song.
So in case one doesn't work out too well, but I think it's okay.
It's really practically done.
And the other song is, so we'll, maybe we'll have two.
Yeah.
When Christmas gets gets closer.
Two quick things, Sam.
You got to remind Junior that now crimes will be on the books.
So for, you know, for his lifestyle, 18, I mean, he's got, he's got to clean up real fast there.
And I wanted to apologize to the Finnish white nationalist Mafia for subbing out the song at the end of our last episode.
It was it was a rough one.
Was well, it wasn't rough, it was good, but it was not what you wanted to play for right at that, and it actually worked out okay because uh Kexi said, No, no, don't share those.
You know, I kind of impulsively said, Oh, hey, we got some couple new songs, let's finish with one of those.
That not even having listened to it myself, but all right, it worked quite a uh technical feat, uh, quite a good bit of work to put that song together.
So, uh, uh, it's it's uh for a record that's yet to come out.
So, anyways, that was just, I guess, for me.
That is a huge relief.
I will stop looking out the curtains for a horde of reindeer riders coming to whack me.
Uh, thank you, Sammy Baby.
All right, rounding us out this week.
I listened to a full final storm recently, and although I did enjoy the content, predictably, I ended up totally disagreeing with his lengthy analysis.
Rolo, welcome back, buddy.
Thank you.
Well, you know, the well, we'll follow up on uh your disagreement sometime soon, and we don't need to talk about that now.
But uh, you made me, let me just say, you made me think it was going to be the worst movie ever, which it was, which it was.
Let's, let's, you know, let's not lie to the people.
It was better than aliens three, it wasn't, but you know, hey, but I we I watched it with uh with Wifey, and she said, Oh, Rolo really hated it, and I said, Yeah, he really hated.
She was like, All right, let's give it a go.
And we'll perhaps parse it later, but yeah, it was it was interesting watching it, having listened to an hour of the final storm, break it down, all the things that were wrong with it.
Some of them I noticed, some of them I wouldn't have noticed if you hadn't said it, and others I just disagreed with.
But it was fun.
Oh, yeah, you know, let's not talk about it, coach.
Coach proceeds to talk about it.
Yeah, that's fine, that's fine.
We'll, we'll get into it in more depth soon.
But uh, you know, other than that, some you know, yeah, you know, normal things actually happened.
Okay, so I actually went on a date that wasn't awful.
Congratulations, good, yeah.
And there, there was a moment where uh, and I just know no matter how much I try to hide my power level, there's just certain things where I just think, no, this isn't, this is not gonna fly here.
We were talking about propaganda, and then she mentioned she had a friend that went to Israel because she's Christian, not because she's Jewish, but she had a friend that went to Israel and said, Oh, yeah.
And then they they have all these depictions of Jewish people, and you can see how they really have these horrible uh depictions that show to dehumanize them.
And then I said, Don't don't you think that the Holocaust is not the most propagandized event in history?
And then, and she goes, and she goes, Yeah, because I mean, I just like, you know, I turn red when I hear that.
Yeah, and then and then and then I just can I just clarify.
I'm sorry, because I didn't entirely follow.
So, the friend who went to Israel, what was the propaganda images?
Was it like dirty Jews, Jews, Jews in Israel, bad imagery of Jews showing like how horrible the rest of the world is to the poor Jews who okay?
I got denigrating Jews, yeah, no, it was it was denigrating Jews, but to show like, look at how the world treats us, but it was like total victimhood propaganda, yeah, yes, yes, yes.
And and she said, Huh, I never thought about it, but I think you're right.
And I was like, Wow, like anyone else Be like, oh, oh, that was easy.
Say that.
How could you six million?
Well, I was just like, wow, I was just not ready for this.
But yeah, this, so this is a girl that's uh, she's into like not necessarily holistic medicine, but like more natural stuff.
And she's anti-like prescription pills and and just the pharmacies probably a good sign.
Yeah, so she's not on any medications and she's not in therapy.
And it's like the only girl I've gone out with in like 15 years that isn't like that.
So did you just break out the ring right there and then?
Just put it on your finger.
I thought, you know, I thought, I thought about it, but you know, I've known better than to just, you know, fools rush in, as they say.
But I was, I was just like, okay, well, that's it's just going out with someone that isn't a nut case.
Like it was just like a regular person when we had regular conversations and she seemed actually interested in the things that I had to say.
And so in turn, you know, I pretended to be interested in the things she had to say, joking side.
She like she did have interesting things to say as far as her outlook on stuff.
But yeah, it was just weird.
It was like, you're the only person that's not like a nut.
Like just the rest, the rest of them, like going back to when I made a girl cry because I just said, you don't think people need to be told no.
And she just couldn't handle that.
So like literally on a date, a girl started crying because I said, you don't think people need to be told no.
But yeah, just saying the Paul, the Holocaust most propagandized piece in history.
And she goes, huh, yeah.
Yeah.
So I think you're right.
You're going to go out again?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, you know, she went out of town for the for the Thanksgiving.
So we will go again and we're going to get some ice cream because we made a bet on something.
And then I took the bet and I won.
So she's going to buy me ice cream.
Good stuff.
I want to ask about the delicate dance of wanting to get in her underpants, but not wanting to be too forward and not wanting to find out how easily she succumbs to your charms.
But I'll resist the temptation because it's that's that's not on my mind for right now.
Like right now, because I'm still kind of like, hmm, you know.
Okay.
All right.
It's early yet.
I think it's a legitimate topic because obviously we're thinking that way pretty early on and wouldn't be upset if it happens pretty early on before Sam don't kill me and be like, all right, that's awesome.
But then you're like, what does that say about her if she's too easy or am I being too much of a Lothario?
I will not croak.
Yeah, because, well, there are things about her because she's Christian.
And I went out with a girl that was like Christian first a while ago.
And then like she had all these complaints about these things in the world.
And then I was like, here, let me show you a three-letter word that's responsible for all of them.
And then she just would not buy.
She was against Satanism, porn, like big pharma and like big banks.
I'm like, guess what?
And then, and then, and I was able to provably show it.
And then she, no, no, that's, it couldn't be that.
I refuse to believe that.
But, but, but this girl doesn't seem like that level.
She doesn't seem like a Zionist.
She doesn't seem like a prude either, but she doesn't seem like a whore.
Sounds good.
Sounds promising.
Yeah.
Promising is like the best word I could use for it.
I don't get my hopes up yet because that would be silly.
But you're like Will Hunting and Mini Driver at the little bar right now or having a little sandwich.
Yeah, you know, what's your major dude?
You know, how do you like them apples or whatever?
I don't know.
I put that on for Junior the other night just because I wanted him to see a little bit of college, maybe because he's super sharp, you know, think about, you know, genius stuff.
And there are just so many F-bombs.
I didn't realize it.
Even back in the late 90s, Alien Romulus, F-bombs, F-bombs, non-stop.
And then in Goodwill Hunting, I'm like, geez, I can't even.
It's Boston.
It's just gross, man.
I don't like, if I, if I were in charge of screenplays, I'd be like, Nick's 50% or more of these F-bombs.
Every once in a while, it's okay.
But it's like not even necessary.
I mean, it's so trashy.
Cringe.
You could take it away and the movie would benefit.
It's not authentic.
You could still have rough language and tell coarse jokes without dropping that word.
Every other word.
And Alien Romulus was so, it was so hard to listen to some of the English characters that I had to do the bit and put the subtitles on the TV.
So I was reading it and listening to that.
I was like, this is intolerable.
Up with which I will not put.
Anyway, good luck, Rolo Buddy.
Seriously.
And I realized as I was sort of haphazardly pecking out notes for this show that we haven't done a coach's comfy corner in a long time.
And we had a precious one here under the roof about a week ago.
It was before Thanksgiving.
And our youngest, who's six, came out and complained that he had a toothache.
And the first thing that wifey and I thought was, oh boy, it's a cavity.
That's no good.
Where is it?
Right here in the front.
So he opens up his mouth and he starts wiggling his tooth.
It's like on a string.
Potato, it's time.
Let's get that.
Let's get that tooth out.
He said, no, no, no, no, I'm not ready.
I'm too scared.
I said, okay, give you one more day, but I think it's going to be coming out soon.
So finally, the following day, he had the courage.
He closed his eyes and clenched his fists.
It was like he thought he was going to get his fingernails ripped out or something.
Just grabbed the tissue and pulled that sucker out, a little bit of blood.
And he couldn't believe it.
He's like, it's out.
It's gone.
And I showed it to him in my hand, this tiny little bottom front tooth.
And he got all excited and, you know, said, oh, well, we got to write a note for the tooth fairy.
Yeah.
In the old, in the old movies, you would see they would tie a string around the tooth and then tie it to a doorknob and then slam the door.
You didn't, you didn't take that opportunity to be dramatic about it like that.
Come on, man.
Not at all.
It was the first time for him.
And I thought maybe it was late too.
I had to go to the Googles and see like, you know, average first tooth loss.
And it is anywhere between like four and even up to seven, I think.
So he wasn't some big outlier.
But then wife and I looked at each other and realized that was the last first tooth loss for our children, for our own children.
And the next time we'll be hearing about it from our kids and their grandkids, hopefully not from afar, but probably not in the room.
So anyway, he was very proud of himself, kept kept jutting his jaw out to show it.
And then the tooth fairy dropped a fiver for the first tooth, which we thought, yeah, someone suggested a dollar.
I said, oh, tooth fairy usually ponies up a little bit more for the first tooth in their life.
Anyway, so it was a delightful little thing.
Well, that's funny that you mentioned I had recently gone through.
We have a little thing on our dresser, little, I don't know what you want to call it.
Not jewelry box, but a little container there with different odds and ends and buttons and whatever miscellaneous.
And I was going through there looking for something and I found a little baggie that had like three teeth of my son.
You know, apparently my wife had kind of put a few aside and kept them in there.
And I just left them in there, you know, that's for cloning in the future, if necessary.
Yeah.
But, you know, so we had saved a couple, apparently, of the teeth.
And one funny story, I can remember one of my older sons when he was little, he had lost one of his front teeth, which is always, you know, already a little awkward when you lose one of your front teeth.
And then he was wrestling with one of the other brothers on the bed and he got knocked off the bed and he knocked his other front tooth out that was not even ready to be knocked out yet.
So he was a long time with, you know, no front upper teeth, which was funny, you know.
So I remember that as you were telling your story.
Yeah.
And you mentioned finding the bag of teeth.
I definitely, with our firstborn, they offered, I think they offered like stem cell banking or umbilical cord banking.
We're like, we're not paying for any like, you know, crypto frozen DNA or whatever.
But I did save.
I think I had something.
I think I saved, you know, when the umbilical, not the umbilical cord from birth, but when that ugly brown thing finally falls off their belly button, you know, nervous about knocking it off.
I saved that.
I saved that one for Junior for sure.
I've got that in the bottom of a lockbox somewhere.
I think I did for my daughter.
And then by the third one, I was like, whatever, we're not going to be cloning.
It's certainly not sentimental.
It looks like it's really end of a banana peel or something.
And then I did save a tooth and a lock of hair from our old dear dog, Mako, just in case that one, because I'm not cloning my kids.
That's Franken science.
But if it became economical one day, I might be tempted to bring that old Brussels graphic.
Bring the dog back.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Let's see.
Sam, you know, I had a very strange Thanksgiving experience because without going into too much detail, I flew one way to the Midwest, which was weird on its own.
I was very glad that I didn't get quadruple-est, not important enough for that.
I had a one-day pass to the United Lounge at Dulles.
So I was able to chill out in the lounge and drink free Miller Lights and tip here and there to the Somalians or Ethiopians behind the bar.
And I got there at like two o'clock in the afternoon.
The airport was empty.
I was like, this is weird.
I thought this was going to be the busiest travel weekend of the year.
And then as I sat there in the lounge, dicking around on my phone, reading a little bit, it was, it turned into an absolute madhouse.
Got out of there and drove an old but functioning car back here because it was sitting around gathering dust and drove, you know, one way from the Midwest back here to the Mountain Mama.
I mentioned on Telegram, I've never seen more state troopers in my entire life than driving through Ohio on the turnpike.
You know how sometimes they'll go side to side in the middle of the median, one's pointing one way, one's pointing the other way, so they can talk and share notes or whatever.
I saw three of them.
It was like one point one way, the other way, alternating and people getting pulled over left and right.
And I normally have a bit of a lead foot and really dodged one there, but never barely had to tap the brakes, you know, drove whatever it was, 10, 12 hours, two bath, two biochemical breaks for biological functions and petrochemical ones.
Very proud of myself, made it in time for my daughter's soccer game.
And then the next day we did the bit and some people are going to cringe at this, but we bought the Costco Thanksgiving dinner platter for a family.
It was plenty of food.
Oh, yeah.
It was 40 bucks.
I was skeptical.
I thought maybe wifey was just trying to get out of hard work.
And I always feel bad about women slaving away.
I honestly do.
Like, you know, grandmas or mothers-in-law will slave away in the kitchen all day long.
And then the dinner's over in like 15 minutes.
It's a labor of love for sure.
And no, I wouldn't feel bad about that at all.
In fact, we went to a catered event with our people.
And I mean, even with the catered event, it was a ton of work.
Just, you know, getting all the tables out and just all the whatever drinks and cups and silverware or whatever.
Yeah, it all a lot of it comes with the catered stuff, but but what a what a great event.
You know, what it we've been doing it for a few years for Thanksgiving.
And some of my family was there, but many of the people were just our comrades who I regard as family, honestly.
And was this Thanksgiving proper, Sam?
Yeah, Thanksgiving.
Yeah, on the day, Thanksgiving.
Yeah, it was it was beautiful.
We had some out-of-towners.
I don't know if I should say who it was, but we had outer towners with his family and just a great event.
Thanksgiving is one of the best holidays for sure.
Yeah, and I'll show just real quick.
Everybody at the table was happy.
It was just a big turkey breast.
It wasn't the whole production.
I know some people are going to say this is faking gay, but turkey breast, mashed potatoes, stuffing, cranberry sauce, and green beans.
And wife totally, you know, flavored it up with additional garlic and salt and all the rest of it.
But everybody was, and she made a huge thing of mac and cheese from scratch.
And everybody was like, this is really good.
And it was 40 bucks.
So don't turn that nose up either.
Try that for your old lady next Thanksgiving, maybe if she gets a little stressed out in the kitchen.
Yeah.
Speaking of Thanksgiving, one of my personal traditions, and I'm stressing that personal traditions, is watching the Thanksgiving Day parades, which goes back to when I was a little kid.
No one else will, everyone in this place would rather sleep the whole, you know, through the whole thing.
But I like getting up on Thanksgiving Day, the East Coast in New York City, that starts earlier.
And then the one in Chicago begins about 8 a.m.
And it was raining heavily in New York City.
So I didn't start out watching that one.
I wanted to watch the Chicago one where it was actually rather sunny.
But I couldn't help but think of it when you mentioned about driving through Ohio.
One of the entries in the parade was Springfield, Ohio.
And I couldn't help but wonder if there was any, was that done on purpose?
Was that, you know, what was it?
Yeah, cats on steaks and mics.
Yeah, eating the, they're eating the cats, they're eating the dogs.
Yeah.
And, but, uh, uh, but I look at this Haitian cuisine and it's like some romaine lettuce leaves, a tomato and like canned corn.
It was, it was actually a marching band from from uh from Springfield, Ohio.
But uh, you know, I'm how many other people watching that or listening to it did their ears perk up?
Oh, Springfield, Ohio.
Yeah.
But the Thanksgiving parade is it part of it is a hate-watching event for me because it sure has changed through the years.
And I am not kidding or exaggerating.
There had to be 12 or 15 entries from like at least eight of them were different Chinese groups.
And then, of course, several Korean groups, Thailand.
And what do any of these groups have to do with Thanksgiving in this country?
You know what I'm saying?
Nothing at all.
Nothing at all.
And I could understand if this was, let's say 90% of the entries were things from.
First of all, this country and even from this area, then, and then the 10% sprinkled on tops were these other groups, but it's not that at all.
There's just no identity to this country.
There's no indigenous culture to this country whatsoever.
So now there are- Yeah, go ahead, sorry.
I was just going to say, from what I saw, the New York one, I was like, oh, there's a floating Spider-Man.
There's a Macy's like blue star.
I turned it on just out of SpongeBob.
Margaret Curiosity.
Well, I think there may have been a SpongeBob.
As much of as I'm a hometown, I'm rooting for the home team in the hometown.
I did watch on YouTube later in the day.
I thought, well, even though it was raining, you know, I think I'm going to put on the YouTube New York City parade.
And somebody had very professionally recorded, video recorded the event without the inane banter of Coda Hotby and Al Roker.
And even though it was raining, I actually enjoyed it.
And I got to say, you know, the marching bands coming by, they were all white.
There were the New York City parade was whiter and it was actually better than the Chicago parade, which I usually would say it the opposite way.
But, you know, because what is missing is that in the New York parade, they stop in front of the review stand and they have some kind of like Broadway number where they lip sync to some nigger song or whatever.
But the Chicago one, it was like I said, I would rather see even though, yeah, on the south side, it's all nigger high schools with their nigger bands, fine, but I would rather see that than all these Chinese groups.
I don't understand what the connection is.
Can't we have like some local thing?
Can't discriminate if they want to put their little stupid church or, you know, temple on a float.
You got to say yes.
Yeah.
But even though, despite all that, it remains my tradition.
I do enjoy watching.
I prepare some kind of breakfast.
I sit in front of the TV and I watch.
It's getting harder and harder, though, because now there's no network TV.
There's, you know, I don't even have network TV, you know, so I, you got to go on Pluto.
And, you know, years ago, it was, it was easier to go back and forth between the two parades.
I would go, you know, when there was a commercial on one or some something I didn't care for on one, I'd switch over to the other.
But now one is on Pluto and the other one was, I'm not even sure what it was on because I don't have any of the network, ABC, NBC, none of that, CBS.
I don't have any of those.
So I don't know how I would have seen the New York one, except that I did watch it after it was complete and it was done very nicely without, like I say, these idiots, Coda Hotby and Al Roker.
The Coda Hotby or Hoda Khatobe?
I don't know.
I know.
I don't know.
Whatever.
She's like a brown mother-in-law.
Yeah.
So, so, but anyways, I enjoy the parades and seeing the whatever marching bands and race cars and fire trucks and even the cultural things.
I like the Lithuanian group is always very impressive with their outfits and their dances and stuff.
But yeah, I put it on and just out of curiosity.
I was like, oh, it's torrentially raining.
And I just couldn't imagine standing there on the street.
No, it looked rough.
Yeah.
That's why I didn't watch it.
I was like, I don't want to watch this.
It looks depressing, you know, but looking back, it was actually pretty good.
You know, when I watched it later, I thought, oh, that turned out pretty good, actually, despite the rain.
So I actually put on the, I put on the football game because we got it because it was on Fox Sports.
I know what you mean.
Now, I'm surprised that you don't get any digital TV signals, Sam.
I mean, for five bucks, you could probably get one of those things.
There's the key point for five bucks.
That's what you're fair enough.
But I put on the Giants Cowboys game just out of curiosity.
I was like, it's Thanksgiving.
We had already eaten.
And I was like, just remembering when I used to care about football and I was a Giants fan.
And my wife was busting my chops, like, why are you watching football?
What is going on here?
Are you having a stroke?
And I was like, yeah, it was actually good because I was able to explain to Junior some of the rules, which is nothing wrong with knowing how the hell football works, you know, first, first down, all the different points and stuff, whatever.
But yeah, it was just every once in a while, I like to dip my toe back into the past of Normadom.
Perhaps, you know, roughly similar to you watching the programs like in the days of your.
Yeah, when it comes to stuff like that, the sports, I, you know, a very, very limited interest in it.
But as I reflect on the past, like you say, going through the years, I, there's a friend of mine, he was big into NASCAR, you know, or another guy who had the, always had the boxing.
The thing I like about that is how it brought us together.
You know, it brought people together for this event, but then we would talk, you know, we would talk and we'd have beers.
Yeah, the stupid sporting event was on, but or Super Bowls, you know, things like that.
I can remember when some of my friends, they had some kind of interest in taking one side or the other.
But I do remember enjoying those things, maybe not exactly because of the sport, but because of that it was an event that brought people together.
You betcha.
And there's nothing easier than sitting on your ass and watch other people play sports or march in the cold rain.
You know, it's comfortable at least.
It's easy for sure.
We mentioned women laboring in the kitchen there for a while.
Oh, coaches cocked.
Heaven forbid women should have to put in a hard day's work in the kitchen or whatever.
I don't like, I don't like standing in the kitchen for hours if I ever have.
And it made me think, I wasn't going to do this.
I wasn't going to indulge in the meme of the week or whatnot.
And Sam perhaps had to do a little bit of last minute research.
I'm surprised you hadn't seen the wifejack meme yet, Sam.
My wife was mentioning it.
Oh, yeah, this wifejack thing.
I said, okay, you know, I didn't even say what is, what is it?
I just said, oh, no, I haven't seen that.
You know, so yeah, our guys were like, how is this actually a source of contention?
Like, what or whatever?
Fuentes and Andrew, not Turba, but Tate, you know, calling it nonsense or whatever.
So I'm going to share my authoritative wifejack analysis here.
And then Sam, you and Rolo can weigh in.
But I have to caveat it with the fact that I am not married to a wifejack.
Like my wife is the least wifejack of all time, which can be a pain in the neck sometimes because she's smart and sharp and intense and she is not cozied up in her little snuggy blanket asking innocent or naive questions.
But my thought is that heaven forbid there should be this relatively harmless, wholesome, mostly flattering, a little bit patronizing, a little bit pat on the head.
It's basically calling the white wife a little bit simple or a little bit naive, but it's affectionate.
It's not insulting.
She looks cute.
She's a redhead.
The funny thing is, she looks just like Smasher's wife, Allison, which is the truth, who is an attractive woman, of course.
It's safe to say that.
And like, of all, like, how many rare pepes are there?
How many Hitler 1488 memes are there out there?
And now there's one that is somewhat complimentary to the ladies in our life.
And it's wife Jack.
It's not single girl Jack or whatever.
It's our wives.
There's nothing, nothing wrong at all with indulging in a little bit of adulation of our wives, even with a slight tinge of critique.
Well, absent-mindedness.
I'll stop there.
Yeah, well, you know, the uh, yeah, don't, don't ever uh underestimate your wife's intelligence as you've already learned that lesson, coach.
Sounds like but oh, I never have.
I knew what I was in for.
Sharp cookie.
Yeah.
See, that's the thing, Sam.
I thought that what I wanted in life was a wife jack, you know, a nice, simple, demure, maybe a doormat or a, you know, a placemat, something like that.
Well, and I, yeah, and I got a feisty one.
Yeah.
The thing is, yeah, the thing is, some women are, they're not only smart, but they're smart enough to know to play to that a little bit.
And they might know, they might ask the question that way that sounds like it's innocent or naive, but they might have an idea behind that.
And that just shows how smart they are because that's how cunning species.
Yeah, that because that's how they can play you in a sense.
You know, don't think that she doesn't know more than what she's saying for sure.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
And a buddy left me a voicemail where he was calling his wife wife Jack and she was laughing in the background.
Another buddy's wife is now communicating to him in wifejack memes.
You know, she's literally putting names or whatever, like, can I do this or do that?
So it seems like the married women out there who are married to our guys and are familiar with it are not offended by it and probably find it a little bit charming.
Yeah.
So that's the way you should look at it for sure.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Rolo, please.
Well, because yeah, you're trying to find what the problem is.
And the truth is there is no, there is no problem.
The people that have a problem with it, the truth is they genuinely hate women.
And it humanizes women.
As patronizing as that sounds, like it humanizes the simple creature that is the female.
No, but like it humanizes women and it turns them into more than just like a sex whole.
And it's like, oh, isn't that fun?
That stupid girl from the time machine, right?
It's better than that one or the howling cat girl.
Like, and then chat.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's like it's a paw.
It's a positive thing instead of saying that, see, every woman ever, which is ironic because a lot of those people follow someone who is now being suspected of having a gay sex tape.
And while it's not, and while it's not proven, while it's not proven, the fact that people question it shows that, you know, there's a problem.
And, and, and, and that's what I think what homosexuality boils down to is it's like a pure hatred of women.
And I think some people get molested and they turn gay.
And I, and there were these, these prank calls that Steve Dave and I used to listen to a long time ago.
And this dude used to prank called gay people.
And a lot of dudes would admit that women were too much work, so they became gay.
So I think a lot of gay dudes just, it is an actual hatred of women.
And that's what these people that complain about the Wojack is just or the wife jack because they're like, yeah, yeah, you can't portray them that way.
Cause they want them to be just shrew monsters that they can say, see, that's why I hate women because everyone says, Yeah, and it also occurs like our women, our wives, uh, often suffer from either neglect because we're be booping on our phone or we're going to meetups or whatever, or we're paying them less attention than we did when we were normies.
So to just to give back a little bit and to embrace the wife jack and love our wife jacks is not feminist.
It's not cucked.
It's just spreading the love around.
And I hated seeing that.
I saw a couple real abortions of wife jacks where it was like Pepe, you know, holding a knife up to her neck or something like that.
And it reminded me of the old Pepe's where like Pepe would be like holding his dick or like spreading his bunches.
Like, no, no, I don't, I don't like those Pepe's and I don't like those nasty wife jacks.
I don't like that.
Yeah.
I thought you're, I thought you were going to say it reminds you of people that wear do-rags.
I used to wear do-rags maybe in 1990.
I was referring to a specific person that wears a do-rag that we know.
I'll give you a hint.
The name that you give him rhymes with Aryan Stallion.
Oh boy.
Yeah, we cannot get rid of that somehow.
I forgot he forgot he had the do-rags.
Now, Rolo, you said something interesting there that you suggested that homos, whether they, yeah, me too.
But it just was banging around in my brain as you were speaking.
I believe that there are born homos and, of course, molested homos and probably heterosexual men who, for one reason or another, they're not getting any drugs.
Absolutely.
Yep, drugs.
And like, once you do it once, too much porn might as well get one.
That too society pressure him to be homosexual.
Regardless, though, the standard thing growing up was that gay men and women were like besties because women loved having a flamboyant feminine man who wasn't trying to get in her pants.
For sure, my wife had gay friends back in the day.
But were they besties or did she have gays in her social group?
Social, social group.
They were not besties.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's what I meant.
Maybe classical gays are pro-woman genuinely and enjoy their company.
And this new breed of gays secretly really hate women and don't like vaginas.
I don't know.
No, I think more than one group, I guess.
Yes, that's what I think.
I think, I think, because there was that study that came out that 76% of gays admitted to being sexually assaulted when they were kids.
Yeah.
I think, yeah, of course, that's one sample because, you know, that's not, they didn't ask every gay in the world for that.
But I do think a lot of them, I had a roommate that his only, like his only objective during the day was to coom, like, no, like one way or another.
And, and then eventually he started like going down the real dark road.
And I genuinely believe that he turned gay because he was just all like what, however he could.
And then he got into weirder and weirder stuff and he needed weirder and weirder stuff.
And then he got into darker and darker, you know, porn.
And I think he turned gay.
I think porn turns dudes gay.
And I think some, they just give up on dating.
And then, and okay.
So I was friends with a child actor from a movie that both of you have seen.
Corey Vex.
Corey Feiset.
I will neither confirm nor deny.
I'm trying to.
But anyway.
Abuse child actors.
All right, go ahead.
Yeah, yeah.
If I told you his name, you'd say, I don't know who that is.
And if I told you who he played, you'd be like, oh, shoot, you know that guy.
But it wasn't Michael J. Fox, I hope.
No.
No, no, no.
It was someone.
He was more of a child actor, you know.
Gotcha.
But anyway.
But yeah, he was friends with me and another guy.
And he would try to convince us to be gay because and basically because it was easier.
I won't go into specifics for the things that he said, but he basically said, like, if you want to get laid, just be gay.
Like, it's just like, it's just that easy.
Yeah, prison psychology too.
If you really got to get some.
All right.
We're wandering way too far down.
But that reminded me, who was the kid in Boy Meets World?
Look like a Jew, curly hair.
It was Ben Savage.
No, that wasn't.
Yes, it was.
Was that Ben Savage?
It was Fred Savage's younger brother.
I bumped into him in a bar in Los Angeles, Brown Circle.
It's like a famous bar in Los Angeles.
And he was a total weirdo.
He was clearly on drugs.
I was just there with a buddy because I was in town for work.
And I was like, oh, it's a celebrity interaction.
And he was like flamboyantly bouncing around the bar.
I never, I don't know if he's gay or if he died of an overdose.
Jewish.
So, you know, they're all like gay and it's like weird about it.
Just a little tale from my traveling.
Real quick about the traveling too.
I think when people go, I used to travel all the time for pleasure and for work.
And at first, it's exciting every time you're packing up, you're going to the airport, you're people watching, you're getting on the plane, this is great.
And then you go through a stage where you're like, okay, I'm a pro at this.
And you get a little cocky and you're like, I've got everything down to a system.
I'm extremely efficient.
I avoid fees.
I can get into the lounge.
I'm racking up miles.
And then by the end, you're just like, I am in an airport again.
And this was the first time I've flown in like a year and a half, maybe two years.
I think it was two years ago, the last time I flew out to give that speech at that lovely event.
And this time around, I was like, I don't miss this one bit.
No way.
Even if you have a ticket, you know, all the crowds and the overpriced food, even in the lounge and the packed plane and the rude, the rude stewardess.
There was an ambiguously skinny racial woman who was the stewardess.
She was so unfriendly.
I was like, I know, like, you're probably tired and your feet hurt and this sucks, but I didn't do anything to you.
I'm just asking for a tomato juice and some pretzels.
I always get tomato juice on things.
But yes, God bless any of you guys who are still road warriors or have to travel a lot for work.
Yeah.
There's no glamour in it anymore.
Even if you're sure, it's a tough life.
Yeah.
Some guys really embrace it.
They like setting up those trips and flying and you get a rental car.
You set it up all the way and you eat in a good restaurant.
You have a nice meal and all that.
But oh my goodness, does it get old fast?
I did that for about five years and that was more than enough for me.
I was going to take the train one way, Sam.
It was a curiosity because I had a family member who took Amtrak recently, but got one of those private cars and raved about it.
But I looked at it.
The price was about the same price as a flight, only it was going to be on the train for 12 hours and it was in coach.
So I was going to be sitting in an open train car for 12 hours or something.
Yeah, maybe the maybe it was half the price, but it was still not cheap one way.
No.
It is not cheap to go by rail.
It is not cheap to go by rail.
Screw it.
Screw it.
I'll take the flight and get it over with.
One thing we have not done a lot on this show is play clips or footage of stuff and provide a little bit of commentary to it.
So we're going to give it a shot this week.
I just the other night was scrolling Twitter and occasionally I see what the hell crazy Elon Musk is tweeting about with his infantile very true or very concerning or whatever.
If he's playing dumb, he's doing it very persuasively because it still seems like he has the political knowledge and instincts of a teenager at best.
Obviously, he's brilliant in his own way, but you know what they say, you know, if you're brilliant in one way, oftentimes you're lacking in other ways.
But he posted this clip of Mark Andreessen, sort of a Silicon Valley legend.
He worked on developing the Mosaic first web browser, essentially went into venture capitalism.
His partner and his firm, not gay partner, but financial partners, of course, a Horowitz.
So he intimately is partnered with a prominent family wealthy Jew on that front.
But regardless, he went on Rogan and I almost never watch Rogan and occasionally I'll see the clips and I'm like, the clip is enough.
But I thought that it was really cool and noble of him, even if he didn't go all the way to talk about debanking, which so many of us have suffered in one way or another.
The Australian guys have, the British guys have.
As I joked, you know, first they come, they came for the terrorists, then they came for the racists.
And then it seems like in the last year or two, it got so over the top intense on the crypto bros and maybe vaccine skeptics.
And if you became remotely known in the world for a controversial thing, they could drop you at the drop of a hat and you had no recourse whatsoever.
So Rollo, with all that said, if you wouldn't mind playing this clip, it's eight minutes.
I don't think we'll do the full eight minutes.
And then maybe we will talk about it a little bit.
But go ahead.
This is a pretty important IMO.
New in financial services.
Can you give me an example?
You know, debanking.
This is where a lot of the debanking comes from is these agencies.
So debanking is when you as either a person or your company are literally kicked out of the banking system.
Like they did to Kanye.
Exactly.
Like they did to Kanye.
My partner Ben's father has been debanked.
Really?
We had an employee for what?
For having the wrong politics.
For saying unacceptable things.
Under current banking regulations.
Okay, here's a great, here's a great thing.
Under current banking regulations, after all the reforms of the last 20 years, there's now a category called a politically exposed person, PEP.
And if you are a PEP, you are required by financial regulators to kick them off to kick them out of your bank.
You're not allowed to do that.
You're politically on the left.
That's fine.
No.
Because they're not politically exposed.
So no one on the left gets debanked.
I have not heard of a single instance of anyone in the left getting debated.
Can you tell me positively positive real quick?
I love you've seen maybe the meme of like Joe Rogan is like a caveman saying, oh, tell me all these wonderful things.
He just like, what?
No, get out of here.
Oh, you know, the left, they don't get debanked.
And Andreessen's laughing.
It's funny.
Now, the guy who he's using as a model, of course, is David Horowitz, the father of his firm partner, who is a Jew, obviously, and one of those old school radical anti-Muslim immigration, anti-terrorism guys.
I'm sure that he has suffered some debanking because he's a little bit one of those Lakudnik sort of wacky.
But if Rogan's playing dumb, that's shocking.
And Andreessen didn't have to go here.
This makes me think now, okay, he mentioned Kanye, right?
Kanye, one of the most famous, arguably talented.
Of course, I don't think famous, wealthy, and he got debanked because of the Jew.
I saw some people say, well, he didn't mention the Jews or, you know, he didn't mention anti-Semites or racists getting deplatforming.
Okay, fine.
But I really don't think that the system wanted tens of millions, if not hundreds of millions.
I mean, this thing had 20, 30 million impressions on it.
This guy is in the business of making money on tech.
And as somebody else posited, the debanking, de-financializing of people finally started to hit Silicon Valley guys and their friends in the pockets.
And that's why they're going to the ramparts here.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Rolo.
With the clip?
Sure, please.
You know, did what they said that got them debanked?
Oh, well, I mean, David Horwitz is a right-wing.
You know, he's pro-Trump.
I mean, he said all kinds of things.
You know, he's been very anti-Islamic terrorism.
He's been very worried about migration, all these things.
And they debanked him for that.
They debanked him.
So you get kicked out of your bank account.
You get killed.
By the way, you can't.
Why is that legal?
Well, exactly.
So this is the thing.
And so, and then you go to this thing of like, well, there's no, this is where the government and the companies get intertwined.
Back to your fascism point, which is there's no, there's a constitutional amendment that says the government can't restrict your speech, but there's no constitutional amendment that says the government can't debank you.
Right.
And so they, if they can't do the one.
Can I ask, do you, do you know where this meme started of fascism is like industry and government?
Oh, it's because really, right.
I'm saying, do you know where it started?
Probably Frankfurt School or some Jewish critique shop.
Well, I mean, there's some truth to the fact that, you know, Hitler allowed free enterprise, but it all had to be directed by the state and in the best interest of the people.
Sure, but they, but they use such a specific example.
Like I've been hearing that from like the gayest of leftists.
Right, right.
That specific thing.
Yeah.
And you think like, okay, so I guess if the model is pure capitalism, where the government does not interfere with business operations whatsoever, that's the virtuous one.
And where the government is the business is communism.
Well, gosh, government sort of keeping a tight rein on business and directing its energies and enterprises toward healthy, productive, necessary things.
Fascism sounds pretty good.
Of course, he did the slander there.
That was the two major knocks I had was Rogan's shocking ignorance and just throwing in fascism there to not be a Nazi.
Interesting that they didn't delve more on Kanye, but yeah, valid point.
One thing that they do the other thing, and then they don't have to debank you.
They just have to put pressure on the private company banks to do it.
And then the private company banks do it because they're expected to.
But the government gets to say, we didn't do it.
It was the private company that did it.
And of course, JP Morgan can decide who they want to have as customers, of course, right?
Because they're a private company.
And so it's this sleight of hand that happens.
So it's basically it's a privatized sanctions regime that lets bureaucrats do to American citizens the same thing that we do to Iran.
Kick you out of the financial system.
And so this has been happening to all the crypto entrepreneurs in the last four years.
This has been happening a lot of entrepreneurs, anybody trying to start any kind of new banking service because they're trying to protect the big banks.
And then this has been happening, by the way, also in legal fields of economic activity that they don't like.
And so a lot of this started about 15 years ago with this thing called Operation Shark Point, where they decided to, as marijuana started to become legal, as prostitution started to become legal and then guns, which there's always a fight about under the Obama administration, they started to debank legal marijuana businesses, escort businesses, and then and then and then gun shops, just like your gun manufacturers.
And just like you're done, you're out of the banking system.
And so if you're running a medical marijuana dispensary in 2012, like you, guess what?
You're doing your business all in cash because you literally can't get a bank account.
You can't get a visa terminal.
You can't process transactions.
You can't do payroll.
You can't do direct deposit.
You can't get insurance.
Like none of that stuff is, you've been sanctioned, right?
None of that stuff is available.
And then this administration extended that concept to apply it to tech founders, crypto founders, and then just generally political opponents.
Yeah.
So that's, that's been like super pernicious.
I wasn't aware of that.
Oh, 100%.
And this is called.
So it was Operation Shark Point 1.0 was 15 years ago against the pot and the guns.
Shoke Point 2.0 is primarily against their political enemies and then to their disfavored tech startups.
And it's hit the tech world.
Like we've hard.
We've had like 30 founders debanked in the last four years.
Really?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
It's been a big return pattern.
30.
This is one of the reasons.
Clause it real quick, Rolla.
Really?
Yeah.
So I have definitely been kicked off platforms, not just social media before.
I'm not going to break out my violin because I haven't suffered.
Some guys have.
No, because it wasn't, because I still had alternatives.
But here's a situation where I know about the neocons that Trump is appointing and Jared Kushner's father and wacky Kash Patel for the FBI, which may be entertaining and may be good for us.
But here's a case where, okay, maybe this guy is friends with Jews to the hilt and he doesn't really care about racists or anti-Semites.
Maybe it's crazy to think that calling attention to this and because this guy is mega billions, very powerful, influential, hasn't been canceled.
But this is an instance where this conversation would be utterly irrelevant if Trump had lost and a case where we would perhaps get material benefit from them and saying, huh, that doesn't seem right, or there should be recourse on this.
Because if you are named a pep and then you lose your bank account, you'd say, ah, well, that sucks.
You know, you're going to get your money back and then you go open another bank account.
But not really.
If you're on the list and you're blacklisted, that's a severe impact on your life.
And they were able to do it, whether the government told them to do it or the company did it and the government said, I'll look the other way.
It doesn't matter.
And you know that a lot of our guys getting debanked or deplatformed is just leftists snitching to either probably the government and then the government telling the bank that this guy's a bad person.
So I'm great.
I was actually grateful that Andreessen said this.
One of our buddies, Braxton, said, What normies crave is normalcy.
So there's going to be some return to normalcy here in the Trump administration.
In the sense of, you know, maybe they won't be able to put men in women's locker rooms, or maybe they won't have such over-the-top propaganda of your kids.
Maybe they are trying to lull you back to sleep, Mr. WN.
But normalcy is better than leftist tyranny.
It's not as good if you're trying to rabble rouse people to join your group or go to the ramparts or protest in the streets or whatever.
But for the vast majority of our people, if you're less likely to get debanked or your kid is less likely to get access to transition drugs without his parents' help, that's better than the alternative.
I'm not trying to sugarcoat Trump or whatever.
And we very well may get World War III.
And I thought the whole thing about bricks and the currency was crazy.
But I don't know if we have to keep going with that.
We are at an hour right now.
What do you think, Rolo?
Should I keep playing?
I forget if there's anything more interesting after that.
Oh, I don't know.
But I do want to add on to that.
Yeah.
To what you were saying, to the people that do, that are saying like, oh, it's going to get so bad.
Look at like Trump's picks.
And then, oh, look at how bad things were under Trump.
Like all these bad things happened under Trump.
Well, there was never an administration in any of our lifetimes, even Sam's, where it got better.
Like each administration, it's just been worse.
And with all the bad things that happened under Trump, and again, and because a lot of people are, you know, like, you know, mentally retarded, and I don't like Trump, and I think he's a bad person with bad, bad friends, essentially.
It's, it's just all the bad things that happened under Trump, they didn't need to do it under Biden because they already did it under Trump.
It would have happened under Hillary because all the people that say all the bad things that happened, like all the censorship and blah, blah, blah, happened under Trump.
Right, right.
They didn't need, it's not like the Biden administration rolled it back.
And Merrick Garland said that the greatest threat to the country is white supremacy.
And so it's all said that that was ludicrous.
Well, but he, but he all he also said that like we, the Americans need to wake up and support Israel.
It's, it just, I think you get, you get World War III under Harris or Trump.
It's, it's not like all the bad things that are going to happen under Trump, it like a different kind of bad.
Plus, you run the risk of possibly a 47-year-old man walking into the bathroom when your daughter's there and taking his penis out and doing something like that.
Because I will, I will say, because we, I don't know if we actually said it, but I work with the tranny and it's confirmed that Tranny is moving to France.
You hit it early.
Packing up and leaving.
So I can say that like that would not have happened under Harris.
So, and it doesn't matter that Trump sucks because he does and his policies are going to be more neocon nonsense that are going to be crappy long term.
But left, like normie right-wingers have a fun delusion that Trump is going to save the world and kick ass and we're going to get our guns and the freedoms.
And left wingers, like, yeah, normie lefties are terrified.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so, you know what?
It's there.
There's the good that comes from this administration is a good that will most likely have a positive effect on your social life.
And it might be fleeting too.
Sure, sure.
Well, the big policy, the big policies are no matter, no matter who's there, are going to be terrible.
Because it was like Conte said, like, who wins the election?
Well, Jews.
It's like, yeah, Jews make the rules.
They sign the checks.
And those are the people that get taken care of first.
But that does.
We have France.
Yeah, Charles Christmas will be our official ambassador to France.
Which is hilarious.
You know, in France that Tranny will be wearing pants.
Sorry.
Well, yeah, I was just, I was just going to say that.
Like, you, like, there's nothing you can do about who's in power and the decisions they make.
So those are things you really cannot worry about.
But Mark Andreessen can.
Right.
That is why I thought it was interesting because he put in billions.
And you could say, well, what he wants is a million Pajites to do cheap coding for his venture capital Silicon Valley startups.
Perhaps.
But he also put up a giant flare on debanking, which threatens us all.
So there is an element of, okay, I am not at all carrying water for this administration.
As you said, Rolo, we have virtually little influence.
Part of the reason why I think the oppression lessened over the past four years under Biden is because they won and we were less relevant and perhaps less active.
I mean, it still continued, but it was more intense during Trump because we were more intense during Trump.
We were the rabble who thought we were helping to steer the ship.
And then they were like, no, thank you, rabble.
We don't need you.
We've got 25 times your population amongst the Normie's middle white Americans who don't care about Hitler or Jewish power, plus all of the Blacks and Browns, who with enough shilling, they ended up winning more on the Browns than on the Blacks, a significant percentage of the population.
So anyway, thank you, Andreessen.
We'll see.
Maybe we'll still keep getting debanked and billionaire crypto bros will not.
But I suspect that in this case, on this issue, a rising tide will lift us along to our benefit as well.
I have a quick, quick thing on this because when people first started getting debanked in the 2017, 2018 era, I knew these older people that I used to kind of socialize with.
And when that started happening, I would say to them, because I could tell that they were more, they were a little more neocon-ish, you know, they're boomers.
And I said, so like, how do you feel about people being, you know, being removed from a bank?
And then their answer was always like, well, they could just go to a different bank.
Right.
And then, and then, and then I was like, okay, well, that was mine too back in the day.
Oh, yeah, that sucks.
Just go get a different bank account, which was still a good thing.
They couldn't fathom that people were being completely cut off.
Like they, like, they, they couldn't process that.
Like, they would just keep going to like, well, you know, there's other alternatives.
Like they couldn't say like, well, what do you mean?
This or that?
No, it was just like, what?
No, they'll just, they'll go use some, they'll use a different service.
They can use PayPal.
Well, or they could use free market.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There's other companies.
Yep.
Yes, it's, it's, it's very interesting that people don't, because people don't understand this, but now, I don't know, 10, 20 million people have it spelled out for them.
Because if you tell a Normie anything, you, you're stupid.
You're a dummy.
You're not, you're not Joe Rogan.
You're not the guy, the guest on Joe Rogan.
When the guest on Joe Rogan says it, like, oh, now it's real.
Now this is like this is normies pay attention to the person on the glowing box.
That's, that's who they care about.
Unfortunately.
Yeah.
And Andreessen posted probably a dozen or more articles on his Twitter after he blew up with that segment of his Rogan interview.
And it was just in 2023 and more this year, 2024, that all of the MSM started to notice and say, ooh, yeah, we get a problem here.
And it's because it's just like with social media.
Like when you would get banned off Twitter, they wouldn't say because of this tweet or because you violated this specific thing.
It would just be like you violated the rules and you're gone.
And the banks were doing the same thing with those inert, inane letters.
You know, you can write, you can, nobody could get an answer.
They were just, it was, you know, it was like getting added to the no-fly list or something.
So very important for our guys who are prominent and providing commentary and perhaps an area of corresponding interest with the Nouveau regime.
We should definitely go to the break.
Yeah.
Gone long.
Hope you didn't mind us doing a little clip and wrap there.
Maybe we'll do it again.
I'll listen back to that one and see if it works or not.
Sam Rollo, anything before we go to the break?
No, I think it's a good moment.
All right, good deal.
New Arcades is a synthwave group that goes back to at least 2017 or 2018.
They've got a spectacular collection.
And sometimes when I hear one, I will put it on repeat for four or five times, not going to lie.
And this is one of them.
And it's called We Can't Turn Back.
So enjoy this pure Synth Wave all-time great by New Arcades.
And we'll talk to you in two or three minutes.
We could go anywhere if you just stayed safe.
So come on.
I'm waiting for you.
Just leave me high.
We can't turn back.
And you know, we won't ever be before.
We can't turn back.
And you know, go ahead and go.
We're just getting by.
And I know you wanna feel alive.
We could be so far away.
There's no reason why we need to stay.
So come on.
I'm waiting for you.
You leave behind it all.
We can't turn back.
And you know we won't ever be before.
We can't survive.
And you know, go ahead and be Once
more, we play our dangerous game.
For some reason, Sean Connery in Hunt for Red October in his pure Scottish, not Russian accent.
And the reason that we are playing our dangerous game yet again is that I am looking at a giant magnum bottle of Kirkland signature, tequila blanco.
I just have a little glass on ice next to me, but that is a dangerous game.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to Full House episode 201, second half.
And I would just like to say, nab alt.
Not all boomers are like that, because aside from my glorious brief visit to the Midwest recently, I drove back with a veritable basement bar stocked full of Kirkland signature liquor that I honestly didn't really want to have that much.
But what are you going to do?
They're not all greedy, selfish, judgmental, politically moronic knaves or rubes.
I love my in-laws.
I love my parents.
They're generous.
They're loving.
They could drive you baddie sometimes for sure.
And they have those idiosyncrasies of a previous generation.
But cheers to the audience and to Sam and Rolo.
It's a delicious, of course, because it's white tequila, 100% de agave, and it's delicious.
I know Sam is a fellow tequila appreciator.
It's kind of bad rap.
Oh, yes.
I don't usually go the Blanco, though.
I usually go the Agnejo or the Reposado.
I can't keep you straight.
Well, how would you break down?
I mean, like, they all taste kind of like tequila to me.
You get one at Taco Belly, then the other at Chipotle.
Like Blanco?
This tastes good to me.
What's wrong with Blanco?
No, no, that's they're just how strong is the flavor.
The Blanco is the least, you know, the more like for mixing, usually for mixing.
Okay.
And the reposado is in the middle, and the añejo means aged, and that's the smokiest, darkest, heaviest flavor.
And then there's the tequila, then there's the turpentine slash diesel fuel one that my wife wants.
Mescal, yes.
Well, Mescal also goes Blanco reposado añejo.
And I actually, I have a bottle of Agnejo.
I was drinking it earlier in the show, actually.
Yeah, I was, I have had a little glass of it.
Yeah.
Oh, it's good.
Oh, it's so good.
Oh, my goodness.
Well, I want to add to that boomer thing that you said, because Kevin Stack said this.
He said this recently.
Boomers, not an age group.
It's a, it's a lifestyle.
A spirit.
Yeah.
Fair.
And I think, I think most people understand that now, because when they talk about boomers, like a lot of times they'll say, like, oh, you're being such a boomer.
And it'll be someone who's like 37 to like 45.
Absolutely.
So it's, yeah.
So it's definitely a mindset.
You know, the people who not only can't deal with technological things, but will not deal with them.
It doesn't even have to be tech.
It can be just like certain things that people didn't take the time to learn.
That's just part of their everyday.
As an example.
Yeah.
As an example.
Tech is easy.
Yes.
Could be anything.
Yes, for sure.
Yeah.
And their lack of idealism, perhaps, and just focus on the day-to-day materialism.
Yes.
I would have knocked that more savagely four or five years ago, but I've been a little bit more reflective or pensive about, I think everyone at some point in their lives, or at least anybody who's been listening to this show or on Twitter and the cause, like when you have that sudden new knowledge, and usually it's valid, at least if you're in our circles, you go all in on the networking and on the propaganda, and it's everything, everything, everything.
And you can tend to lose a little bit of perspective or a focus on your own things in your own life that are important.
And this is not to be de-radicalizing whatsoever.
By all means, go hard.
Live boldly, but don't be a PhD on anti-Semitism.
And then, God help me, I'll even like make a light reference to Jordan Peterson.
Like, I don't care if you know about the Jews and racial differences, if you are kind of broke ass, or if you got dirty fingernails, or if you're in bad shape, you got to do both.
You have to focus on the small ball, the stuff at home, and get that stuff in order or improve it or strengthen it while also keeping the edge.
And I have been on the one side of the, it's not like I was neglecting my family when I was a fire breathing alt-rightist, but certainly they were, they got less of my brain activity than did what at the time was an all-encompassing more or less belief that we were doing something right and that it was important and it was making progress.
And now fast forward five, six, seven years, and it's like, man, we did, we did some good work.
It was important.
We were not wrong, but probably shouldn't have gone too hard.
So a little bit of speaking of boomers, am I being a boomer here by admitting that or thinking back to it?
But everything in balance, seriously.
Yeah.
The small ball and the big picture, the radicalism, along with being friendly and normal and well presenting, I guess.
All right.
Let's do new white life.
Sam, two good friends of the show.
Oh, man.
Oh, man.
Big ones this week.
Yeah.
Oh, my goodness.
Yeah.
Two real brothers, two really great guys who Just wonderful in so many ways.
Our dear uncle Ruckus welcomed his fourth son into the world.
Just great.
We know his wife, who's a great lady in her own right, and she deserves the Mooters Cross.
He should go out and get her one.
But great job.
We saw the picture get passed around.
I'm sure you guys are.
There are only four boys.
They don't have one girl.
Just four.
I'm sorry.
The fourth.
That's the fourth.
That's the fourth and it's a boy is what I meant to say.
Gotcha.
I didn't mean to say this.
I'm not sure.
No, it's all girls.
It's all boys.
No girl.
Okay.
I wasn't sure, but I wasn't sure either.
But great, great work.
Great job.
And the other one is a fourth.
I'm sorry, not fourth.
I'm trying to think what number it is.
I'm not going to say the number because I want to say it's number six, but a boy.
Yeah, a boy was born to our dear friend Walker, who's a fantastic guy.
And his wife's a trooper and a beautiful family.
So they welcome another child into their family.
God bless them.
You'd think Sam was drinking the tequila blanco.
That's fine.
Absolutely.
Congratulations.
Two friends welcoming four and above within days of each other.
And have you met?
I have not met Walker, Sam.
Yes.
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah.
I've met his whole family and great people.
Yeah.
Way to go, boys.
And Sam mentioned the mother's cross there, the Mutu Cruz, Muter Cruz.
And it is a beautiful necklace that, of course, the Third Reich presented to.
You couldn't just pop out four and get this award.
You had to be upstanding and show evidence that you were contributing to the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth.
And you can still find those out and about on trading sites like lakesidetrader.com.
Yes.
Now, I don't have four, but I'll admit I got one after our third.
You know, jumped the gun, maybe thought we get a fourth.
But regardless, you know, and I know guys who have given them to their wives and their wives are not 1488 fashion Roman salute ladies and they still think that it's precious and cool.
It's a collection.
Yes.
Yeah.
Oh, for sure.
And absolutely better that you get it than some Jew looking to get those things and melt them down into, I don't know, fake coins or something like that.
So go for it.
There's got to be other sites other than Lakeside Trader, but that's one that I know that's been around forever.
And I will try to remember to put that in the show notes.
I mentioned things on the air and people were like, hey, where's that?
The show notes, coach.
I was like, I don't know.
You have the same access to information that I do.
Like it was the woman's moments thing, Sam.
A bunch of people were like, where's the woman's moments telegram?
I was like, I don't know.
Because it's device banned.
But I didn't even go to look at it.
Yeah, that is an absolutely great channel.
All right.
We got a lovely note in the inbox from our old pal, Volgas.
And I'm going to read it here real quick.
Coach, I've been trying to find time to write you after your audience appreciation episode, but life has kicked me in the teeth lately.
A few days before that episode dropped, I had to put my dog down due to deteriorating quality of life.
He had been with me 12 years, well before I met my wife and had a family.
He was a one-man dog, my buddy.
In the second hour of the episode, when you all were talking about pets through the grief, I was smiling inside hearing that I wasn't the only one who felt this way.
Not that I did not already know that, but hearing others speak about it at that moment was very nice.
I say this to let the birth panel know that we listeners appreciate you probably more than we make known.
And sometimes little tidbits like that segment can make a show hit the feels.
For quite some time after getting married and having kids, my dog would bark at family members anytime they came around me, being protective.
He had not learned the pecking order until later.
It was concerning since I was unsure whether he would protect them if ever the need arose.
One day while I was at work, he proved my family was also his family and jumped on a delivery driver that unknowingly surprised them in the yard.
He didn't bite, but he let the driver know not to mess with him.
That made me quite proud hearing of the tale.
The day we put him to rest, we treated him to everything that he loved.
We held a ceremony and I buried him as the family walked to the house as it was quite cold and late.
As soon as I finished, I followed, put the shovel away and looked up to the sky for some reason.
There, with nearly a full moon and mostly clear skies, I saw a perfect halo tied around the moon, complete and unbroken.
Never having seen this before, I rushed inside to get the fam.
The missus and other two kiddos came out to see it.
It was as if we were meant to witness this because the halo had widened and was disappearing as we watched.
A good sign, I'm sure.
What perfect timing of such a phenomenon after the burial of our dog, since I learned this was called a moon dog.
Taking this as confirmation, he is in the bliss of doggy afterlife.
We will smile as we remember him.
During such a negative week, the timing of your episode was a fitting conversation.
So welcome.
Big thanks for what you and the birth panel do and what goes into creating an enjoyable listening experience.
Hail Full House Birth Panel and hail to our pets laid to rest.
And that was from Volgas.
And yes, I got choked up there reading it.
Damn it.
Yeah.
I like that guy.
He's got a good music channel and he puts out a lot of good music.
But a good buddy of mine recently, he had to also put down his dog and it was really rough.
This friend of mine, he has had a rough go with women through the years, you know, which can happen, you know, through no fault of your own, let's say.
And after a particular bad breakup one time, he said, you know, I think I'm going to get a dog, you know, many years ago.
And so he got a dog, which did prove to be a very faithful companion.
And it was very hard and sad, sad, really, for him to put it down.
I had talked to him right after that.
And that was a few weeks ago.
And just today, he called me to say that he had just got a new dog.
So definitely our dogs are important to us.
I do not have one.
I always said I had kids.
I don't have any dogs.
That's more than enough for me to take care of.
Maybe that's a cop out, but I definitely see the value as companion, especially for somebody who gets stuck living alone, maybe not by their own choosing.
But a dog can certainly make the difference.
Absolutely.
And I saw that same, probably the same moon halo that Volgas did by any chance, because it's not every time you don't go outside and look up at the moon or whatever, but I happened to be out at dark, looked up and said, holy cow, look at that gorgeous, like a corona around it.
And the timing checks out with what he said.
So that was additionally pretty cool.
And it is very rare.
I've only seen that maybe once before in my life.
The Rainbow Bridge is the famous poem about dogs that will get the waterworks going if you've lost one or recently lost one.
And definitely the best way after an appropriate morning period of, I don't know, a couple months, getting a new dog helps.
It helps significantly.
It's not like your wife just died and you're going out and dating two months later.
It's getting back in there and helping the doggy world.
The worst thing about having a dog, in my opinion, is you can't just pick up and leave.
And, you know, kenneling a dog sucks because in most places it's expensive and you feel sorry for the dog.
You can't always bring the dog with you.
Sometimes you can.
Sometimes people are like, yeah, you can bring your dog, but they really don't want some dog running around and possibly getting out or making an accident in the house.
So it's a major, major thing.
And I've got that coming up with Christmas.
It's like, am I going to kennel her?
Am I going to foist her off on a neighbor?
Or am I going to ask for permission from people who don't really want a big, hairy, lovable dog in the house?
Probably going to kennel her because she's spoiled 99% of the time here.
In addition to looking at a big bottle of tequila, I'm also looking at Petey Mouse.
One more quick comfy corner.
I've probably beaten Petey the Mouse on very rare episodes over the years, starting with the fatherland.
But Petey Mouse is an emissary from Santa.
Your family, it may not be too late for him to arrive on your doorstep, a little cute stuffed mouse with a red hat and a basket.
And he basically hangs out with the younger kids.
Maybe sleeps on their bedstand next to them.
But he's arrived every year for all of our kids.
He keeps an eye on them, makes sure, but he's not a creepy elf on the shelf.
And then he goes back.
He disappears on Christmas morning.
Santa brings him back.
But this is the first year, Sam and Rolo, where our youngest wasn't just like, oh, okay, Petey's here, but he was excited and he was drawing pictures and showing it to him.
And I could see some people thinking that that's creepy or manipulative somewhat, but it's not.
It's wholesome.
It's almost like having a little temporary pet or an imaginary friend.
And it's just been a tradition in our family since I was a boy back in the 80s.
So something to think about.
It's not elf on the shelf.
It's a little mouse in a basket and arguably a little bit more wholesome.
So that's all I got.
It's also better than mench on the bench.
Well, that too.
Sam Rollo, what's in your stack?
I'm hoarse.
You want to do the story right now?
Yeah, I could do it.
I did want to mention about Thanksgiving.
I know now we're looking back a couple days.
So I hope the audience will not think we're, you know, late on things.
But I had, you know, I listened to the final storm.
I enjoy the show and I like Rolo's music.
And something I heard, I said, hey, can you send me your music?
You know, I know a couple songs have come out here and there.
I've heard them.
So he sent me.
He sent me a whole bunch of them.
And I said, oh, great.
And I put it on a CD.
And so I was playing it for, you know, I just put it on when we were listening to music.
We were listening to other stuff, skinhead stuff, whatever.
And then I put that on and boy, did it get a good reception.
I mean, from more newbies to skinheads to everybody said, wow, that is really good.
What is that?
So I had to explain it, you know, that it's from the Final Storm and everything like that.
We play the music, you know, especially the song Brick by Brick mentions Full House.
It's got that little blurb from Coach there talking on there.
Totally surprised me.
Yeah, you know, I mean, it's, it's really good stuff.
So, so we, we played that, excuse me.
And that, that was a big hit.
Um, but uh, I, I did want to talk about Thanksgiving for a bit simply.
It does have a real quick, thank you for uh bringing that up, Sam.
And I just wanted to fan Rolo's balls too.
They're like, you know, I plenty of people send me music and usually I'm like, okay, thank you.
That is good.
And Rolo has sent me others of his music where I was like, not my cup of tea.
And when he sends me these synth wave slash techno jams, uh, nine times out of, I'm like, that's really good.
And I like, I like his darker stuff, his heavier stuff, the final story on digital secrets.
When I heard brick by brick, I was like, ah, it's too, too upbeat for me.
So I didn't listen to it all the way until the end when the gracious bastard went and sampled from episode one of Full House for the close there.
I of course didn't hear it.
I heard it on re-listening.
But thank you, Rolo.
And you got chops, kid, if I can say that.
And I hope you keep making it, despite you thinking that you've already created your magnumogus and you can't possibly reattain those heights.
It's not just from the first episode.
It's the first thing said in the first episode.
Wow.
Yeah.
That's heavy.
That's meta.
Well, I like Rolo's heavier stuff and I like the somebody who knows me might think, oh, wait a minute.
You can't possibly like this type of fash wave stuff.
No, no, I if it wasn't good, I would not like it.
It was, it's just because it's good, you know, that's why I like it.
And my tastes are maybe centered in a certain area, but I do appreciate good things outside of the perhaps the normal things I listen to.
But definitely great stuff.
And I don't, I don't know, I don't always hear the music that you play on the break or the final because, you know, like I listen, I don't listen to the show myself.
My wife will listen to it.
I will hear our conversation, but I usually don't hear the music part of it, you know?
And yeah, forget the new babies that we may have encouraged to come into the world, Sam.
I think that my proudest moment that I failed to mention from last show was the idea that you and Wifey made whoopee listening to some of my electronic jams.
Yeah, I've come back a couple of those trance classics.
Oh, yeah.
Score.
That's another thing I would tell the listeners.
You know, on the website, there's that, you know, music from Full House.
Yeah.
And a lot of that's like I said, this is maybe a couple of years ago already.
I went through one time and I took all the songs that I didn't know what it was.
I said, I want to listen to the stuff that I don't know what it is.
And yeah, a lot of great stuff for sure.
And there's a Spotify playlist now, too.
The guys who were over in Poland rocking their full house shirts asked for it.
And I said, oh, shoot, that's, they're like over there now.
So I just said, all right, clear my schedule.
Not that that was particularly challenging.
And I just sat down and literally, not every song, of course, was available on Spotify's playlist, but I will link that in the show notes for sure.
I did put it out on the Telegram channel.
And one other quick housekeeping item before the show, Michael Hill reached out to me.
I think I can share this.
And he said, hey, coach, I'm going to be speaking at the American Freedom Party convention or Congress or event coming up in March.
And it's about damn time that we shook hands.
And I said, son of a gun, that's not too far from me.
I don't have a single valid excuse for not going to that.
So whatever you think about politics or maybe even the American Freedom Party, the speaker list is great.
You got Thomas Rousseau, Michael Hill, Sam Dixon, Kevin McDonald.
I am thinking about going to that.
It's March 7th to the 9th.
They haven't announced registration or location yet, to my knowledge.
But check it out.
It is intriguing to me.
And I am going to go.
I'm a little bit fatigued of events and networking and all that stuff as a salty old war veteran at this point.
But I am planning to go if you want to meet me or more importantly, check out the American Freedom Party and the impressive slate of speakers.
Sounds like it'll be a good time.
PSA.
Yeah.
I'd like to go to that myself.
We'll have to see how it shapes up.
Get Rollo to take a, I don't know, jalopy out here, by biplane, planes, trains, and automobiles.
Autogyro.
Maybe, maybe he could hitchhike.
What about hitchhiking?
He could probably get away with it.
Yeah.
He's not going to get raped and murdered in the middle of the desert.
I don't think so.
Not both.
Yes.
You're going to.
You're going to do the raping and murdering.
Oh, no, no, not Rolo.
No.
Listen, I need to, I need to get across country by any means necessary.
There you go.
Maybe like a hobo, he could, you know, get on a rail car that's going across.
Oh, and real quick, Sam, Biden pardon Hunter tonight.
And, you know, you know, if I were President Biden, I would pardon Hunter too.
Not because I like Hunter, not because he said he wouldn't.
That I think is the bigger issue.
A politician lied, you know.
But that was a very well-written statement that he put out.
Of course, you can craft a good statement about a shit sandwich if you want.
But the overwhelming response that I saw, at least from our guys, was like, good.
It's good to have just naked expressions of favoritism and using.
Oh, I thought you were going to say naked pictures of Hunter Biden.
No, And it puts maybe puts a little bit of pressure on Trump or, you know, shows the Trump pardons in a different light.
At least, you know, like, hey, I'm using it.
And he's using it on December 1st and not like on his way out the door.
He did it on a Sunday night when it's a little bit quieter.
But yeah, if I had a crackhead son who had some dubious stuff like that, I'm not at all breaking out the violin for Hunter Biden.
And, you know, it probably would have been better if he overdosed years ago.
Oh, yeah.
But it's, it's, you know, a father using his executive authority to pardon his son who is already hated and maligned rightfully by society.
All right, Joe.
Okay.
Okay.
I got a question for you.
What?
Sure.
What if it, what if it was you rape?
We'll say brother-in-law.
Yeah.
Is that like Jimmy Carter?
No, that was his brother with that.
I think he pardoned.
No, Charles Kushner.
Did Trump pardon Charles Kushner?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, he pardoned him.
I knew that Charles Kushner was all mixed up.
Trump.
If only we had an intern.
I mean, I just told you.
Yeah, well, one one you don't have.
Trust, trust, but verify.
Yeah, he pardoned in 2020.
I apologize, Rolo, for seeking verification.
You are never wrong ever in your life.
So, you know.
Well, that one I was, I, I was, that's why the appointment is so laughable.
I just thought that Kushner had already done his time back then.
Or would he like expunge it?
Um, anyway, it's not important.
Um, just interesting.
Well, it kind of is.
Oh, oh, oh, sorry.
That, that detail is important for sure.
I mean, uh, I was more curious about the conviction and two years sentence making false statements.
All right.
So Kushner was convicted and did two years for preparing false tax returns, witness retaliation, and making false statements to the FEC.
He was prosecuted by Chris Christie.
The irony.
Well, that's why they hated Chris Christie so much.
Well, Chris Christie was kind of pro-Trump the first time around, if I recall.
And then he got.
Well, he was until they got rid of him because Jared Kushner told him to.
But again, would you?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, pardoning.
I mean, would you pardon that guy?
Well, I wouldn't be.
No, I would not be in a position where I would have a Jewish son.
Well, you wouldn't be in a position where you have a crackhead, most likely child rapist son.
Probably not, but sometimes kids go awry despite the best parenting efforts.
Okay.
Well, if some, if kids go awry, then maybe they marry a Jewish person whose dad is a criminal.
Fair enough.
No, I mean, that's an interesting hypothetical, you know, like if my- Yeah, because I mean, if people are going to be okay with the Hunter Biden part of the thing, then you should just STF you for the Charles Kushner thing.
Well, it's like, do you really expect Biden to stand on principle here and not pardon his son?
No, I don't think that's reasonable.
Like that's he's he's a politician.
He basically got screwed by his party.
There was a political aspect to the Hunter prosecution, some aspect of it.
It's not like he was innocent.
But I'm not hating on Joe for doing that.
If I'd probably do the same thing in his shoes is my point.
And we could go down a rabbit hole of other scenarios where that would be based or neutral.
But I asked you a question.
Would you do it with, with, with Charles, with your, with your.
Okay, sure.
No, I would not pardon a Jew.
Yes.
Okay.
Is that so hard?
Jeez.
A lot went into that.
Presumes that I would have, yes, a son-in-law who was Jewish and his father was a crook, even if a minor crook.
But yeah, it's all gross.
All right.
I am done.
And Sam has prepared something.
This is not untimely.
I think it's quite time.
Sam, yeah.
Well, yeah, because I've asked people, including colleagues at work or people I come into contact with, if they know the true story of Thanksgiving.
And never does anybody know the true story of Thanksgiving.
So I thought it was good to mention it here, even though Thanksgiving is a few days past us already.
I think it is an interesting story and not well known.
So we all know about the Pilgrims, right?
And Plymouth Rock and all that type of thing.
And so that was they landed Plymouth Rock December 21st, 1620, which if you think about it, you know, like six months previous or six months later would have been a lot better.
But such as it was, they landed on Plymouth Rock.
They had come from Holland.
And of course, they came from Holland because they had fled from England due to religious persecution.
Well, what was all that about?
You know, the pilgrims, we have a very wholesome image of them, you know, these in their cute outfits with their blunder bust at the side with a turkey constantly sitting down to Thanksgiving dinner.
It sounds very wholesome, but of course the Pilgrims were Puritans.
We also have that word.
We know that word, Puritans.
So these people were after the Anglicans broke from the Catholic Church, you had the more radical members that wanted to go further with the changes in religion, changes in society, things like that.
And the Anglicans suppressed these more radical elements, including jailing them or fining them or even killing them.
And that's why that they were fleeing all that.
And it was not for no good reason because ultimately the Puritans famously killed the king, Charles I.
And that enabled the Oliver Cromwell to take power.
And, you know, the subsequent things, the glorious revolution, you know, a lot of turmoil.
So the English do not have such a wonderful view of the pilgrims like we might have.
They viewed them like as terrorists or rabble rousers.
So that's just the background.
Excuse me.
The pilgrims were almost like a like a history screenplay custom made.
You know, the perilous voyage, the persecution, landing in the forbidden, you know, savage.
I mean, it is legitimately a compelling story.
Real quick, Sam, I read that Mayflower history classic.
I forget the author's name, but it came out in the 2000s at some point.
And I was just struck.
It was kind of brutal.
Oh, yes.
Oh, my goodness.
Everything about it was like unpleasant.
There was like very little romanticism, death, disease, starvation, freezing.
The ships anchored off, you know, with the supplies and stuff like that.
And it just made me think, holy cow, as I look at my, you know, electric lights and washing machine and all that stuff.
It was so different back then.
And we should still count our lucky stars for what we got today.
Sorry for the digression.
Yes.
Yeah.
We cannot really appreciate the difficulties they went through.
And certainly the unenlightened person cannot even, they don't even know anything about this.
Right.
Well, anyway, so they fled to Holland and eventually they, the Virginia Company of London, contracted with this group to bring them to the, the New World, or the, you know, North American continent continent, to found a, a colony and a plantation.
It was a commercial concern, really.
So in 1620 they set out for the, the New World.
And as it sounds, the Virginia Company of London, England, the Virginia Company wanted them to go to Virginia to set up this agricultural concern.
And they financed the trip and they gave them a charter of how the work would be set up, how the colony would be set up.
They gave them a certain amount of tools, financing, and the trip itself.
And they coming coming here, they got blown off course by bad weather.
And as much as they tried to get to Virginia, they were blown north and ended up in Massachusetts, as we now know, Plymouth, Plymouth Rock.
And they, of course, lived on the ship for a while and slowly made their way ashore.
But December 21st, 1620 was the day that they established their Plymouth Rock.
And when they got off the ship, they immediately started looking for Indians because they wanted to trade with them or barter with them, but they couldn't find any Indians.
In fact, there were no Indians for 75 miles in any direction because there had been a plague that wiped them all out.
Smallpox from their blankets.
Before.
So if you go back a few years, 1616, there was a plague that wiped out what were called the Patuxet Indians.
And then two years later in 1618, there was the Great Comet, which in relatively modern times, when there was more record keeping, was recorded and described as being one of the most brilliant comets that was ever properly recorded and described like that.
And it was present for over 30 days.
You could see it in the night sky every night.
And in all cultures, of course, the appearance of a comet is always a harbinger of something great, something important or an omen, even.
And so in 1616, like I said, there was a plague.
It wiped out all these Indians.
And then in 1618, there was this great comet.
So Indians, they saw that and they knew that something was happening.
Sure enough, in 1620, the pilgrims show up and they started looking for Indians.
They did not find any.
So that just puts it to the lie that white people somehow stole any land from Indians to start this, you know, to start this particular colony.
It's just a lie.
Anyways, they did look for Indians.
They did occasionally find their packs of dried meat and berries that were hidden.
There were just no Indians around.
And so in 1621, eventually an Indian comes into their camp, greets them and asks them in perfect English if they have any beer.
So, you know, i'm sure that that was very surprising to them.
And uh, and so this Indian, he came, just were they were, they teetotalers, the pilgrims sorry, no beer here.
I yeah, I don't know I, I maybe maybe they had some beer I and and uh, so this Indian came, we don't know this Indian and uh, his name or too much about him, but he came to see if they were friendly and what the situation was.
And when he saw that they were friendly and that they were willing to maybe did offer him some beer, he went and got his friend, uh Squanto, which you may remember that that name, or recognized that name at least.
And so Squanto comes real quick.
Do you think they?
They heard about beer through the grapevine from down in Jeans?
Well, we'll get to that, we'll get to that in a moment.
So, so Squanto shows up, and he did uh show them like where there were some good streams where they could fish, and then the fish, of course, were used uh, sometimes for fertilizer to help plant the crops.
But so Squanto, it turns out in 1605, he and three of his companions were abducted or captured by an English captain and brought back to England.
And for, you know, 15 or more years were, well, less than 15 years, but in England were taught English because they wanted to learn about the Indians.
How many were they?
What were the friendly tribes?
What were the unfriendly tribes?
How many of them were they?
Where were they located?
They wanted to learn about Indians.
So these four Indians were taught English and uh Squanto, and this one companion, at least, had been released some some 14, 15 years later, and it uh, oddly enough six, six months previous, he had come back to that area where his tribe was from the Pautuxets, but only to find out that they had been wiped out by this plague.
So that's how he knew about beer and that's how he knew about, that's how they were able to speak English uh so um, the the uh pilgrims were uh they, they came ashore they, they began to set up their, their colony, they had Squanto their friend, and october of that year, in 1621, was the very first thanksgiving.
Now you might say well october, that's not when we celebrate it.
That's true.
In Canada they do celebrate october 13th, and that's a different story.
That's maybe for a different time.
But um uh, that's true that october is not not the, the uh, Thanksgiving we celebrate, and we'll get to in a little while why that is so.
In 1621 they they had uh settled in and made their first planting and their harvest and they had Thanksgiving Thanksgiving because many had died.
It was extremely brutal.
The journey was, there was 102 people on a ship that was designed to transport 30 people.
And the crew was not kind to them because these were religious people.
Of course, sailors are very often not religious people.
Aside from their superstitions about the sea, yeah.
Well, yes.
And a certain amount of people died.
And if you read the records, every month, this many, you know, this many we had died.
Four or five died here, four or five died the next month.
So it was, you know, it was, it was a tough life of disease, exposure to the elements, but they had survived up to October.
So they had their first Thanksgiving after the harvest.
So in 1622, they proceeded.
Now, the charter that they had been given by the Virginia Company meant that everyone had an allotted roles.
There was equipment and resources provided and there was instructions how to do it, kind of like they were employees of this company.
And in 1622, things were not going too well so that by 1623, it was really positively a famine.
They were barely making it through the winter.
So William Bradford decided we're ripping up the charter.
We are dividing up all this land according to the size of your family.
And everyone is on their own.
You plant, work hard, don't work hard, whatever it is, it's up to you.
And this is a point that I'm making because the conservatives will use this, you know, like they had like a communal living where everything was in common.
And then when that wasn't working anymore, they said, nope, you know, every man gets the fruit of his own labors.
And sure enough, it did have the effect that everybody was out there, men, women, children.
Everyone's out there.
Nothing but assholes and elbows.
You know, everybody's working.
Something to be said for rugged individualism for sure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The only thing I would say to the conservatives is that they had this plot of land and resources of tools and things to begin with.
Somebody gave them that, right?
And then they divided it up.
So it wasn't like people were starting with nothing.
They were starting with something.
So, you know, the national socialist in me says, you know, there remains a role for socialism, so to speak.
A fine, fine blend of individualism and community.
And like, you're not going to get a freebie, but we'll help you out and we're going to organize this rationally.
Yep.
100%.
Right.
So they have a phenomenal season of planting.
They accomplished way more than they had in the previous two years.
And everyone was happy about that.
And however, by July, by the second planting, a drought had settled in and everything was dying.
The beans were dying.
If you read the accounts of it, it's heartbreaking.
You know, all the work that was done and everything's dying on the vine.
It's pathetic.
So William Bradford.
When you're not on the verge of starvation or death.
And then you see that and you're like, oh, man.
Yeah, you're looking at death right there because you have the coming year that has to, you have to live off of that thing.
So William Bradford, he calls what was called a solemn day of humiliation.
And all the pilgrims gathered together at an appointed place and time and they prayed and they turned to the Lord God for mercy and for help, for rain.
And like one man said, you know, we're not asking that you make it easy.
We're just asking that you'd make it not impossible.
And I was listening absolutely intently.
I couldn't help, but I mentioned this before, I think in the respect of Jamestown.
Jamestown was started or established in 1607.
Yes.
17 years later, the pilgrims in Massachusetts.
You can't, you just look at the map and anybody who's ever been to Boston in December will know like the idea that you're going to sail across an ocean as essentially exiles and settlers to set up shop at Plymouth.
December 21st.
December 21st in 1620.
Among the worst possibilities you might as well, you know, land on the moon without a lot of incredible without electricity, the printing press, the cotton gin.
156 years from the Mayflower, 100 or yeah, 169 years.
Yeah, close enough from Jamestown.
So in a span of four generations from landing on a rocky, icy outcrop in the middle of winter to then having the established economy and demography to revolt against the most powerful people on earth is one of the most spectacular.
Whatever you think about America and its founding, that amazing development by, especially in the north, 100% white people had maybe some tricklings of slaves back to help them after Jamestown and between Jamestown and 1776 is a spectacular creation story, essentially.
Yeah.
Yeah, there's for sure.
It's when you look at it, it is amazing and it does deserve to on Thanksgiving of all days to take a moment and reflect on it because it is quite amazing.
But so William Bradford calls the day of humiliation, they pray.
And on a cloudless, hot July day, all of a sudden the clouds roll in and the gentle rains begin.
And it waters the ground in the most beneficial way and the crops recover.
And even the Indians thought it was amazing that the white man's God was so beneficent to give this gentle rain and watering and how all the crops came back because the Indians, they had their conjurations.
Their conjurations, though, would often result in a violent storm that would knock the crops flat.
But the white man's God was gentle and beneficial.
So anyways, what resulted was this bountiful harvest of a bumper crop.
And the pilgrims experienced this recovery, but the Indians to the north and the south, they did not get this.
So the Indians in the north and the south were starving to death.
So when the second Thanksgiving was given, November 29th of 1623, the pilgrims were able to invite these starving Indians to come partake of their Thanksgiving and at least prevent some of them from starving to death.
So that's the real story of Thanksgiving.
Hell yeah, Sam.
Thank you for doing that.
Absolutely appreciated it.
And worth remembering, too, because I've gone back and forth on Thanksgiving between this is the greatest American holiday.
It's so wholesome.
Forget about the football or like the overhead food.
Like this is a, you know, it's a stark cold, but not brutally cold.
You know, we almost always go out.
This Thanksgiving, it was really cold in the morning.
And I said, all right, not going to frog march the kids outside to go kick a soccer ball or go on the tire swing or whatever.
But I did later in the day.
And some years I've blessed Thanksgiving and other years I have neglected the historical reality of it and just said, it's just another freaking day.
It's just turned a day, you know, and sort of poo-pooed it.
But bringing the reality of the brutality of white settlement and courage and all that is spectacular and 100% true.
Yep.
Yeah.
Rolo is not actually white, so he cannot enjoy or I'm clear.
Comanche.
I see some Comanche stock in that face.
You know what Comanche means?
With man.
Enemy.
Yeah.
Makes sense.
Why did you do that, Sam?
Just out of curiosity.
Did you read this?
Well, read about that.
No, sir.
It's a long history.
Going way back, way back to, in fact, I posted this in some of the chats and things.
There was a going way back to the early Christian identity days for me.
I would get the cassette tapes in the mail.
You know, this is before the internet or, you know, anything like that.
And I had a cassette which was, excuse me, the basically told this story.
And every few years, I would trot it out and I'd put it in my cassette deck and played it.
And a few years ago, I brought out the cassette and played it and the tape broke.
And I thought, ooh, I will have to replace that.
And I didn't for a few years.
But this year, I said, you know what?
I'm going to order the CD off of their website.
And he actually had done it a couple of times through the years.
There were three different tellings, basically with the same information, sometimes a little more, sometimes a little less, but it was three different messages told from us.
The website is scripturesforamerica.org, if anyone wants to go check it out.
They're good guys and they had a wonderful ministry, wonderful camps that if anyone has been listening to the show long enough, they will know that I met my wife actually at one of the camps in the 90s.
And even though I was married to someone else at the time, but later, you know, later, much later, when I wasn't with her anymore, then I got together with my wife because we had that connection.
Are you advising the married men in the audience, Sam, to always make eye contact with Fetching ladies just in case?
Well, You know, we remained friends for some years.
But, you know, things change in life and situations change and sometimes certain things work out.
But Scriptures for America, they had camps through the years and good guys who had a good message.
And these are available.
You know, maybe we could even post one of them in the show notes or something if you want.
Or also, there's like the written version of what I just said.
We could post that as a PDF if somebody wants to take a look at it.
It's a nice thing to remember.
And so this year, like I said, I said to myself, well, I'm going to go on there and order that thing that I lost.
And I saw that there were two other versions.
I ordered all three.
Basically, they say it's the same information, just a little differently presented.
But anyways, that's the story of it.
Yeah, I'm thinking back to this story and that God knows who it was described America pre-settler, pre-colonialist as a continent of campfires.
And I'm sure that that is unfair to the quote-unquote Native Americans, at least the natives who were.
Don't don't apologize.
No, I'm not.
But well, it wasn't just campfires.
I mean, some of them were a little bit more developed.
They had societies.
They were floating.
But I think that there's, go ahead.
Some were friendly.
Some were absolute animals.
Some had no problem with the settlers and got along with them and, you know, either mixed in a little bit with them or kept their own identity.
But, you know, we're, you know, just got along with everybody.
Others of them had to be exterminated, you know, really.
Yeah, put down.
But I think that there is a difference between the European settlement of North America versus other colonization efforts for sure, and that there was a ton more space and much less developed society,
as it were, compared to the British Empire, you know, all the different colonialisms, or as was much more exploration and settlement as opposed to conquest and colonialization.
I think that's a fair statement.
Yeah.
Well, you look through, you know, the French and the Spanish had come here, but it was when the English started coming here that they brought their families and that was the difference.
Yep.
And they didn't interbreed particularly with the natives.
No.
The meme of like the Dutch.
Yeah, they brought their families.
The Dutch is rubbing his hands.
The English is like, you submit to me now.
The Spanish is looking at the fat brown ass with thirsty eyes and all the various ones.
It was pretty classic.
Just the various European styles of colonialization.
All right.
I think we could probably wrap it here.
Sam, I don't know if I'll be able to link those in the show notes, but if you have a URL, I will post that for sure.
And I just want to share a quick story here at the end.
I was questioning whether it was safe to talk about this on the air or whatever, but I bought a gun safe just yesterday and I picked it up today.
Why?
Not because I have a massive collection of awesome stuff.
I really don't.
It's not a lie.
But I have various things that are child secured, but in various places that I thought, you know what?
I really just don't like that.
And I was a typical American consumer.
I got an email that it was like, these are all on sale.
And I looked and I said, those look really reasonably priced, even if they're made in China, whatever.
I don't need, I don't, I'm not worried about the Mossad or the FBI or whatever.
If they want to take my stuff, they're going to take my stuff.
But it would be better to have things more secure than less secure.
So I pulled the trigger on a very reasonably priced gun safe and checked with the homies before we did it, before I pulled the trigger.
No pun and 10.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And went down and picked it up today by myself with the minivan and just loaded that thing in the back on its side or on its back.
You can't put it on the front because of the accoutrement there.
And then drove it back.
And then I got back and I said, Junior, get your boots on.
It's time to go to work.
So long story short, just myself and Junior and a little bit of ingenuity got that thing in there.
And now certain things are more secure.
I know everybody has a big hang up about guns and treasure and prepping and all the rest of it.
And gun guys or serious safe guys would be like, you got a Mickey Mouse safe.
Okay, that's fine.
But it's better than what I had before.
And it was in my price range.
And I was damn proud when that thing was upright and working and coded.
And I saw some treasures in there.
So I'll leave it at that.
And somebody else was like, I'm glad that you mentioned that, Coach, because I needed one.
It's been on my list of things to do.
We all know that the number one priority on that stuff is child safety.
The number two priority is, you know, if you get a break-in, burglars, et cetera, you don't want that stuff walking off easy.
And sometimes just making things more difficult is more important than the pie in the sky perfect vault that would require excessive stuff.
And it was a nice memory with my son, too.
Although I must say, waiting for the big testosterone to kick in, because he even said he was like, oh boy, I'd be a lot stronger if it were two years from now because he's on the cusp of, you know, the great chrysalis emergence, unlike Trump.
So was proud of that.
And we got a good, good, did the consumerist thing.
All right.
12.50 a.m. here in the Mountain Mama.
I only had that one glass of tequila Blanco.
And maybe I'll have one more after we conclude.
Last call.
Rolo to you.
Kassam was just delivering a sermon.
I had a thank, but well, did you write it down?
You forgot it?
I forgot.
You were going to say something.
What are you going to say?
What'd you do?
Yeah, I was going to say, what'd you do on Thanksgiving?
Did you have a nice one?
You didn't talk about it at all.
Oh, I didn't know it was something we were passing around.
I didn't do anything.
I went to my mom's.
My brother and his wife were there.
No drama.
And they're both just so fat.
And it was funny because his wife was talking about doing keto now because she's really fat.
And I just said, you know, that doesn't do what you think it does.
And she says, I'm down 30 pounds.
And if you looked at her, you'd be like, you know, down isn't when you go on the scale and the number goes up.
It's like, it's, you're not down 30 pounds.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Other than that, yeah, no, we just uh we ate some food.
I made some twice-baked sweet potatoes.
Uh, I don't recommend it ever.
It's just if you want, if you want sweet potatoes, just fry them.
It's it was really bringing your A game here at the end of the second half.
Are you tired from playing Magic the Gathering?
Come on, show some spirit.
I mean, you know, well, yeah, I've been on a loot, I've been on a losing streak for the last 30 minutes.
That's why he's down.
No, it's just late, and I'm tired.
I did have something.
I said it before we started recording.
I was like, I got this, this, and this.
I just forgot the third thing.
Oh, Joe!
Okay, remember, shout out to our friend.
We'll just say Major E.B.
I don't know what he's okay with being called.
He's erectile dysfunction.
Go ahead.
That's him.
Yeah.
And yeah, he thanked me for the music and the work.
And he sent me a very, very generous gift.
And it was very wonderful.
Couldn't be as generous as a brand new computer, thanks to our no, it wasn't.
And thank you to everyone who helped with that new computer.
Yeah.
Amen, brother.
Yeah, I mean, that was spectacular.
We put up the flare and they delivered.
Sammy Baby, I would have stopped in if I could have.
Thank you for doing that.
I love you and your family.
Maybe we will see you at the American Freedom Party conference.
Yeah.
I literally, just before we went to the air, you know, I was like, you know what?
That sounds like a good idea.
I'll rouse myself for that for sure.
I did hear about that.
And now that you're bringing it up, and I didn't connect exactly where it was happening.
So, not announced yet.
But yeah, let's wait and hear for sure all the details.
But that is sounding more and more like a possibility.
Might be a good opportunity for a bunch of us to go and do a good deed and socialize and network.
Yeah.
I've never, I've never been anti-Amron.
I just have never felt really compelled to go distance.
A little bit of wishy-washy on the JQ, etc.
Yeah.
But not that I disparage anybody who goes to Amran or anybody involved with that.
All right, let's get out of here.
And I'm going to be a little bit of a musical dictator this week.
Two weeks ago, my wife and I watched the Country Music Awards out of curiosity, hoping that the Shibuzi phenomenon had passed.
Not entirely, you know, the big snake-like dread black man with the epic country music smash that has set all the records.
However, it was a very compared to the Grammys or any other award show, even with what's his name?
Post Malone and his tattooed thing.
So Fat Roll.
What's that guy's name?
Jelly Donut?
Whatever.
I know, I know.
I know my instant instinct is like, I don't like that guy because he's got fat.
Well, he's fattened because he's got face tattoos.
I don't know.
He probably doesn't even clean his fingernail.
We're not going to play Post Malone, but Post Malone did a damn touching.
He created a song basically to his young daughter about the day that she gets married and he has to give her away.
And I recommend it's called Yours.
Now, it was way better watching it live and it was touching there.
But there was another, there was another performance by a woman named Casey Musgrave or Musgraves.
I'm looking for it right now, regardless.
That I said, holy smokes, that is one of the most beautiful songs I've ever heard.
And if you're listening to Full House for a long time, it's fairly rare that we play female artists.
We played Olivia Key from our Square, for sure.
Loretta Lynn, first aid kit.
But I thought this was live, it was spectacular.
She was beautiful.
Her voice was beautiful, sort of like a Loretta Lynn.
Regardless, Casey Musgraves, an architect, and this is a little bit religious too.
Architect, of course, being the big man upstairs.
So thank you for riding with us.
This was a casual, less directed full house.
Hope you didn't mind it.
If you're listening to this, you are one of us.
Thank you, Sam.
Thank you, Rolo.
Thank you, everybody on the merch train.
We'll talk to you next week.
We love you.
And I don't know, enjoy the song.
Rollo was playing Magic the Gathering.
So, Sam, it's yours again.
See ya.
See you even something as small as an apple.
It's simple and somehow complex.
Sweet and divine, the perfect design.
Can I speak to the architect?
There's a canyon that cuts through the desert.
Did it get there because of the flood?
Was it devised?
Or were you surprised when you saw how grand it was?
Was it thought out at all or just paint on a wall?
Is there anything that you regret?
I don't understand.
Are there blueprints or plans?
Can I speak to the architect?
Sometimes I look in the mirror and wish I could make a request.
Could I pray it away?
Am I shapable clay?
Or is this as good as it gets?
One day you're on top of the mountain so high that you'll never come down.
Then the wind at your back carries inber and ash.
It burns your whole house to the ground.
Is it thought out at all or just paint on a wall?
Is there anything that you regret?
I don't understand.
Are there blueprints or plans?
Can I speak to the architect?
Too broken, and maybe too hard to love?
I was in a weird place, then I saw the right face.