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Feb. 15, 2025 - Full Haus
01:57:43
Old Friends in Interesting Times

Our longtime Norse pal Lauritz rejoins us for a wide-ranging conversation: from new parent advice to Europe's security future to a two minutes' hate against lies and idiocy. Bumper: So Easy by Royksopp Close: Ham Som Reise by Burzum Do us a favor please and subscribe to The Final Storm on Odysee. And check out our pals at White Noise Radio and The Fundamental Principle.  And the official Full Haus playlist on Spotify. Go forth and multiply.  Support us at givesendgo.com/FullHaus 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 to fullhausshow@protonmail.com. We love ya fam, and we'll talk to you in a week…or two!

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Time Text
What's up, everybody?
For the first time in, I don't know, five plus years, 205 episodes, I scrapped a prepared opening monologue at the last minute because as I looked over it, it just seemed like a ponderous, meandering, preachy word salad, not to give it too hard of a time.
I wrote it last night, thought, oh yeah, this is good, deep stuff.
Then I read it tonight before the show and I said, this is all trash.
Life is like that sometimes.
So shoot from the hip here with some free association.
I was thinking about the heat wave map sort of look like a radar screen about how conservatives or right wingers prioritize people in their lives closest to them.
And then liberals or left-wingers prioritize that telescopic philanthropy of people on the other side of the world, not remotely related to them.
I was thinking about my concentric circles of love, appreciation, duty, etc.
And obviously, number one is the bio fan, which I consider my wife and three kids.
Just beyond that would be my parents and my parents-in-law, who I love very much.
And I think just beyond that is not my neighbors.
I don't have a church brethren, but it would be knuckleheads like you listening to the show, whether we've met or not, people who are ideologically simpatico with us and Rolo and Sam look very sad.
Don't worry, guys.
You're on the inner circle of the Sam's laughing.
You hear a little wheeze in my voice, and that's because I have been getting out there pouting the pavement.
And the thought occurred to me tonight that probably somewhere over half of mental illness cases or depression are probably people who just aren't getting out there and revving their motor strongly enough or frequently enough because it's been a while, you know, recovering from surgery.
I have a natural high going on right now, just from going out in 32 degrees and a bit of snowstorm.
So pat on the back again for me.
On the way home with Junior, there was a raccoon in the middle of the road.
It looked dead.
I did my best to not hit it.
And then at the very last minute, I saw it lift its head up and then I heard thump, thump, thump under the car.
I felt really terrible about it.
Then five minutes later, we're almost at home and a skunk is crossing the road.
And I dangerously lurched the minivan away and saved that skunk's life and certainly some stink from getting on the car.
So, you know, took a life, saved a life.
And I think there's a lesson there for all of us in some way too.
More important than all of that, yeah, what's worse?
Ponderous musings that are pre-prepared or me shooting from the hip.
Most importantly, we have our dear old friend Laritz von Guildhausen from the great white north with us this week.
And we are going to talk a little bit of politics, but we're going to start off with New White Life this week and maybe talk some family stuff and then indulge in that sort of business.
So with all that said, Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
It is episode 206.
I hope I'm not too hoarse and I'll have excellent mute discipline if I have to cough while we're recording here.
I got my inhaler next to me.
That's how bad it is.
May the devil strike me down if I say whatever one more time after this.
It's funny how everybody either has a verbal tick or develops one.
You can knock one down like a whack-a-mole and another one pops up.
But I said whatever probably a dozen times last show and it pissed me off from what I thought was an otherwise good recording.
Some people will probably be like, I didn't notice anyway.
Before we get to the birth panel, I want to thank Melvin Goldfarb who sent us a generous contribution, sent a kind note.
We really do have the best pro fam podcast, don't we, folks?
Just terrific.
People tell me all the time what a great podcast it is and they want to know how do we get these great pro family podcasts.
And I tell them, I don't know.
It's just a thing.
It just happens and probably because genetics.
Melvin, thank you.
It's been a while.
Good to see you there, buddy.
Appreciate.
Sorry, I didn't do Trump any justice.
And also to our pal, the friend father, who sent some shekels and said, I'll give a listen when I have a minute.
Hope you guys are doing well.
Thank you, friendfather.
And if you'd like to be like those two gents, just go to givesemgo.com slash fullhouse.
And yeah, we'd be most appreciative.
Let's get on with it.
Sam, I don't have anything snappy for you this week.
I just say it's good to see you and always a pleasure.
Welcome back.
Oh, yeah.
It's good to be here.
You know, coach, maybe you scrapped your monologue because of your over-oxygenated brain from that run.
Yeah, this is, this wasn't high energy enough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or deoxygenated.
I don't know, one or the other.
Oh, yeah.
You were overwrought.
That monologue might have been great.
Well, I still have it.
Maybe I'll dust it off and use it next week.
It was, it was an evergreen thing about social media and our influence and what we have control over and blah, blah, blah, blah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's probably just fine.
But as far as that heat map you mentioned about the heat map, you know, I would argue that the liberals really don't care about anybody.
Like that map is the map is suggesting that they care about some faraway person, but that's that's not even a person they know or not even a person that exists in reality to them.
So I think that is that mentality is just an excuse for not caring about people around you and making some kind of rationale that, oh, but it's for the starving children in China or something that we heard when we were growing up as kids.
You know, it's just something that's kind of doesn't even exist.
A virtue signaling heat map for them.
Yeah, it's empty.
It's not as though they even really care about that.
They really care about their own virtue signal, as you say, their own standing in the eyes of other people.
Yep.
And I forgot to mention, of course, the white race, too.
That would be the outer circle beyond the no-knucklehead family.
Sure.
And his friends.
As far as podcasts go, you know, I happened to pop in and a bunch of our local guys, they were talking about how podcasts, podcasting is dead and this and that.
There's, you know, very few good podcasts left, but we were one of them.
We were one of the few.
And I would, and I'm not just saying that.
You don't think they were just buttering you up, right?
No.
Well, in fact, one guy, he didn't even allow for that.
I said, excuse me, except for full house, right?
And then, oh, yeah, yeah, of course, that.
But then some other people jumped in there too.
Said, oh, yeah, there's very, it's, it's, and it's true.
And I'm not just saying it to stroke our own egos, but sure.
Of all the podcasts that have fallen by the wayside, either because they don't are not done anymore, or they just have lost all relevance or things like that.
But not to congratulate ourselves too hard that we're doing some superlative job, but we've hung in there and we're a perennial.
And people like they come back, even if they don't listen for a little while, they'll come back and listen because we stuck in there and we have established ourselves as a good podcast that has always been there and it's always going to be there.
Huzzah!
Well said, Sam.
Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, it made me think.
Here's what's in my podcast library from most recently updated.
I do have Radio Renaissance from Amrin, the Marcus Schultz Global DJ podcast.
Having the Tucker RSS feed, you know, I'm not sitting down to watch Tucker interview somebody for an hour, but sometimes he does have really interesting guests.
I enjoy listening to Tucker occasionally.
King Charles, let me know about this podcast called The Compound in Friends, which is all about Shekels investing and stuff.
And you can pick and choose from all these.
And then I'll maybe talk about this later.
Our interesting times is this is just the ones that have is not all of them, of course, but our interesting times really like Tim Kelly.
But he had EMJ on recently and I hit the roof.
I stirred some Catholic pagan animus again today.
That was not my intent, but we'll talk.
Yeah, it's just catnip for us.
We can't help it.
Well, I do like to hear that because my own tastes tend to narrow down to certain things.
And I only have so much time and all that, but I do like to hear when somebody recommends another podcast.
Maybe I'll mention a couple of my perennial ones that I always hit.
Yeah.
Okay.
That sounds good for later.
Yep.
And I'll just so that they don't get angry at me.
I've got the Aurelian column on here, which is a great one.
It doesn't come out too often.
Just a quick summary of the news with great commentary.
And I got Myth of the 20th Century in there too.
I was listening to storyline finance.
Yep.
All right.
Let's move on before our Norseman goes back into hibernation.
Rolo, safe for you.
Nothing snappy.
You were quite agitated in the public chat today at the impertinence of another anti-Christian pagan getting under a lot of people's skin.
What are you talking about?
I wasn't in that chat.
Oh, okay.
You can did you see, did you see Rolo anywhere in that chat?
I think not.
Oh, no.
Okay.
Well, you can edit that out if you'd like.
But anyway, Rolo, how the heck are you?
And give me something new in your life, something positive, something uplifting.
I have a girlfriend.
Oh, Rolo.
Oh, yeah.
All right.
Yeah.
Hell yeah.
Right.
My first thought is, how the heck did I miss this?
I mean, I know you've been dating for a while, but what happened?
A little bit of backstory.
Well, met her some months ago, and we kept seeing each other.
And we were on the same wavelength as far as big picture goals.
And yeah, well, there you go.
Okay.
Do you have Valentine's plans?
Well, here's the thing.
She's on vacation this week, which she had planned before we met several months ago.
So we celebrated Valentine's Day last week.
Cool.
All right.
I'm going to probe for more details off air.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Sam.
You didn't impregnate her yet, did you?
You'd be the first to know, Sam.
Well, we always give Rolo a hard time as a non-father that's always on this show.
And, you know, I'm just a little anxious.
That's all.
Sure.
I understand.
Aren't we all?
Godspeed, Rolo.
I hope it works out.
Speaking of non-fathers, our very special and very patient guest back on for the first time, it was September 2022, I think, that he was on to talk about Europe and the energy crisis.
Dear friend of ours, no stranger to many of our listeners, seven foot tall, but doesn't know how to bounce a basketball.
Newly ascended into the list of full house eligible bachelors with that long wind up.
Laritz Von Gildhausen, welcome back, big guy.
Ah, thank you.
Thank you for having me again.
Uh, I i'll be remiss if I didn't mention I was on for the election stream a couple of months ago but uh yep, that was my star studded uh, who's who of the uh of the podcast elite on that show.
So uh, I don't feel too bad about disappearing into the.
Uh, my bet yeah my, my Dunbar number was apparently really low or high or whatever that night, because we did have probably 20 guests come through, but you were the special guest for BIG Energy Scandinavians on that night.
That's right.
Yeah, it was a fantastic, fantastic election night.
Uh, all told uh and, and it's 4, 30, or it was 4, 30 when we started, buddy.
So thank you so much for waking up early to be with us.
And uh, I was dead serious.
I don't know what our feet.
I haven't done one of those polls in a long time.
You know, back in the day, I think 10 of our audience was female.
Um, but i'm dead serious that uh, Laritz is tall handsome, a gentleman, wants to start a family and is smart as hell too, and i'm not even, you know, scratching the surface there and that's not a joke.
So hit us up or hit him.
I don't know if you can hit him up, if he's got any public contact information but uh, that that is correct right, buddy?
You are open to dating, including Americans?
Oh absolutely, I love.
I love American women especially um which, which which might be refreshing to hear for for a lot of people in the in the podcast.
But no, I recently got out from under uh, a long-term relationship with someone who was uh, unfortunately too sick to have children, so now i'm very much uh, looking forward to uh procreating as soon as possible.
Amen yeah that's, that's all there is to say about that, although getting up so early isn't that much of a problem when the sun never comes up in any case.
Yeah, you're just dark all the time.
Yeah, might as well be 4, 30 p.m here.
Uh, serious question, do you get the winter blues?
Or when you live that far north, it's almost.
It's just a part of life.
No big deal.
Life goes on.
Uh, it depends on the year um, the last, the last few years uh, it has hit like a ton of bricks um, and some years it's totally fine, but what I do, what I will say, is like if you don't get loaded up on sunlight during the summer, you are going to have a hard time.
It feels like a physical weight and just like, and the way the knowledge that the days are becoming shorter by an average of three minutes every day starts weighing on you like chinese drip torture.
Um, and then by the so like.
I totally understand why Christmas, even prior to uh, prior to the birth of uh, of our lord and savior, Jesus Christ, was a big deal up here, because the sun turning around is absolutely massive.
Suddenly things start to feel a little lighter every day.
Suddenly you're like okay, we're in the middle of it now.
It's cold as heck, it's snowing, it's terrible, but there's an end to it.
So uh, very significant.
Does anyone sit under, like a chromatic light or something to get more of the uh, full spectrum of the light that you're missing?
They should absolutely.
What I will say is, a lot of places we do mimic the Americans love for the Christmas ornaments, because having a lot of light when there's nothing but dark outside all day is crucial.
It's key.
And if all else fails, you can always just go abroad for a holiday to Spain or something.
Personally, I spent one week travailing the Sinai desert a couple of months back.
No, sorry, a month ago, actually.
Oh, my.
No kidding.
Yeah, yeah.
I was up at Mount Sinai where Moses got his Ten Commandments and the burning bush and all that stuff.
Very awesome.
Very great.
Pyramids too?
Or just a Sinai safari?
Just a Sinai check.
I needed some sunlight, so that's what I went for, swimming in the Red Sea and whatnot.
And then, hey, it turns out I'm right next to where it all happened many thousands of years ago.
So I figured I might as well check up there.
A bunch of Bedouins, camels.
Good time.
Unfortunately, no divisions of Egyptian tanks heading northeast, though.
Well, it's funny you should mention that.
And this is an aside, but you know how America gives Egypt a lot of money and aid every year?
Of course.
A lot of that has been earmarked for security purposes because heading into the Sinai, not only did our bus have a police convoy, but they have, and I kid you not, like a dozen checkpoints in the middle of the desert full of armed guards just basically sitting around kicking rocks.
And I do do that in a literal sense because they are in desert and there's nothing else to do than to literally kick rocks.
And I found myself thinking, you know, the ratio of policemen to tourists in this area is like, there's one policeman for every six tourists.
That doesn't even make economic sense.
I was like, you know what?
This is USAID, isn't it?
This is foreign aid.
It absolutely is.
Because one of the big complaints, especially from Israel, is that Egypt isn't doing enough to police the Sinai for extremist groups or whatever.
And you just go, well, we literally have thousands of policemen sitting around in the Sinai doing nothing.
So what are you complaining about?
Sure.
Yeah, it's hard.
Yeah.
I mean, everything's so wide open there.
And Cairo obviously is no slouch when it comes to governmental authority.
In fact, I read just the other day that Cece or his lieutenants are the ones who are going around to Jordan, the Gulf states, et cetera, and trying to lead the opposition saying, no, do not take, do not crack the door open to allowing the forced evacuation, the ethnic cleansing, the genocide, whatever of Gaza.
I think I could say whatever there in a relevant phrase.
But yeah, good for them.
And that even made me think, all right, well, they're trying to stick to their guns and show at least a little bit of solidarity, where so often it is lacking when it comes to Israel and us and our meanderings in that region.
Let's go.
Since we're flying a little bit more casual this week than usual, and sometimes I am perhaps rote with the structure and whatnot, let's go to New White Life right off the bat because we got two nice ones with a question.
And I thought that would give us some family commentary at the top where oftentimes it's relegated to the second half.
So here we go.
Hello, biofam, longtime listener here, happily married and soon to be a proud father of a newborn son.
Throughout the years, there's been a lot I've learned listening into the show that has helped me in all facets of life.
So just wanted to share thanks and the good news about another white family being blessed with our first child.
And also for everything that you guys do, keep up the great work.
Now, for everyone on the show, what is your number one most pertinent tip for the first time father?
Would love to hear everyone's insight.
I'm a bit concerned personally about sleep deprivation, but everything else I'm excited for.
Again, thanks so much.
And that was from Limosa Nostra, which means new lime in Italian, perhaps.
I don't know.
I would say right there is the key point has been hit on.
Sleep deprivation will do a lot of things to you.
We'll make you feel like you're losing your mind.
And all the best intentions in the world can get derailed with that one thing there.
And having children and a wife recovering and all that is not supposed to be done alone.
In times gone by where you lived close to your parents and your siblings maybe lived in the very close area, people would help out.
And now families are smaller.
They're more spread out.
And that's, I would say, the biggest danger is to try to set up that network of people who will help a little bit, you know, come in and give you a break.
And, you know, try to plan that a little bit.
Try to reach out to people that you know and trust and see if they could help you out.
You know, an hour here or there means a lot just for you to catch a nap or go for a walk or do something.
That's what I would say is important thing.
Sure.
I would tell him that the first one is the toughest as a newborn because you're green at the gills.
You're nervous about everything, you know, even picking it up the first time.
You're, oh, I don't want to hurt it.
I don't want to, you know, drop them.
And a really important part is that if there's ever a time in your life to cook to your wife or be a beta male or really pick up on some of the domestic help when it comes to the baby or just making wifey's life easier,
the birth of your first child is the time, not just out of gratitude to her, but because there's often postpartum depression or blues or whatnot, because she may be in physical pain.
If she has to get a cesarean or if there's tearing or whatever, she could be in really rough shape.
And it's a team effort.
We know some guys are just like, no, not changing a diaper, not doing it, not doing bottles or any of that stuff.
I guess more power to you, but I was always hands-on.
I enjoyed doing it.
It made her life a little bit easier.
The sleep deprivation was worse with the first one when I was youngest.
Go figure.
The second and the third, but no big deal, whatever.
You know, just used to being tired, I guess.
But help your wife.
I don't care if that sounds cocky, you know, nail me to the wall.
Do as much as you can, even if you're working nine to five or longer, of course.
Do your part to help in and get that skin to skin with your new baby son.
Yeah.
Not just the, because it's the right thing to do.
It's, you know, if you don't want to be fighting with your wife, you know, and oh, it's your turn to do it.
I need a break.
Why don't you ever give me a break?
You never give me a break.
You never do that.
No, that's, that's, you got to head that off.
Yep.
And she will snap at you unfairly.
We talked about wife gripes last show or the show before.
It's going to happen.
She's going to snap at you.
She's going to like scream bloody murder.
And you'll be like, I didn't do nothing.
You just got to deal with it.
The hormones are all out of whack.
And when it comes to junior, Godspeed.
Just keep him warm.
Keep him dry.
When in doubt, change it.
Keep him fed.
Feed on demand.
Obviously, breastfeeding if you can.
Nothing wrong with bottles.
Don't kill yourself if you have to supplement early on.
Don't kill yourself.
Breast milk is the best and they're all different.
Our first was tough.
Our second was easy and our third was the toughest.
And with somebody, just a roll of the dice, whether they're going to be a good sleeper.
You're going to hear about people all different.
My baby slept through the night after the second week or, you know?
No, no, they're all different.
There is no one right way.
You know uh, you may have I I think i've talked about it before when, when I had my first child uh, and and oh we, we did everything, the the uh, the co-sleeping, the breastfeeding on demand, the cloth diapers uh, everything you know.
And then the next one was a little less, next one a little less.
Pretty soon it was all you know uh uh, disposable diapers and bottles, you know.
So I mean, just do what you got to do, you know don't, don't beat yourself up.
Yeah definitely, try to be be inspired and and do try, try to do good things, do the right thing, and do you know, do do those things you think will be good for you and the baby, but don't uh don't, be a uh, don't purity spiral.
I think is so, so much, so much stuff.
Of course, we have Laritz on.
He's like guys uh, go ahead.
I had uh, I had a weird question, do you Americans let your let your babies sleep outside during winter, if we want to get rid of them?
Yeah, up in the tree, in the owl nest, i'm not joking actually.
Uh, I recently, I recently became an uncle uh, for the first time, and that's when I realized that in Norway it's all the rage to put your baby to sleep outside.
Uh they, oh wow, in the stroller or whatever, and all swaddled up uh, you know, dressed appropriate for the, for the conditions and uh, you just let it sleep outside.
This is something that people do and apparently it's supposed to be healthy.
Never heard of it before.
Certainly, if Junior fell asleep in a stroller on a january walk in those early days great, you know, just keep, keep walking around.
But I I don't think we ever deliberately put them outside to sleep, as opposed to the crib or the rocker or whatever.
You only put them outside if they're barking too much.
Uh, for real though, it is all the crazy, like all the mothers in Norway are doing it.
Apparently wild system and sleep quality and not to mention for the parents themselves not have to deal with like the screaming for for a while inside is probably good.
Yeah, we have hawks around here.
I saw a hawk carry off a blue jay the other day, so I don't know, I wouldn't feel too comfortable.
We have eagles on my part and uh yeah, it seems to be fine, although I wouldn't let your small furry creatures uh, hang around outside them because they'll take it for sheep.
Don't let Junior wander in the middle of the street when i'm driving through either.
Tonight has uh shook me.
Uh, we got another one here.
Really sorry coach, i've never sent in a message because I always download and listen to full house after it's aired.
But my wife and I now have our first six-month-old new white life and your show has been a wonderful inspiration.
That is from Julius.
And then he went on and said, if you want to add any info, I was born and raised in the San Francisco Bay, escaped the Shitlib gauntlet and am now homesteading in Hyperborea.
No need to publicize my name.
Your recorded intros have been great as of late.
Your effort is highly appreciated.
Well, you're welcome that I scrapped that one.
Uh Julius, and congratulations buddy, if you got any questions.
He's six months in.
He's on easy street.
But back to uh first.
The early days are.
The are obviously the most joyous and wonderful and awe-inspiring, but they're also the most stressful.
Uh, worry about getting the baby fatter and getting as much sleep as possible.
Just get through those uh first early days and it gets a little bit easier down the road.
After the first month or two you're out of the the worst and onto the best, crawling and stumbling and jibber, jabbering and sitting up in the high chair and stuff like that.
So congratulations guys, way to go.
Uh Larit, let's go over to you and uh, you had proposed talking about Europe's perilous, I guess, or maybe positive, optimistic, new situation in which the the table has been kind of flipped over.
You've got the Russian menace or the Russian power certainly encroaching but also kind of halted.
At the east, everybody hates Russia, except for maybe Hungary and Robert Flico, and Slovakia uh, and then the right, and the United States is more truculent toward Europe these days and treating it outright like a colony, whereas before we sort of went through the uh, the gestures, through the motions of treating it like a co-equal grand world power, and it seems like Trump just has no time for any of that bs when it comes to trade uh, this time around.
But I, I guess, how are things on the ground there?
Or any top line observations from our cradle continent please, buddy?
Uh sure, I mean, I think there's absolutely opportunity here for Europe and it just needs someone to pick it up.
Unfortunately, we are living under the uh regime of an unelected, unpopular ruler called uh, Ursula Von Der Leyen and um, is she the president of the EU or chairwoman yeah commissioner yeah commissioner probably yeah um, which means that the only people who elect her are the heads of state of other countries.
Uh, so it's like uh, an election deferred, if you will, that you get to vote for someone who gets to vote for you as to who they want, right?
Of course, the process is way more Byzantine and way more corrupt than you could even possibly imagine, but the point is, nobody likes her she's.
She went from messing up the German military, that's when it was under her charge.
You had stories from Germany coming out.
They were going to military exercises with broom handles because they hadn't been supplied, they didn't have enough guns for people, let alone bullets, and and basically just destroyed the German military utterly.
And to reward her for this, for this feat of management, they made her commissioner of the EU and then, as if that wasn't enough, she recently got re-elected as commissioner of the EU, and her whole approach and this seems to be the approach of the EU in general is that they very much would like to hang on like a Ramora fish to the, to the teeth, to the spigot of American military power and defense.
And they are, in fact.
They're they.
It seems to me that they are terrified to even potentially to even contemplate ruling on their own, which is they're absolutely panicking.
Now that Trump is, I would say he's not even treating Europe much as like a vassal, more like a, more like an ex, or like a relationship that's souring that he's trying to get out of he's.
He's like, deal with your own mess.
Like I can't be bothered with this.
Like I got a new hot thing going on in Taiwan and that's where I want to be also, you know, I got my old old side lady Israel, there and she's demanding more attention.
Europe, you do your own thing.
But basically, what's coming out of the NEW YORK Times and the statements made etc to this effect is that Europe is terrified to go alone.
Europe says we cannot go it alone, which I find preposterous, considering there's over 500 million white people in Europe.
Sure unfortunately, 300 million, not so white people at this point um but, but the very idea that we're we're dependent on 350 million strong America is just on its face stupid, right humiliating.
Yeah yeah, it's like uh, perpetual adolescence, you know, or like postponed adulthood.
They've just been under our wing since 1945, you know.
Yeah, arguably defective.
We've lived very, very well on the peace dividend, not having to to supply our own defense in any way since, since the Cold War ended, and if you're looking at military figures right now, Russia is producing more than like more defense material material per year than Europe does in every 20 years, or something like that.
The figure is ludicrous and, quite frankly, because of the way the EU came about and because of how artificial it is as an institution.
You know they're trying to make the United States of Europe, but they're not managing to do that because Europe is not, does not have the same, the same suppositions or the same conditions as the as America once had, where you have a fairly similar polity mostly Anglos, some Dutch uh banded together and then sort of a federal uh institution.
In Europe we, you have a bunch of different nation states with a bunch of different ethnicities, always at each other's throats, and the best they manage to to cobble together is a, basically a union that's good at making um, making bureaucrats and making economical decisions on all.
And yeah, that does not lead itself I mean, first of all, it doesn't lead itself very well to defense um, common defense politic, because we're constantly fighting each other.
But secondly um, the nation states themselves don't want this right, but at the same time, we also definitely don't want to be spending our own money on on defense.
So you have a completely paralyzed EU terrified, and the elites are like, oh my god, America is abandoning us.
What do we do?
Well, then you have, then they start promoting like uh basically, Neocon war hawks from the Baltic countries.
Yeah, like Kayak Kalas from Lithuania, and the whole idea is just ridiculous.
Or she's Estonian, isn't she?
Whatever, they're all so small.
I don't really I don't see much of a difference between those three countries.
Um, and yeah like, the end result is they come up with with statements like the Weimar Plus, which they yeah, two on the nose, I mean, of all the names of of small policies.
Uh they, they went with Weimar Plus, which that, somewhere down the line, implies a Hitler plus, even looked like it had a vaguely rainbowish logo or color scheme behind it too.
Yeah, from the EU countries that they're going to come to the defense of Ukraine without actually promising the Ukraine literally anything apart from words.
So we're all terrified well we, they are all terrified of Russia, rightfully so and they're afraid to go it alone and they're exactly the wrong people to have in charge at the moment like this where there is a crisis in Europe and also opportunity for for the people who are willing to seize it.
Yeah, it's to me, just looking at it from a distance and not be having really studied European politics too closely over the past year or two, obviously paying attention to Russia, Ukraine and the top line stuff it, it strikes me as impossible that Europe writ large the, with the Uk out of the European Union, with the AFD menace lurking in Germany, with uh the Romanian Semi-pro, uh Russian guy,
is his election just being thrown out for no reason apparently.
It just seems like there's too much disunion for them to get on the same page either to stand up and say to the United States, go ahead and leave NATO, we don't need you anymore, we'll take care of ourselves.
Uh, and aside from uh Hungary and obviously Serbia, which has long cultural historical, religious connections to Russia, maybe some stirrings of Pro-russian sentiment in Romania, but are there any other?
Fico and Slovakia has traded carefully, but are there any other European countries that are saying you know what?
Maybe we would do better to be friendly with Russia?
Sweden and Finland, of course, joined NATO over the past year or two um I, I assume that the sentiment that you see is still way more Pro-US than Pro-Russian.
Oh absolutely uh, I think the, the far right in most European countries are trend towards neutrality on the Russia issue.
That's basically what you're getting from from FICO on the like too.
Like he's not saying let's be Russia's best friend, he's merely proposing treating them in a realistic way, with respect.
Yeah, which is a difference, right?
I mean, God knows, in these days, nuance is hard to come by.
Sure, as soon as you say anything that's not 100% negative about Russia, I'm sure the local typical tricksters say, ah, there's the proof, you know he's on the payroll.
Yeah you, you don't want to curb, stomp Russia into oblivion.
Like what?
Are you a paid Russia shell?
It's like no, but I do like the the cheap electricity coming from there, because right now we're paying like a euro per megawatt hour, which like per kilowatt hour sorry, kilowatt hours.
Absolutely, it is killing industry here like uh yeah, I was on this ground a couple of years ago that this is really killing Europe, and it is like it's.
Germany is the last like truly industrial nation that Europe has left and it is deindustrializing at a rapid pace because they can't afford to keep the damn lights on um, especially salary level.
Cheap energy flows got shut off to a major industrial power, some say by design by the United States to break the Russian dependence that they have and bring them even more to heel, as if they weren't already absolutely.
But how about uh Trump?
Trump is going to Moscow to meet with Putin and then Putin is coming to the United States to meet with Trump.
What do you think of all that?
Um, I am somewhat of a devotee of Uh Of Simplicious, which I know Coach also appreciates a lot.
He's not absolutely everything.
He has his priors, he has some blind spots, but I kind of agree with his analysis from yesterday saying that this was mostly lip service.
Now it is refreshing to hear um Hegseth come out there and basically preemptively cave on all the things that Russia has been demanding as lease.
As far as the Us is concerned yeah, they're not giving up Crimea or the Donbass.
Yeah non-starter yeah, Yeah, exactly.
But they're saying no NATO membership, no American troops in Ukraine, et cetera, which are all good conditions to bring Putin to the table.
But let's face it, Putin is maybe half a year or a year from starting to make those truly big gains, like a crushing victory.
And there's very little that the West can realistically offer him at this stage that will deter him from just taking Ukraine.
Well, and then how about just say that like, okay, we're just going to stop messing with you militarily as just a sign of goodwill.
To that point, Laritz and Rolo, breaking news across my screen, I got like five notifications.
Vice President JD Vance said Thursday that the U.S. would hit.
He's over in Europe right now.
He had to go to Dachau.
Of course.
He said the U.S. would hit Moscow with new sanctions and potentially military action if Putin won't agree to a peace deal with Ukraine that guarantees Kiev's long-term independence.
So there's the stick to Trump's carrot.
Not only that, but Zelensky doesn't have any say in it.
Didn't you think that was kind of funny?
Yeah.
Like Trump's going to negotiate it with Putin and that's it.
Yeah, I know.
If I may expand on Simplicius' idea here, I'm paraphrasing him basically because I think he's got the right of this.
It is very much in Russia's interest to be on Trump's good side.
Trump is, at least compared to the alternatives, very, very good for Russia.
And so it behooves Putin to at least play along with Trump, which is why he'll take that call.
He'll say, oh, this is positive because it unironically is.
But ultimately, there's nothing that's changed in the geopolitical image that would make conditions any different.
Now, saying that, it was interesting to see that breakers hit universally along the Russian stock market yesterday because people truly like they invested so much the market was up like 7% or something.
Right.
It was overheating in a good way.
It wasn't a crash.
Yeah, exactly.
Like, which shows that a lot of people are ready for this, but I, quite frankly, I'm just not seeing it right now.
But what I will say is it's very refreshing to see them sidelining Zelensky completely and Trump expressing interest in basically the mineral rights to Ukraine.
We gave you half a trillion.
You owe us half a trillion of stuff.
NAFO fags were apoplectic after that.
We fought and died in the trenches so that Zelensky could give away $500 billion worth of medals, which, by the way, are almost all under Russian control right now.
You trusted a Jew.
What did you think was going to happen?
Yeah, to quote Henry Kissinger, to be an enemy of the United States is dangerous.
To be a friend is fatal, right?
I mean, you got it to bed with the United States.
And now we've had our own version of regime change.
The vibes have shifted.
I'm with you.
Trump made the big promises.
I do actually believe that it probably would, the war wouldn't have happened if he were in office.
Who knows?
But the other thing, Laritz, is that Putin obviously sees that he's got a different Trump this term than the first one.
There's no Russia gate hanging over his head and impeachments and FBI investigations.
He's clearly more serious about doing things and significant, somewhat radical things this time, including possibly just cutting a deal with Russia that is advantageous to them.
Zelensky will have to face, it all comes down really to how much does, you know, after all that Russia has sacrificed and given up, what would they possibly take in order to shut down hostilities that they're clearly winning right now?
Ukraine's got another year to fight, maybe absent some major new Western infusion of lawyers, guns, and money or troops, guns, and money.
Oh, absolutely.
And I think considering just how badly I misjudged 2022, I'll always add this caveat is Russia is unpredictable.
Putin is unpredictable.
Trump is proving to be quite unpredictable as well.
And so, you know, the chances of there being talks and the chances of some peace to be had within the coming, let's say, half a year is definitely not zero.
You know, if I was gauging the wind here, maybe 10, 20%.
Yeah.
But I just, like Simplicius has pointed out, it just doesn't favor Russia.
And I don't think the West is willing to make the kind of concessions that Russia would need to even consider taking that instead of taking all of Ukraine or Ukraine up until the Dnaper River, which they are very, very close to doing.
Yeah, at least in Yepara Petrovsk, for sure, Kiev's a different story.
Yeah, I agree.
It comes, yeah, it's the ball's really in Putin's court, right?
He doesn't have to take a meeting.
He could just be like, no, we're going to keep grinding.
And the United States might then choose to escalate.
But like you said, we've got Gazans to dislocate and Chinese to dissuade.
And just today, Trump proposed cutting nuclear arsenals by 50%.
I actually took issue with somebody on Twitter who said, this is all ginning us up for World War III.
I said, you know, if World War III is at the top of Trump's agenda, or maybe the powers behind him, you know, opening negotiations with Russia to end the Ukrainian war is a pretty bizarre way to go about doing that.
And I guess you could say, well, it could kick off with Israel and Iran and Russia getting dragged into that.
There's a hundred different scenarios out there that could kick off a conflagration.
But I think that the United States is serious about wanting to stop it for various reasons.
And the ball's in Putin's court, whether he wants to, he's been conservative up until he gave the ghost signal finally in 2022 to go in.
And beholden to his own people, right?
I mean, they've invested a lot of money and that money and overtime at this stage trying to make something happen.
And I mean, as a leader, as a popular leader, even though, you know, you can say whatever you want about their election system, he needs to ultimately give the people something.
And it has to be as commensurate with the effort they put in as possible.
Absolutely.
And yeah, and again, he'd be a fool, even if we assume that Trump is straight dealing and will stick to his end of the bargain.
All bets are off in four years, right?
You know, you leave a major, significant, still beefy Ukrainian regime, and you could be having the same problem four years from now with money banderists and Western arms and stuff flowing in there, no matter what the agreement is.
So, hey, this wouldn't have happened under Kamala, for sure.
It would have been more of the same.
Russia would have kept buying it.
We're getting the daily excitement and churn for sure.
Not that I'm going to get back up on that soapbox.
It did occur to me the other day, we all feel obligated to pick aside a stance and then sort of stick to it out of pride, stubbornness.
And when things change on the ground, you know, we look for things that justify our previous position.
And it occurred to me that a lot of our guys want bad things out of this administration just to save face to say, ah, I was right.
And we see that, right?
Every little negative headline that comes out, they're on top of that.
And I have oddly found myself in the opposite situation saying, oh, here's a good headline.
Here's a good hunt.
No, that's not on paper.
Here's a dozen really good things that have happened so far.
So it's just a very, and that's me shifting my position, of course, which is a little bit, takes a little bit of humility to do.
And I am curious, Larise, let's not go heavy into politics just because we beat it the past two weeks, but you and I have gone through virtually the same journey, the extreme or strong Trump enthusiasm in the run-up to the first election, some very initial major disappointment, then transferring into outright loathing and disgust at how that first term went.
And the election, you know, serves you're right.
You didn't have that first term.
But it seems like even the commander of the Black Pill longboat, you're kind of seeing that things have changed.
And this is far from the first term.
So I think the way...
Not to put words in your mouth.
Sorry.
Yeah.
You're broadly correct.
I just wanted to tweak your statement.
Absolutely.
I think what we're dealing with here is more of a battered wife syndrome because, I mean, the guy did nothing but horrible things for four years, like awful, god-awful things, right?
And now he's come around and he's made changes, big sweeping positive changes that he did not need to do.
I mean, batten down the hatches.
I was preparing for four more years of utter doom and despair, right?
And then he comes out and it's like, oh, he's bought us some flowers.
Oh, he's taking us someplace nice.
You know, he's taking anger management classes.
He's stopped drinking.
And I'm just like, okay, I can see why a lot of people would be, are very remiss.
And I was expecting myself to be among their number on taking him at face value or indeed for giving him even one inch of slack in any regard when it comes to these policy issues.
The problem, though, is a lot of the things he's doing are just like not just on its face good, but like in actuality good, if you know what I mean.
Even if they're for the wrong reasons, right?
Even if they're not racist or anti-Semitic, they can still be good policy.
Far-reaching, far-reaching decisions for sure.
Yeah.
And I think what separates me from the people have gone all in who are now, he just seems horribly out of touch by just slamming Trump on everything and every change he's making is fake somehow is that you have to remember that in all of this, we are pretty much politically powerless.
And so it makes no sense to be invested in this.
Yeah.
So like, just be an impartial observer.
Look at things the way they actually are unfolding and ask yourself, is this good for me?
And mostly yes.
For example, my favorite thing that Trump has done so far, apart from pardoning the J6 protesters, which is comes up as a neutral in my column because he got them in that trouble in the first place.
At least he made up for himself.
Cleaned up his own mess there a little bit.
Minus the couple of years they had to languish in prison and the six suicides, but let's not talk about that.
USAID being defunded is probably going to stand even after Trump is done in office as the most significant and vital thing that he has ever done or is likely to do.
And I am numbering that over even over whatever he may do on immigration, even if he brings in the military and starts sending up hundreds of thousands of them.
It's incredible.
What he's done is that he has taken a big old axe and he swung it directly at the root of the money machine that's been funding everything we hate, right?
The money machine that's been funding all the things where we've been sitting back and going, thinking to ourselves, how the hell are these people who are so unpopular like making a living?
How is someone We just thought it was the Soros Open Society Foundation for everything or the Rothschild.
I would venture that the George George Soros gets his money from global, like the like each nation's equivalent of USAID.
I guarantee you, because he doesn't like Musk or Bill Gates or Jeff Bezos, they have companies that produce products where their funding comes from.
Soros doesn't produce anything.
He just destroys things.
I bet you.
You're saying subversion's not a product there, boy.
Yeah.
Well, doesn't he on oil producing companies or something?
He's probably still got tons of trading and currency swaps going on.
But I would bet.
Yeah, I bet most of his money came initially just from like other governments.
Just, oh, you give this, give this Jew money.
Oh, there's no doubt that he's tapped into some of those government revenue streams, right?
But what's more important is that coming out.
So obviously people like Valsh and Hanania and that other homosexual, I forget their names.
Who cares?
They were not funded.
That was kind of hyperbole.
There's been a bunch of FUD, sure.
Yeah.
My grandma died.
USAID was funding her poison.
However, 20% of the BBC was funded by USAID.
20% of the British Broadcasting Corporation was funded by USAID.
Yeah, I mean, who do you think translates all that pidgin English versions of things?
radical far-left party pushing degeneracy in poland discovered as being funded by us all that talk about drain drain the swamp drain the swamp from 2016.
Nothing from 2017 to 2020, except he like attempted to reclassify federal employees to make them easier to fire.
And now he's just going in and whacking departments.
The layoffs have started.
And Doge just walked in there with a swing and dick to the IRS today saying, show me the file.
Well, not the tax files, but you know, let's get a headcount here.
What exactly do you do?
There's going to be some openings and factories and things when there's the illegal immigrant, illegal aliens get sent away.
So there's going to be some job openings and factories and things.
So maybe these, you know, these people could have a little career change.
I think some FBI agents are going to have to sell their houses in Northern Virginia and move to West Virginia.
Yeah, the coder, the coders can learn to mine.
Yeah.
Learn to put things in a can.
I don't know.
Yeah.
All of it.
Absolutely.
Just to finish fleshing out my point, though, like not only the BBC, but Radio Free Europe and all these other subversive data outlets that have been flourishing all over Europe and sparking revolution, sparking civil unrest, sparking gay LGBT, like all that stuff about $150,000 to the promotion of gay rights in Romania and all that bullshit.
100% true.
Butsex and Botswana.
Don't forget about them.
Yeah, no, let's not forget about Buttsex and Botswana.
Now, saying that, and Trump has been very clear on this point as well, there are things that the U.S. USAID did that was just unironically an unmitigated good.
For example, unfortunately, 2,000 minesweepers in Asia have been let off because they no longer have the money to sustain them, which is unfortunate.
Although you should be asking yourself, why is America funding minesweeping countries in one of the few countries that actually had nothing to do with?
I mean, that game is 40 years old.
Like, why are we funding it?
Yeah, like a freebie on Windows.
That's just hasn't even had a graphics overhaul or anything.
You know the game.
The game is abandonwear at this stage.
Um, and they had 2 000 people working on it incredible.
This just goes to show the government yeah, the waste, the spending yeah no but um, but for real.
But you could argue that, like there is a like clearing mines from warzone is just like a good humanitarian thing to do.
So I think I would be in favor of that um, or like very much in favor of it, but maybe not so in favor of like spending many, many millions from a nation that's already got its own problems, you know, but whatever well, what?
Also, keep in mind, like we're funding that product, but are we, is there any oversight to it?
Because, as far as we know, we're sending them money and if they're still doing after all these years, are they even doing it?
I, if I were informed yeah, that's a great question I I, I wouldn't.
Like they're just going to keep giving us money as long as there's mines here.
Oh, we need got to get more mines.
We just can't find them all.
They think getting rid of them, right?
No like oh oh, you kill yourselves because you work too hard.
Yeah, we'll put some nets out there.
Better luck next time.
Get back to work absolutely.
Make the point that that you know probably the vast majority of the money that's being spent on this aid, even the Airmark stuff, is not going to actually combating that issue.
You know it's going through administration graft corruption bribes, what have you like?
Yes, 100.
So that's that's always important to remember as well.
Um, that being said just yeah, just.
The fact that Us aid is more or less disappeared is an unmitigated good, and we're seeing a lot of our enemies suddenly being laid off or taking the severance package and basically cutting off this global home.
At the root is is, I think, going to have ramifications that we are even just beginning to see.
You like you won't believe the stuff that's just going to die from as a result of the, of the route being cut off.
Uh, that said, like you said, with the, with the government spending and stuff.
Now NEW YORK Times has a tracker, I believe something like eight and a half thousand people's jobs are currently affected, and that's so far.
And we're on what?
Week three, week four?
Uh, this is letting, letting a bunch of early 20 year old somethings have unmitigated access and running rampant through the Us government is going is one of those things that they're going to write about in history books in a positive way.
Unfortunately, one of them is an Indian and another one isn't Asian, but there are four white dudes in there and there's a bunch yeah, and there's a bunch of others that weren't in that profile too.
Yep, are you talking about uh, big Hairy Balls, Hairy Balls.
And then uh, the shit the shit lord, who uh said, go ahead and Israel in Gaza.
I was racist before.
It was cool and i've never.
He's even more puritan than me.
He said, i'm not marrying outside my ethnicity, not even my race.
He is whatever now is.
Is the Indian the shit lord in that group in a different sense?
Yeah, I see what you did there.
Yeah, I don't believe that he was Big Balls.
Now, I didn't read the profile in BIG Balls, but I read, like, Big Balls were the first people in Doge.
Big Balls was the kid who deciphered the Dead Sea Scrolls or whatever they were.
You know something from Pompei and yeah that's, that's Big Balls.
And then uh, Alon changed his name to Hairy Balls.
I don't particularly care for his sophomore humor.
That he thinks is just hilarious, but whatever uh he's.
He's earned the right to have a little bit of fun.
And then it was Elez E-l-e-z, the kid that you know, got put right into the wood chipper early on, when it was the WALL Street Journal actually, some mucky muck who found his old handle.
He had, I guess, initially had his real name in his handle.
He changed it.
Ah, the cardinal sin.
They can always go back and get.
And then they brought him Back.
There was a Twitter uproar that said we have to stop bending the knee to this faux social outrage for some online commentary.
And everybody from Alan to Vance to Trump said, Okay, bring them back.
But I was reading this article about the gerontocracy.
If you look at this phony protest that's been happening, Chuck Schumer, what's her name?
Elizabeth Warren.
Master Chuck Schumer.
Yeah.
You know, all these old people, not just 60s, people in their 70s and 80s.
There's a funny meme.
It's the child is asking the mother, what does a colostomy bag look like?
And she says, Did you ever see a picture of Maxine Waters?
Max Maxine haranguing that doge guy outside the Department of Education right now.
We've all been there.
He looked like the guy at the DMV.
Yeah, sure.
How that looks.
I mean, that's just anyone who sees that video or that photo is laughing their ass off.
That is totally funny.
All those things.
Nancy Pelosi, another 80-year-old.
Mitch McConnell, Mitch McConnell, Bitch McConnell.
The black posse picking the worst possible time to demand reparations after the most Negro-fried, disgusting Super Bowl halftime of all time.
Man, they do not know how to read the room.
They don't know how to read.
Yeah, they don't know how to read it all.
Yeah, tone deaf.
What is room?
I love the comment.
Somebody said, I don't know who it was.
Is there any other country on earth that takes money from their citizens to give to the United States?
I don't know.
I don't think so.
That's bizarre.
Yeah.
I mean, simply, yeah, going to the root of the money, starting to cut back on the behemoth, which got even bigger, of course, under Biden.
How many times have we said this country is functionally bankrupt if it weren't for our ability to borrow money through issuing treasury debt?
We would have been toast a long time ago.
It wasn't for world currency.
I mean, it was this year.
It was around November, I believe.
The interest payments, interest payments on American debt actually surpassed military spending.
Yep.
And just today, just today, Trump said we may have to take half off the Pentagon and the defense stocks.
So, you know, he just throws shit at the wall.
Hey, they failed twice.
They don't have a good track record.
Okay.
Yeah.
Maybe the military industrial complex should invest more in like competent assassins and less in boondoggles.
I don't know.
There you go.
All their assassins are DEI hire black women.
Well, there you go.
Yeah, that's a problem, right?
More to the point, though.
And I think this is important to keep in mind.
And the naysayers do have a point here: is that a lot of these changes might be skin deep and could be reversed easily.
And certainly the legal challenges are mounting.
We'll see what comes of that.
But I certainly, and for the death of me, I think he's sincerely trying here.
And frankly, if I was in his shoes, I don't know if I could have done a better job.
I think, I suspect not, actually.
Like he's legitimately trying, come whatever may, he's willing to take that fight.
Now, we'll see how easy it is to throw away these changes in court, right?
I suspect quite a few of them will be overturned.
Some of them already are, like, like the federal freeze or whatever he imposed got shut off immediately.
And he's adhered to the courts on that one.
That said, The question is, is he willing to take up the fight with the judiciary?
And that's got to be the big thing to watch.
Is he actually going to go, well, Andrew Jackson, right?
You made your ruling.
Now let's see you enforce it.
Because if he's not willing to take on the cretarchy, then all of this is going to be undone by the next guy, or maybe even in his term, right?
Despite his own will.
It'll be a very interesting thing to watch in that regard.
But I think I think he's actually trying.
And it's better to do something only to fail than to do nothing and having failed before he even got going, right?
And this is the first time we never heard about impeaching judges or challenging their preposterous nationwide injunctions the first term.
I think Gorsuch actually said, or maybe it was Thomas who said, yeah, we can't have these judges just knocking down things at the stroke of a pen across the entire country because they don't like it.
And now they're actually talking about impeaching judges.
You didn't hear anything about impeaching judges the first term.
So it's kind of become a feeding frenzy of demanding more, not letting them.
And I've seen some real red meat rhetoric out of very widely read columnists.
I'm going back to Real Clear Politics daily for the first time in a long time.
And people are just saying, no, this we are so used to being abused by the left and the right doing nothing about it other than occasionally winning an election, maybe passing a bill or two.
And they're actually playing smash mouth baseball right now.
Now is it bro?
Why?
Are they going to sure?
There's tons of what-ifs and they might fail or they might not be sincere or they might not be doing it for the reasons that we like, sort of like with the Boers.
For years we said, you know, help the Boers.
If we're going to have migrants, we should have it from white South Africans.
And then they actually do it.
And it's like, well, we should really be sending money straight to the Boers and arming them.
It's like, can they get any credit whatsoever?
Right.
Well, and that's the thing, right?
Now I'm going to stop fanning Trump's balls here for a second and put on my critical hat.
Sure.
Like, I'm just, I'm a little bit skeptical.
I'm wondering why he's doing this.
Like, he clearly feels like he needs our, or at least the far right, for lack of a better term, support for something, right?
A lot of people are saying for the war in Israel or whatever.
I don't know.
And I'm just going to be quite honest.
I couldn't even speculate as to why he feels he needs it, but he feels he needs it.
I'm happy being courted for once.
It feels nice.
Buy me some flowers.
Take me somewhere pretty.
And at the same time, though, I would also criticize this.
It seems that when it comes to the solutions for Israel, he's going much more in-depth than he is at the U.S. You know, in the U.S., it's mostly like let Elon hack and slash at it, which is fun, which is yielding tangible results, positive results.
But at the same time, let's look at what he's doing for Israel currently.
Big arms packages.
Yeah.
Well, not just that.
Like he is legitimately working out a deal with Jordan and Egypt to take thousand refugees.
He is literally trying to ethnically cleanse that country.
Now, I find myself sympathetic to the Americans to say, well, you know, that's not my primary concern.
And you're right.
It shouldn't be.
America should be your primary concern.
Why would anything else be?
But at the same time, like when Jays get to not to win that big, I get very upset.
Sure.
And they certainly haven't won yet.
It looks like the ceasefire is off, at least temporarily.
And it still could go absolutely nowhere.
Or the Arabs might come up with something to help.
I mean, that was the crux.
I forgot to mention that Egypt was talking about getting some of those wealthier states to fund the reconstruction and prevent the expulsion.
So you're absolutely right, but it hasn't happened yet.
And he does have that tendency to throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks.
And something we say by Saturday, right?
All ships going to hit the sand.
Yeah, that's right.
If they don't release all the hostages.
I mean, that is.
And you're right, Coach.
Like initially, when he came out with the Gaza statement, I was like, oh, this is bad.
And then I thought about it for two seconds.
I'm like, no, no, no, no.
He's glad handling them.
He's doing to Jews what he's been doing to the right.
It's like, oh, yeah, it's going to be a big, beautiful wall, folks.
We're going to throw all the illegals out, the rapists, the criminals, even the good people and all that stuff.
It's going to be a big, beautiful ethnic cleansing.
We're going to gas all the Palestinian.
It's going to be great.
You're going to say, what Palestinians?
We never had any Palestinians.
You're going to be saying, Mazlatov, to all my friends.
I got three words.
Big, beautiful condos.
Big, beautiful.
Big, beautiful temple.
There'll be a red heifer and then there won't be a red heifer.
You'll have an antichrist.
You'll be like, when we get all these antichrists, oh, thank you, Donald.
Your favorite, your favorite prophet.
You're welcome.
Go ahead, buddy.
That word antichrist there, you know, the ADL says that that's an anti-Semitic word.
It is.
Yeah.
They're right.
I mean, when they're right, they're right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, they're wrong about a lot of things.
That's not one of them.
No.
But my point is, I'm starting to suspect it might be more than just glad handling them simply because you're starting to see concrete steps being taken to facilitate that process, which has me very worried indeed.
Yep.
And Abdullah visited, and I think just to not have it be a complete disaster of a meeting, said that they were going to take in 2,000 sick, wounded Gazan kids for treatment in Jordan.
That's all that I saw out of that meeting.
Yeah, I mean, the Jordanian question is interesting, right?
Because like literally King Abdullah's life depends on him not taking them.
Like if he takes them, his own murder him.
Unironically, because that country is already like 45% Palestinian or something.
If you make that a 60 or around 70%, he's not going to be king for very much longer.
He's deeply unpopular for having his tongue so firmly wedged up the Israeli backside.
However, when it comes to Cece, Cece, on the other hand, is absolutely addicted, dependent on American largesse.
So he's got the opposite thing going.
Like Trump could threaten to revoke the billions in aid that they're giving to Egypt every year.
And all these police officers out in the deserts are suddenly going to have to find something else to do.
And Cece's only in power because he has managed to kept that spigot of handouts flowing.
And if that goes, then the Egyptian people are probably going to depose him in some kind of spring uprising, right?
So that's the exact opposite thing.
So Cece, I think, might cave, whereas Abdullah, does he treasure his life or not?
I think legitimately, that is the question for him.
Yeah, he'd go into, he'd be the second Arab leader to go into exile after Assad.
Putting on my retard Q tinfoil hat.
This is all Trump's master plan to get the Arabs and the Iranians to unite against Israel against the worst idea of all time.
And I'll put my realistic hat on.
And we all expected him to be pro-Semitic to the most embarrassing, disgusting degree.
Oh, yeah, he's absolutely delivering on expectations there, no doubt about it.
100%.
But again, this is the part that comes with being an observer, right?
Like both of these things can be true without having to take one position that like, oh, Trump unmitigated evil or Trump unmitigated the best guy to ever be a guy in the history of guys.
Truth is somewhere in between.
And for better or worse, this time around, he seems, you know, poised to give people something, which is a hell of a lot better than giving us absolutely nothing but crap.
And on immigration, which remains my number one issue, I would make that devil's bargain if I had to make that terrible choice.
Okay, Israel gets whatever it wants, but we get mass deportations and a sealed off border and a crackdown on H-1Bs and all the rest of it.
That's our quality of life.
That's the safety of our kids.
That's our future demographics.
And lots of signs that aren't widely reported that they're doing real things.
They're deputizing other parts of the government to act as immigration agents.
Just a tiny story.
They jacked up the fee to apply for a visa from like $30 to $250.
They are talking about using more troops.
Yeah.
Go ahead, Sam.
How about this mark and reprisal policy of hiring privateers to go down and loot cartels or kill them or whatever they want to do?
Yeah.
Cartels are a major real threat.
And at least.
Yeah.
And they are.
And I want to go back to the dismantling of the USAID because I heard someone say something about how that's a bad thing because they're trying to streamline this system.
And is this a system that you want streamlined?
Well, do you want to live under a system that is taking your money and putting five-star or filling five-star hotels with like Somalians?
The Pakistani government owned.
Yeah.
That hotel in New York City is owned by Pakistan.
So not only were they putting up illegals in five-star hotel or however many stars it was, it was ultimately getting funneled back to Pakistan on the back end.
Yeah, but in addition to that, it's, well, at a certain point, you know, things are going to be bad, but like, why, why would you want to live in a country where the government is just letting the cartel just run roughshot over your community?
Like, why, why, why is, how is that a good thing?
How is any of the things the USAID is funding a good thing?
Like, if someone says, well, it's more radicalizing.
It makes us more angry.
Yes.
It heightens the contradiction.
We're angry.
There's a certain point where like, okay, we're pissed.
And what about those other people?
They're too, they're too stupid to get angry.
Okay.
So at a certain point, let's worry about us and not retards that aren't angry enough.
Like the gentleman who said, and I'm not going to like, I'm not going to give him too much guff, but he was saying that interracial porn on 4chan might be radicalizing for some people, where I would disagree.
I think people that watch that are perfectly happy with it.
And like, if you're not radicalized by that already, you're not going to be radicalized.
Well, I don't know, but this is what I heard.
Like, that's always a losing proposition.
The creation of this interracial porn is like a loss leader or something like that.
Like, people don't like that anyways.
And it's, you know, we like rotisserie chicken from Costco.
We don't like seeing.
Well, I think, I, I honestly think, I think black people like it.
Like, and not maybe they do.
Yeah.
They just like that it exists.
Cause I, I, I have a normie friend who, who, like, whenever, like, when, well, you know, I won't say more, but we're all allowed to have two normie friends, tops.
Well, yeah, yeah.
I mean, he, he, you know, God bless him.
He tries, but he, he thinks like, oh, yeah, black, like when they do like race swapping, he thinks like, oh, black people don't like that.
Cause that's what they say on like, you know, that's what conservative retard like gatekeepers will say.
Like, blacks don't like that.
Why can't they make their own?
No, blacks like it.
They don't watch this stuff.
They just like that it exists.
Blacks love being pandered to.
They love it.
They don't take it in, but they love it.
And it's at the point where if you stop it coming, they're going to bitch.
Like if all the interracial porn like went away, blacks would be in an uproar that there's not enough representation important with white.
I guarantee you.
I don't know how to do that.
I've also heard that the white actress, there's a lot of white actresses will not have sex with niggers.
I've heard that too.
You know, in my travels, I had met several, we'll call them, we'll call them actresses.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And yeah, they said, no, no, no, I don't like working with them because they like they are like, they're basically animals.
Yeah.
They don't understand that this is a fantasy and they're like trying to hurt us and they like, they enjoy it.
Yeah.
I joke there, Rolo, about we should only have, you know, we're only allowed two normie friends each.
But if you think about it, we should all have tons of normie friends if you can handle the mental inanity just to not keep ourselves in ghettos.
We can have our bro networks and stuff, but have all the normie friends you want and start picking off the ones who actually have a couple synapses that are still functioning.
Yeah, that's if you could tell me right there, just to have a bunch of normie friends just to have a friend.
No, I don't agree with that, but definitely try to cultivate people that, I mean, you know, in a lot of ways, when you talk to somebody whose instincts are intact, the problem is that they're deprived of having a frame framework for thinking about the issues that we care about.
And it's like in that book 1984, where they were eliminating words out of the vocabulary so you can't express the idea.
For instance, like during the election, you talk to a red-blooded American guy who's maybe seems like he's all right.
And then you get to the end of the conversation and he says, yeah, and that's why we got to elect Trump.
You know, that's what he thinks is the solution because he doesn't understand that there's anything else.
And so that's the reason to try to reach people is try, like you say, try to find people who are not brain dead, who, you know, and you can introduce concepts to them and get them thinking.
And once you do get them thinking, you will know it because then they come back to you and they start pointing out things.
They start seeing things that maybe even you didn't see.
Absolutely.
There's a difference between someone who you can fix and someone who's a lost cause.
And it doesn't take too long to.
No, you could size them up pretty quick.
Yeah.
Yep.
And one of my, he's not a normie.
That's unfair, but he was a big Trump trans plan truster, maybe dabbled in QAnon, then totally sickened by everything by the end of the term of January 6th.
And I actually just broached the topic and said, I'm pleasantly surprised so far, cautiously optimistic.
And he admitted that he's kind of scrambled.
He's gone down so many rabbit holes and been on so many roller coasters that he just doesn't know what to think anymore.
He doesn't know whether he should be positive or negative or believe anything that's coming out.
And I think a lot of maybe not our guys necessarily, but all, you know, just all the weird conspiracy stuff.
There's a whole ecosystem of bizarre streamers and podcasters who dwell in the esoterica stuff that I think are deliberately engineered to waste people's time, soak up their money, and just like intellectually play with people on stuff that is either totally unfounded, purely speculative, or designed to just run people on hamster wheels.
It's really gross.
Larita, I wanted to ask real quick, the two hypocrisies.
If I were just having a conversation, hey, I'm pleasantly surprised.
I'm cautiously optimistic.
I like this, this, this.
But when is Doge going to go and see if APAC has gotten a lot of U.S. funding, this foreign, hostile, alien lobbying group influencing our government so spectacularly?
That would blow the lid off.
And I don't think old Alan has responded to any of those questions.
Yeah.
And you see so much fraud all throughout the government.
Now, whether Lee Zeldon's Jewish blood was lying when he said that the EPA pushed $20 billion out the door in the last days of the Biden administration, I don't know if that's 100% true, but I bet you that I believe.
Do you think he just totally fabricated that?
No, not really.
Sounds like something that the left would do.
Hey, while we still have power and control of this institution, let's get all this money out to a third-party NGO so that they can then hire us or keep our operations running for another five, four years, whatever.
And he just came out with a video.
It's got like 20 million views about, no, we're going to that bank and getting that money back.
Whether you like Lee Zeldon or not, or whether you think he's completely sincere, if they're going out and yanking money back from radical far left groups, that's a total win.
Just keep pushing that stuff.
And fraud and immigration.
If there's 20 billion getting pushed out of the door of the EPA, how much fraud is there on legal immigration applications?
It goes right Elon Omar herself.
Yeah.
Let's while you're hitting that drum there, how about this?
The U.S. Council of Catholic Bishops.
They've received billions of dollars to push their sick and twisted agenda.
And if they go after them, we might see some of these shitheads going to prison on fraud.
Inshallah, ironically.
Laritz, I wanted to ask you, you do in fact have friends, and I believe that they are mostly normies.
I won't probe.
But yeah, do your Normie friends have political opinions?
Are they, I assume, more liberal and left-leaning and, I don't know, pro-Ukraine, anti-Russia?
What's some of the normal zeitgeist like up there?
Well, I mean, it's hard to probe where people's loyalties truly lie in this day and age.
Damn it, Rollin.
He's giving me the probing movement with the finger there.
No, but what I mean is there are polit, especially in a country that is outlasted, remember, there are political opinions that you simply aren't allowed to have in this country.
And one of them is being pro-Russia or anything but pro-Ukraine.
And another one is it seems to be that unless that you're willing to deliberately put on the official kook hat or the stamp of kookery, you have to kind of go, oh, isn't it crazy what's happening in America?
And what's funny is like nobody will ever expand on that, which goes to show a lot of a lot of people just agree with Trump, but they know that they can't say that, if that makes any sense.
So they say, oh, isn't it just crazy?
I was like, oh, yeah, it's totally crazy.
Wild crazy.
Oh, wild.
Yeah.
Or as Norwegians like to say, and this is a legitimate expression, it's completely Texas over there, which is how we use for crazy.
How about on immigration?
Is there any native bubbling?
I know, not Nordic Frontier, but Nordic resistance got labeled as a terrorist group by the State Department under the last administration.
That would be a nice one to see rescinded officially.
But is there any sort of mass or even small pro-Norwegian, inherently pro-white kick the migrants out?
I know you don't have as much as Germany or the pro-white scene here is very, very small, unfortunately.
Norway has yet to learn to become uncomfortable, and the comfortable nations do not take uncomfortable positions politically.
But there is a huge anti-immigrant sentiment building, and all of Northern Europe is frankly sick of it.
And all this pro-refugee stuff that came in the wake of Syria is gone.
It is completely and utterly destroyed.
And with the cutting of USAID, I suspect it's never coming back.
The question is if it's too late or no.
Certainly, there are leanings towards a stricter policy regime, etc.
But at the same time, the 2026 EU compact on migration, which doesn't touch Norway, but it was just pounded through yesterday.
So even Poland's going to have to take its share of migrants starting in 2026.
Which just goes to show that, and this ties together with what I was saying about the inefficient EU earlier, right?
I genuinely believe that the idea for the EU was to run out the clock on migration and just destroy all these ethno-states from within, because then they could have their United States of Europe, which would be vaguely brown and not very good at English, I imagine.
But the point is, if you break the nation's spirits of self-determination, then you're much easier to be run by a supernatural organization like the EU.
And so they are absolutely adamant that Europe has to keep taking immigrants.
They're absolutely like if there's one cause that they are absolutely willing to go and die for, it's exactly that one.
So that's what they're pushing through.
Even Poland has to start taking them now, which is unfortunate because Poland is like the whitest country in the world, but won't be for much longer.
A little shout out to Belarus and Iceland there.
I think they still have Poland beat, but I'm not sure about Iceland anyway.
Maybe Belarus.
We'll go to the day.
Belarus is still pretty white.
It says it right there in the name.
It's white, white Russia.
Yeah, that's true.
That's true.
You know, that title used to be held by Northern Ireland, which is 99.99% white until 2015 or something like that.
Yeah.
It was a good time.
But yeah, more to my point.
So like they're rushing to get the last waves of migrants through, which is why if Israel starts making overtures, which they have, that Europe should take the Palestinians and starts driving Palestinians out, then I think Europe's going to have to take another wave of those, unfortunately.
That said, with AFD and with even more normal parties seeing what's happening, for example, in France, seeing what's happening in the UK, seeing what's happening in Germany, anti-immigration is definitely on the agenda and it's there to stay.
And I think they're serious about it this time.
So a lot of positive developments, definitely, but also some negative ones to keep in mind.
I'm so sad that you can't have candid conversations about politics up there.
I mean, it's not the speech laws.
Is it just like a oppressive politeness and nobody wants to be the skunk with the unpopular opinion?
It's fair.
It's fair.
Simply speaking, it's because being labeled anything outside of the mainstream is like not a good position to find yourself.
And at the same time, there's the ever-present looming threat of just the government coming down on you like a ton of bricks.
So I think a lot of people are hiding what they sincerely believe.
And certainly, to my knowledge, I have not, or to my recollection, sorry, I've not had a real political discussion with the normie in several years.
The few times I've actually tried to bring things up, they blank it out like I didn't even ask.
I've had a lot of experience with a group of friends of mine, and there'll have been, you know, some big happening like on immigration or something.
I've struggled to remember specific.
But anyway, I brought it up.
I was like, what do you guys think about this?
And the guy literally went, ah, so anyway.
And then he changed.
Like, they are neurotically scared of touching politics.
I forget there's still the Brevek specter hanging over you guys too, that anything remotely right-wing might be equated with him.
Well, on that point, I have to say, actually, you don't notice that in today's society much.
It's like he's just been forgotten.
Like memory.
Until you brought him up just now, I was like, oh, yeah.
Yeah, good.
I thought maybe there was some, you know, just such serious, deep scar tissue there that it was still on everybody's mind.
I'd say that impacted the left more than it did the right.
It put a rapid breaks on the burgeoning woke movement, I would say.
I mean, woke still to some degree, or for lack of a better term, infiltrated Norwegian society, but like it didn't come like an awesome tidal wave like it did in other countries.
It just kind of came in drips and drives.
And I think that's legitimately because they were scared of people like Brevek.
Wow.
On the whole, I'd say he actually muted left-wing discourse more than you muted right-wing discourse.
Not that we would endorse that, but incredible to hear that his actions may have actually put the fear of God into them.
Yeah.
Just like the silver lining of a dark cloud, right?
Sure.
Yeah.
Got a future in diplomacy, Sam.
To make a clinically detached observation on the state of things, it appears violence works.
Did he say empirically?
Is he going to be in the five-star Norwegian prison for the rest of his life?
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
Okay.
They're not going to let him out.
I mean, like, unless Trump signs an executive pardon, well, so beyond the fact that he killed like 80 people or however many people he killed, it's the fact that he's just a lunatic, bro.
Like, he's legitimately just crazy.
Yeah.
You know, judge not.
Well, I mean, it's not like that stopped the courts from letting people go before, right?
Right, right.
There you go.
Let's shift a little bit.
I think we're just going to go long.
Does anybody, I don't, and nobody looks to be hopping around.
Sam, you good?
Just keep going?
Larice's got to go to work.
Well, hey, go ahead.
Go grab another beer.
Yeah.
I got left in me before I got ahead out.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, well, we got 40 minutes left here.
We're already at an hour 20.
I don't know if we want to talk about the most negro-fied Super Bowl of all time, but we did get a funny story from a friend, Puke Tales.
He's got a relatively young baby at home, and he said she had been not feeling well for a while.
And his wife went to pick up the baby, and the baby projectile vomited straight into his wife's face and mouth, which I'm sorry, it reminded me of some of the travails of fatherhood and parenting and all the good puke stories as a kid, you know, other kids that puked, me puking in my parents' bed all over the place.
My mom said it was like the exorcist, you know.
But I had a very proud puke moment with Junior probably three or four years ago.
And we were driving on the highway.
He wasn't feeling too good.
I looked back in the rear view mirror and he's looking a little bit pale.
And he said, Dad, I think you better pull over.
It was a 55 mile per hour state highway with guardrails.
I said, all right, hold it together, buddy.
As soon as I can find a spot to pull off, I will, you know, just breathe, just breathe.
You know, it's almost like awaiting a delivery and finally found a spot to pull off.
He opens the door of the minivan and then lets it rip.
And I, and just, it was a wonderful, magical moment.
I was so proud of him.
And I still remind him of that every once in a while.
Not too often, not like a weird thing, but we pass it sometimes.
And I'm like, Junior, that was where you exercise total physical control over yourself and spared the minivan.
And then, of course, there was the time about three years ago in the summer when we had mice down in the loft in the shed for the first time.
And I had put green poison tablets into far remote corners, you know, behind chairs or whatever.
And the dog got one.
And I'm thinking, oh my God, the dog's going to die, you know, because it was a big rectangular tablet.
It wasn't just a little ball or anything.
And I panicked.
I went to the chat and guys were saying, create these concoctions.
It's like, okay, maybe I'll create this concoction, but she's not going to drink that.
And then I had the great momentary brilliance.
Ah, the dog always gets car sick when we, whenever we take her anywhere, five minutes and she ralphs in the car.
She starts drooling.
I don't know if she had some previous traumatic experience.
So it was just potato on me, loaded the car into the minivan, drove around at high speeds, around curves, really to accelerate the process because I'm having some anxiety that the dog might suffer some serious physical malady.
And boom, she puked big green pile of rat poison.
And that was a success.
Beautiful.
I don't think we need to.
Yeah.
If you guys have a puke story you want to tell, you're welcome to.
I sanitize some of my moments.
I got a quick one.
Gosh, we're coming.
In Norway, one of the ways you can refer to ralping, as you eloquently put it, is calling for the moose.
Calling for the moose.
That's what do they call that?
The part of speech, the Amatawatapia.
exactly i got one more good one uh One of my friends, I was probably eight or nine.
He was having a birthday party and we were going to see Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade.
Now, I was not really good friends with this kid.
It was sort of a forced relationship due to proximity and carpooling and stuff like that.
So I said, mom, I really don't feel well.
I shouldn't go to Andy's birthday party.
And she thought that I was just trying to get out.
And she said, nope, you are going to this thing.
You got invited.
You're going to see Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, 1989.
I said, okay, you're the boss.
And get in the car, not feeling so good.
Hi, everybody.
And then we get into the lobby of the movie theater and just let it rip all over the floor.
And no cell phones back then.
I think she had to drive me back to the house and the birthday party was ruined.
Mom should have listened to me on that one.
Well, what I remember is not the barf stories, but more of the whizzing, you know.
Okay.
You go to change, especially the boy.
You know uh boy, baby diaper and and out of the blue, as soon as that cold air hits the uh, the old ding-a-ling, you know, it just goes off.
You know you get a mannequin pee very uh, firm stream of urine.
You know, just out of the blue.
Yeah, I didn't have, we didn't have too too much of that.
Uh yeah, true.
Uh, the Emichael Jones thing that I teased before I was listening to our Interesting Times, uh, hosted by Tim Kelly, it's a great show.
You should check it out.
I enjoy it.
Yeah, it's uh, it's not middle of the road, but it's an uh, it's a civilized discussion.
It's not, you know, shock chock podcasts like so many of us got used to over the years.
Uh, but very intelligent guy knows a ton of history and he had Emichael Jones on.
Apparently he's been on a bunch I hadn't heard.
Obviously I had a predisposition to think that Emicha Jones is outstanding on the Jewish question and pants on head retarded on the race question.
Yeah, but I was, I was willing to give it a shot and sure as hell, Emj is just straight dealing on the Holocaust.
I want to briefly interrupt you quickly.
He's not just like, he is actually one of the absolute worst an enemy on the race.
Like on the race like, he's not just bad on it because like like, if you, you think like like, Jared Taylor is just kind of like, he just doesn't talk about the Jq, he just kind of like yeah, we're moving on, but like Emicha Jones, his position on race is as bad as, like the the worst Libtart, like our Alexander Dugan yeah, so bad.
Yeah, it was Mark Time who I brought.
I was like Mark, you must be familiar with that.
And he said no, maybe he was just uh hedging, but great on yeah, the holocaust narrative is dying.
Obviously it didn't happen.
Jewish power uh snuck in through whatever it was great, great on Jews, and then immediately shifts gear into uh, pure anti-racism.
He must have said, and these white boys derisively, five times in five minutes I I, I shut it off.
And that was when I went to Telegram.
I just said I really love listening to Emichael Jones because he reminds me of how much white pride I have and how I am glad to no longer be a Catholic.
Now, that was inflammatory.
I'm not a Catholic anymore because of Emichael Jones.
I didn't get that attitude, but he certainly does not make me.
You know he's Mr Tracking you bang, mr anti-semitism right, he's the exact opposite of you, Sam.
You kill with kindness.
And he makes me want to punch an old man in his ugly teeth.
Uh, for the first time in my life, especially like saying, like these white boys, it's like doesn't white not exist?
You stupid idiot like you're the, i'm not white, i'm Biracial, Irish and German.
So shouldn't you say those, those Italian boys, those English boys, those Luxembourgian boys?
You stupid.
I, that guy when it comes to, when it comes yeah, those Lichtenstinian boys.
That guy When it comes to race, he's not like bad on it, he's lying, yeah, which is the worst.
He knows not just wrong, yeah.
Yeah, because if you're saying those white boys, but I don't see race, then you see race, right?
I'm gonna see it when it's convenient for you.
Someone that Catholic would never lie, he wouldn't lie, that's against the commandments.
Maybe he's just absolutely retarded.
And for some reason, the Jewish propaganda did not sink in, but all the rest of the Kumbaya racial garbage tower of Babel did.
Go, go, figure.
But of course, the classic joke is, yes, if you could fuse E. Michael Jones and Jared Taylor, you know, take EMJ's stance on the Jews and Jared's stance on race, then you would have the Uber Boomer, the Overman of the Boomer class.
But alas, that's not.
And somebody actually said that he deserves to burn in hell for all of the good white people he's turned off against Catholicism due to his and he does lie about he does lie about it.
I don't know if I would go so far as I don't think he deserves to burn in hell.
Little Traw.
Let's talk.
Well, yeah, of course.
You know, I have an open mind.
But he's, but he is absolutely lying because he's not so stupid.
Like, I've talked to boomers about race and like you can tell some of them, they just like they can't fathom it.
Like, and I think they look at it like it's like a like it, it like they've been traumatized by the civil rights movement.
Yeah.
Like like that, what that was was such a disaster for their country.
And because they lived through it and they got to see what it was like on both sides, that they kind of have to block out race.
It's like Stockholm syndrome.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Where E. Michael Jones is, he's just, he, he's lying about it because he sees whites and he will use it in a negative way.
Like he will talk about white people as a detriment and everything that's wrong with them.
But when it comes to other races, oh, what are you talking about?
Future converts.
Their problem is, well, they're just not Catholic.
That's what that's the reason they shut up.
I just can't stand the just blatant lies.
Right.
And yeah, Corey Mahler took him out to the woodshed in that stream too.
I very rarely watch streams.
And I started that one and I was like, yeah.
And his lies don't actually benefit his Catholic agenda.
It'd be one thing if he was just like, not even.
I don't care.
Like, just be a Catholic.
Who cares if you're white?
I just, I don't care.
Like, if he were like Jared Taylor on it, where someone asked him, like, well, do you think blacks steal more?
I don't care.
They should be Catholic.
Like, if it were that, I wouldn't give a crap.
But that's not the issue.
It's like he goes out of his way to try to get you not to believe in race, which is so sinister.
Yeah, it really is.
I mean, you know, the white behavior is as much a part of who we are as like the fact that we have blue eyes or green eyes or whatever it is.
You know, the, the, it's, it's just a trait.
You know, if all the blacks became Catholics, they'd be no different than how they are now.
You know, that's, and the fact is they can't be Catholic because they just don't have that kind of moral character anyway.
So I'm even willing to grant that, you know, if all blacks converted sincerely to Christianity or Catholicism, then it might upgrade them a little bit.
I mean, some of them are.
Yeah, a little.
Maybe it would help them in a way, but it's, it's, it has never happened.
It never will happen.
It could never happen.
And it's, it's, you know, moral behavior is a trait just like the music our race has created or the culture or the philosophy or government or religious ideas or whatever it is.
It's all just traits, just like the color of our hair, color of our eyes, color of our skin.
It's just another trait.
Yep.
Just drove me crazy.
It's like, I don't care how good you are, Jews, if you're morally ambiguous or even supportive of race mixing or Pakistanis in England becoming English or Kenya is the way it was because it adopted Christianity later.
All retarded bullshit that I will never believe in my entire life.
And if you believe his lies on that one, let's be cucked.
He doesn't believe it.
Yeah, he doesn't believe it either.
He just wants you to believe it.
Because he's afraid of, and of course, unsaid, extraordinarily critical of Hitler and National Socialism, which was, of course, the last man and last political force to truly challenge the evil that he has dedicated his life to denouncing.
Anyway, yeah, he sucks.
Yeah.
My nice high from running is off.
And now I'm angry again.
See?
Trump's in office.
You can't be angry anymore.
You can't demand more or anything like that.
If you haven't watched the adventures of Pete and Pete with your youngest, so good.
We went back.
It was back at my parents' house.
This has been in my notes for a long time and we never got to it.
I liked it as a kid when I was maybe 10, 11, 12, even though I was getting a little too old to watch Nickelodeon.
My son and kids love it.
You can find them all for free on YouTube if you look hard enough with no ads.
Some of them are a little bit like splotchy or like bad recordings.
But hell, if you want to splurge, they're pretty expensive to get the box set or buy them digitally on Amazon.
But it's offbeat.
It's heartwarming.
It's 99% white.
Great kooky characters, fun tales, bucolic adventures in the suburbs, the wonder of youth, great writing, great acting.
Great music.
Great sound.
Great music.
Polaris.
Absolutely.
I was listening to some Polaris on the way home from my parents back then.
Just jamming.
And the fact that my kids were watching it and enjoying it just as much as I did back then.
And now currently makes it one of the all-time great kids series ever set, interestingly enough, in suburban North Jersey.
In Glurt County.
Yeah.
My dad's like, oh, I recognize that.
That's there.
You know, some like down at the docks in one of the scenes.
Supreme with the metal detector at the beach.
So much good stuff.
So I assume a lot of you have heard of it or are familiar with, if not, the adventures of Pete and Pete.
Yeah.
Toby Husk deserved an Emmy and Oscar, a Grammy, and the guy from King of the Hill.
Who's the guy from King of the Hill?
Oh, Toby Huss was a voice actor on that.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, he's Hank Hill's dad.
He's great.
All right.
That was all the essential stuff that I have in my stack for this week.
Sam Rolo Loritz, over to you.
And if you got nothing, we can wrap it up.
Sam, you want to mention the, well, we had a new grandfather in the chat.
I know the details are sketchy or whatever, but that's awesome.
We welcome you.
I don't know that I have my grandfather's.
Yeah, for sure.
I don't know that I have permission.
I don't want to say either his screen name.
Okay, fair enough.
But yeah, he was posting some pictures with the, I mean, he put his full name on the, in there anyways, but I'm not going to be the guy that says it on a podcast.
But yeah, great stuff.
Yeah.
Yep.
The only other thing I wanted to add, I'll just go and if you guys got anything, have that after this is that a lot of times in chats, I will get happy sad when I see parents doing things that I am failing to do or doing inadequately.
Like one guy, great guy said recently, oh, yeah, we went through all the how to train your dragon books and then we went through all of the Lord of the Rings and then we moved on to this.
And I said, oh man, I mean, we have those books, but we haven't been as diligent.
And I know that there's tons of parents out there who probably, you know, whether you're in a chat group or whether you're seeing some big social media account, Trad, whatever, doing propaganda, say, this, this is my homestead or this or that, this, that.
I just want to let you know that you're not alone.
Nobody's perfect.
And I don't, I don't take it against, I certainly don't knock anybody who's doing wonderful things at home.
Yeah.
And the people propagandizing, yeah, there's probably some cobwebs in their corners.
And, you know, the kids aren't always rosy cheeked and perfect.
But, you know, it's just like, oh, yeah, I didn't do that.
And my window of opportunity is closing.
It's kind of a good reminder.
Oh, maybe I should pick that up, et cetera.
You can't do everything.
Yep.
Yeah.
And yeah, I'm the same way.
I see people doing stuff and I say, oh, that's nice.
I wish I had done that or I should do that.
But yeah, you cannot do everything.
And don't let yourself do that.
Yeah.
I think of a family member who's got a whole wall of family photos from state parks and vacations that they've taken.
And we've had some nice trips and stuff.
And I'm like, huh, we haven't really done Yosemite or, you know, Moab or whatever it is.
Yeah.
So a little sad and also a little bit motivated.
Maybe this summer coming up, it's time for us to go visit a national park if there's anybody still working there.
Apparently, they're in slight upheaval due to the hiring freeze and all these probationary feds basically saying, nope, you're gone.
Sorry.
Got to save money.
36, whatever the total debt is to date.
Cuts will be made and it's good that they're being made.
I don't give a rat's ass.
For sure.
Laurits, over to you for last call.
Any comment, question?
And just hopefully one more thing, Coach.
Have that.
All right.
Yep.
Go ahead, Laurites.
Maybe you had to go to work.
Yeah.
No, sorry.
I just another policy issue that I wanted to mention real quick is a clawback from New York City where Christy Noam, the DHS secretary, she literally took back $80 million straight out of the city's account.
Which I don't even know the mechanisms for doing that, but whatever.
Didn't you mention that?
I think it was off air, though.
It's off air.
Yeah.
And this Letitia James from New York, the attorney general is talking about bringing charges against her because of failing to enforce immigration law.
Yep.
Yeah, so a lot of things are happening all at the same time.
Trump dropped the corruption investigations into the Mayor Adams there.
He owe Trump big time now.
Trump is also, like you said, mulling over, bringing charges against Letitia James, who was one of his main antagonists.
V Dare's Inquisitor in New York.
Yeah, the reason V Dare is shut down is because of her.
What happened to a better person?
And the governor of New York, her name is Woman.
Hocho, whatever.
Hocho, yeah.
And Sami, you saw he pardoned Blago, too.
He's already out of prison.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Bob McKlevich, the shame of the Serbian nation in the United States.
Well, here's the thing.
Like, yeah, was he a shitlib and stuff like that?
Yes, but you have to understand Illinois is so incredibly corrupt.
And he came in as kind of, he was also corrupt, by the way, but he was no more corrupt than anyone else.
But the thing was, he was an outsider, right?
And so he came in and he really ruffled a lot of feathers.
And that's why they did that to him, because he was not playing the game entirely to their satisfaction.
Yeah.
So even though he's a liberal in a lot of ways and stuff, but he's, I would give him some credit as being somebody who came in and tried to upset the apple cart a little bit.
Yeah, I know.
It was interesting.
I was like, why the heck is Trump pardoning him?
He's already out of prison.
He commuted his sentence toward the end of the first term.
And I think that they like have some like mini bromance there as persecuted politicians.
Yeah.
Because ostensibly the reason he got in hot water was because he was trying to sell the Senate.
Obama's seat.
Yeah, which is not uncommon to do.
You know, that's what I'm saying.
Right.
Like he was, yeah, was it crooked stuff?
Yeah, but it was stuff that anyone was doing anyways.
It was the fact that he was upsetting the apple cart and doing some of the things like the Trump's doing now in this crooked state.
And he paid the price.
A lot of years in prison.
I don't know if you guys caught this, but two years ago, Bob Menendez got 11 years.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yes.
Finally from New Mexico.
No, New Jersey.
Yeah.
He was like a New Jersey mob boss editor.
Okay.
All right.
Well, his name is Menendez.
I don't blame you for thinking he was down on the border.
But yeah, he was a Cuban American with gold bars and tons of money.
And that happened under Biden, I believe.
He got in trouble under Trump the first time and he beat the charges or hung jury and then they came after him again.
He was so corrupt, even Biden couldn't let him leave.
He was such an obviously corrupt scumbag with some sexual peccadillos to peccadillos.
I don't know.
It's been a while since I used that one.
Yeah, good riddance to him.
But Coach, if we are starting to wind down towards the end, I know we talked about the music, which we didn't have a break, but we talked about playing a Burzum song because, you know, Norway.
And while we were talking about that before the show, I wanted Loritz maybe to put some of those comments in the show because I got interested in the art of Theodore Kittelson back in the day because Varg used some of that artwork in some of the earlier albums, at least, the Burzum albums.
And so I bought this book of artwork.
And Theodore Kittelson, he's done a lot of artwork about like trolls and stuff like that, but a lot of stuff beyond that too.
And this book had some like folk tales and things in there as well.
But I would ask Loritz if he could mention a few of those, the meaning of the art, the era that it was created.
And yeah, say a few of those same comments.
We were having good conversation before.
Oh, absolutely.
So what you're referring to, Theodore Kittleson is one of the many beautiful products of the age of the national romance, which was between 1800 and 1830, roughly, although some countries had it longer.
And what it is, is it's the last time Europe was re-enchanted.
And what I mean by that is we're talking about ethnogenesis here.
We're talking about a movement that really hit on all over Europe and it was all about highlighting the beautiful parts of nationalism, highlighting how every nation is unique and its people and its culture and history is unique and that should be celebrated.
And so he is one of the artists that truly took that to heart and started portraying Norway, which was still under Sweden at this time, in a very beautiful light and pointing out, for example, as you mentioned, with the trolls and our supernatural beings and our fairy tales and just how beautiful that is.
And so I think Norway owes him a tremendous debt of gratitude.
And we certainly are very fond of him as an artist.
And as a funny side note on that, Norway had laws outlawing Congress with trolls up until the 1200s, which just means that needed to be put into law.
Sure, right.
Can't be too careful.
Exactly.
Gnomes were a fair game, though, apparently.
Cute little boys and girls.
Absolutely.
No, no.
You're supposed to leave your milk out for them.
That's where you get the milk and cookies.
You know what?
I'm not okay with this, like, catering from gnomes because that's a slippery slope into catering to Mexicans.
Well, yeah.
So what song were you thinking about suggesting for the show closer there, Laritz?
Well, so you have one in mind.
I know it's a bit long-winded, so I was maybe thinking a paired-down version of Dunkelheight.
Ooh, yeah.
Okay.
Dunkel Height.
Yeah.
And hey, if you want to listen to a couple during the day over there and change your mind, have that.
If it's Dunkelheight, it's Dunkelheit.
Well, I was going to suggest, just for coaches' tender ears, you know, Handsome Reist.
Handsome Reist, which is he who traveled.
Right?
Yeah.
Is that what that translates?
Did it?
Hansen Reist.
Yeah.
From Detsum and Gangvar, which is that which was, once was.
Is that right?
Yeah, 100%.
You know your lore, man.
You know your lore.
Yeah.
I just heard Handsome Racist is the sound of the song to me.
Yeah, I thought that might be just a little more, you know, for those who are listening or for coach that are not big black metal fans, that might be a little more, you know, gentle.
You know what?
You're right.
I'll leave it up to, I'll leave it up.
But Dunkel Height is a solid song for sure.
A solid song.
So either one of those I would I would go for.
Just to clarify, Sam, I totally love all the screaming black metal.
It's just for the fans.
It's for the audience and the kids in the fan.
Not about me.
Still scarred from whatever garbage JO played.
That song sucked so much.
It's the worst song in full house history.
Somebody said, I never thought I'd hear full house play.
I can't even think of the name.
It was kind of a one-hit wonder.
It was Lorna Shore.
Lorna Shore.
Lorna Shore.
I only know it because it was a woman's name.
Yeah.
Very, very strange all around.
All right, guys.
Huge thanks to Loritz for waking up so early and hanging with us straight through.
Yeah, I kind of like these, just powering through and going as long as possible.
Sometimes we need to take a bio break, but again, just slam an iced tea.
Another half gallon here.
I've been staying off the sauce just because I like feeling good and getting back into shape.
But maybe I'll have a little line after this one.
I think we earned it.
Loritz, thank you so much, buddy.
Much appreciated.
And yep, anytime, even with the time difference.
Sammy baby, this was fun.
Yeah.
All over the place.
Good stuff.
Absolutely.
If the fans don't like it, they can go pound sand.
Right.
That's right.
Just kidding, guys.
And Rolo, you didn't get a last bite at the apple if you got anything in the stack.
Yeah, just follow my Odyssey channel, Odyssey slash Final Storm.
You don't even have to listen to it or subscribe to the RSS feed.
Just follow it.
There's a reason we need to get our followers up for some red tape crap.
Make some as many socks as you can.
Just give us a follow.
I mean, it's better if you listen to it because we don't tell you why good things happening to you is bad.
And we say why bad things happening to the system is good.
Like and subscribe.
And I always have that in the show notes, but I'll bump it up here.
I made an arrow.
Certainly, when I go to type up the show notes, I'll see that arrow and remember to bump it up.
Probably.
All right.
Laritz, Godspeed.
Sam, always a pleasure.
Rolo, B plus, maybe an A minus this week.
I think I'm pretty good.
And we love you, fam.
There you go.
Two shows in two weeks.
Are you not entertained?
And we'll see what we do going forward.
But God knows.
Let's try and get a turkey.
Come on.
Greedy, jealous, needy.
But hey, there's a ton of things happening out there.
And I'm certainly more energized than I was toward the end of 2024 personally.
So we'll see how things go.
We love you.
We'll talk to you next week, hopefully.
And Sam, it's over to you.
See ya.
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