From good things happening in the world to our own lives, we should all be grateful just to be alive. Join us for an upgraded, upbeat assessment of the passing scene. Bumper: Also Sprach Zarathustra by Deodato Break: Power to Believe by The Dream Academy Close: Not Alone by The Midnight (DJ Rolo) Subscribe to White Stag Athletic Club: Justice for Ash & His Family on Telegram, and write to him. And don't forget his wife and girls: https://www.givesendgo.com/SupportingPSharp Do us a favor and subscribe to The Final Storm on Odysee. Based & Confused as well. 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. 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 soon.
Yeah, we made you earn this one with that little bit of lengthy bumper music.
And we are still the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole family.
It is episode 216.
And from where I'm sitting at least, it is Friday, October 17th, 2025, deep in the heart of the most enchanting month of the year.
I am, as always, your trusty host, Coach Finstock.
And that pure 70s masterpiece you heard there is called Also Sprock Zarathustra.
And that was featured in the 1979 classic Being There, starring Peter Sellers as the retarded gardener chance, who then goes by Chauncey Gardner.
It's one of my favorite films.
It's definitely quirky.
And I think just my favorite thing is it just exudes the 70s in a bit of a way that the not the poltergeist, but the movie about the priest and the exercise, the exercise.
I was like, oh, God.
But, you know, another DC film.
There's just a scene where Peter Sellers, as a handicapped gardener, is walking up a dividing, you know, a highway divider toward the Capitol building as that music is playing.
And it's just stuck out in my mind.
Anyway, I endorse being there from 1979.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Johnny, the friend father, and Charles for their kind donations after we did our last show.
It was about a month ago.
Sorry about that, fam.
And if you enjoyed this one, just check us out at givesendgo.com/slash fullhouse.
And Johnny wrote in to say, longtime listener, about time I share a few shekels.
Hail victory, our people, and make more white babies.
So after all that, let's get on to the birth panel and see if we have anything worthwhile to add after all these years.
I suspect we do.
First up, word on the street is that he has rented a love nest overlooking the ICE facility in Broadview, Illinois.
But instead of illicit liaisons there, he's just sitting up a lawn chair every night, cracking some cold tree floyds and enjoying the fireworks.
Sam, if I were you, I mean, it's not that far from you.
I'd maybe go by a roll by and see what's going on.
Yeah.
Well, you don't want to get involved in anything either.
You know, you don't want to get roped into it.
But yeah, it's pretty wild and funny to watch some of it.
Oh, absolutely.
Like, what do these people think?
Like, what is their notion of how this is going to go?
Like, we should let this country be taken over illegally by illegal aliens.
Or we should let street rabble come and just try to block law enforcement vehicles from doing their job.
Yeah, I mean, they are so clearly showing their true colors.
If anyone had any question about it, they would say, like, well, we're getting rid of these people.
They're here under kind of questionable circumstances.
Is it right, wrong?
But when you see the way that they're acting, they're so totally criminal about it.
These are many, many of them gang members and things like that.
Anyone observing this would say, yeah, these people need to go out of this country for sure.
If not the prison.
That iconic photo of the gay fag commie priest, like he's either getting pepper sprayed.
Sorry.
Hang that one up on the wall.
The footage of Abu Gazella, whatever the hell her name is.
I mean, she's like a six-maybe semi-cute white girl who's running for Congress.
She's basically an Antifa commentariat person and just tossing her flat ass on the concrete.
I was eating that up alive.
And it yet again reminded me that this is the superior timeline, even if we do have not eradicated philosemitism and Zionism from the highest echelons of power, even remotely yet.
For sure.
I mean, as we have said before, that some of the things we have in common with the conservatards, I mean, Antifa is not being taken down on our account.
That's for damn sure.
But the thing is, Antifa has made so many enemies of so many people that they're being disposed of, it would seem in a systematic way.
And I hope it goes all the way through to completion.
Yeah.
I mean, Andy Ngo, you know, gay Asian man, but he is Mr. Anti-Antifa, you know, inviting him to the White House.
Now, having a little summit at the White House, we know doesn't mean anything, right?
They had social media censorship summits the first term, et cetera, but they have started arresting them.
You literally have the head of the Department of Justice calling it a domestic terrorist organization.
It's been declared that, even if there's not the legal machinery exactly for that to fit, I guess they just have to go a little further and call it an international terrorist conspiracy, which it is.
It's, it's, yes, even, even if the meat isn't quite on the bones yet, the rhetoric is there.
Well, it doesn't, it doesn't have to be like 100% effective or something.
The people that get involved with this are not like virtuous or principled or anything like that.
This will actually scare a certain amount of them off.
Whereas we would stick to our principles and things like that, just like the anti-immigration stuff, you might say, well, really, that doesn't necessarily stop them.
I know, but put yourself in their position.
Are you going to take a chance on that?
Oh, well, maybe we will get a Democratic administration in three and a half years, or maybe Trump will let up or whatever you think might happen.
It can switch back just as easily.
So I like the fact that it sends a chill through the things.
This is a chill on antifa.
It's a chill on illegal immigrants.
It's maybe not, if I may use the phrase, the final solution, but it's, it is part of it.
They don't want to put that instruction in writing.
Yes.
It's purely communicated orally.
Exactly.
But you're right.
I mean, you're right.
The Antifa professor from Rutgers literally fled to Spain.
They found the Rose City Antifa founder in Sweden just the other day.
Apparently, he's been over there for a while.
It was nice to see them getting a taste of their own medicine.
And whenever I see them cry about civil liberties, or when I see right-wingers say, the Democrats are going to use this against us.
It's like, both of you shut up, faggots, you know, faggots of a different color.
Yeah, this is our, this is the chance.
They are going harder than anybody really expected, or most of us expected.
Welcome it, encourage it, demand more.
Same stuff we've been saying.
Yeah, I almost forgot we have another person on the show, Sam.
He's very easy to forget.
Yeah, go ahead, big guy.
Quickly, and then I'll shut up.
You can see the seasons have changed, and you can see the lemon tree has come back inside.
It is behind me.
The gorgeous, gorgeous neon light.
It looks like you're in some sort of fashion wave or synth wave video about with an Aryan nations t-shirt on.
Excuse me, okay.
Corn cob pipe.
Anyway, welcome back, Sam.
Thank you for riding my ass to do the show.
You see, you see, that's what I said.
I told Sam or Rolo, if we don't record this week, I'm a cuck faggot.
It's pardon my language.
And I could not allow that to stand.
So, yeah, I put it off for long enough.
Next up, a couple of different ways to go with this intro here, but I will say with full sincerity that he is now a published author of a work of fiction.
I won't say genre or name or pen name or whatever, but my wife read it and enjoyed it.
And Rolo, welcome back, buddy.
Congratulations.
I salute you.
Seriously.
Thank you.
I do the best I can with what I have.
And what I have is a good question.
Yeah, obviously, I don't think you want to draw the connection between the two, but that's always been something I've always looked at writing a book, whether fiction or nonfiction or autobiography is like, oh, God, what a huge hassle.
Did you enjoy doing it or was it a labor, a beast of burden?
So the hard part was actually formatting it.
That was the hard part.
Really?
Yeah.
I would have thought the creative process was the most time consuming.
No, no, because what happened was I had this idea and I was just with some friends.
I'm like, wouldn't it be funny if like this happened?
And then I was like, you know what?
That's a good idea.
I'm going to write that down.
And then like the next day, I was like, dude, I'm going to write this book.
And then just like three months later, obviously I didn't do anything, but I was like, you know what?
I'm actually going to write it.
And then, cause I had the whole idea in my head.
I was just like, yeah, whatever.
And then just like, I kind of made it up as I went along.
Like I had an idea for what I was going to do.
And because anyone, I would guess almost everyone listening has had an idea, like, I should write a book on something.
Most people, I think, have had that thought that are like, even if it doesn't sell much, right?
Just get that off your chest.
Yeah.
But most people just don't go through with it because it's like, yeah, it's all, it's a lot to go through.
And I don't know.
I've always considered myself pretty creative.
But so like once I started going, it wasn't, it wasn't too bad.
It did take a while, but honestly, the only thing that was tough was formatting it because it's not as simple as you would think.
Did you storyboard it or make an outline?
I had an idea for like, all right, so this is the big picture.
This is what it should be about.
And then as I went along, I made an outline for each chapter and then just kind of filled in the blanks from there instead of just like, okay, this is going to be the whole thing.
I'm going to do another one.
That is without question.
But the next one I'm doing, I'm going to take more time in the planning process because it was just like my first stab at it.
And it didn't take me as long as I think it should have.
But I think the next time I do it, I think it'll be much leaner and much easier to do.
But the, yeah, the biggest, once I started going, it was just like really just easy to just get through.
Yeah, the biggest problem was just kind of, because, you know, oh, it's, it's ready.
And, you know, I can just gotta gotta sell it now.
And like, oh, wait, I have to actually make it like printable.
And I can't just send a Word document to the publisher.
Enough of your stupid book.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
I asked.
Sorry, Rollo.
Okay.
I'll switch this on.
Don't worry about it.
No, don't, don't, don't cut it.
We got a lot of things.
Anyway, seriously, though, friends of the show, I guess trusted associates or whatnot, if you're interested in the copy, I will defer to the author in terms of how to, you know, the dangerous dance of, you know, who can get their hands on Rolo's Sam is dot book.
But yep, we'll, I'll, we'll do that on a case-by-case basis.
Um, let us just start right here at the top.
Uh, it's, you know, like I said, October 17th.
It's been absolutely gorgeous here.
The weather has been perfect.
The skies have been crystal blue.
The leaves are falling.
I've had so much fun with the leaf blower.
I've probably lost half my hearing because that thing is loud as hell.
The Milwaukee leaf blower is my second favorite tool to the hedge trimmer that I love on all the thorns and weeds here.
No, the snowblower, well, I love the snowblower for its symbol of accomplishment when I fixed the carburetor last winter.
But I have been happy.
Things have been going good at work.
I got a really good piece of news personally/slash professionally related to my now six-year saga since getting dox in 2019.
But I can't share it just yet because it's not like bird in the hand completely.
And I still have to check with my legal eagle who's always advised me to say nothing at all about anything.
And even doing the show, I think gave him some anxiety.
But I'll just leave that there as a teaser.
That fighting nerve and poor co-hosts.
Just remembering your poor co-hosts.
Yeah, maybe.
Yeah.
I remember, Sam, when we started, you're like, well, kid docs wouldn't be that big a deal.
And then it happened to me.
I was like, well, that was kind of a big deal, Sam.
But hey, yeah, life went on.
And I was having a long talk with a loved one the other day.
And she was actually a little bit reticent to ask.
She was like, do you ever stop and think that it's actually a good thing that happened?
I said, oh, yeah, absolutely.
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, Y, you know, almost 26 examples of why my life is better after, you know, moving on to life 2.0, just with a couple, you know, frankly, material hiccups there that have been semi-painful.
So yeah, making lemons that are lemonade out of out of lemons for sure and fighting ended up bearing fruit.
And on top of that, I was just, you know, like I went to pick up the kids at the bus stop and the bus had beaten me by like 30 seconds.
So I happened to catch them walking down the hill with beautiful fall colors and a crystal clear blue sky behind them.
And they're all like one, two, three, you know, tall, medium, short, healthy, reasonably happy.
You know, it's a Friday.
I always say happy weekend on Fridays when they get off the bus.
Fur Friday.
Furer Friday.
Fure Friday.
I don't actually say that, Sam, but maybe I'll add that to the repertoire.
They might roll their eyes like, yeah, yeah, dad.
But I just, I just said, yeah.
Why do I, you know, what do I do to deserve such a good, happy, healthy, loving life?
I really do that.
And I was driving the other day, Sam, and looked up through the sunroof to thank God.
I was like, I better stop doing that because I'm going to like crash into a tree like Alec Baldwin.
We said that the last time.
That is, that is one of the most important things you could do.
The saints always say, what is the most important thing?
What does God love the most?
He loves the gratitude and the acknowledgement of him in your life.
And so you're really doing an important thing.
And I hope anyone hearing this will do that same thing.
We know the old adage, count your blessings.
And that might, it sounds a little corny or hollow, but if you sit and think about it.
That's so true.
You know, I can, I could name at least 10 things off about both of you guys that would be, you wouldn't have it any other way.
So you got to think of things that way.
You got to take moments like you did to reflect and to be thankful, not only just thankful, but thankful to God.
Yeah.
And honestly, this time of year in this part of the country of West Virginia, it's so breathtakingly beautiful.
The cat just scratched me on the leg.
See, Rolo, that's why I hate my cat.
She just came up and scratched me unprovoked.
She's got, she's got food.
See, that's what I mean, Sam.
I was like, oh, she's petting you.
Things are going.
Yeah, she's sharpening her claws on my leg.
That's lovely.
Tell her, but Catter Day is tomorrow.
Catter days tomorrow.
I had not actually heard that before.
But I always think like, okay, things are going too well.
Let us not crash into a tree.
Let us not get sick.
You know, let's keep an eye on the kids.
Let's not get not get cocky here.
Whenever I get good news, I look over my shoulder and make sure I'm not about to get stabbed.
You know, maybe too many movies.
But yeah, just loving it and got daughter's Halloween costume.
I had to go to eBay.
If your kids have like a tough Halloween costume, I was looking at Walmart, Amazon.
Some of this stuff was going to take like 30 days to get here.
They wanted $50 to ship it.
I said, screw this.
I hadn't used eBay to buy something in 10 years, 12 years.
I thought maybe my account would be deactivated.
And then boom, right there, quick shipping for about the same price as the other ones were going to be.
So if you're in a pinch for a Halloween costume for the kids, consider eBay.
And then I did find it funny.
I don't know if the audience knows that I'm from New Jersey, but our pal Crash was shocked to hear that I was a Jersey boy, more or less, you know, 17 of my first formative 18 years and didn't have a noticeable New Jersey accent.
Now, I don't know if Sam and Rolo agree with that.
Obviously, Sam sounds straight from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, of course.
But do you guys think that I have a noticeable Jersey accent or California?
I don't, I don't think, I don't, I don't think of Rollo as having an accent whatsoever, but I don't think of him as having an accent either.
Okay.
No, no, not on you, coach.
I mean, your accent is what we call like an urban accent, of course.
You're not a country person.
That's right.
That's right.
Oh, yeah.
And Rolo does have kind of a laid back sound to his voice, like you might think of a West Coast person.
A little bit.
Sure.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
But I don't know why that is because I, you know, I definitely noticed the South Jersey, of course, North Jersey New York accent is noticeable.
And my parents are from there, but they didn't really have one.
And when I heard, you know, you can, when you hear it, it always was a little bit grating to me in the background.
So maybe I consciously blocked it out and didn't pick it up.
My wife is from somewhere over there and she has a certain amount of that accent.
Literally.
Yeah, I'm trying to think.
It's not heavy, but in certain words, it comes out more.
Yep.
Yep.
Here and there.
Anyway.
Like water.
Yeah.
Yep.
Those types of vowel sounds.
Bounce the basketball on the cement.
They call it cement in South Jersey.
At least some people do.
Picture.
Take a picture of that.
Okay, whatever.
And they stand online.
They don't stand inline.
Maybe that's North Jersey.
I don't remember standing online versus inline, but yeah, a little bit of a divide there.
I did want to, I forgot to highlight your shirt, Sam.
Is that Aryan Nations?
Yes, it is.
Yeah.
There's a great guy.
I don't know if I can promote his.
I don't know that I have permission to promote it.
He's got a Telegram channel where he's got just an absolute ton of t-shirts and designs and things.
And now, if there's one person in this world who should not buy even one more racist t-shirt, it's me because I have them on shelves.
I have them in drawers.
I can wear one a day, you know?
And yeah, but he had some really interesting ones.
This Aryan Nations Shield logo was, I thought, a really interesting one.
I used to have a patch on my bomber jacket, the same design many years ago.
And so, yeah, he had some nice designs.
And I picked up three, I actually bought three shirts.
One that I bought that I really like was the band Brutal Attack has a song called The Return of St. George.
And of course, in English, English kind of mythological thinking, it's like the return of King Arthur.
The return of St. George is, you know, when our people really need help, these great heroes will come back.
You know, so he had he had two different designs of the return of St. George.
I got them both in this Aryan Nation shirt.
So super cool stuff.
Yeah, it's got like, as I look at it, it's got almost the Confederate flag in the background, the Christian iconography, and a little bit of the swastika going on at the same time.
Very powerful.
Anyway, I also forgot to mention that Rollo is drinking tonight, Angry Orchard, because it had some Friday the 13th or Nightmare on Elm Street theme to it, which he is a bug man for horror films.
So hopefully Rollo will be falling off of his chair by the end of the show.
We'll get to hear a wilder side from him.
Aside from singing Payans to October, which we've done in the past, I did want to talk, the talk of the town this week for sure was the politico unquestionable hit piece about the mendacious leaking of the New York young Republicans.
It looked like a Telegram chat to me and the multiple things going on there that I thought were cool and good news and revealing and showing pushback.
But first off, it's not at all a surprise to me that something as supposedly milquetoast as the New York Republicans, even if they're just making jokes about watermelon people and gassing their enemies.
I don't actually really like, if I saw a rape joke in a private chat, I'd be like, I would delete it if I were the admin.
That's kind of crude.
Gas chambers, totally fine, but no rape, please.
And yeah, and seeing the commentary, it go, oh, yes.
I mean, I've worked with young Republicans.
They all actually talk like this.
They're all Nazis.
It's like, yes, yes, of course.
I love the pithy observation, like Jews destroy your country.
And then you're going to act surprised that young men like Adolf Hitler.
There are a number of things, a number of lessons very telling about this.
First of all, like, would we make these types of jokes or post some type of content like this?
Absolutely, sure.
Behind all our sock names and security and things like that, These people are known people who are putting this out there, which shows, first of all, they are like at on the rung one or first or second rung on this journey of a ladder up the racist destination.
But it also shows how big our thing is, because the mentality is spreading far and wide.
And one of my sons was pointing out, if you look at some of these people with their profiles and that, some of them are not even white or kind of mystery meat looking people.
So, and I'm not saying we welcome them by any means, but our mentality and our jokes and our logic has spread very, very far and wide.
Yeah, somebody said these racists are so out of control, they'll even welcome black people as long as they're racist too.
Yeah.
And the ultimate big loser, just being serious about this, the ultimate big loser in this is Jewish power.
Because the black people, but yes, yes, yes.
The black people can make black people.
When you're making the loser, though, because he's talking about big pictures.
Well, the old GOP slowly dying and withering away, the pearl clutching, you know, of course, a lot of those people got fired and banished to the wilderness, at least for now.
But every Holocaust joke and gas chamber joke in some way breaks down that myth that has held power over us for so long, you know, and just step over it, mock it.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Yeah, I'm a Nazi.
Now, we're going to talk about infiltration and all those dynamics, but go ahead, Rob.
Well, I want to back up what Sam was saying about that.
And that is the bigger loser in this because their whole mission is essentially to make sure that their people and their base never turn on Israel.
Right.
Republican establishment.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So like the people that are working for them are saying that they love Hitler and then they're making jokes about gas chambers.
So I would say, yeah, that shows that they have failed.
And the old guard has failed to preserve what it's intended to do.
Because the GOP in the boomer form is the Israel Party.
Like the Democrat is the non-white party.
The GOP is the Israel Party.
And they failed to maintain that.
It is dying.
Flipping through their fingers for sure.
It dies with the boomers.
And Loritz, who has no bottom to his ability to blackpill and analyze things and see like, this is bad, this is bad.
You know, even he has to agree that the insurgency that we waged as part of the alt-right or WN 2.0, whatever you want to call it from circa 2014 through 2018, 19, whatever, unquestionably broke down barriers and normalized rhetoric, conversation, ideas, historical truths that were previously totally suppressed or in like little conference rooms in England and maybe in Baltimore.
And we played absolutely a part of that.
And I was thinking about that the other day too, because sometimes you can look back and say, well, that was stupid, undisciplined, immature, unserious, and a failure.
And it was in a hard power sense, but in a soft power cultural insurgency sense, unquestionably, all that trolling is a lot of it's a waste of time.
It can quote unquote ruined life, which basically means you get fired and some people hate you and your real opinions are associated with your name.
But it influenced a whole generation of young white men around the world growing up on the internet and getting their information from there and saying F you to all of the stupid rules from apologizing to your enemies to having to kowtow to Jews to pretending that race is not real.
All those things are out the window.
And as Mitch McConnell vividly displayed, that old guard is dying off, getting mercilessly trolled by a pack trekker, everybody on Twitter, to everybody.
I tried to find several young Republican groups put out tut-tutting responses.
We did not discard of rhetoric.
And I really tried to go through the replies and not just have my Nazi algorithm.
curating only the negative trolls and memes.
I couldn't find a single person whose name didn't end in Stein who was like, you know, it was all like, gay, you suck, never apologize.
They want you dead.
So even if the Republican Party is not National Socialist today, far from it, its rank and file, its most likely adherents have a fighting spirit and literally see this in the Sam Haidian framing of they want you dead.
I saw they want you dead.
Charlie Kirk, of course, helped to drive that home.
It's white-coated, as they say.
That doesn't mean it is, you know, through and through or that it does amplify our values or hold our values or whatever.
But also there's you can see the confidence building in it.
I remember the video of that guy, if you recall, he shows up at a Democratic National Convention activity and he's wearing a Trump sweater.
And he's going around and the people are accosting him, like women, of course, grabbing him and trying to force him out, grabbing him by the shoulders and blocking him like a football tackle almost, you know, just swearing at him, people just insulting him, all that type of thing.
And then he goes to the Republican activity and he wears a Biden shirt.
People are laughing and taking pictures with him and joking with him and playing with him.
And that shows, that shows strength, even though I don't tell me about that the Republicans are not on our side.
I understand all that.
It's voted that way.
And the symbolism of it is like I'm trying to tell you.
So that shows like a certain confidence that is in place.
Absolutely.
The Republican Party is still the white people's party.
Yeah.
It's the white straight Christian party.
It's the anti-antifo party now.
It is the party of mass deportations and ICE physical removals and street brawling and pepper bombing people trying to block.
It's the party of when it's in power.
It posts memes on Twitter.
It's the party that now is actually prosecuting its enemies and the people who were playing dirty against it.
The former FBI director arrested or indicted.
A former National Security advisor, John Bolton, arrested.
Almost, that's going to be hard to see him get out of that one.
And there was some Jew on NPR, Jonathan Weissman, who was a former U.S. prosecutor.
And it was like this total thumb sucking boohoo me and oh, the principles and the rights of law.
And then the interviewer was like, are you actually a little concerned that you might get arrested?
It was on her mind that he might be next.
He's like, well, I didn't do anything wrong.
So you just have to go about your life and stuff like that.
But I don't want to hear like, we know the Republicans suck and they're not there yet.
But more than ever, whether it is white nationalists or national socialists, no, it's not.
But it's certainly not your father's or your grandpappy's or GOP that we grew up with.
Yeah, the groundswell, you know, the grassroots is going the way we say it's going.
Absolutely.
The Department of Homeland Security is saying remigrate.
The Department of State just tonight was like, you know what?
Going over to blue sky is a great way to find people who deserve to have their visas revoked.
That is inciting a culture of fear that if you open up your big fat commie visa holding mouth, you might get evicted.
Now, frankly, I don't want people getting kicked out for anti-Semitism specifically because that's so important to the ultimate motion, but I'm certainly not going to cry in my beer at brown, lefty, anti-white, violent, or just thuggish people getting kicked out, even if they're also anti-Semitic.
And never forget that those people aren't anti-Semitic out of any kind of principles like, oh, they're genociding host nations.
They're not people that are rent-seeking against brown people.
They're slum lords, and then they're killing brown Arabs.
That's what they see.
And then if you try to explain it to them, they say, shut up, Jews, white.
Right.
If you try to explain to a brown person, no, no, no, I'm white.
They're Jewish.
Oh, oh, yeah, they look white to me.
It's like, you're trying to explain to people that like they can't, they can't tell you how they would feel if they didn't have breakfast, the nuances of race.
Like you could, you couldn't have a more uphill battle.
Yeah.
More important than what happened and what it showed, though, I think, is the debate that it spurred because there was a whole, it was a retreading.
We've had the infiltrate versus become pro-white National Socialist Vanguard or, you know, check out of the system and move to the hills, which I do not denigrate, although I understand why some people do, you know, retreat, et cetera, live in the woods.
Nobody's afraid of that.
Some truth to that too.
But this whole self-absorbed sort of, I almost view it as delusions of grandeur.
And I hope this isn't de-radicalizing, but everybody in an age of social media and like a tumultuous time sort of views themselves in some way as a main character, either as the person to give strategic advice on the internet, or maybe I'm the person who's going to infiltrate and become little Hitler growing up.
Now, are there a handful or dozens or hundreds of men who have that potential in them in our ranks or coming to our ranks?
Yes, unquestionably.
They probably know who they are.
But for the majority of our audience, you know, they like to paint us as cranks or abnormals or antisocial, you know, attendees, basement, internet, et cetera.
Most of our guys are normal guys with families or trying to get them.
And they have jobs and they have income responsibilities and they have lives to live.
And the decision on what you do with your life is so much different than like, should I infiltrate the U.S. government to try to change things or should I join this revolutionary vanguard?
Because number one, like your likelihood of infiltrating and being safe and yet being effective and eventually coming to a position of real authority and power is frankly infinitesimal.
That's not to say that infiltration or joining power structures is a bad idea.
And then on the flip side of that, the likelihood that you are going to become this planet shaking figure who's going to totally overturn the Jewish power structure, at least in our lifetimes, is also infinitesimal.
So, you know, I'm not advising everybody to just be like, you know, don't worry about this and go about your lives and make money and look after, have a good family, but that is a huge part of your life and your happiness and being realistic about what you're good at and what your strengths are and what your weaknesses are, how you can best make money.
Who are the people who really run the world?
Aside from the Jews, obviously, you think of guys like Jeff Bezos or Peter Thiel or Alon Musk.
Why are they in those positions?
Combination of brilliance, some degree of self-discipline.
Alan, of course, is a bit of an exception in that rule.
And partially through their brilliance and hard work, they became filthy, rotten rich.
So becoming really wealthy, whether it's through investing or an invention or becoming a CEO or something, is its own sort of course of infiltration.
Wealth is still a massive power level lever.
So this idea that you have to go join the CIA as an intern or go work for the Republican Party to infiltrate is a little bit silly.
Know yourself.
And if you're into, most people go into politics are narcissists or sociopaths or nerds, right?
And I suspect that the vast majority of people go into politics, like they do some grunt work.
Maybe they make it to the ballot and maybe they most likely lose on the first ballot.
Maybe they keep struggling, but it's kind of a miserable business.
Similarly, going to join the government as a young man or woman at a low ranks does provide a pretty good income with benefits.
It's probably harder to do that now with cutbacks and the shutdown and spending cuts and whatnot.
But it's not a terrible way to get some job security.
Obviously, it didn't work for me when the rubber hits the road.
But there's like you're not instantly going to be swallowed up.
You're not going to be able to join the CIA or the FBI and all of a sudden start like making real meaningful change.
But it's not exactly like, especially now.
I mean, if Kamala won, maybe it would be totally pointless.
But with the pendulum starting to swing back, it's not like you join the U.S. government and then all of a sudden you're swallowed up by the Borg and you're assimilated to some sort of deracinated trash.
Like there's multiple ways for you to go out there to thineself be true.
Know what you want to accomplish in life, what you're good at.
And are you disciplined enough to not say nigger and hail Hitler and gas the kikes race war now in a private chat?
Because if you're really serious about becoming a powerful, wealthy, influential person, you probably have to start summoning that discipline now.
Just because we can all be lazy and haphazard and loosey-goosey in private chats, but private chats can leak.
Things can come back to bite you.
I'll stop there, Sam.
Thanks.
Yeah, it's, you know, you have to look at the opportunities that are before you.
You know, it's not everybody can pursue that type of path.
It still depends where you were born and what kind of schools you happen to go to, who your parents were, what kind of doors are in front of you.
But you can be, you know, we have a mutual friend who's a truck driver who has said he's met multiple guys who are truck drivers who are multiple, who are multi-millionaires.
So you can succeed at anything.
And at any rate, if you're called to the family life, you can have a wife and children and a family.
And that is contributing in a big way.
And just your viewpoint has to inform every part of your life.
You joked about one time, Coach, how every time I come on here, I'm always wearing a shirt.
Well, the thing is, I try to make every single part of my life is an expression of my dissidence and my rebellion from the music I listen to to the clothes I wear to the places I go, the books I read, the people I hang out with, whatever it is, you know.
So you can embrace that personal war in whatever walk of life you may be a rural person who's doing some kind of manual labor.
There's no dishonor in that, you know, and you can have a beautiful family.
And when I was having children, be a good neighbor and drop truth bombs.
And, you know, it's not.
But even having a lot of children, people might say, well, you know, it looks like you can't afford that.
I know, but can't bring your way out of the Sam.
Well, we'll just see.
And that's my act.
That's my act of rebellion.
You know what I mean?
And that's what I speak, the things I say, I hope it comes across.
I'm trying to challenge people to be that way.
And if I might just slightly introduce one of the other topics, you know, I went to some, we had some local gigs here recently.
And we had three, three significant white power gigs in the area.
And this is like Comme Central.
So that is in one sense says something about how times are changing.
Back even as much as a year ago, we were, my band was going to play a backup position in the bill and the gig got shut down.
We had to go to somebody's house and play.
So that there could be three very openly white power gigs in the area in this area shows that something about the enemy's power is changing.
Vibe shift.
Yep.
Vibe shift.
And by the way, coach, I sold five full house t-shirts.
Yeah, I got to wet my beak on that, Sam.
You know, I have exclusive rights.
God bless you.
But here's the point I wanted to make about that, because we talk amongst ourselves about podcast race, you know, and I'm not calling out anyone in particular, but we know certain podcasts come across with a certain tone and they use words like white toyed and right-toid and things like that.
And even some people who are longtime listeners of podcasts, perhaps this even applies to you or to Rolo, like kind of people are soured on podcasts and the quest for hot takes and the know-it-all attitude sometimes sounds like.
But here's the thing.
I went to the first gig because it was much earlier in my recovery.
And so I was really probably, my doctor would have said, don't be going to anything like that.
But I went to the first night of there were these three gigs and I went to the first.
And you can watch them on YouTube, by the way, so you can see what I'm saying is true.
But here is a thriving, exuberant throng of young people full of white power.
They don't know anything about these podcasts.
If I asked every single person there, have you listened to this podcast?
If I gave them a list of these podcasts, they wouldn't know what any of them are.
But yet these are the young people full of exuberance and life.
And I was so encouraged by that because this is what you're not getting from a lot of podcasts or some podcasts that I have in mind is the idea of populism.
And I hope that comes across in our show is and on our show, we're on the side of our listeners, right?
We're not talking down or against the listeners or against any group of white nationalists.
We are on the side of white nationalists.
And that's what these people, these young people, that's the type of message they need to get.
They need to receive.
That's the thing that used to have.
It felt like back in the day, we were all rowing roughly in the same direction, even if in different canoes, maybe a little bit askew here or there.
Even with some of the creepy, like alt-light people, still, there was an insurgent sort of common theme going in there, which was that we obviously had to defeat the left and get Donald Trump elected, which, by the way, we were very important.
Yeah, that first term sucks so bad it threw things off.
But yeah.
Where is that populism, that exhilaration and exuberance that I observe that I try to have when I say the happier warrior, whether my side is winning or losing does not matter to me.
I'm doing this for my own personal sense of power.
I'm doing it because it is right.
And that's what I want to get across to the listeners is for yourself too.
Yeah.
You get one guy.
like what I'm describing with that sort of positive, powerful attitude, that guy is very dangerous to the system.
Not in a crime way, not in a terrorist way, but in a very real existential way, if you know what I mean.
Absolutely.
And to put a bow on it too, Sam, what I was really wanted to get home to people is that this thing can become a dangerous distraction or an obsession, right?
Where you're online all the time and you're thinking in memes and everything is related to that.
That's not to say you shouldn't get involved, that you shouldn't engage in all that.
But when you're on your deathbed, wherever it may be, for most people, for the majority of people, it's going to be the family that you built and the legacy that you left for them, not how good Nazi white nationalist activists you are.
Not to say that's not important because that requires courage and principle and putting ideas and your greater people ahead of, you know, you could call it cowardice or greed or materialism.
But you still need to hold a job and raise a family and be a good father and a husband and all those things.
And that was what I, I was just like, this is all like for most of our guys, they should probably focus more on their personal lives and being good.
And I don't mean that to be demeaning, like you're all screw-ups or whatnot, because I was like, there was a period where I was so into this stuff.
I was always pretty much a good father, but like neglected my marriage and was thinking in Twitter's and was on my phone 24-7.
And that made some little ripple of a difference in the fabric of how things have changed.
And I don't really regret it, but I would certainly do it a little bit different now, knowing how things go and the challenges that we face.
But your focus on positivity, on not wallowing in despair, black pilloy.
You know, there's, there's like that whole schism where people are like, no, all, yeah, all this sucks.
You're not getting any W's.
This is all a facade.
And I was thinking that was what this term was going to be like.
We don't have to beat this dead horse.
We've talked about it before, but you can't tell me that this is not a good thing when you see ICE massively ramping up hiring and deportations.
Don't give me Obama or Biden were bigger deporters.
They were just catching people at the border, sending them back and chalking them up on the data board.
The rests of your enemies, the pardoning or the commuting even of fag George Santos, right?
You punish your enemies and you reward your friends.
They're finally starting to exhibit the understanding of power and how important this opportunity is.
And I love that the shutdown's dragging on for so long.
I mean, they'll be like, well, during the shutdown, what has not really declined?
You know, air traffic controllers are important.
You know, the courts are like, can I have to start cutting back?
I guess you really do need operating courts, but lay off the shit that doesn't matter, right?
And that's fulfilling a promise that Republicans were, you know, cut back government.
Big government is the problem, not the solution.
And they're actually doing that too and not getting much credit for it from our, you know, the big bad USG, Uncle Zog, Randy Weaver, right?
And they're, you know, getting the leftists out of DOJ.
They're firing people left or right.
Julie Kelly, whatever on Twitter is like, oh, yeah, this DOJ person just got fired.
Oh, this DOJ person just resigned.
And they were all, you know, the career apparatchics or professional leftists who had just been entrenched there for a long time.
So the times they are changing and the left is freaked out and on their back heels.
The New Jersey and the Virginia governor's elections coming up next month will be very telling.
It's yeah, the black woman in Virginia and then an Italian guy in New Jersey's got a chance.
They're probably both going to lose, but maybe Tyrone and not her, you know, did you read anything about this starting in November, the snap benefits and the EBT cards are going to come to an end?
I doubt that that will really happen.
I wish it would because that would be hilarious.
I think I remember seeing that before, like it's Ron Paul, it's happening when the EBT guards run dry.
It's possible, but I'm not getting any hopes up there.
It would be good if it did happen someday, but think of think of the plan some Jew hatched long ago, or maybe not a Jew, just an anti-white.
You know, some of the worst anti-whites are white themselves.
But somebody thought of this, have this population of these worthless niggers that are dependent, utterly dependent on these welfare and EBT and everything, so that all you got to do is yank it away and you have like an army of violent people who will be robbing people.
You know what I mean?
This is literally the orcs.
The orcs are being pacified by Sauron at the moment.
Yes, exactly.
Did you guys see what the Democrats were demanding to like funding for to reopen the border?
The government, you mean?
It's all about, it's about Obamacare health subsidies.
And I think that, I mean, they wanted money to establish like feminism in Africa, like feminist study, like feminist colleges in Africa.
No, there's a bunch of really like, it's like the most obvious thing, like, like, all right, we're not going to give you that.
Like, fine, well, I guess you're going to have to shut down the government.
It's like, it's like clearly like, we got you now, and we're going to blame it on you.
And it's both sides blaming it on each other.
There is, it's pretty funny.
It is.
Yeah, they, uh, the crux of it is the Obamacare health care subsidies, which, you know, there's plenty of white people who probably get their health insurance through there.
And the premium, the premium hikes.
Yeah.
It's either you're illegal to not to not be on it.
They did get rid of that.
Yeah.
It's no longer illegal or a tax penalty to not have health insurance.
But remember that there were a couple of years where it was like you got a piece of paper in the mail that was like, yes, you did have health insurance.
I did.
Yeah, because I was paying $150 a month for health care and it was really good.
I could go any hospital, any doctor.
And then Obamacare was passed and it went up to $900.
Whatever.
I'm young.
I'm healthy.
I don't have to worry about it.
How is that going to work?
Yeah.
How is that an improvement on anything?
And then I got a letter in the mail that said, you will be fined $1,800 if you don't go to like, if you don't register for this thing.
Awakening $900.
Libertarian.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was crazy.
And then I had to go to a place that it was like, it was like 30 miles away.
And then I just had to go and establish care.
And it's a super fobby Asian woman.
And I come in just to whatever.
And she's like, you want STD pet?
Like, what kind of place should you run at time?
But yeah.
You were a bit of a luxurio.
As well.
Yeah.
But it was weird that that was the first question.
Like, it was like, that's a normal thing in that place.
Yeah.
I, you know, to my experience, I just, it really like stuck in my craw and I just had to get it off my chest.
You know, when I joined the government, it was absolutely not an infiltration attempt.
It wasn't like, I'm going to get in there and then like spread, you know, I was like, no, I still had a latent patriotism and I wanted to, obviously I was a realist.
I was a conservative at the time.
And I thought I can go in and make a good life for myself, do some good, maybe push back on the garbage.
And the real lesson was the there was, I mean, there are a couple of times where I tried to steer policy in a direction.
And I may have said it before, I got sort of a pat on the hat, you know, if I would have a private conversation with someone who was in a real position of influence, usually a political appointee or a senior foreign service person.
And they would just sort of look at me like, that's cute that you think that your opinion matters, right?
So there's that element.
And then I did get asked once after a speech, you know, well, Coach, do you think that, you know, we should have our kids join the NSA and the CIA and stuff like that?
And I was like, that, that branch, if they're really good and they're really committed, but that's probably pushing it.
Like, you know, when you, and that was especially at that time in 2017, 2018, I don't know what it was, 2020, actually, you're asking for probably trouble.
They might actually get sucked up into the board.
But you send your kids to college and you risk them.
You know, it's like everything in life.
Go join, work for some corporation.
There's a risk.
And anything in America or in the world, if you join a big group, you're going to be put under a certain level of pressure to conform ideologically, you know, whether it's the stupid diversity training seminars or whatnot.
But that stuff is getting cut back.
So the point being is that there are more openings and more opportunities.
And it's not either or infiltration is stupid or national socialist vanguard is stupid or even frankly moving to a really rural area in happiness and peace and security with your family.
I wouldn't knock any of that.
You just need to know what you're capable of, what you want to do with your life, and then steer your kids to what they think.
Are they just going to be a lawyer or a doctor?
That's fine.
They want to go be a mover and a shaker in Washington.
You got to give them the cautionary tale in front of it.
But speaking of Washington, I was looking at myself on camera.
It looks like I'm actually wearing a wire.
Speaking of feds, but today, Sam, we talked about it last show.
I finally got my halter monitor on.
And the brand, I was very disturbed to see on the box, it said Zio in big letters.
It's a Zio halter monitor.
This goes back to my, I had seven days of palpitations last month that eventually went away.
And I was tempted to cancel it.
I was like, I don't want to wear this stupid thing, but got it installed today.
It's literally just like two little flat electrodes and then there's a button on it.
So if I feel any flutter, now this is more for people who have, they're like, you know, if you, if you faint, press the button.
I don't know how you're supposed to press the button if you're fainting.
You know, if you have chest pains, I haven't had any of that.
But if I feel a palpitation, I'm supposed to press the button and then it records it.
And they gave me a little journal for me to write down like at this moment on this day, I felt a little palpitation or whatever.
I haven't felt anything.
So I'm just going to rock this thing for two weeks with a little, it looks like I'm literally have a wire like the mafia would whack me if I went into a restaurant.
Yeah.
Coach, what if you've fallen and you can't get up?
Then I'd use the clapper to turn the lights back on.
Yeah.
Real, real throwback hours to, yeah, to childhood and all that stuff.
Chia pet, the clapper, and I fall in and I can't get up.
It's a simpler time, all white actors or whatever.
But let's do it now, Sam, before the break.
I want to hear more juicy, seminal details about your prostate.
Well, yeah, you know, since we rarely do these shows anymore, there's been some news.
You know, there's been some news because after a couple of weeks, after a few weeks after the operation, then, you know, you have a doctor's consultation scheduled where they're going to go over all the results because, of course, they dissect the lymph nodes to make sure or to check, you know, if there's cancer there or anything like that.
They sample the surrounding tissues to see, you know, has cancer spread there.
So, you know, that's, you might imagine that that weighs heavy on your mind in those three weeks or so since it's since the operation.
So that day was coming up and then went and had the appointment and he said the best possible news, most positive possible news, everything clean, clear.
Everything was the best that could be hoped for.
So yeah, that was, you know, when you're sitting on the other side of it, that's a great news to hear.
Now that it's over, I'm telling the story, maybe you get the sense of relief and joy that was on that moment.
But, you know, since that time, the recovery's continued.
You know, once I get out of these depends, we're going to have a special full house episode.
I got a plan because, you know, that's going to be, yeah, I'll let you know too right away.
Yeah, you should pin your used ones up on the wall and then burn them in the backyard.
I don't know.
Sorry.
Well, it's gotten better, you know, because on that first day, man, you can't control anything.
But then first week was like, okay, I think I kind of got a sense of how this is going.
You might be burning through, you know, three, four, five a day.
And then the next week I was, you know, maybe three to four a day.
The next week, two.
Now, today I wore one all day long and I was good, you know.
Hell yeah, Sam.
Yeah.
And then eventually you graduate to the, what do they call it?
Like an insert, you know, just kind of like a shield, they call it.
So that'll be the, that'll be the special full house, a special full house episode.
Extra long, extra long shield.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That's a big one.
Got to cover some real estate for sure.
Yeah, the depends, you know, I mean, it sucks in a way, but it's, like I said, I've made improvement and you kind of learn to get the hang of it and you improve every.
And then this, you know, this last Tuesday, we happen to be recording this on a Friday night.
Last Tuesday was six weeks.
And I was told six to eight weeks, you can't really, you know, don't do, don't lift anything more than 10 pounds.
Take it easy.
And as you know, I'm into lifting weights.
I'm into push-ups.
I'm into everything.
And all of that stopped, absolutely stopped for six weeks.
So on this Tuesday, this past Tuesday, I said, I'm going to go back to my push-ups and just see how that feels.
So I got up early on Tuesday morning, about a couple minutes before 6 a.m., immediately threw myself on the ground, did 50 push-ups, felt pretty good.
And I could see an explode or yeah, no, no, I could, no, that part was okay, but I could feel the tension across the couple of the little incisions that I have in the belly.
Yeah, it was, but it was okay.
So I did that and then I did, went back to my water rowing, which I highly recommend.
And that, that was fine.
That was absolutely fine.
And I probably could have started that earlier, but I held that off.
Like I said, I just, you know, because it's not even about the strength and everything.
I returned to work one week after the operation, but it's, I don't know how to describe it.
You just kind of feel more tired.
Sure.
You know, like it's stress on the body that that is not there.
It's been working to heal itself instead of being vital vrill to the rest of your life functions.
Yeah.
There you go.
So it's, I've been, you know, holding off.
And even in those six weeks, I thought, like, what am I going to do?
I'm not working out.
I'm not screwing, you know?
And so I thought, so I bought a model of a T4 Roman numeral 470.
tank.
It was the third Reich tank, but it was like the smaller tanks that were like tank killers.
They were anti-tank tanks and they were smaller and more maneuverable and they didn't have a rotating turret, you know.
I always thought of T4s and T40s and whatnot as Soviet tanks.
But maybe Roman numeral 47070 slash A or slash B.
So I bought that, but you know, in those first six weeks, I really, or certainly the first four or five weeks, I didn't have the, like I couldn't concentrate, you know, to even work on this model.
But maybe about, I think it's been about two weeks ago, I actually started working on it and I've been making progress.
But that's just, I'm just giving you a flavor for like what it was like to recover from this.
I was like, not in pain or anything like that.
It was just, you know, it's something you go through and you got to kind of pay attention, learn to adapt to it.
And now I'm making the models.
I'm doing my push-ups.
I'm doing the water rowing.
I have not added the weightlifting back.
I think I'll wait another week or two before I add that or the boxing or the jump roping.
Those I'd like to do those as well.
Those are a little bit more, I'm starting with just a few things.
But yeah.
Yeah, don't blow a gasket.
Easier way back into it for sure.
So far, yeah.
And like I said, I've tried to take the good out of it, which was like hitting a reset button on your life.
So, you know, I dramatically backed off any beer drinking and things like that.
And, you know, my appetite was left less and I've lost some weight, you know, which was which was one of my goals for this year was to get to a certain number.
And so, you know, I tried to make the most of it.
And just for a moment, I'm going to plug one of the other shows I'm on, which is the Manor Bun Dispatch.
You know, if you folks out there are waiting for another full house episode to come out and it's been weeks and weeks and you don't know when the next one, definitely tune into the Manor Bun Dispatch because it's three dads on there.
And we don't really talk about dad content.
We're more like a theme-oriented show.
Once in a while, we mention things, but there is three dads on there.
And we're coming up.
The reason I'm building up to this, we're coming up on, you know, this Halloween is kind of like at the end of September is like the end of the Catholic Church liturgical new year or the liturgical, not new year, the liturgical year ends at the end of September in the Catholic Church.
But also in Halloween, some people call Saoeen, which is like the pagans new year.
And anyways, I can remember years ago, I went to a function and they did the roast, boast, and toast.
I don't know if you've ever heard of this, but everyone takes a turn.
First, you can go around, whatever order is.
You could roast somebody.
So you insult somebody, whether they're present or somebody who's not present.
You can like put a little playful insult out there, roast, and then a boast, you brag about something you did in the current year, the year you're finishing up.
And then a toast is to, you know, a toast to the ancestors or to somebody or something.
And then you also make a promise of something you're going to accomplish in the coming year.
Well, one of my things was to get to a certain weight by the next, by our next time.
So that's coming up.
So I'm not going to tell any more of what the other guys promised to do or not do.
And I'm not going to give any more details of my thing.
You'll have to just tune in to the Manor Bun Dispatch and hear about our, you know, and we'll take up a new roast boast and toast for the coming year.
So I like it.
Definitely check.
And those guys would actually be good to have on Full House sometimes because both Uncle Ruckus and Bob, as he goes by, is he's been on Full House, but not since he's been on Manor Bun Dispatch.
But to have both those guys.
on would be maybe a good future show too.
And they would love it.
But definitely check out Mannerbun Dispatch.
It's on Telegram at the Mannerbun channel.
All of them are on there.
We've been doing them since a year ago last July.
And, you know, maybe about every three weeks or so, we get a new one out there.
And while I'm plugging myself, White Noise Radio, I'm on there semi-regularly, you know, or regularly enough, but we're having our Halloween episode coming up.
And so we just play some, you know, songs that are themed for Halloween and kind of a roundtable chit-chat and very casual.
So check that out as well.
White Noise Radio worth hearing.
Very good.
Manorbund Dispatch at White Noise Radio.
Sam's putting in the work.
I have not been sad in terms of not doing Full House.
We talked a little bit before the show about the general disgust that some of us have with not podcast race, but the content creation hustle.
We've talked about this too.
But I just, you know, I said the other day, like one of the plagues of modernity is that every dickhead with an internet connection feels the need to weigh in instantly on anything that happens.
And for in large degree, I have been happy and pleased and not feeling compelled to get to the microphone and preach to our listeners.
You know, Sam has noticed that I have am or have been a melancholic, which is totally true.
I can, you know, can feel when I'm when my brain's firing on all cylinders and I'm looking up at that glorious sky and giving thanks and then other days when it's like you're a useless piece of trash, you're wasting your life, et cetera.
But I've been happy.
So I've been eating and drinking beer, Sam.
So when I'm happy, I'm an eater and a drinker.
I've definitely, you know, winter's coming too.
We're the same.
We're the same, melancholic.
We talked about this.
That's, you know, like I said before, a lot of our shows have such good content that they're almost worth repeating because we talked about the four temperaments.
That would be a good one to return to one of these days.
But the melancholy, to understand what temperament you have is very important because it helps you understand your weaknesses, your strength.
It puts you on guard when things are going in a certain direction because we have the cycle of consolation and depression or desolation, they call it.
Saint Alphonse de Liguri talked about the cycles of consolation and desolation.
And it's just a natural part of life.
So when you're in the desolation, you look forward to with expectation when the return of consolation.
When you're in consolation, you temper yourself a little bit, knowing that consolation doesn't last.
And when desolation returns, that's just okay.
You get ready for it and you know that what you how to handle it.
So it's very important to absolutely understand your temperament.
The four temperaments.
I wanted to thank you too, Sam, for sharing that health saga because, you know, it's intimate, literally and figuratively.
And it comes with some of that.
There's no need to be embarrassed or ashamed, of course, but nobody likes to have to go to the store and pick up the pens.
It's sort of like a meme.
And I have to say that.
It's also a Mandela effect.
It's a Mandela effect because it's depend, not depends.
Paranormi's told me.
Yeah, you're an authority now.
And I definitely, over the past few months, my vision has been, I used to always like, you know, when like my old man would pick up instructions and hold them at arm's length to read them, what a lame others sucks.
And now my close-up vision is really starting to deteriorate to the point where I'm like, all right, let me, I can still see the show notes.
Fine.
I'm not complaining.
But yeah, yep.
God, Jim from the Fatherland said, yep, it's time to get your readers or something like that.
I was like, oh, I've never worn, never worn glasses in my life, but that might be approaching.
And then I just real quick before we go to the break, I guess we're doing our little old man health segment.
For the past, I shared this with the guys in the chat, but for the past two winters, probably, I was wheezing particularly in the evening, and it was only in the winter.
And I thought for sure it was because the windows are closed, because the dog and the cat are spending more time in the house.
And it's just related to increased pet dander, despite the fact that we vacuum religiously and keep this place tidy.
And then it started happening again recently.
I was like, what the hell?
It's not even winter yet.
The windows are open.
But what changed was the scented candles came out a little bit early, you know, a little pumpkin spice, a little cinnamon in the spirit of the year.
And it was absolutely, I was excited.
You know, I just had that light bulb Eureka moment.
Son of a bitch.
I bet you it's those candles because somewhere in the past year or two, I read that a lot of these candles, all candles will put out particulate matter.
You're burning a wick.
And a lot of these candles, and I'm not going and spending 20 bucks on a Yankee candle, right?
I'm getting the like home goods, you know, bare bones just to have a little nice smell.
Yeah, frankly, because I was like, who cares?
It's just a candle.
You want to smell nice.
But absolutely, once I was like, oh, we need to take a break on the candles, no asthma whatsoever.
So 100% is that.
Just a little PSA for the audience.
Yeah.
Now, in this case, I kind of like, I'm going to make, call me a fag, but it's like, yeah, I kind of, you know, having a candle is aesthetically pleasing, whether it's the scent or just that it's putting out a little bit of heat, a little bit of glow.
But I like 100%.
Yeah, it was causing my asthma.
And I'm not sure I'm going to upgrade to Yankee or whatever, the hoity-toity.
You know, Smasher's wife used to make candles.
Maybe we can test some of hers and see if they are more natural and don't trigger it.
One thing to keep in mind, everybody, is like, you know, people develop allergies at different times in their life, too.
And also allergies go away.
So you have to, like, you always have to pay attention to yourself in kind of a like a sensitive, open-minded way.
I used to be violently allergic to dog hair.
And, you know, we, our first dog, Little Mako Brussels Grafan, was particularly hypoallergenic.
Not a lot of shedding didn't bother me.
Our current dog sheds about as much as a damn golden retriever.
They have to vacuum the hardwood floors.
You could just see the hair everywhere.
But I, you know, nothing at all.
Like if I would go to a sleepover at a friend's house who had a dog, I would come home and my mom thought that I got in a fight because my eyes were all puffy and my nose was running and look like hell.
But yes, I some somewhere in my physiology, my body was like, okay, this is not actually something that needs to trigger the immune system every time we encounter it.
So yep, absolutely.
Rolo, I'm sorry, I saw your hand up there.
I wasn't sure if you were trying to cut in.
That was a while.
Okay.
Yeah.
Five minutes.
Yep.
Thank you very much, buddy.
I didn't want you to think that I was overlooking you.
When we come back, got a bunch of new white lives.
Nice letter from a listener.
I do want to talk about the absolutely record-setting surge in gold and silver prices, relatively unprecedented.
What that means.
Is it going to keep riding?
I feel more confident and comfortable giving generalized financial commentary.
The dive in crypto.
Bitcoin and Bitcoin, for sure.
Let's go see.
It was like struggling to get back through 107.
Yep.
And I got the one-year chart up.
It's at 107 basically right now, Sam.
One year ago on this date, we were at 68,000.
So not bad.
I remember when we did the election night show and it looked like Trump was going to win.
I said, oh, it's at 76.
Hot damn, we're rich.
And now it's at 107.
And it's like, ooh, I am so sad.
You know, it's like, put that in perspective.
Yeah.
I'm not this type of person that's watching that, but we had that little exchange, remember, on the channel there.
And very shortly after that guy said, oh, yeah, you watch, it's going to drop.
And 88.
He said 88 in two weeks.
Well, but it was at 125.
And then I sold a bunch of it and then it dropped like a rock.
So I for you, sort of.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I shame on you for selling, Sam.
Yeah.
But sometimes you need a little cash.
Yeah.
Yes.
It was, I, it was the right move at the right moment.
I still have plenty in there.
Don't worry about that.
But I thought, hey, this is the time to take out a little chunk.
Just hey, Sam, buy the buy the dips and sell the rips is good advice.
Now, I'm a long-term holder.
After we did one show where we talked about Bitcoin and some a non- said some non-small, yeah, he said, I'm going to fly a drone into your house and blow up your stupid Bitcoin ass.
I was like, I'm not particularly concerned, but I'm not generally used to getting bomb threats in the inbox.
Well, I will say the same thing about Bitcoin or not just Bitcoin, but crypto in general.
I say the same thing now as I said perhaps years ago is I know I'm on a particular board with people that actually have money.
I do not have money.
I mean, you know, I have a little bit of money that I work very hard and have tried to invest to make just a little tiny bit, but I know people who are like with real money.
And those people are not in cryptocurrency at all yet.
And so the point is, I truly believe this is not going away.
And there have yet the people, the more people with money have yet to even get in this thing.
So there's, we are, we are towards the beginning of this.
We are not towards the end of the beginning or the beginning of the end or anything like that.
We are at the beginning of all this.
So get into crypto today.
If you're not, yeah, I would say just do Bitcoin to keep it simple, just like gold is probably a better bet than silver, but we'll talk a little bit more about that.
Silver is at it.
I remember back maybe about 12, 13 years ago, silver hit an all-time high of $34 an ounce and I cashed in some that I had.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I still have a lot of silver.
$53.50 an ounce.
Yep.
It's happening.
Finally, the silver bugs in the nursing homes are celebrating.
Orders that are in circulation that are made out of silver.
Yeah.
Yeah.
If you see one of those, grab it.
This is a real cool story.
I'll share real quick, but you know, my wife loves to do auction shopping, not like actually going to the auction house, but just online.
You can get awesome stuff.
A lot of times it's like the display chair from Costco, right?
It's not beat up, but it's not brand new and sealed up.
You know, hardwood flooring that was left over from a job site or whatever.
And they have, you know, estate auctions as well, where you're literally bidding on the dead stuff that a family's trying to dead owners stuff that a family's trying to get rid of.
So my wife bid on and won a chest of drawers.
You know, I forget if it was a table or a dresser or whatnot, doesn't matter.
Won it Ferron Square, took it home and put it wherever.
And then she didn't think to open the drawers or whatever, but what's in the drawers, but a full set of sterling silver silverware or some part silverware.
And I don't know if she got it assessed or whatnot, but it was worth a significant amount of money.
Granted, it's sterling silver silverware.
It's not like it was 500 pounds of the stuff, but it's just like, oh, sweet.
But the classic question is like, okay, are we just holding it?
You know, somebody was like, so how am I actually supposed to like profit on this aside from ETFs?
You know, it's easy to buy and sell in your brokerage.
But when it comes to the physical stuff, you know, I think it's a little bit like Bitcoin.
Like, just scroll it away and that's for a real rainy day.
You know, if the shit really hits the fan, that's when you'll find me at the pawn shop or at the we buy gold stores trying to trying to get some currency.
No, I know.
Yeah.
Well, nobody really answered about the, right?
I guess there's like legitimate gold brokers.
No, no, you go to independent people that are buying that.
When you go to those big chains, they have like guidelines, protocol.
They will already pay you so much.
I went when I was selling some silver, like I said, maybe 11, 12 years ago.
I went to one of those places and they offered me this.
And then I went to an independent seller and they offered me quite a bit more.
Yeah, don't go to Rod Rosenstein's jewelry expo.
Yeah, go to some independent person.
All right.
It's great to talk and see you gentlemen again.
Hope the audience enjoyed that first little bit lengthy first half because Sam is a Gabby guts tonight.
Rolo has just been slamming Angry Orchard cans there the whole time.
He's falling out of his chair.
He's going to be ranting and raving in the second half.
But I watched the John Candy documentary on Amazon called I Like Me or something like that, which was very touching.
Now, I'm not like all about John Candy after watching it, but for a Hollywood guy who was a fanso and who, as a kid growing up in Canada, actually went to the United States to try to enlist in the army during the Vietnam War, which I thought said a lot about him.
Talk about a, you know, a different breed from the normal pinko comic Hollywood types.
It was a moving documentary and it inspired me to rewatch or watch for the first time some of his films.
And one of them was Planes, Trains, and Automobiles of Steve Martin, which I never watched because I don't like Steve Martin.
I don't like his stupid face.
You know, he's supposedly an Irishman, but he looks like a Jew and the silver hair.
I just never thought, found him that funny.
But that was a charming, several times laugh out loud movie.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, when these are like driving the burnt out car to the motel and really touching scene when they're sitting there in that like kitschy motel and having the little tequilas out of the bottle, like a bunch of old buddies and Steve Martin sort of has that like this, this guy's not so bad, even though he's not like me.
But Sam, I don't know if you remember, but there's a scene where Steve Martin's riding the Chicago L finally to get home after saying goodbye to John Candy, whatever his name in the film, Gus, was.
And as he's riding away and he's thinking back to all the sort of madcap adventures that they had, some miserable, some really funny.
There's a beautiful song playing.
And that's when he decides, no, let me go invite him to Thanksgiving.
Totally touching.
Almost getting choked up thinking about it.
And there's a beautiful song playing in the background.
It's like a de minimis, almost techno by the Dream Academy.
And it is called, I forget the name of it, Power to Believe by the Dream Academy, which is an old British trio that is most famous for...
Life in a northern town!
Hey, uh, hey, uh, my mother, hey!
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Kind of a one-hit wonder for a lady.
Anyway, but I yeah, I just found this like as soon as it as soon as I heard that song in the moving scene, I got my phone and Shazammed it.
So I hope the audience enjoys Power to Beauty by the Dream Academy and check out planes, trains, and automobiles.
Maybe closer to Thanksgiving.
Supposedly, people watch that around Thanksgiving, like Home Alone at Christmas.
And we will be right back with healing prostates, non-existent prostates, and knock on wood healthy prostates do.
All right.
talk to you in a bit.
Welcome back to Full House episode 216 of If my accounting is up to date, it is a delight again to be back under microphone.
I always look at the thing and like, you stay in the drawer.
I don't want to see you.
I don't need to do this anymore.
And then lo and behold, get here.
Happy to do it.
And I'm super excited because tomorrow is the soccer bacchanal of the fall in which we will be out in about 70 degrees and perfect sun, soaking up some late fall vitamin D and watching the kids play gladiator games on the fields with their feet.
Just the other night, we had a parents versus kids scrimmage that was so much fun.
And I was frankly mortified that I was going to blow my ACL out because I can't play half-assed.
I had to like really give it and show off because ever since I tore my ACL the most recent time, I was like, okay, no more soccer, no more basketball, no more tennis, just me stupidly jogging in a straight line on a flat track.
But I was able to show off, able to show off.
Yeah, pickleball too.
We got new courts around here.
Things are on the up and up.
Our street got paved.
Talk about things that tickle my fancy.
Long, long road sort of leading to our house was sort of degrading.
There was a pothole on the bridge, and I actually emailed the Department of Highways and just said, hey, you got a bad pothole on this bridge.
And I think the road's starting to degrade.
And nice lady instantly.
I don't, you know, West Virginia gets a totally bad rap.
Instant response.
The team was out the next day filling on the potholes.
And I thought, well, I got a little greedy with the repaving.
At least they filled in the pothole.
And lo and behold, about a month ago, pure flat jet new blacktop.
So now I can do 100 miles an hour around those country roads.
Just kidding.
You really can't.
It's dangerous.
Let's get straight to it.
New white life.
Sam, lead us off before I forget.
You got at least one.
How about?
Yeah.
Well, I had two.
I think we mentioned one, but I'm going to mention it again because he's getting on the last to the last leg of it and it's getting exciting.
But our good brother Rufus, you know, his wife's pregnant.
He's expecting soon.
And then my co-host Bob from Manor Bun Dispatch is also, they are expecting.
And they're, I think, pretty much in the last leg of their journey.
Well, yeah.
And that would be that would be their first, right?
No, no, no.
That's at least the third or fourth.
Bob?
Goes by another name.
Goes by another name, which I will tell you off the air.
Okay, gotcha.
I was like, hell, I didn't know.
Yeah.
I didn't even know he had a lady.
Very good.
Very good, Sam.
Thank you for that.
And let's see here.
Jeb Stewart sent me a beautiful picture with the, it's always nice to get a little side boob, not to be a creep, but, you know, beautiful babies.
Yeah.
Thanks for the side boob.
Most important thing.
And beautiful baby.
Thank you, Jeb.
Didn't forget about you.
Jeb is, well, I won't give any more backstory.
Congratulations, Jeb.
Your wife is beautiful.
And he was already a good father.
And now he's adding to his ranks.
Congratulations to that.
Yep.
Our pal, Dio Vendice, if that's his real name in Latin.
Is that God's victory or God's vindictiveness?
He's got, I want to say it was his fifth or maybe even his sixth.
Yeah, he's a he's a real breeder, someone I've never met, but like the cut of his jib online.
And he's proven to be a total intelligent, positive gentleman throughout.
So Dio Vendice, we see you there smiling.
Congratulations.
Great work.
Don't push your luck.
I don't know.
You're not a young buck anymore.
Push your luck.
There you go.
And then CK.
It's not C. Kyle, I don't think.
Somebody was like, hey, guys, check out my new screen name.
It's C. Kyle.
And there's already a C. Kyle.
You're not that creative.
Anyway, C.K. said, oh, and for Coach NWL, just had kids six.
Really glad to see you guys still focusing on the good and not wallowing in anger.
For all the negative ninnies and Nancy's and nattering nabobs of negativism, to borrow from Spiro Agnew, who you see in the comment zone every once in a while, a lot of guys have said, one guy said, you know, I am really happy focusing on my family and my faith and sort of giving up this internet internacine constant hubbub and fighting.
And a bunch of people just said, thank you for being sort of, I don't know if they said words of wisdom or, you know, whatnot, but just like, thank you for being reasonable voices of common sense, I guess, in evaluating this madhouse and not looking all these gift horses in the mouth.
And it's not about taking the win or like blackpilling.
It's like nothing's ever going to be perfect.
If our thing is in the right direction.
Yeah, you got to have a balanced approach.
Sure, maybe you need a little couple of little black pills once in a while, but then it's got to be balanced out with a lot of, hey, we can do this.
We can prevail.
You know, our ancestors, we have the force of our ancestors behind us.
God is on our side.
Nature is on our side.
I can be grateful and point out good things and celebrate them and with full knowledge that there is still a severe problem with Israel and Jews in power and disproportionate influence.
And that, I mean, but yeah, we've talked about that too.
That is not going to hold up.
That ship will not stay afloat.
Too many people know it's too out there.
It's too grotesque.
And, you know, maybe we said it before the show, but it was like, if we could just cut all that aid to Israel, get APAC registered as a foreign lobby or shut the hell down and investigated and tell all these Jews to blow it out their ass and go make a Leah.
If you're, you know, Mark Levin, all these total fifth column Israel firsters, just get them the hell out.
And that would be such a wonderful thing.
We've still got demographic problems and debt problems and violent leftists and ineffective ways of dealing with them.
But that remains the prize sort of in tandem with the deportations that are rolling out.
Anyway, just wanted to, yeah, give lots of nice, you know, I don't write them all or I don't save them all or like pin them, but a lot of good, positive little feedback that doesn't always make it on the show.
This was a nice one.
Guy took the time to write this letter and said, coach, you got to keep the show going.
Not all of us need doom and gloom dopium kick episodes.
Whether it's black pilling episodes or an hour talking about how our backs or knees are completely messed up, though, we need it.
Some family men don't have a network of guys to talk to or listen to.
So you guys are their space away from the white-collar office job dealing with the tranny nigger co-worker or the blue-collar guy being surrounded by spics or rehabilitating niggers.
So true.
Exactly.
Very good.
I know.
Yeah.
Now I'm starting to feel guilty for not doing more shows, but hey, whatever.
I got a life too.
You know, I've given a lot to this thing.
Okay.
You know, cut me a little bit of slack.
Excuse me.
That's only on my second miller light here.
They are the tall, yeah, like the stadium aluminum cans.
Things are literally.
Now he adds here, things are literally, he's like, all positive.
And he's like, things are literally getting worse as much as we would like to say.
It's getting better, though.
My family had a run-in with a leftist freak who had to go out of their way to show us they hated us at a primitive festival.
And it solidified what we've been saying.
I wonder if that's a Renaissance festival, primitive festival.
I don't know what a primitive festival is.
He said, Mike, I don't know.
Maybe it's primate fast enough.
Effectively.
But he says, my kids witnessed this and they've seen what the opposition looks like now.
They know now what the opposition thinks of their mom, dad, and them.
Red pill moment at the primitive festival.
I get it.
What the hell that was?
He may be just being cagey about where this happened.
Maybe it was a whole brew haha.
I may or may not have been wearing a Wolf-Knocked shirt.
Well, Wolf-Knocked.
I got to go to our authority.
What's Wolf Knock?
I got one.
It's kind of like a Wolfang.
Is it a band or is it a simple?
Yeah.
That is, yeah, that is a band.
That's a black metal band.
I thought maybe our archivist was stumped there for a second.
But regardless, we don't go around calling every Libtard cunt wearing a trans-flagged shirt or nigger lover with a subhuman baby.
This is not my words.
It's just a correspondence, man.
Don't get your panties in a nice letter he received.
Look, I'm a sucker for flattery, right?
So he's like, I heard beautiful words there.
Continue.
Okay.
Well, maybe I need to repeat this.
All right.
Wolf knocked shirt.
Third over, yeah.
Yeah.
And I'll say it really loud and in my own voice so that it can be excerpted as use the proper proper dick shoe.
Well, here, regardless, we don't go around calling every libtard cunt.
This would be better in a British accent, frankly.
We don't go around calling every Libtard wearing a trans-flagged shirt or nigger lover with a subhuman baby that we hate them like the left does to us or lately more so.
I have to add earlier in the day, while at a knife sword trading post tent, one of the fellas running it complimented my shirt, was a big fan, and asked if he could purchase one.
So the day wasn't a complete loss in blank area of the country.
Anyway, our opposition wants us dead, and I believe more guys, young or old, with families, will be falling back to you all for support.
Thank you.
And that was from Chaz.
Chaz said that, yeah, the Chad of the Autonomous Zone said thanks for doing the show.
Thank you, Chaz.
Hope we find Chastity Bono.
Wasn't that one of those guys?
It was a woman that's now ARPI as a man.
Yeah.
To talk about a little expansion on the shekels from the first half.
Gold is the most important and prominent story in the markets for sure since the tariff puke and instant recovery, which by the way, that was a great buying opportunity.
We nailed that perfectly.
Get greedy when others are fearful and we've already recovered more and then some, but gold has been rising precipitously, which is great if you hold gold coins or hold the easiest way to invest in gold in your brokerage or in your IRA is you could do mine.
There's a ton of things you could do.
GLDM is you buying, it's a little bit like buying a Bitcoin ETF, right?
You're giving money to a company, which then is actually possessing and holding physical gold or the Bitcoin keys in the case of the ETFs.
And I don't, the consensus of I know quite a few gold bugs and I often get forwarded, you know, analysts assessments of the market and where it's going.
The consensus is gold is going to 5,000 likely quickly, as in perhaps even by the end of the year.
That's probably a little aggressive.
It'll probably go into next year.
So, you know, whether you're, I wouldn't rush out to buy gold coins right now, right?
You don't want to buy high and then stuck with something.
Gold goes through really long periods of dormancy and it looks extremely overbought now.
But what's most interesting about it is that it comes in terms of it's been called the debasement trade.
It's basically big money and it's not just like individual investors buying up all the gold.
It's not like the Chinese are just buying up with all the gold, but it's governments.
It's these big businesses who, including Tether, one of these big crypto firms is like, no, we're going into real estate, obviously Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies and gold and gold miners too, because of the loss of confidence in central banks to keep inflation under control, in national governments to get their debt levels under control.
And lo and behold, big shocker, the ultimate historical safe haven, the barbaric relic, barbarous relic in Warren Buffett's terms, has been beating.
It finally has exceeded Bitcoin, at least in terms of this year's growth, year to date, not one year over year yet, because Bitcoin had that explosive growth.
So if you have investments and you don't own a little gold, I would think that, you know, you always think, I'm too late.
You know, you see the headlines up, gold has already skyrocketed.
I'm too late.
You'd be shocked at how not late you are sometimes on these big moving things, right?
Like Google in 2017, you're like, Google's already skyrocketed.
Chipotle, oh, it's already gone to the moon.
It's too late for me.
You'd be shocked.
Those things can keep moving, keep moving, keep moving.
And some of the smartest people on the earth are saying that you should have 10 to 20% of your portfolio in gold.
And you can dabble in silver too.
I still love Bitcoin.
It's hilarious.
You know, when Bitcoin hit 100, you know, we're doing dances and it goes to 126 and your pupils dilate and then it drops down to 110 and 107.
And it's like, it's all over.
You know, time to time to commit Harikari.
And it's like, that is the toughest psychological thing to overcome in investing is not panic selling, getting greedy when there's a little bit of blood in the streets.
And it's extraordinarily hard to time the top, right?
At when is gold going to top out?
And that's the time to cash out.
You know, Sam timed that Bitcoin sale very well.
And it also depends on is it a long-term investment?
Is it short-term speculation?
If you're just looking to make some money in the market like a trader, which I think is for most people, probably dubious to be able to time that and make money consistently, you might make a cheap score, but by buying and holding for the long term, which is really important.
One of the things that, you know, we didn't talk about money a lot early in the show, but long-term wealth, not just for you, not for you to go have a Viking cruise, certainly not a carnival cruise, but to leave something for your kids to deal with if this world gets crazier.
If you're, you know, it's like, if I had a million dollars, would I go and be a barnstorming, you know, Rock Willian white nationalist?
Probably not, but I would definitely increase my charity and, you know, make sure that my kids were set up and, you know, do all sorts of cool things.
Money is important.
But the point being, gold is sending a very dangerous signal.
It's actually like the higher gold goes, the more nervous I go that something big and bad is on the horizon, whether it's a mass devaluation or runaway inflation or a government defaults or the dollar collapses or the dollar has lost a ton of value.
And one of the arguments is if you're, you know, what can you get in a savings account on dollars?
Maybe 4%.
I just checked mine.
It's like 3.8% for my little rainy day.
Like you just need to have a little bit of cash squared away.
And if you're sitting on a lot of cash, you're really getting hosed.
And you might think, well, that's what they want you to do.
They want you to take the safety and put it and speculate in the market.
It's like, sorry, man, you have to get involved and play the game to grow that sucker.
Diversify.
Don't put all your eggs in one basket.
You know, we had some guys saying, I want to put my paycheck on, do I do gold or Bitcoin?
I was like, I don't know.
How about half and half?
He ended up choosing Bitcoin, which I think is probably a pretty aggressive, smart play, given how beaten down it is from 126.
But gold, Bitcoin, sprinkle with silver.
And frankly, all those chip stocks have still gone crazy.
AMD, NVIDIA, Ethereum, TSMC.
I'm staying away from Ethereum on principle, Sam, just because they can print more of it.
You know, the beautiful thing about Bitcoin, there's never going to be more than 21 million.
I don't know if it's Vitaly or the board, but they can expand that.
With Ethereum, I think you're going to get bigger rips and bigger dips.
And people who know better than me are just like, no, screw that commie faggot, Vitaly Boutikin, with his like, you know, skeletal frame and whatever machinations.
If you like Ethereum, that's great.
I'm not poo-pooing it.
I'm just, I'm sticking with Bitcoin and gold, maybe a little bit of silver.
I don't really, I've heard silver people being so obnoxious and loud about silver.
And like, I still have a silver stock that's down 20%, despite this.
It's like, how the hell did I lose money on silver?
Is it still down?
It was a minor.
But regardless, look into it.
Check it out.
If you want to make bigger money, then you would buy gold miners.
GDX is one of the big gold miner ETFs.
There's a ton of them, Sprat, SP, GD.
I won't get into that level of granularity, but it's at 4200.
I had a big puke today on Friday.
The miners and gold was down.
Is that the end of the show?
Or was that just a little correction as it continues to wrap up?
I suspect it's the latter half.
But, you know, for a long time, I'd be like, miss the bus or nah, I'll just keep it safe, keep it in cash.
If you don't play, you can't lose.
And I said to some guy, I was like, I was a terrible investor for two decades.
Like as soon as I started white collar and, you know, stocking money away in retirement until some point after COVID, I realized.
No, you just need, you can't fight City Hall.
You just pick the things that every that is hyped, even if it's unfounded, right?
You know, your Teslas, your AI, your chip stocks, et cetera, and just ride it and remember your time horizons and to diversify.
And then you set trailing stops.
I'll stop with the financial lecture there, but I had to talk about gold.
It's very important.
Sam, let's go over to you whether you want to do October, your pick.
We got two of your bullets down.
I think you got at least two more.
Yeah, I don't know if these are big topics or just something to talk about.
We had our Oktoberfest recently, which if you recall from previous shows, previous years, this is our number 10, okay?
10-year anniversary of doing Oktoberfest.
And the earlier ones, we didn't even call it Oktoberfest.
Our local group, we had a separate Oktoberfest and then we had our big annual camp out.
Well, then eventually they became combined events.
And so this year was our 10th one.
And I'm mentioning it just because we've promoted it in the past because we even take people who are interested and they want to, maybe they've heard about how great it is and they want to get in.
And we've had people from out of state come and join us and stuff.
And this year, we had a couple of little changes here and there.
And it kind of got a little bit bubbled, bumbled, whatever the right word is.
And we didn't organize it as well or as early as perhaps it could have been.
And so it was kind of last minute, really.
And so if anybody was paying attention, they might say, how come I didn't hear about Oktoberfest?
No one invited me.
Well, that's because it was kind of a last minute thing and almost, you know, could have maybe possibly didn't happen, but of course it was going to happen because it's 10 years.
So we did have it.
And it's always fun to put the leader hosen on.
All the women look very beautiful.
I sent you a picture, Coach.
You probably saw it there.
My wife and one of the other ladies and then our good friend Mike, Mike Beth with the kidney, you know, our kidney recipient.
And everybody looked happy to be surrounded by such bounty as cleavage in that chat.
Yes.
Oh, wow.
How could you not be?
And so it was a good event.
Of course, a hallmark of it is I play my rousing set of sing-along racist songs.
And so we did get it off.
We did have a lot of good German Oktoberfest beer, a lot of way too much food, and as many people as we could scrounge up on kind of a somewhat of a short notice.
But Oktoberfest is great.
And of course, it's still October.
So definitely anyone who's listening, get in on it.
If you got something going on, if there's a local something, you know, it's, you can go on Amazon and you can get the whole GitHub for relatively cheap.
I have just the, you know, it looks good, but it's, it's, you know, a budget, budget outfit.
One of my sons, he went to, of course, he had to go downtown and Chicago to a German store and get all the authentic things.
Fancy pants.
Yeah, yeah.
So literally, whatever.
Either way, you know, it's fun.
For the women, it's fun, you know, showing off the boobs and everything is, you know, it was a great time.
And I wanted to get that out there to people.
The Germanic soul stirs at the sight of beer steins, sausages, and women in cleavage shirts and traditional attire for sure.
Very healthy, fun at that time of year.
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, you get those first, that's my favorite time of year when you get those couple of first wild, cool, chill winds blowing through on a sunny day.
You know, that's, that's my favorite time of year.
I haven't done too much movement stuff in the past year, honestly, but we did get together this summer, Sam, and go check out the Perseid meteor shower in State Park in West Virginia.
Yeah, I only caught that last night.
It fell during my during the surgery time, you know, so I couldn't go, but I think we're going to make that an annual event.
And it was really cool.
Yeah.
Even if even on a cloudy night, like we said, like it was starting to get cloudy.
We're like, shit, we're going to miss all the meteors.
But then there was like all this lightning strikes off in the distance.
We're like, okay, that'll work.
You know, we're still getting our light show.
And two things come to mind.
One is that some of the best, friendliest, kindest, most sincere people in the thing I have met from your area of operations, yourself included, of course.
So if you're in, you know, we haven't, I haven't had the passion or the feel the need to like push for vetting or networking in a long time.
One, because it's like you already know that you should be doing that.
And two, it's been, you know, a little bit fractious in the cause and whatnot going back for a year or two at least.
But if you're in that, you know, area, upper Midwest or whatnot, consider it if you're not connected with any of us.
And, you know, maybe I can pass you off to Sam and whoever handles that for that area.
And then also, I just want to say, if you live in West Virginia anywhere, I, you know, the early enthusiasm that I had for this place as our new adoptive home, almost as internal exiles or displaced people has only grown over the years.
It hasn't faded.
The natural beauty, the demographics, the good kind-heartedness of people.
It's not Midwest nice, right?
It can be a little prickly up front.
There's this one store.
I won't give any details, but when I first walked in there, the guy at the counter was so cold and dismissive.
I don't know if he thought I was a dickhead from out of town.
And then another guy walked in and said, oh, hey, Matt, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
And he was like, oh, how do you know him?
I was like, oh, you know, this, this, and that.
And then he instantly warmed up and was like, oh, this isn't some pecker stopping in from DC, but he's actually from around here.
It was like a sea change.
I was like, well, that's really cool, you know, that people have their own sort of insular preferences and then warm up as soon as they know that you're not some Northern Virginia dickhead.
But regardless, yeah, you know, it's like if you live like four hours away, I'm probably not going to go meet you at a bar in deep, deepest, darkest West Virginia.
But I would still bang the drum for this state, you know, going back to that whole debate.
Pacific Northwest, Appalachia, or New England, usually being the three priority targets.
I love this state.
And there was a time during Biden where I was like, oh, it's getting darker.
I'm starting to see a little bit more trash.
And the school, you know, just sort of left his programming and protesters and stuff.
And it seems like that has been more or less snuffed out in the cradle, perhaps.
So yeah, consider West Virginia.
Where do we go from there?
Hey, tell us about your son's trip to the old continent.
I also have a friend who went there.
We talked about them possibly meeting up Sam.
And everything went okay.
He didn't get murdered or raped or arrested, but did get phones seized, I think, on the way back and not prominent dissidents too.
So I don't want to mislead.
It could have either been the Brits or it could have been the U.S. on the way back.
But yeah, international travel, if you've ever committed a thought crime, is like a really perilous electronic thing, at least.
I would say you got to have a burner phones, you know, if you're going to travel over there, just get a, how crazy is that?
Yeah.
Yeah, it sounds stupid.
And why should you have to do that?
Like, you're not a criminal.
Why can't you just travel with your phone?
But if, you know, these people are insane over there, especially in England.
And if you're going over there, just bite the bullet, play it safe and get a phone.
You don't know what you may have said or may have, even if you're, even if it was my mother going over there or whatever, I would just say, hey, you know, did you ever get a text from me or something?
I don't know.
Just be cool about it.
But yeah, a couple of my sons.
And real quick, Sam, it's not even about saving your ass with the authorities.
It's about the safety and privacy of all your friends and contacts.
Yes, all that, of course.
And so my two of my sons, they went over there.
They visited one of my other sons who lives over there, as we had him on the show, you know, about his story.
I don't need to repeat.
So they went over there to England, which was really just kind of a layover.
They went to Germany and then spent time there doing different things.
And they went to the Czech Republic.
There's a certain amount of Bohemian ancestry and both my wife and myself.
And so my sons, they were interested to go there.
Of course, Prague is very kind of has a medieval feel.
Oh, very walkable city and the castles and the bridges and everything.
So they love that.
And my son is in a race every year and he goes there and he was participating in the race.
And of course, my youngest son, he's quite young.
I mean, he's an adult now, but he's, you know, this is all very new and experience of a lifetime for him.
And as I mentioned, my wife and I both have Czech ancestry.
And so there are some relatives over there, which they were overjoyed to meet with these somewhat couple times removed.
But, you know, you have these Americans coming over that are relatives.
They were just absolutely tickled to have them there.
Yeah.
And they actually had to travel because they live not real close to Prague.
So they traveled to Prague to meet with my sons and go to dinner and, you know, speak with them and show them around a little bit.
So really, really nice.
They went to Munich, went to Berlin, and then they went back to England where they spent some days.
London is absolutely horrible.
It's just like dealing with the zombie type Nigroids of Chicago, let's say, is just really, really unlivable compared to anywhere else.
But once you get outside of London and you get into those suburbs and things, people are more normal.
Certainly when you get to a rural area, people are normal and there's not those problems.
They're not creep shitters there.
The Angry Orchards finally kicked in, Roland.
Cutting them off.
That's your last one.
No, no, let it rip.
But yeah, it was so a great trip.
I want to get over there myself maybe next year.
But they had a great time.
And like I say, it's experience of a lifetime for my youngest son.
My other sons have been there numerous times, but always a great experience.
Sure, absolutely.
And yeah, I'm glad they, it's really touching that they connected with distant blood as well, which, you know, I've been to Ireland and Germany, but never, the relatives are so distant.
So it would be like, who, what, where?
But the thought occurred.
I haven't been to Europe since maybe at least five or six years ago.
But my favorite, I'll do West, Central, and East.
And obviously things have changed since then, in some cases, perhaps significantly.
But there was no magic like being in Paris with my, we were still, we were not even engaged at that point.
We were just dating and being in Paris and doing all those things from the Eiffel Tower to the baguettes on the side of the road.
There were Africans selling, you know, knockoff Gucci bags on the street there, even back in, this was 2004, I think.
But to experience and see Paris, the sights and sounds, if it's unpalatable now, that might be the case.
But I think we treasure our memories from Paris.
It's not totally horrible.
My son that lives over there, he drove through the channel, you know, the channel that was under the channel.
He drove and they went to Paris and he told me about that.
He really liked it.
But I'm sure you're.
And I've been to London and I've been to Ireland too, but for some reason, like that, that really was a magical experience.
Now, I've been to Prague.
It was just choked with tourists when I was there.
And it was like the peak springtime.
We popped up to Berlin, which I thought was kind of cool.
But Budapest, I love that city.
And that of all of the cities, Moscow accepted, is probably still very Hungarian and not, of course, plagued by locusts, i.e., you know, migrants, Africans, Arabs, Muslims, or the worst, African Muslims.
So if you had to pick someplace in Europe to see Budapest, it's so cool.
The architecture, it reminded me of Pittsburgh in many ways because of the orientation of the river and the bridges and the sort of both banks of it.
And then you can't beat Moscow in terms of excitement.
And I would give an arm or a leg to go back and see what, you know, unlike, you know, London decline, Paris, decline.
Rome was frankly a dump back in 2006 when I proposed to my wife there.
But I would die to see Moscow.
Let's go Bitcoin and see how it's improved and is cleaner.
Cause, you know, I saw that upswing from 2001 to 2006 the last time I was there.
Couldn't imagine a more exciting trip than going to Moscow right now.
So yeah, for those guys who are able to, I'd probably skip, I wouldn't even mess with the UK, honestly, personally, being semi out there.
Yeah.
Sam Hyde had an interesting point on this when he, when they were talking about their implementing the social credit score in England, and he was talking about how they did it in China, where the difference is in China, they don't want to lose.
They want China to succeed so they don't use their social credit score to turn the Chinese gay.
And they're not trying to hunt down people that are, it's the opposite.
They're trying, they're they want Chinese to be strong and nationalistic and like virtuous.
Yeah, well, yeah, they're, they're, they don't want to, they, they want to hear people say China's the best.
Get rid of all the non-Chinese people who want to be the best nation ever.
Whereas these other countries, they're just insane.
Yeah, yeah, they're looking for anti-racist.
So they're looking for people that say, like, I love England and I love, I want England to be number one.
Like those, oh, arrest that person.
That person can't buy groceries this week.
Flying the flag of England.
Yeah.
Like, oh, no, no, no, sir.
Yeah.
We only recognize the rainbow flag here.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There was a video of some Arab that was like writing a ticket to some Englander because they were flying the Union Jack.
And then he was like, oh, yeah, oh, you shot.
Are you going to get me a jacket?
Because I've got the English flag.
Oh, is how you going down?
He's just filled with me.
He's like, I ride you a dick.
Yeah.
Or, yeah, this is maybe a month ago, like the two young female cops.
One of them is white.
The other one is Indian.
We're here to talk about your social media activity.
Like, what a freaking joke.
Yeah.
Slam the door in their face.
Friend of the show got sort of temporarily detained recently and questioned and let go for not kowtowing, I guess, to whatever.
But Nigel Farage, for all his flaws, is, I think, even money to become the next prime minister of the United Kingdom.
The last poll shows that his reform, like the Tory, like the conservatives are dead.
And people hate Labor and Kair Starmer so much.
I don't know if whatever it is.
Richard Spencer in two years really looks like Richard Spencer.
He acts like Richard Spencer.
Same energy as we used to say.
But yeah.
It's really Machiavellian.
It's like, you know, like, yeah, Nigel Farage has said some terribly cucky things.
And like, you know, but it was like, how could you not view Nigel Farage as the prime minister of the UK as a positive welcome development or at least a respite from think about it this way?
So back in 2016, I was swimming with two other people and one guy was like, yeah, I don't want to talk politics.
And I just said, yeah, I just want Trump to be the president.
He's the best one here.
And the other guy was with goes, yeah, I do too.
And then the guy who didn't want to talk politics, he said, you know what?
I think Trump has the best policies of all these people.
I think he would be the best.
Fast forward to 2020.
That guy was riding with Biden because he wanted all the crazy stuff that happened to just end.
He's like, I just want all this craziness to stop.
Back to 2024, he's like, all right, you know, F it, MAGA hat back on.
You can't look at like, okay, Farage has done cucky stuff.
Not great, not ideal, but you can't look at the current state of England and just say like, well, it needs to get worse.
How much worse can it get?
You're just you're being buried alive and they're dumping gasoline on the grave and then they have a flamethrower.
How much worse do you need it to be?
At a certain point, you need it to be good enough that you can live.
Like it's really bad.
Like they're arresting people for being pro the country they live in.
Right.
You do need some breathing room.
No, no, they're just trying to get this so you'll become a normie republic or conservative.
I want Oswald Moldy.
I want Oswald Mosley tomorrow to take total power in the country and enact every single one of my policy demands right away.
Otherwise, it's cucking.
Yeah, otherwise you're not going to be able to do it.
There are people that actually believe that, but those people, they don't live in the real world.
I guess that's the thing.
You have to live in the real world and you realize people live in England and they are genuinely being arrested for the most draconian, inhuman things you can think of.
Our friend got arrested because someone sent him a file.
He didn't even open it.
They just sent it to him.
What's to stop them from doing that to anyone in the future?
Right.
Yeah.
Well, to be fair, Ash did download the white resistance manual or whatever.
He just didn't open it.
He was like, oh, that might be interesting to read one day.
Putting it.
Sure, sure.
But yeah, whatever.
He didn't open it.
He just thought, like, hey, this could be interesting.
But it doesn't, but it doesn't matter.
That's not something you should be jailed for.
Right.
Like, it, it, like, because there, there are genuinely mosques out there where they are just like, yeah, let's, who are we going to kill today, Abdul?
And you know, and you know, they're spying on everyone.
And it's not.
You know, Kamaro Harris's America would have been getting rapidly toward that level, too.
I think the persecution.
No, I know.
Yeah.
Like, I really don't want to be a broke record, but it's just like, I can't believe there are people who think that it would actually have been better as of this moment under the alternative regime.
It's just panic.
Yeah, I know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yes.
And it's the same thing.
It's like at a certain point, people need to be able to breathe.
And that's kind of where.
But then they won't be stirred to revolutionary action, Rolo.
You fool.
You eat every bourgeois, counter-revolutionary reactionary.
Fair points, of course.
Of course, completely reasonable, fair points, as always.
But at this point, you get it or you don't.
And from the leaks in the Republican chat, it looks like the young people get it.
Pretty much boomers will never get it.
They just never.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The young people are getting it.
They're just, they're just not all saying it.
And then I said this to one of our friends recently.
If you see a buff white guy at a gym, odds are he's our guy.
Yeah.
Like that, that's it.
Like it's that simple at this point.
And if someone's not our guy, they're stupid and they're just, they're either an ostrich or they're a lost cause retard.
There's no in between.
Yep.
To that point, Rolo, it's almost perfect.
I meant to bring this up on a previous show.
It's very dated by now, but on the summer bucket list, the kids wanted to go to a real amusement park, you know, Six Flags, Disney World, that sort of tier.
So I was doing my homework, consulting with the comrades, et cetera.
Yeah, Dorney Park, Hershey Park, all sorts of things.
Six flags, I considered in New Jersey because we were out visiting my parents.
And it was my mom of all people who said, are you stupid?
You're going to take the kids to Six Flags on a Saturday in the summer?
Like, what's wrong with you?
I was like, all right.
Very wise.
Thank you.
Good, good counsel.
You're right.
It will probably be a den of degeneracy and crime.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Now, she would never say that, but that's sort of the old way.
Oh, no, probably not the best time to go to Six Flags.
So I was like, all right, I have fond memories of Hershey Park as a kid.
Let's go to Hershey Park.
It's far enough away from Philadelphia.
You know, and it's Hershey and generally has a reputation for being nicer.
So we went on a Saturday in August, woke up at the break of dawn so that we could get there early.
Hopefully, you know, the Costco rule, you get to Costco early.
It's more pleasant and whiter than usual.
It was extremely depressingly diverse.
On our way to the park, we were following this car that was driving haphazardly, and I could tell that it was a black driver with a couple other, you know, wife kids.
Was it because it was a Nissan Ultima?
It might have been a Nissan Maxima.
Yeah.
It was definitely like a 2010 Ultima or something like that.
All over the road.
I could tell he was like looking at his GPS or, you know, Shaniko was saying, I've turned there.
I was just like, okay, kids, you know, driving lesson time.
Stay back when you see a car driving like that.
And I was like, son of a bitch.
It pulled into the Hershey Park parking lot.
For whatever reason, it was a generally good experience.
It was crowded.
It was, there were a lot of blacks, a few Indians.
It really was like the total panoply or, I don't know, collage of American diversity.
But most of them were on good behavior.
I didn't, there were no fights that I saw.
There was no gratuitous bad behavior.
It was just hyper diverse.
And Hershey, I think, does a pretty good job of keeping that out of lockdown.
There were security guards all over the place.
But what was more interesting than that, everybody knows that America is diverse and that nons are attracted to amusement parks, was that the white kids that I saw, now perhaps they were just sticking out to me because I'm, you know, observer of the scene.
They had this, Rolo will probably know exactly what I'm talking about, but a lot of them were tall and they did have that shock of hair, whether it was a Zoomer fro or just naturally unruly and curly.
They kind of wore like tall white socks with new balances or like white sneakers and they looked to be very fit.
So in the sea of diversity, the maybe majority of young white kids that I saw there looked like Chads.
They looked like they were basketball players or volleyball players or soccer players.
They were fit.
They were confident and they walked around like they weren't cowed to be around a bunch of, you know, nons as well, which I took as a kernel of a white pill in a sea of diversity.
Are you familiar with this like thing that I saw, Rolo, where like it's almost like our fit, white?
No.
Teenagers being seeming to be tall, fit, and almost having like a goofy 80s dad aesthetic vibe from the curly hair to the socks and the sneakers.
Yeah, I have seen that.
Okay.
Yeah.
I would have thrown a Roman.
Well, I like a little one.
Like what do you do?
You get one of these?
Towards the end of the day, maybe, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You give them a little one.
Like you give them a wink and a nod.
Like, yeah, I don't know.
It was real.
It was really tough because they probably have Twitter accounts with frog profiles.
Like they're not all the way there, but close enough.
It was nice.
I would not, yeah, like in terms of tips.
Now we're into October and maybe they're doing, you know, they're spooktacular or whatnot, but I would advise against going to a large amusement park in the summer.
Isn't spectacular what it was, apparently.
Yeah.
Six flags, maybe that was the name that they had for their Halloween spectaculars or whatever.
But lesson learned, do not go to a large amusement park in the summer on a weekend.
I think that's probably common sense.
It was also really a challenge because I was single dadding it that day and I had the three kids.
So I had Munchkin potato who didn't qualify for the really cool rides.
And I wasn't super excited about letting the two go off on their own.
But once we got a feel for the park and I could track the cell phone to see where they were and they're like, Dad, we're fine.
We're not going to get killed.
I was like, okay.
So me and our youngest went off.
It does.
Yeah.
Being able to meet me at Space Mountain at two.
It's easy enough.
That's well, in the olden days, it would be like, okay, yeah, meet us at the merry-go-round at two o'clock and make sure that your watch is wound, right?
Instead, it's like, oh, let's see where they are.
Oh, those bastards went back.
Yeah.
Well, I was, I meant like you text them, meet at the Space Mountain.
Sure.
And in the olden days, I thought you were.
You actually have to plan it out.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Like you have to be here.
And if they're not there, you start to get that rising anxiety in your neck.
But it went off without a hitch.
We were there for like 10 hours.
It was hot as hell.
I tried to resist all their entreaties to like, let's get cotton candy.
Let's get ice cream.
Let's go here.
And then at the end of the day, you had to get an elephant ear.
Tell me you got an elephant ear.
No, we got cotton candy.
And at the very end, we like, I was like, yes, you can get whatever freaking candy you want in the gift shop.
We had to take like a midday break because it was so hot.
And oh, that was the other thing.
The water park was so crowded and so black, you know, with like the oil spill?
We were like, we're not doing this.
We've been to water parks that are nice.
We were just not.
We couldn't get a chair if we wanted to.
But again, they were in good behavior.
It's stolen.
Yeah, there was just a lot of darkness, but I didn't see any rowdiness.
You know, nobody was like vaping cannabis and mating.
Give me a break.
That was happening.
Perhaps.
Yeah, I know.
Look at me.
I'm cucking in my old age, giving them credit.
The behavior was generally acceptable aside from the aesthetic offense to the senses.
But I would go back to Hershey Park on a weekday in the summer if I had to, not on a weekend.
Maybe I'm kidding myself.
You know, everybody's off in the summer.
Maybe it's always the same.
But we did get that checked off and we're going to do an MLS game this fall to finally get that list off the fridge.
It's still there.
But we're going to go with the pal and it fell through for one reason or another.
So little lesson learned, but I was encouraged or heartened by what I saw as relatively high T, confident, weird 80s aesthetic on the youth of white America, the men at least at Hershey Park on a day in August 2025.
Surprisingly or not, I don't have anything else in the notes.
I'm glad to be alive.
I'm happy.
I'm pleased.
Yep.
Sam, Rolo, open to it.
My youngest son, you know, I've talked about the troops of St. George a few times through the years.
And tonight he's kind of on his swan song, if you know what that means.
He's aged out of it now.
And this is his last camp out with them.
So he's off on a camp out with the troops of St. George.
Cool.
Is he sentimental or emotional about it?
Or it's just like, whatever.
No, no, I think he thinks like, well, I'll probably still go and be a volunteer or something.
Sure.
Well, I think you got to concentrate on other things, but definitely go and do this.
Where he's going is a, we've camped there before.
It's a fun area.
And it's, there's a gigantic, The grounds is a, it's a, it's a farm.
It's so many acres.
I don't know how many acres of a farm.
It's now the crops have been taken up.
So there's the, the, uh, the field.
And it's, I don't know if you've ever had this experience, but we, so at night we said, let's, we're going to, we're going to hike across the field to the tree line.
Well, it's deceptively, deceptively big or deceptively not, how can I say, it's hard to size what the right what the right size of it is.
So we start hiking across it.
We look back to the headquarters where we were.
There's a house there and we're, we're walking, we're walking, turn around.
The house is getting smaller, but we don't feel like we're getting any closer to that tree line, you know?
And it was a full moon.
It was a full moon and we're going and we're going.
We just keep walking and walking.
Now we're like in the middle of this great big farm field and you just you lose your sense of direction or which way you're even going, you know?
And so we kept, we actually never did get to the tree line because it was so far and the house was so tiny.
We turn around and look at it.
And so finally we said, all right, I think we've, we've walked far enough.
We turned it around.
But so he's, he's out there.
It's, you know, he's, he really loves all that outdoors.
He's a tent set up, setting up the tent and brings all his tools.
He's got a camping flashlight and an axe and he's got all the tools.
He loves to set all that up.
So anyways, I just thought I'd give that a little bit of a report.
Amen.
Yeah, very touching.
Sort of a, you know, passing of the torture rite of passage.
And sort of in that vein, Sam, fall, you know, always get a little bit nostalgic, think about, you know, similar life situations and previous October's Halloweens with the kids or going back further.
But now that I am, you know, I've been a professional father kid sports and school chauffeur for so long.
But now I'm actually going up to the high school often for pickups, drop-offs, et cetera.
And it's crazy how much I miss high school.
I, there's just something about, you know, I always thought the band was stupid and geeky, but hearing the band play or we went to see a football game and the crowd made me depressed about soccer because the football games are like jam-packed with probably hundreds of people easily.
And then the soccer games, it's like, yes, very good.
You scored a goal.
But man, what I wouldn't, you know, in high school wasn't like a joyride.
Obviously, I had more fun in college, but just thinking back to like, you know, getting your driver's license and having the thrill of a girl that you think likes you and you like her.
And maybe she'll be at the party and maybe somebody will be able to bring beer and like the stress of, you know, like, would you get on your PSATs?
Would you get on your SATs?
You know, am I going to make varsity this year?
Am I going to still be playing JV?
And the bus rides and like bringing a boom box on the bus to play Rage Against the Machine, know your enemy before going to smash the opposition in an upcoming soccer game.
You know, it's just like, I'm so happy for like the kids to have that opportunity ongoing or soon imminent.
And I would like, I just find myself fantasizing about wishing I could go back and do high school again.
Just, you know, that becoming an adult and having more independence and pushing borders and waiting to get away with being a little bit naughty with a cigarette here or a beer party there.
The being able to drive somewhere with your friends, even if it's like to the middle of the woods to have a campfire.
Like probably didn't appreciate it enough at the time or when I have advised Junior, like the overwhelming emotional or like social scene is at least in the 90s it was.
It was like, this sucks.
You know, I don't care.
Like looking depressed was cool or whatever.
I was like, Trust your relax.
You know, like it is so much.
Granted, classes suck and calculus sucks and blah blah blah and stress and who's cool and who's sitting at the table.
That all sucks too.
And we probably look back on it with rose-tinted glasses.
But how cool would it be to be able to go back and like relive those days?
Yeah, knowing what you know now.
If you knew now, knew then what you know now.
Like they say, too soon old, too late smart.
Say that again.
I didn't register it.
Too soon old, too late smart.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yep.
I get it now.
Well, I've not heard that before.
And yeah, sort of, it's just like inevitable, I guess.
That's the way life goes.
You don't know what you got till it's gone.
To quote, who was that, Rolo?
Poison?
Slaughter?
Cinder firehouse?
Cinderella.
I was in the ballpark.
I could hear the song.
I had no idea who it was.
The important thing is.
Take the lesson that right now you're alive.
Right now you are having experiences of marriage and friends.
Hopefully you have at least a few of those things.
And now is the time to appreciate and have the right outlook on life.
Yeah, I know.
You could die in a car crash tomorrow, or a black could stab you in the neck on a bus, right?
So yeah, don't think, oh, boohoo, I wish I could go back to high school in South Jersey in the 90s.
Look around at all the natural awesomeness and your kids getting off the bus and give praise, whether it's to God or to Jesus or to the big man upstairs, as I like to call it, whoever and however he might be.
Thank you, big guy.
Maybe it's because I'm getting older and I'm getting closer to meeting my maker, Sam.
It's pure opportunism.
I'm like, oh, maybe I better.
No, no, it's no, it's not that.
It's totally just like getting older and being like, you know what?
This could all be a lot, lot worse.
Yeah, it could be living in London for example.
All right.
Let's get the hell out of here.
I'm looking forward to the soccer bacon all tomorrow.
Love you, audience, if you made it this far.
Love you even more.
Sincere appreciation.
Give us anything you want to hear on the air.
We'll be happy to do it.
I would love to do another show.
It's the 18th.
Yeah, maybe, maybe just before Halloween.
And we got a couple people who are still out there in the waiting room in the hold room to come on the show, bring them on and have a wholesome one.
Kick around and chew the fat, et cetera, chew the cud, whatever.
Rolo, you have the DJ booth to close us out.
I'm happy to listen to all the stuff that you've sent me over the past couple of weeks.
Or if you want to just call it right now, it's your prerogative, as Bobby Brown.
Let's keep the audience on their toes.
Tune in and find out.
Very good.
And Sammy baby, yeah, next week, let's get that clip in there.
But Rolo needs, we don't want him to get angry.
I'm in favor of no, I like Roloff.
All right.
Very good.
We love you, fam, and we'll talk to you before Halloween.