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Nov. 1, 2025 - Full Haus
01:57:11
Taking it to the Streets

Happy Halloween. We welcome an accomplished father (and new grandfather) to talk a little bit about everything. Bumper: 1983 Theme by Sinoia Caves Break: Rocky Horror Picture Show (forgive our guest) Close: La Danse Macabre (DJ Son of Sam)  Scary movie endorsements: Weapons, Hereditary, Evil Dead (2013) 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.

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Time Text
Two shows in two weeks, as promised.
Are you happy now?
It is all Hollows Eve Eve, our seventh Halloween special, if you can believe it.
The Finstocks will, of course, be hitting the mean streets for treats tomorrow.
And for the first time in a while, we are joined by an old friend of the show, but a first-time guest.
So, Mr. Producer, in the spirit of the season, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's most Samhain and All Saints Day-respecting show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole biofam.
It is episode 217.
It's October 30th, 2025, as we go to tape, and I am your self-medicated host.
If you can hear it in my voice, it started to come upon me about two hours before the show.
I'm just on an allergy pill, but it could be worse.
I'm a big, big drama queen, regardless.
Sound like hell, feel a little bit better.
And it's Roach Grimstock back with another hour probably of common sense, edgy commentary on the passing scene.
Before we meet our death panel, though, big thanks to the White Stag Athletic Club and Johnny for their kind support of the show.
Check us out at givesendgo.com slash fullhouse if you'd like to share some appreciation.
And big thanks to our old pal over there in Old England, who sent us some quality athletic gear just the other day from his active club.
And we'll be enjoying and using and distributing that very shortly.
Thank you again, buddy.
With all that, let's get on with it.
First up, he's our least Halloween respecting regular.
So just for this week, I'm calling him our David Berkowitz, also known as son of Sam.
Welcome, buddy.
Hey, it's good to be here, coach.
Yeah, it's talking about England.
You mentioned there about that athletic club and all that.
How about this priest, man?
Really glutting it out of the bag.
He's posting under the name Skinhead 1488.
He's posting all kinds of racially aware comments and everything.
I just saw that tonight.
Yeah, I don't know if the audience will have seen that screenshot, but yeah, first it's the young Republicans respecting Hitler in the private chats.
And now we got priests.
He's not quite one to look at there.
He's a little longer than two.
Hey.
But yeah, I just finished carving the pumpkin yesterday.
You know, these duties of the season always seem to fall to me.
I do think the rest of my family appreciates the things, but it's, you know, it's always me that is the one that's doing the getting the tree, setting the tree up, Getting the pumpkin, carving the pumpkin, whatever the the thing of the season is.
So uh, I posted a picture of it in the chat there.
Maybe we could include that in the show notes or something.
And uh um, you know it's what it's a one of my fun things I like to do.
I get all the seeds, I separate all the seeds out, and then we make uh, we we season them and and bake them and and then we uh save the pulp and we make some either pumpkin pie or something else out of that, and then of course the uh, The pumpkin itself, I made the Harry Potter hat.
I don't know if I'm too old to be appreciate that, but maybe you guys recognize the hat.
The hat that I recognize the judging hat.
Yep.
The judging hat.
Separating hat, whatever it was called.
What's it called, Rola?
We'll say it again.
Sorting hat.
Sorting hat.
Yeah.
Because as soon as I showed the picture, one of my kids said, oh, yeah, the sorting hat, but I couldn't remember the name of it.
The original name for it was the segregation hat, but they had to change that and they brought it over to American.
Right.
Right.
Very good.
Yeah, we will be getting the seeds out tomorrow night, Sam.
We always carve the pumpkin right before we go out trick-or-treating.
Of course, fingers crossed whether it was a magic pumpkin.
And this year, actually, we just weren't at a place to choose a pumpkin and with our youngest there to tap it and see if he could find a magic one.
So he trusted his old man to do it this year.
So there's big pressure on my shoulders when we open that sucker up tonight.
And I ask him to turn his back on the pumpkin and go get a spoon out of the drawer.
Whether when he comes back, there will be a message from the magic pumpkin.
And so, yeah, they fall for that one every time.
It's a wonder, wonderful move.
Anyway, welcome back, buddy.
And let's power through here.
Next up, it's possible that he has seen every horror film made in human history from the fourth nun prequel to Soft 14.
We know him as Row Low Probability of Survival.
What's up, buddy?
Welcome back.
Good to be here.
You know, I haven't died yet.
So I consider my probability of survival very high.
You do realize that 90% of horror films are absolutely terrible and you really just need to watch the ones that are critically acclaimed or mildly critically acclaimed.
I would, I, I, I don't entirely disagree with that.
It's the genre that is the easiest to make, probably.
Like if you wanted to make like a science fiction movie, you need a lot of money.
And if you want to make like a drama, you need to have really smart, compelling characters and good actors.
For horror, all you need is some latex and some corn syrup and then just go out in the woods where it's free to shoot.
So darkness, creepy sounds, ghostly images.
Yeah, it's the genre that has the highest disparity of like good to bad.
But it's, it's also the until Jason Blum took it over, it was the only genre in Hollywood that was pretty much goy made.
And it was made by people that just wanted to make movies and not sell you homosexuality miscegenation.
Yep.
Blacks always being the first one to go, you know, get rid of that and, you know, get on with the story and the damsels in distress.
Now, it's actually not true that the blacks are always the first to go, but the blacks are always the stupidest people in the movie.
Very rarely is the black the first to go.
I went through all of my horror movies and I found it was like scream two, gremlins, and I discounted like anything that was like an all-black cast.
But other than that, it was like very rarely.
Always die in the middle.
But blacks never do anything intelligent.
They're because they're never resourceful.
They're always selfish and insane and that at best you have a black guy that's like the jock.
So he might be like, all right i'll, i'll beat that booger man up and then you just that's the best you can hope for.
Very true, i've got a couple uh, new endorsements that we'll talk about later.
Go ahead yeah, well.
And the last thing is that horror is also probably the only genre, again until Jason Blum, that was not graceful to blacks.
Like just like Friday The 13th, part five, the black guy dies on his in the toilet because he announces that he has diarrhea and he may fill his drawers and then he dies an embarrassing death on the toilet.
Who is this Jason Blum you speak of?
Did he like uh, totally infiltrate the horror movie industry?
Oh yeah, so Jason, Jason Blum, he produced paranormal activity and his and his more recent things is, he produced the New Halloween trilogy and he produced the New Exorcist.
And if you look at his his like filmography, all the non-horror movies he's made he produced, like Selma, Black Clansmen, like all these super subversive, like the that the, the Detroit Riots movie just awful human and and the new Exorcist movie that he made it.
It is the most like anti-exorcist thing ever, because the Exorcist is very much a Catholic movie and the villain is a biblical demon.
It is calling himself the devil.
And then the new one, all the religions come together as one to fight the demon off and the only people that do die are literally Maga Trump supporters and like.
Not just that, the girl that the, the daughter of the Manga family, who gets possessed.
She actually gets sent to hell in the movie, but not the, but not the black girls.
They get saved by all the religions coming together.
And then yeah, and everyone hated the movie, but yeah, that guy is the new head of horror and all.
They're all unwatchable.
They're all just either Girl power, Black power.
If you're white, you suck very good.
We can maybe uh, geek out a little bit on uh, some of the new ones or ones we haven't seen before, because all the.
If I get a little creeped out or tingled down the spine, i'm pleased because it, you know, when you're 12 or 14 or whatever, that's very easy.
You can see a trailer and get spooked.
When you're an old man, it's like it has to be really well done and creepy.
To actually make you go, maybe i'll use the bathroom inside instead of going out on the deck at midnight on a full moon.
Anyway uh, let's move on finally to our very special, patient and long overdue guest.
He's a father, relatively new grandfather, longtime ideological comrade, and he has not seemed to mellow in his middle age, unlike yours truly or perhaps Some in the audience.
He is not a short member of Kid Rock's Posse.
He's Joe B. Welcome, Joe.
How are you?
Okay.
Great to be here.
Honored to have you.
Let's do ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
Ethnicity, I am a first generation.
My dad comes from Campania in Italy, and my mom comes from Sicily in Italy.
Okay.
Religion.
I am like, I guess, a lapsed Catholic, but I have received all the sacraments, as have all my kids.
And I have four kids and one grandkid.
Wonderful.
And got to ask, why lapsed?
Ideological or just not going to church a lot?
Ideological, I think.
My last parish had a real left-wing priest that really turned me off.
And that's some laziness involved.
Oh, you know what?
I should clarify something, though.
Although ethnically, I'm Italian.
I have to say, culturally, I am probably Irish.
Okay.
I grew up in Boston in the 70s and 80s.
And I don't think I grew up with a single friend that wasn't Irish.
So even though I'm Italian, I feel like 100% Boston Irish, whatever that's worth.
Sure.
Yeah, a little bit of osmosis.
You absorbed it.
There were a ton of Italian, you know, I have zero Italian, but there were a ton of Italians in South Jersey.
And I don't know, it didn't have the same effect on me.
I viewed them as a distinct other ethnicity compared to the Mutts and whatnot.
Go ahead, Sam.
If I could just make this observation, I've met Joe in person, which was a wonderful time that we had the conversation.
But if I had to guess, I would have guessed he's Irish.
In fact, as I was sitting here before you introduced him, I thought, okay, he's going to say he's Irish.
So yeah, there is something about that it's rubbed off on you.
Well, like I said, I did not have a single friend who wasn't Irish.
I mean, Boston is not a swarthy Sicilian either, apparently.
Very good.
Well, hey, Joe, we haven't had a good red pill story in a while.
And, you know, I've been in contact with you online for years now, never met you in person, unfortunately, but you always came across as sort of common sense and mild mannered.
And I meant that sincerely, though, that you have a fire to you.
You know, you suffer no fools and you tend to call BS on a lot of the stuff that we get excited about or enthusiastic or perhaps optimistic about.
So, you know, take us through your journey.
Were you a normie, a conservative?
How'd you end up in the white nationalist sphere?
Yeah, I mean, I guess I was just a normie conservative.
I just sort of gradual.
I think always, I mean, I grew up in Boston in the 70s and 80s, so I was always racist.
But I don't think that the JOMs probably came until probably around like 2015, 16.
And then since then, it's just been straight, you know, downhill or uphill, however you want to say it.
And this type of ideology.
But there was no like epiphany or anything.
Just kind of gradual.
Sure, always had the race awareness.
Did you go to public or Catholic school?
Uh, Catholic school uh, from fourth grade until 12th grade yeah, and did you uh experience or witness the I i've, i've heard, but I haven't learned too much about?
Boston was supposedly a hotbed of pushback, maybe around that time.
Uh to forced busing.
And yeah yeah my, my parents were in those demonstrations outside the State House when forced bus was enacted in 72 or 74.
It was uh um, and I I I, I was going to public school, the local school and um, and you just didn't know, from year to year you would get a notice uh, telling you where your, where your children, were going to go to school.
And I was still going to the local school.
But my mother didn't know what was going to happen the next year.
So um, she moved.
But I have some brothers right when we were older and she moved us into Catholic schools and um, you know a funny story there we, we were in our neighborhood in Boston and we had moved to that neighborhood from another neighborhood in Boston, just like through a year or two before busing started, and so we were in a new parish and we were in the public school.
So when my mother decided to bring us to the Catholic school, she went over there and the Catholic school was full because everybody was doing that and they actually had no room and they had to leave room for people who they knew were in the parish.
And my mother never donated money in those little envelopes at church or that they mailed to you that have your name on it, so she would just throw money in the basket.
So they didn't know that she was like.
She may have registered with the parish, but you know they're going to give first tips to the people that are donating money.
So we had to go.
She sent me and my younger brother and eventually my older brother to a uh public, a Catholic school in another city.
So I had to take a public uh public bus to go to school on my own, even though I wasn't being bused um, but yeah I, my older brother um, had to spend one or two years in an integrated school.
It was pretty bad uh, he was getting like beat up once a week before my mother got him out of there.
Isn't it amazing how they use our people and our families and us as children, as guinea pigs in their insane social experiment, putting us with these niggers and exposing us to all kinds of danger and and all of the uh.
At the time I can remember all the rationale that was being put out like, oh no, this is not going to destroy the schools, and the any right-wing or racist person would say would describe how this is going to destroy the school system, and then everyone would say no, that's ridiculous.
And look, here we are.
You know, everything's destroyed, all the beautiful schools and all the sports and intramural programs and and all the the clubs and activities all gone, every bit of it all gone.
Joe, did your parents discuss the protests or shifting you over to Catholic school and explain why?
Did you know?
Did you get your race awareness from the streets and from your friends, from your parents, or did you just pick it up as a Boston kid?
I, just being in Boston yeah, I mean it.
You know the neighborhoods were all segregated, um and uh, there were, there were no, there were no blacks in the the part of Boston I grew up in um, you see them because you're not go very far, but there are none in uh, where we lived, and you know Boston Irish, you know all those stereotypes are kind of real, but I like them, you know.
Sure yeah, and they and they were.
They were tough.
They were tough guys like back then in Boston.
Um the, the blacks would be as afraid of going into a white neighborhood as whites would be of going into a black neighborhood.
Uh so yeah, it was.
It was race aware from the beginning.
The only thing that came later was the, the j awareness.
That's it fair enough and not to get you in trouble.
I think the statute of limitations is passed.
But did you ever get in a race rumble or you know, either you on them or them on you um, uh well uh the, the Catholic high school I went to, um was in my neighborhood in Boston and it was a public school um, a few blocks away, public high school and um.
By the time I was in high school there were almost no white kids going to public school in Boston.
They would all be.
If there were.
They were going to the exam school, um.
So the local public high school was pretty much all black and I. One day, when I was a freshman, something happened outside.
When we were getting out of school, some of the kids, some of the blacks from a public high school were walking past our school, which they normally wouldn't have done.
I'm not really sure what happened, and they beat some kid up and uh, you know I was a small freshman but you should have seen it I mean two dozen jacked guys white, Irish and Italian guys come pouring out of that school, tearing down the street, and went after the blacks.
That did it.
Cops had to come.
I never saw like what the fights happened because I was already getting on a bus to head home.
Uh, and one time when I was in middle school, a bunch of friends and I rode our bikes to a local park in another town hanging out, and we had the day because we were in Catholic school.
It was one of those days we had off.
The public schools were all in.
There was a field trip from our middle school kids public school I don't know if it was Boston or another town and it was all blacks.
Something happened and we, we had to like, run out of the park and hide in the woods until the field trip was over, because there were like 50 of them and there were like five of us zaya zombies running across the field.
28 days later um, you may not be there exactly anymore, but you didn't run to the woods of Maine or Appalachia.
Uh, are you?
Do you wish that you had escaped the whole blue Massachusetts scene to redder, whiter areas, or are you just like?
You know?
This is where I was born and raised.
I'm sticking with it, you know, like it or not yeah yeah, I mean it's nice in Massachusetts.
I mean it's there's, it's, it's getting increasingly bad and but it's still so nice and the whole family's here.
Well, what am I going to do?
And all my extended family's here right, I've got cousins and aunts and uncles.
My parents are still around, but they're getting old.
I can't leave them.
That's like a whole nother thing I, you know, was would like to talk about the whole.
It's like the thing that's really bugging me the most is now that my kids are adults.
They're all doing well.
But, and, you know, we've got the one grandkid, which is kind of shocking that I came this early because, well, it's been a whirlwind year the last 12 months.
I had the first marriage.
Then I got laid off.
And then, like, I think like right before I got laid off, my son and new wife told us that they were having a baby.
And then the baby comes.
So it's been a wild year.
But, you know, I'd love to be able to, you said something a few weeks ago on the show, like you've got your own little like compound.
And that's great.
Yeah.
And that's what that's what I feel like my life has been like.
But now they're all adults and three of them are out of the house, one in the house.
And I'd like to keep that compound going.
And I'm not sure how to do it.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
Well, you know, we're going to talk about the layoff and sort of starting over midlife or maybe even past midlife.
You're roughly Sam's age, maybe a little bit older.
But before we did that, I don't know if we've had, yeah, we've had maybe one or two Massachusetts guys on, but not as a special guest.
I don't know if I read it once or I just basically inferred it, but it seems like Massachusetts, despite, of course, there's a lot of diversity, but it's still a relatively white state and yet is deep blue.
Why the mass hole or Boston white liberal total infection?
So far as you can tell, you know, because you would think that at least Western Massachusetts, central Massachusetts would be MAGA country at least.
But it seems like the state is just deep blue.
And I'm curious, is that a union holdover?
Yeah.
It's more nuanced than that.
I think Massachusetts typically votes like 40, it'll get 40% Republican in a presidential election.
It's not, but you know, it's all or nothing, right?
So, and even in congressional elections, it's about 40% Republican.
But you might have seen that map that was going around on Telegram and other places a few weeks ago, showing how there's not a single Republican House or Senate member from Massachusetts, from New England.
Yet New England still, like as a whole, votes about 40% Republican.
And it's about different than Massachusetts.
It's kind of just the way it's signed with St. Jeremy Mandarin's just that, like, I mean, if you get 40% in every district, you're going to have zero reps.
So that's kind of what it is.
And Massachusetts is not as white as you think.
Like, between the 2010 and the 2020 census, no state had a bigger percentage drop in white population than Massachusetts.
It went from 75 to 66% between 2010 and 2020.
And it's, I can't wait to see the 2030 census.
It's going to be even worse.
And it's Chinese and Indians.
It's not Blacks.
It's not really Hispanics.
It's Chinese and Indians.
It's crazy.
Like, I was born in, I was born in 1966.
Boston must have been like 90% white or more.
And in my lifetime, it's now majority not white.
And I remember I probably went like seven or eight years without going into like the downtown and waterfront area.
And I had to go there for an event and I was shocked.
It was just Indian and Chinese everywhere.
It's like in my lifetime, I've seen my city just be taken by 2020 at the most.
It's going to be like Vancouver.
It's just going to be Chinese and Indian.
It's sad because those people are not holding up any kind of social institutions the way that we grew up.
You know what I mean?
That's not really why it's sad.
It's sad because it's not us.
Yeah, and it's not us.
Why would I care?
It's not us.
Right.
Right.
But the whole feel of the culture and society is different and it cannot be the way we fondly remember it because it's aliens.
But does Massachusetts or Boston have the problem like in Chicago, which is the machine, what they call the machine Democrats?
In other words, there is dead people voting, fake people voting, and things like that that hold up this unnatural and false ratio of Democrat to Republican voters.
No, I don't think so.
I think it's pretty honest.
I don't think there's cheating going on.
I think it's just honestly like that.
Okay.
I can say a lot of things about Massachusetts, but it's actually, I mean, it's corruption if there's anywhere, but stuff like that's always been kind of clean.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Pivot over to new grandfather status, Joe.
Just by pure coincidence, my wife put on Father of the Bride last night, Steve Martin.
There's a lot of schlock, and I actually found myself disgusted by a bunch of it because he's the stereotypical goofy go-to-work.
And the family and the daughter pressure him into having this over-the-top, you know, gay-directed swans and everything wedding.
And he's just like haplessly struggling to get through when he should have put his foot down.
But that's irrelevant.
It's just sort of a coincidence.
But, you know, you said it was a relative surprise when you found out you're going to be a grandfather.
Were you overjoyed?
Were you anxious?
Walk us through that because, you know, it's a little early for me, but I am looking forward to being a grandfather, truth be told.
Well, I mean, they got my first, it was my third who got married first last October.
And then I think it was like right around Christmas time.
They called us up and they said, oh, we're having a baby.
And no, I was happy.
I was happy.
I was surprised.
I didn't think that they would.
Yeah, we were, yeah, we were really happy.
You know, they're a little far away from us.
I mean, not really far.
It's like an hour's drive.
It's not a big deal.
That's not bad.
Yeah.
But everybody else is like, you know, within minutes.
Or the youngest is still at home.
Yeah, no, we're happy about it.
We just wish that we were closer.
Like I said, I would, and I've even talked to my boys about it.
I haven't talked to my daughter about it, the oldest, but I talked to boys about it, especially the two middle ones, not the youngest one, because he's still at home.
But like, I mean, I would be all for like pooling all of our resources and like buying a bunch of property or a big house together and all.
It wouldn't bother me.
Like my son that got married for like a year while they were engaged because of living arrangements and she was still in nursing school.
They lived with us in our house.
It didn't bother me in the least.
It was great.
I loved it.
That was done very commonly in the olden days.
And it really makes sense, especially now, because who can afford to, as a young person, go and buy a house and start a family?
You know, nature is calling a young man with his hormones and his desire to be with a woman.
Nature is calling a young man to take a wife and to have a family, but he can't because the society is such that it's almost impossible to get a house.
Whereas in the olden days, it was very common to take a wife, you live for a while with your parents.
And when you get a little stronger and you have some money saved, then yeah, you go get your own place.
And I would be all in favor of that.
Yeah, I think it was late in the summer.
A story came out that report, and the median house price, not even a house, I mean, they've included condos too.
So the median unit price in the city of Boston was a million dollars.
Can you imagine that?
Not the average, the median.
So there are as many units above a million as below.
I'm like, how the hell is anyone supposed to buy a place?
Yeah.
It's not like it's much better anywhere else in Massachusetts.
You can get a little cheaper other places.
And I had this, I was visiting my parents the other day, and my mother was like, I mean, they're old, right?
They're not even boomers.
They're silent, gym, right?
And my mother was saying stuff about neighbors of hers and they're trying to save up.
And she was berating them because they're not buckling down and they're too frivolous with their money.
I just have to stop her in the tracks.
I'm like, come on.
Like, when my dad bought his first house in 1972, it cost him $36,000.
His salary was like $25,000.
So he bought it for less than one and a half his annual salary.
I'm like, I'm like, mom, you're not special.
You didn't do anything good.
You were just lucky to have lived in a place in a time where you could do that.
You're not any smarter than these people and you're not better than them.
You're just lucky.
So don't give them a hard time.
They're not doing anything wrong.
Hardball with the old lady.
Yeah.
Well, older people can't fathom that.
They really can't because they've never lived in a world where they've really struggled like that.
And their struggles were all temporary.
Like when they were young, and then the rest of their life, they never had to struggle to find a job.
They never had to worry about, oh, will I have enough money to have a down payment?
And they just up to young people.
Well, they must be lazy now.
The Depression era generation did for sure, but yeah, not the boomers in general.
Yeah, the white, you know, in a whiter society, people were paid like a better ratio of what the cost of living was versus what the wages were.
I know the wages were lower, but so was the cost of living.
And that's something that's different when you hear these leftists say, like, well, us white nationalists, we're like foot soldiers of the capitalism or the rich people or something like that.
That's the opposite.
It's because of having these non-white aliens in our country that wages can be low.
If this was an all-white country, in this times we live now, people would all have to be paid like $30, $40 an hour.
So, you know, that's why we need to have an all-white society, all-white country.
Yeah.
And Joe and Joe got smacked up the head and he perhaps enjoyed the old ways for a while.
As I understand it, Joe, you worked basically for the same company, white collar for a long time out of college.
And then finally, the Reaper's shadow darkened your birth too.
Yeah, my whole career, I started in 1990 working.
I had an entry-level job at first, but that was only for like four years.
And then I was in a research position for 30 years.
And I was let go in January.
And, you know, it was a, it was a real, it was a real blow to the gut.
I really thought after having survived so many layoffs, I really lost track.
It must have been at least 10 layoffs I survived that I would be able to coast into retirement.
But no, it was a generous severance.
I guess you can't complain about that.
They gave me a full year's salary.
And I did not, I did not rest for a second.
I took the first week to be shocked and then I got my resume together and I started networking and I started calling on using LinkedIn to contact every person I ever worked with to try to.
And I was looking for jobs and I mean, really, I was like trying to contact HR people if I saw a job to really make sure I got my resume into their hands.
And if there were any people at the company that I used to work with or know somebody I used to work with, I would try to contact them.
And I did have some success.
I got a fair number of HR screenings and then interviews, but nothing landed.
Every job, you know, I don't know if you have experience using LinkedIn, but it shows you, at least on LinkedIn, how many people have applied for that job.
And I don't think I saw a single job after about two weeks that did not have, well, they after it's, I think after 250, they don't give you the number anymore.
They just say over 250 people have applied.
Yeah, it's just the competition is just overwhelming.
And it's just all, I mean, it's all Chinese and Indian too.
Sure.
What do you attribute the layoff to?
Cost cutting, cheaper immigrants coming on.
Any idea why it finally, how do you survive for so long?
Two, I mean, I'm sure that you were a great employee.
And then, two, why did it finally happen?
The company just wasn't doing well.
They actually got rid of research.
They fired half of research.
And the people that were left, their job was just to essentially, they're literally, because I know people still work at them.
They told me, they're literally outsourcing experiments.
Sure.
Things that we used to do on the bench.
Now the people left behind just have to find outside contract labs to run actual experiments.
The company's just not doing well.
That's the part about the, you know, the whole thing about now, it depresses salaries in general, having all these H-1Bs here.
That is true.
But they're not paying the H-1Bs less than they pay Americans.
I know this for a fact.
Like, at least in the biotech industry where I work, they're paying the same amount, but their being there just depresses salaries.
They just, there's so much competition, they don't have to pay as much.
Yeah.
So yeah, there's nothing about me.
It was not, although I do have, I do have, this is just anecdotal, but it's probably not completely isolated.
So my group got let go, most of my group.
My supervisor is still there and she was talking to me.
And there was an Indian girl, sort of a visa.
I don't think it was an H-1B, some other type.
And so I heard this from the horse's mouth that they didn't lay her off because if they laid her off, she would only have 60 days to find a job or she would have to leave the country.
Boohoo.
There was another Indian girl in my group, American born, so American citizen.
She got laid off.
So I don't, so it's not like they were doing it to save an Indian.
They were doing it because they felt bad getting someone deported, but they didn't feel bad about laying off that other Indian girl who was American born.
And they didn't feel bad about laying me off.
Yeah.
Laying off a veteran that might, because of age, have a little bit of a challenge to find something and so forth.
Yeah, I don't know if my age is having something to do with it.
I mean, they can't tell you that, of course.
No, they can't tell.
But they know, I mean, I've worked someplace for 34 years.
I'm not young, you know?
So I don't know.
So I tried really hard.
Like, I mean, I tried really hard all through the winter, all through the spring.
And then in the early summer, I just got so down about it.
I'm like, I'm never going to find anything.
I'm like, I'm going to end up like stocking shelves at Home Depot or something like that.
Your sense of self-worth is in the gutter.
You're like, why am I wasting my time?
Yeah.
So I don't even remember how.
I'm like, well, what?
Like, I actually don't even remember how I thought of HVAC.
I actually don't remember, but I do remember that if I looked on like indeed, if you type in HVAC, at least up here in Massachusetts, the jobs never end.
Like, I'm not joking.
I have not gotten to the end of the list.
I get tired before I get to the end.
You know, you go next page, next page, and there's another like 25 next page.
And I'm like, I don't even know how long the list is.
It doesn't show you how many pages are in the list.
So I'm like, okay, maybe I should look into it.
So I found a local school.
It wasn't too much money.
It was a 13-week program.
I signed up for it and I got two weeks left.
I started sending resumes out.
I haven't heard anything yet, but I just started last week.
Yeah, you're probably going to be set.
That's incredible, though.
You did the bit.
You went into the trades after getting betrayed in a certain sense by the white collar professional world.
I don't know if I'm brave or retarded.
I'm a 59-year-old man.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Did it cross your mind, big guy, that you were like, well, I just got a year severance.
Presumably you have some retirement socked away.
Did you consider just hanging up the spikes and writing out your investments?
Yeah.
Like I my 401k did pretty well.
You know, it was a generous match.
And I, I just never spend any money.
I just, I put everything into that.
Yeah, I'm, I'm, I could, if, okay, if I were a boomer and didn't give a shit about my kids, yeah, sure.
I'd be fine, I guess.
I'd be like, I won't work anymore.
I can earn anything off of that money and I'll be more than good enough.
But I don't want to do that.
I'm like, I want to be able to help my kids.
My kids are all doing well.
Like, one's a teacher, one's an engineer, one does construction management.
And the last one just graduated and he got a good job as an accountant.
Like they're all doing okay.
Hell yeah, then because this state is so expensive and place is so toxic, I want to be able to help them.
So that's why I was and you know, I paid, I paid the last payment to college.
Like I, I, my first three took out minimal loans and the last one took out no loans.
I managed, I sent the state school.
I was able to pay for everything.
I made the last payment this summer.
And, you know, before the layoff, I was like, oh, this is good.
I'll be done paying for school.
I won't have that monkey in my back anymore.
I'm making decent money.
I was making a really good salary.
I'm making good money.
I'll be able to like help the kids out, do some other stuff that I wanted to do that I've never been able to do.
And then this happens.
So, yeah, that's why I wanted to keep working.
What did your wife think?
Did she think you were crazy to go start working on furnaces and heat pumps and all that?
Or is she totally supportive?
Well, she's awesome.
She would, you know, she's like, she's like, you know, my port and storm always.
She's the best.
She was worried just because she thinks like I'm too old to do it because it would be too strenuous, but I'm in really good shape.
I still play hockey.
I work out in the gym regularly.
I'm not overweight.
I'm in really good shape.
I'm not worried about that at all.
That's all she was worried about.
Yeah.
Fair enough.
Let's talk a little bit about politics and stuff because I wasn't kidding that you, you know, you can be kind of hardcore in the responses and the commentary.
I'm also a little bit surprised, you know, given your age and the fact that you got kids and career and tons of things going on in your own life that you haven't sort of just drifted away and said to hell with this white nationalism and all these knuckleheads and all the failures and the embarrassments and the scandals and stuff like that.
You've sort of, you've stayed fairly rock solid.
I'm curious about that.
Well, I don't think you're going to get too many red pills from me.
I'm going to say black pill.
I mean, I kind of at this point, I still feel the same way, but I'm pretty sure we're just going to see it burn.
You know, actually, I kind of hope we see it burn because the alternative, I think the more likely alternative is like just a slow decay into like, I don't know, Brazil or something like that.
So still decent.
I stay on top of everything, but I mean, it's kind of like watching a train wreck, right?
Yeah.
There was going to be a train wreck, you probably walk out to see it, even though you don't think there's anything you can do about it.
Sorry to bother.
No, that's all.
And so you've, you, you've go ahead, Tim.
Well, but by being enlightened, it allows you to take advantage of possibly certain situations and you avoid certain confusions or certain discouragements because you understand things.
So to me, there is a certain exuberance or energy that comes from hating our enemies and loving our people.
Oh yeah.
Oh yeah.
Oh, the hate is delicious.
It keeps me going.
Oh yeah.
It's just as good as love, you know?
Oh yeah.
But you view this minor pendulum swing back with Trump 2.0 as temporary or do you think it's actually BS and that this is all like window dressing and they're not actually serious.
Because you listen to the show.
I'm probably more optimistic or at least give them credit for going way harder than the first time, which makes me think that they understand the scope and the severity of the problem and at least are giving it the college try, as they say.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I well, see, I think you're kind of black.
You seem pretty optimistic about what's going on with the current administration.
I think overall, you seem pretty black belts.
Yeah, I don't like, yeah, I don't think that we are on the cusp of a grand shift.
Although, you know, there's, of course, the awakening and the Jew genie being out of the bottle and not being able to be put back.
And we'll talk about Tucker and Nick, which disgusted me thoroughly, but that's a different story.
I just, you know, I don't know about you, but this is the first time in my life where I'm seeing aside from Israel and the anti-Semitism legislation and Randy Fine and all that trash, like that is in a severe bucket of unaddressed more or less.
But the people know and all signs point to the deportation effort being vigorous, serious, and expanding, which, you know, and I always said I would take some BS on the JQ if it meant that they actually went hard on immigration.
And just today, you know, 7,500 refugee admissions for fiscal year 2026, and the majority of them are white Afrikaners.
Nobody would have thought that that was coming down the pike before the election, right?
So you wouldn't do that if you weren't racially aware and serious about cleaning up the immigration system at least, which is, you know, that's the meat and potatoes of our problem without addressing how that was a problem in the first place.
Yeah.
I agree.
And there's some, there's some reason for hope.
And I mean, who knows what's going to happen?
Well, part of the problem is just knowing consistency in America because it can change every four years.
Who knows what's going to happen when Trump is gone, right?
And sure, maybe they'll cut back on obviously immigration.
Maybe they won't stop.
They'll stop taking in the refugees.
But the big thing that is just to me is like the 800-pound gorilla in the room that nobody talks about is India.
People just don't get it.
Like there are 1.4 billion of street crappers over there.
1.4 billion.
I mean, think about it.
Like they could send over 350 million people.
They could double the size of Indians.
Come over here.
Double the population of America.
And it would still be more than a billion of them over there.
And every single one of them wants to come to the West.
Every single one of them.
It worries me more than China because China is becoming richer by the day.
And at some point, you're just going to see China's not going to want to leave China.
And you're going to see, I'm pretty sure you're going to see a lot of them go back, especially if things become awful over here.
But I don't think it's possible for India.
I don't think it's possible for any place in the world to get so bad that Indians would be willing to go there and leave India.
Yeah, JD Vance is married to one of them.
Of course.
Just like this huge, like sword of Damocles hanging over the entire world that nobody seems to talk about.
I mean, the only good side is their fertility rate is falling like crazy.
I would disagree that no one is talking about them.
I think Indians are the most talked about minority because they have none of the sob stories of any of the other races.
And they've all come here in the last like 30 years or something.
And all of a sudden they're doing the whole like, oh, yeah, white people and your privilege.
Oh, we're so oppressed.
And liberal white women hate Indians.
I have met women that will say, I don't want to sound racist, but I don't like Indian.
That's one thing that's come out in this.
Yeah, in this meme age that we live in, blacks have suffered, the Jews have suffered, the Indians, the awareness of the disgusting qualities of Indians is front and center, I think.
No, no, people are discussing Indians because they're now all coming, like they're all sprinting over here.
Everyone else is kind of like slowly trickled in.
Like Blacks have just always kind of been here.
Chinese have been here for the hundreds of years.
There's not a lot of Japanese.
The Mexicans have been crossing the border for, I don't know, a century.
But now it's like all of India is trying to get here and everyone sees it.
And there's no Holocaust.
There's no slavery.
There's no trial of tears.
They have nothing.
And all they are, they're all creepy.
They're all cheap.
They're all stupid.
And they're dangerous.
They're not like dangerous, like a black where they'll just like kill you and steal your Starbucks gift card.
Like everyone is seeing that they're now, they're driving trucks.
It used to be like no one died from truck drivers.
And now you have hundreds a year.
It went from like less than one to literally in the hundreds and everyone sees it.
And whenever they kill someone, there's always the cell phone video of them and they're standing next to the cop like they just got like a ticket for driving while talking on their stuff.
Yeah.
No, like they like they don't see a problem with it because they believe in reincarnation.
So if you die, whatever, you'll just go back to the spawn point.
They literally have zero value for your life.
Like none.
I've actually, I actually heard years ago someone say that one of the reason reasons India is so depraved is that and so callous toward the poor and the wretched or whatever in India is because, well, they believe in reincarnation.
If you're wretched, you must have done something in a previous life to deserve it.
So I don't owe you anything.
Yeah, I always hear that you're a strong offshoot of population density too, just that hyper crowded.
You know, you almost have to be pushy and annoying and scheming and conniving to get anywhere in a, you know, it's still technically your white brain.
No, they're just savage and stupid.
Like their average IQ is 69.
These are stupid, evil little monsters.
Like there is nothing nastier in the world than excrement.
And it is their cure all for everything.
A woman died in India recently because she got bit by a snake and someone decided to bury her in cow crap.
And she died from suffocation.
There's a temple where there's all these rats and they crap everywhere.
And then they drink milk with rat crap in it.
They shove their face in cows' butts.
There is blacks don't do that.
Jews don't do that.
There is something specifically dark.
Well, not really.
In Africa.
In Africa, they ingest the menstruation of the cow in Africa.
Yeah, but okay.
I mean, that's weird that they do some weird stuff, but it's not like en masse, like where they all do it.
I'm sure it's like some weird, stupid tribal.
Like Blacks are their own kind of scary, but like Indians are so gross and dumb and rapey.
Like they're rapier than blacks.
Like blacks can't control themselves.
Like Indians, like a woman will be walking down Main Street and like five Indians will like look around and they catch each other's eyes and they'll all just dogpile her and rape her.
Like that's just, that's just another Tuesday in Bangladesh.
Hey, nothing, nothing wrong here.
Let it be known that apparently I'm in the pocket of the Indian lobby and Rolo surprisingly is defending the sub-Saharan Africans of the world against the Indian men.
That's okay.
No, no.
No, no.
What's going on is you're using your white brain to try to rationalize what their crap brain is doing.
Well, I mean, Canada got it per capita hard and fast and good and strong.
Insert other adjective or adverb there.
So I just how Judea likes it.
Yeah.
Now dating Katy Perry, interestingly enough.
Oh, oh, he's growing a new beard?
I guess.
Anyway, but yeah, I got an argument with a couple of guys in the comment zone or, you know, whatever.
And they were saying, oh, yeah, sure.
The window dressing deportations.
Meanwhile, the Indian invasion is on.
I said, okay, do you have any, you know, I wanted to see evidence that Indian legal immigration to the United States had increased since January and they could not.
It was like, well, the shutdown, there's not the data.
Oh, here's this.
Oh, come on, everybody knows.
It was AI slop.
I was like, I'm willing to grant that it's possible that that's happening because we talked about that too.
Yeah.
Illegal, bad, legal, good.
Tamp down on the illegals and get some deportations going in order to justify either an amnesty or a legal influx.
But nobody's been able to show me that data.
I remain open to the possibility.
Sure.
Right.
Well, I mean, they put the H-1B, you know, fee on, which everybody celebrated about and then got deflated.
But they took some action on H-1B, which you think you wouldn't.
I mean, you know, maybe it's like, let's just take some pressure off for everybody.
Oh, is that a distraction from one thing or another?
I don't know.
But I haven't seen anything to support the idea that there's been an increase in subcontinental immigration to the United States since January.
Could be wrong.
Yeah.
So I can, another, again, I don't think it's an anecdote.
I mean, it's an anecdote, but I don't think it's an isolated case.
So when I was still working at the biotech company in Cambridge, we had a co-op program for the last, I was involved with it for her the last four years that I was there.
And for six-month periods, so for every January and July, we would take on these co-ops.
And they were almost always master's degree students.
And they were almost all coming from the same university in Boston, private university.
And we would get like, I don't know, if we had two positions, we'd get like 20 or 30 resumes.
And 90% of them were master's, women, master's degree students going to that big Boston university from India.
Yeah.
Like four years that I was there.
It's like that university, like that master's degree program is probably just 100%, probably 95% Indians.
And I'm just like, I don't know that that's unusual.
That same thing might be going on all over the place.
And I'm like, so I don't know.
It's just, it's just an unending spigot of them coming over here.
I just don't know when it's going to end.
And it's, if there's a particular badness to it, like, because it's not those numbers pouring in aren't going to be low-level jobs.
They're taking high-level jobs.
They're, you know, it's like you're getting squeezed.
The low end is getting squeezed from Hispanics, and the high end is getting squeezed from Chinese and Indians.
And the middle is going to get squeezed by AI and mass layoffs and automation.
Yeah.
The great squeeze is on.
And the thought occurred too.
I think everybody's had a good experience with, you know, the Jose who comes over to do this or that.
You know, you can have a normal human interaction with a hardworking Hispanic from El Salvador or whatnot, not making an excuse for that.
But have you ever had a really warm, you know, man-to-man moment with a South Asian immigrant?
No, it's usually either a terrible call center interaction or IT at work or maybe you know a doctor that you have a difficulty understanding and who doesn't seem to care particularly much, not even to mention the confidence.
Yeah.
Well, as another sort of, again, this is just my personal experience.
I don't know if you guys would agree or have enough experience with it.
Indian men are just the worst.
They're like, they're creepy, they're effeminate.
There's just something about them that just like rubs me the wrong way.
I just like, I just, it's like, it's like they are, they are creepy with their bug eyes.
They're always like, but the women truly alien the women tend to be kind of nice.
Like, because I've worked with enough of them.
Like, yeah, because they'd rather marry you than one of them.
Yeah, that's what I was going to say.
Right.
Yeah.
And then, and then with the Orient, with the Chinese, with the East Asians, with the Orientals, it's kind of the opposite.
Like, Oriental guy, because again, I've worked with a lot of them because where I worked my whole life, the Oriental guys, they tend to be kind of like normal.
Like, you can get along with them, they seem okay.
And the Oriental women are just like, I don't even know how to put my finger on it.
It's just, I don't know, it's just something so like, I don't even know.
It's not that they're sometimes they seem that they're mercenary.
Sometimes it seems that they're just full of shit.
Sometimes I like like when my last years at work, and it was really bad.
Like it got to the point my last years working there that on my entire floor in this research building, I'm pretty sure I was the only white male.
There was survivor.
There were some Jews there.
There were some Jewish guys there, a couple of Jewish guys.
and lots of lots of women, lots of white women.
I was the only white male.
Yeah.
I was the only white male there.
And it was like so like, you know, people with like rainbow flags on their desks and that type of thing.
Sure.
It was like, it was like being in the invasion of the body snatches.
You had to be, you have to watch out.
What you say?
You just didn't say anything.
Like the only guy in the building who wasn't a part person was a Chinese guy.
Like I could sit down and like joke with him about the tranny stuff and the gay stuff and how absurd it was.
Yeah, there's a both side story.
Like that's my, you had quite the impressive endurance there, Joe, and the hat tip to you too.
Salute you for not just hanging up the spikes and saying, no, I'm going to keep grinding for a little bit, try something new.
And we wish you absolutely the best.
I got to take a break.
I'm going to make myself one of my drug cocktails.
No, not prep and whatever else they get.
But, you know, the kids know my magic potion.
It's like the, you know, Nyquil powdered stuff you put in hot water.
Oh, it's like magic.
Yeah, boohoo is me.
But Joe, before we go to the break, if you got to run, if you got to wake up early to go twist ranches, Godspeed, but you're more than welcome back for the second half.
Got to ask your favorite childhood memory, first thing that comes to mind.
And if you have any nice Halloween memory from when you had little kids under the roof.
Well, yeah, Halloween.
Like the neighborhood I grew up in was like Halloween paradise.
It was just like perfect.
Yeah, just Halloween is my favorite holiday.
It's my favorite time of the year and always has been.
Hell yeah.
It was like, it was just like magical.
You know, houses close together, but far enough apart in the neighborhood I grew up in, running around with gangs of friends, homemade costumes, at like criminally early ages, going out trick-to-eating without our parents.
There was a certain freedom to it, the way I recollect it.
You know, the, first of all, that the evenings are coming sooner, right?
It gets darker sooner and you're out.
You're running the block with your friends.
There's a certain sense of wildness about it.
Those first chill autumn winds maybe are felt.
And that's the way I remember it as being kind of a feeling of freedom with those, you know, the early darkness and your parents maybe allowing you to run around free a little more than they might otherwise.
And as for the kids for Halloween, yeah, it was great.
Like, and, you know, this is going to happen to you soon enough, coach.
So enjoy it.
I know, but it's close.
It was when, you know, there are a lot of milestones, not so much milestones, but endings with certain things when you have children.
And it's like, wow, that's the last time I'm going to do this.
This is the last time.
That's the last diaper I'm going to change.
That's the last kid I'm going to teach to drive.
Yeah, you're right.
There's a bitter joke.
And when my youngest, so I think I stopped going out with my children when they went out with them until fourth grade, I think.
And then when they hit fifth grade, they would just go with their friends.
So I did the calculation because when my oldest, you know, when I first took her at Halloween, I guess probably when she was two or three, and then when the last one finished fourth grade, and then it like struck me when he was in fifth grade and Halloween came.
I'm like, oh my God, I have no one to bring out for Halloween.
And I realized I think it was 18 consecutive years that I brought up for Halloween.
And it was like really shocking.
It was really shocking.
And I'm like, oh, man, I don't have, I don't have anywhere to go on Halloween.
I'm just going to stay here, get candy out.
I don't have any kids to bring around.
That's a bittersweet thing.
There's a lot of, as you say, there are a lot of moments like that as you have a family and as they grow up and you feel, at least I feel, like kind of left behind in a way, you know, because the child goes on to not do those same things that you have been doing, like you say, every year for 18 or more years.
And yeah, it's a bittersweet moment for sure.
We'll see soon enough, Joe.
You'll be out trick-or-treating with your grandson.
I'm pretty sure your daughter and son-in-law will let you tag along and relive the golden years.
Hopefully, yeah.
Amen.
All right.
Well, hey, Joe, you got the break music.
I'm springing this on you so you can decide later after the show if you want, unless you got one in the hopper.
But I'm a little worried about you.
I don't know your musical tastes and you're an exercise.
And, you know, from your era, I'm going to say no Boston, no Steely Day, no Chicago, and no Super Tramp.
Those are off the table.
He's my age.
He's in my age category.
He might be in the same table.
I'm going to pick a weird one though.
Good, good, good.
So starting about 10 years ago, it just sort of became like a tradition of me that I sort of like brought my wife into.
And every October, I watch.
I know you're going to say something about it, but the music is so good, Rocky Horror Picture Show.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
Okay, Jewish.
I know, but no, it's not Jewish.
Richard White is not a Jew.
He's not a Jew.
The guy that plays riff rap wrote all the music.
And I watch it at least once every October.
And I listen to like Halloween music all October.
And that's in the mix.
So it's great choice.
Joe, are you old enough to remember going like to midnight shows, you know, before cable TV and before, you know, all those types of things?
The only way to see movies like Rocky Horror Picture Show, you would go on a Friday or Saturday night to a midnight show.
Yeah.
I never did that.
The first time I saw a movie was in my freshman year of college, which would have been 86.
They played it at, they played it like the first, like sometime in September in the school auditorium.
That's the first time I saw the movie.
I didn't know about it, but I just never saw it.
Were the people, yeah, well, when I was maybe a very young high school or yeah, probably first or second year high school, I went, but the Rocky Horror Picture Show, of course, is famous for the people that acted out in the audience.
You know, they throw the toast when he says, I propose a toast.
Everyone throws a picture.
My roommate said, yeah, we got to bring all these props and stuff to it.
And I'm like, oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I was there, man.
I was there.
The only thing I know about Rocky Horror Picture Show is that JO was famously a stand-in for Tim Curry in that role.
That was his first major thing.
He still busted him that he looks like Tim Curry.
But go ahead, Joe, and then we'll take a break.
It's all yours, big.
Yeah, so pick the play the intro, though.
Science fiction double feature.
You got it.
We'll be right back, fam.
But he told us where we stand.
And Flash Gordon was there and silver underwear.
Claude Reigns was the invisible man.
Then something went wrong.
For Fay Ray and King Kong, they got caught in a cellular jam.
Then at a deadly pace, it came from outer space.
And this is how the message ran: Science fiction double feature.
Doctor S will build a creature Sea Android spying Brad and Janet And Francis Starz.
You I knew Leo G.
Carroll was over a barrel winter Rancho took to the hills and I really got hot when I saw Jeanette Scott fight a trip that that Spitz poison and kills.
Dana Andrews at Pruse gave him the rules and passing the muse, lots of skills.
But when worlds collide, said George Powell to his bride, I'm gonna give you some terrible thrills.
Like a science fiction double feature.
Dr. X will build a creature Sea android spiting me, Brad and J and Francis Stars.
E.M. Forbidden.
welcome back to Full House episode 217, second half.
I have my hot steaming cup-oh prep here already making me a little loosey-goosey.
I'm going to pour a little Miller Light in there to make it something.
It's like the white man sick purple drink.
Just kidding, mostly.
Big thanks to our pal Joe, who's sticking with us for the second half for taking us, you know, kind of a nice meandering tour through all the trials and tribulations going from white collar growing up and urban decay and immigration to your kids getting married and having kids and Halloween and all the rest of it.
Mostly positive, plenty of negative to talk about too.
It depends on how close you look at stuff.
You can stick your head in the ground or you can be hair on fire, irritated by everything.
I had never actually seen this meme.
It just comes to mind right now mentioning this stuff.
But the guy on the left side of the screen, he's kind of a soy jack and he's going crazy, but it's all the memes.
You've got a sun in red, you've got the Black Lives Matter, you've got the trans flag, you've got the don't step on me, don't tread on me flag.
He's just going crazy.
And on the right side is Iga Chat and he's just like, no, I've never heard of this, or I have things to do today, or, you know, no, yeah, I'm not really interested in that.
And there's some element of truth to that where I'm more on the right side of the screen, whereas I used to be not, of course, BLM or tranny garbage, but I used to be left side of the screen.
And now I'm a little bit more right side of the screen for better and for worse as well.
Probably need to moderate it, but you know the zeal of the newly converted and people who spend all day online angry about everything and agitated by everything.
It's incredible what they can come up with to get you agitated about if you pay attention enough.
No new white life from me yet.
This week, we did just record a show roughly seven days ago, but got a nice message in the mailbag that I figured was worthy of reading online.
And it goes like this.
Longtime listener, first time reaching out.
I don't have a lot to weigh in on except to tell you that I'm neither a father nor religious, but I still listen to every episode because although that specific content does not have value to me overall, the show still does.
In the last episode, Sam mentioned how he felt podcasts were going out of fashion.
Coach has often expressed his fatigue with the responsibility.
But don't give up.
Even if you do episodes less frequently, it's still worth it.
You probably have little understanding of the current podcast environment, and Full House is among the very, very few left from the OGC ville vet era that are still producing the same product as you did when you began.
Thank you very much for that, sir.
We've definitely changed or moderated a little bit, but yeah, more or less, I hope still over target.
Sadly, Exodus Americanus called a quits out of nowhere early this year.
And I was going to edit this out, but I'm just going to read it.
TRS simply sucks now.
And you are obviously aware from that, from the thinly veiled comments last episode and on previous shows.
Thank you, Rolo.
The space is now flooded with a lot of new voices who, although many of them are quality, I'm dubious of.
Yeah, I'll skip who he's dubious of just to not cast aspersions.
He just says that a lot of these guys equivocate on our key issues.
I can only imagine he means the JQ and seem like Johnny come lately from the NRX sphere and the new right dorks were only brave enough to say, I don't want to be trans before Trump 2.0 hit.
Far too many of the other newer voices are heavily slanted toward religion at the expense of the more important political aspects.
It's important that our OG voices like Full House maintain a presence and anchor this thing in the issues that inspired it and keep it focused.
Don't give up.
And that was from Doge Stapo, probably a heavy doge.
Yeah.
So fair.
And you could quibble that religion matters very much.
And maybe we don't do all that much politics, but hopefully we're still true to ourselves from back in 2019.
Yeah.
I think you got to touch on all those factors without any of them being overbearing.
I think they're all important in their own way.
And even somebody, for example, who's not religious can appreciate the angle we try to give or that we try to show value of it or the good side of it, something like that.
So even somebody who is of little or no faith might draw something useful out of that.
Really?
Sam, tell me if I'm crazy.
Rolo would know this too.
And maybe Joe, Joe's been a longtime listener.
I feel like we sort of blasted through or coasted through COVID without going insane one way or the other.
Like there were people who made their entire lives and content about COVID.
And at the time, I just remember thinking, don't get vaxed, but I'm not going to call you a walking bioweapon if you do.
Like, yeah, the masks suck.
You know, we took our kids out of school when they re-imposed mask mandates.
And I'm not making light of COVID and all the tyranny and insanity that was at that point.
But when I think back, like my hair was not on fire over COVID.
I think back to it as like a really love for me personally.
It was like a wonderful time of life, personally.
You got to put it in perspective.
You know what I mean?
And just like any other issue that might seem so all-fire important or divisive today, like Palestine, right?
You know, or something like that.
It's like there's something to be said about that, but that's not our whole worldview.
It's not comprised of free Palestine.
Yeah, I don't even remember you guys talking about COVID.
I mean, maybe you did, but I don't remember it.
Somewhat when it was early on, we had a medical professional on here talking about it.
We did do a very thorough show, and he said, it's real.
It's, you can get it, but you don't have to lose your mind about it.
I bet you if you go back and listen to that show, it's probably like spot on.
You know, it was just common sense.
Like, no, you know, like the fatality rates are very low unless you have this or that.
Yeah.
So it just came to my mind.
I was like, man, yeah.
We just sort of continued on with our lives and our content without going COVID crazy.
And we didn't dismiss it as like BS.
And we didn't like say this is the greatest threat to the white man since, I don't know, Jews landed on our shores.
I actually kind of liked COVID.
Yeah.
No, I mean, I liked COVID, but it was fun.
Like everybody was home.
Yeah.
I was off work for like, I thought it was like March, like most of my half of March, holiday.
2020.
Yeah.
And like two-thirds of May, and I was getting paid the whole time.
Nice.
Yeah.
And then, and then we had the summer of chimp outs, and then we went into the election.
And then Biden came in and he was like, yeah, we're going to like just push a ton more money out the door.
And it was like, okay, all right.
Yeah, sure.
Incredible time.
What a time.
What a time.
Two years.
Yep.
Sam, let's go to you with your story if you want to, or we can go right into it.
Yeah, go for it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, we had one of our local guys went through some trying times recently or is in trying times to a certain extent.
This starting about maybe a year ago or something.
And I'm not going to say who it is.
But guy went through some difficult times, some bad breaks, you know, with things with the job, things with where he was living, and he couldn't live there anymore.
He had to go here.
And he just, he kind of fell through the cracks.
Coach, you know who this guy is.
I think he's been, he said hello on the show a couple times.
I think you kind of met him a couple times.
You were irritated with him a couple of times.
And you know what?
He would probably say that himself, that he was irritated you a couple times.
But anyways, he's a friend and one of our local guys we've known for quite some time.
But he, you know, and it's not to say that any of these things weren't part of his fault with losing jobs or losing his way in life.
He would probably, you know, freely admit that as well.
But coming back maybe about a year or so, he became quite ill and they, you know, he was diagnosed with liver failure.
And he was given one to two years to live.
And, you know, for a young man, I'm going to call him a young man, especially compared to my age or Joe's age, to have to go visit a young man in a nursing home is a pretty sad thing to do.
So, you know, and our people have gone to visit him and I've gone to visit him as well.
Excuse me.
But, you know, in such a moment like that, just being frank here, I'm somebody who's keeping people on my prayer list and putting people on my prayer list.
And I pray for people in different ways.
And with something like that, it does kind of hit you like with what can possibly be the outcome of this, you know?
And you just don't even know what to what to do, except, I mean, you get on your knees and pray for the person.
We can't get a liver donor out of the audience like we.
I mean, that's a really tough, you know, your liver's, I mean, yeah, your kidneys are important.
You can live with one kidney.
And yeah, your quality of life could be such.
And we know that story.
The liver is even more critical, more difficult to, you know, even if you have a donor, right?
Even if you can get a donor is a very serious operation or serious transplant to have.
And he, you know, and to even qualify for it, he frankly got, I could say, kicked out or removed from programs because he didn't comply with what they said to do and stuff like that.
So you can read between the lines, you know, that he had some kind of problem going on that he was not getting hold of.
But anyways, he kind of hit rock bottom where, like I say, he was in a nursing home and trying to get himself sorted out so he could maybe get on a list, a waiting list to get a transplant.
And yeah.
So anyways, I've been praying for him for a while now.
And I recently went and visited him.
And when we were going to visit him, he says, hey, I got some good news I'm going to tell you.
And I'm like, okay, well, what is this?
He says, I'm going to wait to tell you until you get here.
I'll tell you in person.
So we get there.
And he says, well, he's, you know, because now he's been clean for a while, right?
Now he's, he's doing everything to, you know, be in a program and to live right and everything like that.
And he says, his doctor, hepatology, I think that's what they call it.
His last visit, they said, wow, you've really improved.
We're looking at you, you could have a good 10, 11 years left.
Hell yeah.
Yeah.
So, and, you know, meanwhile, he can be on a waiting list.
And, you know, and I said, you got to keep going, man, because you look out how much you've improved.
You know, they took like 60 pounds of fluid out of him because, you know, when your liver stops working, you start to blow up, you know.
And, but I said, you keep going.
You're going to see how much better you can do because you're a young man, you know, and even though you were given a very grim prognosis, you've, you've really turned it around.
He looks better and he feels better.
He talks better.
And now he's looking at getting into whatever the next like more independent living type situation above being like literally in a nursing home.
But good for him.
So you know what I mean?
Never too late to turn back from the brink, right?
And you don't have to despair and say it's over and might as well have another bottle.
Yeah.
Well, that and I just look at it also like prayers get answered.
That too.
Yep.
Could be.
You know, I have to say it, the first thought that comes to mind is I can't imagine how much you have to drink to put your liver on the fritz as a young man, right?
It's, it's almost incomprehensible.
But it happens.
And he's not the only one, Sam.
I know somebody else who was a friend of the year.
Sadly, I've known more than one person.
I've known more than five people who are sad cases.
Something to be to be slamming it that hard and put your liver on the fritz is frankly hard hard to understand or believe, but makes you realize the pain and the depths of alcoholism, frankly, how bad it can get.
But that's awesome.
I'm sincerely, absolutely happy for him.
Don't get cocky now.
You know who you are.
Probably, hopefully, maybe listen to this.
No, there's always hope, you know, there's always 10, 11 years.
Yeah, we should all be lucky to get 10 or 11 more years.
And, you know, and that's just now.
You keep yourself going, getting clean and getting better, more healthy.
You could make that number even higher and maybe you get a transplant at some point.
Maybe you don't need a transplant.
But, you know, some shows earlier in this year, we had Skip from Ironwill on.
And if that, if that doesn't lift you up and show you that it's possible to turn your life around with multiple things against you, you know, it's inspiring.
Whatever challenge you're facing in life, man, there's a light at the end.
And yeah, even if, even if you're not like, okay, today's the day I'm going to turn it around and we're going to, you know, do a complete 180, maybe just do nothing.
Like, don't, don't get drunk for a week.
You don't have to be like Mr. Health and Mr. Happy and Mr. Hero.
Just do nothing for a little bit.
Maybe you'll feel a little better.
That little incremental change, right?
You know, lay about in bed and be sad all day long.
Just don't get hammered.
It's like losing weight or giving up drinking or giving up something that you need to give up.
When after a few days or a week, you're going to like how good you feel.
And you're going to say, I want more of that.
Yeah.
Don't don't be like, I feel so great.
Let's go to the bar to celebrate.
No, no, there's a there's a new life ahead of you.
You got to put all that all that bullshit behind you, man.
You got to leave all that behind.
Amen.
Thank you, Sam.
And Godspeed, brother.
If you're listening to this, you know who you are.
Keep at it.
Happy to hear it.
So from the good to the to the bad and the ugly.
I don't know if I had high expectations for Tucker and Nick.
Maybe I did.
I thought, all right, maybe we're going to, this will push the envelope even further because a lot of people have been impressed or pleased by the ability or the willingness of Tucker to deviate from, I'm not just anti-war, but I'm going to roast Ted Cruz on being so pro-Israel, right?
I'm going to literally criticize Israel and Netanyahu and speculate about, you know, the murderous left and all this stuff.
You know, real, real progress, people giving him the benefit of the doubt.
If you haven't listened to it, I suggest that you do only because I was shocked and kind of angry by how bad I thought it was on both ends, more from Tucker, a little bit less from Nick.
And I read what I believe to be a lot of copes about it.
And I'll take it in two directions.
And I know that Rolo listened to it.
Joe, did you see or listen to the interview?
No, I just heard.
Okay, yeah, fair enough.
Yeah, yeah.
I unleashed about a two-minute.
I never leave voicemails in the group chat, but I just, I was driving.
I was able to concentrate and listen carefully from the beginning straight through to the end.
And I just let off like a lot of F-bombs and like this, this was total trash on both ends.
Overall, I thought that Tucker sounded more like an agent of the state, like a deliberate de-radicalization agent or officer than I had heard in a long time.
And I thought that Nick barely lifted a finger to push the envelope in terms of the kind of content that's been discussed on Tucker.
Now, in terms of the copes, I heard people say, you should just be glad that Tucker had Nick Fuentes on.
That in and of itself is a victory.
To which I said, if I wanted to hear two grown men just barely talk about Jewish influence in American foreign policy, like that, that's nothing today.
I'm not impressed by that, even if Tucker has a massive audience, right?
Jeffrey Sachs went harder on in not really the JQ, but the IQ at least.
People said, well, you see, Nick just came.
He like deliberately tempered himself there.
There's no reason to go juju ju on Tucker and alienate the audience.
He's drawing them into his show, which is where he goes really hard.
And I said, okay, fair enough.
And, you know, I haven't been critical of Nick in public or in private really for the past year or two because I thought, you know, if he's, if he's talking about race and Jewish power regularly, making people laugh, mocking the insanity of which Jewish power in America is calling Barry Weiss a spy and all that stuff.
I was like, you know, good on him.
Might not be my cup of tea.
He's been a worm for longer than he's been an Aryan soldier, right?
But, you know, he's getting older.
He's maturing or whatever.
But maybe I was like, did I just mishear that?
Like, am I imagining things?
Because I don't think Tucker was stupid enough or perhaps cowardly enough to say some of the things that he did.
But it looked to me, or it sounded like me.
I didn't watch it.
I just listened to it.
It actually looked like Tucker may have gotten like a higher seat and maybe put Nick in a lower seat to like dominate him.
Or maybe Nick's really that small compared to Tucker.
You know, when I saw the still image, Nick is shorter than Ben Shapiro.
Yeah, I don't know how tall Tucker is, but Ben Shapiro was not tall.
And Nick Fuentes were shorter.
And Rolo, I saw that you gave me a thumbs up.
Did you listen to it too?
I thought I was doing the listening.
All right.
No, I didn't.
No, I guess.
I didn't listen to it.
Sorry.
You gave us a question.
I know two people that listened to it.
Bobby listened to it.
said it was mostly pretty gay and not really worth your time, but there was a few interesting points.
And then one of the one of the weathermen listened to it and he probably hated it as much as you did.
Like he was like, this was awful.
This was terrible.
There was nothing redeeming about this.
Yeah, it wasn't interesting.
The only things that were interesting were like Tucker asking Nick about what was said at the Trump Mar-a-Lago thing with Kanye.
Like that was mildly interesting.
And then later on, like Tucker and Nick talking about women was like kind of ludicrous, you know, like this like old boomer and this like millennial Zoom or whatever Nick is like I was like, well, that's kind of interesting.
But the worst, the worst part about it was Tucker, I couldn't believe my ears.
He was basically saying that America is too diverse.
He was he was virtually putting his hand around Nick's shoulder and saying, why, why are you attacking Republicans like Joe Kent and Marjorie Taylor Greene?
And, you know, why not go after the left or go after Antifa?
And for Nick, of course, it's personally, he's like, well, they, they attacked me.
And like, I kind of understand that.
And of course, you want to push the Republicans to be better.
And then Tucker was, you know, he did, of course, the not all Jews thing.
He did Ma Saul of Tarsus, my favorite Christian.
I came up with the two, three overwhelming responses for me.
One, I did think that Tucker was deliberately de-radicalizing there for some reason, whether he's paid or whether he's just, you know, doesn't want to see things get too nasty in America.
Two, I thought that Nick played it way too safe, missed a ton of softballs.
And if he was just playing savvy longball to increase his audience, I couldn't imagine wasting an opportunity on Tucker Carlson.
But why would you want to be why would you want to be so low energy for something like that?
You want to draw attention to it?
The one opportunity that I really do think that Fuentes missed, which would have been a really good dig, when Tucker's like, I thought you were a Fed.
And Nick should have said, yeah, you also thought, hold on.
He should have said, yeah, you also thought I was gay.
You want to talk about that?
Yeah.
Like, really leaned into that.
Gloss right over that.
Right now, they're like sort of bosom buddies.
But the biggest thing was Tucker seemed to say, America's too diverse and we have too many ethnicities and too many religions to play identity politics.
I just, I basically fell out of my chair.
The whole idea is that, yes, that is true.
And that is why we, yeah, that's why whites have to play identity politics.
Nick said pro-white once, and he said, well, you know, and Tucker did the not all Jews thing and my Jewish friend.
And Nick's like, yeah, my producer and my best friend is Jewish.
It's just like, oh my God.
So, so, so, so, we're doing, we're doing, we're doing knacks alt there.
This is like the edgy that Mr. Edgy from the Holocaust like joke department is just like, and he'd be like, Yeah, I totally agree, Tucker.
But you see, there are Jews who have an affinity to Israel, and that is a double standard.
And it's like, that's that, that's the takeaway.
Like, you couldn't like no talk about white genocide or who's behind immigration or who's behind Older fans or all that stuff.
It was just like Charlie Kirk was a more interesting interview.
Jeffrey Sachs was a more effective critique of Jewish power or Israeli influence in the United States.
It went nowhere, and I was just disgusted by the entire thing, basically.
Well, Coach, what I would say, and I didn't watch it or listen to it.
I saw it crop up and I said, I was interested to watch it.
Maybe I will get to it.
But the phenomenon of both of them, Tucker and Nick Fuentes, if I wanted to take a positive, I would say that they both are phenomenon points to that the Overton window has shifted.
They are the trailing edge, not the leading edge.
And the sentiment of the people is way further ahead than either of them.
So if you want to take maybe not the exact substance, but the fact that they are out there doing what they're doing says something, I think, in our favor.
Well, it's also kind of crazy how Nick was in the Tucker interview compared to like a month ago.
He was on the Sam Hyde show.
And he was the complete opposite.
Like he was saying pro-white stuff and anti-Jewish stuff and he was naming names.
And I think the problem is as a Zoomer, he does not know how to interact with adults because their whole life is basically meme culture.
And that's not a paternalistic sort of tone.
Like not to defend Fuentes on this front because he knows better.
I do think that Fuentes has big aspirations.
Like he has like a level of megalomania where he doesn't want to just be the biggest podcast in the world.
Like I think if Spotify said, hey, screw Joe Rogan, his numbers are going down.
You're the guy.
You want $150 million, but you just, you can only podcast.
I don't think he'd be taking that deal.
I think all three of us would.
That'd be, you know, that's the best deal anyone could have.
I think he genuinely wants to be president.
I think even being mayor of Chicago isn't enough of him.
And I think he's like, wow, this is, yeah, it is.
Like, there's like a few cities like being the mayor of would be like a big deal.
Chicago, New York, and probably San Francisco.
Not so much LA.
Nobody cares there.
It's too Mexican, too black.
But I think that he sees that as a way in towards like the Republican Party.
Like, see, I can be civil.
Look.
And he, and he's trying to have his cake and eat it too.
Like, he didn't really cuck on anything, but, you know, if you don't push the envelope at all.
Yeah.
You know, if like, if you don't tell your wife you were cheating on her, it doesn't mean you weren't cheating on her.
It's like, Nick, we still know what the game is and we know what you are actually like.
You're not really being civilized here and you're not getting yourself closer to Republican power.
Because Tucker is a Republican, but Nick definitely wants to be a Republican.
He doesn't want to start a new party.
He wants to go into one where all the groundwork has been laid, which is the smarter strategy.
But I think that's his goal.
Color me skeptical that he is a born-again Aryan Christian warrior for the white race, Uber Ellis, as opposed to a slightly wormy megalomaniac, you know, narcissist.
I think that's a lot of our.
It's probably could be could be a little bit of both.
I think it's 60-40, former to the latter.
Yeah, that's fair.
A couple of things to be fair as well.
It's possible that he got edited.
You know, Tucker's editors may have slickly cut him off.
That's a possibility.
Do you think they did?
I don't think Fuentes would have been tweeting, though, and just like, look, they selectively edited me out.
I was talking about this, this, and this.
He'd be making, you know, he'd be tweeting up a storm.
He'd be talking about it on his show.
Maybe, or maybe he viewed this as his welcome back party into the graces of big tent dissident Republicanism, you know, if that's a situation.
I think that's, well, that's what I, what I was like, let's not screw this up.
Yeah, no need to go ahead.
But it's like, you know, would it be, would it really have hurt him to like point out that the OnlyFans creator and owner is Jewish when Tucker was fed jacketing the guys who went to Charlottesville as Nazis?
He couldn't say, well, actually, I was there and I wasn't there as a Fed.
You know, it was just softball after softball missed opportunity that made me think that Tucker was deliberately trying to drag him back to an unacceptable form of respectability.
And Nick was kind of like enjoying the fact that he was perhaps, you know, on that big stage and it just grossed me out.
And I would never, if I ever went on Tucker, I wouldn't like miss that many opportunities to speak the truth in front of you know, at least a couple million eyeballs, maybe more ears included, right?
Tens of millions.
I don't know.
You're definitely right that that's what was going on with Fuentes saw it.
Like, look, Tucker's courting me.
Tucker brought me in.
I better be on my best behavior.
And Tucker was like, this guy, he beat Joe Rogan on Spotify.
This was the number one guy.
And he's talking about a lot of things that if you go out into public, regular people are talking about.
We need to dial this back.
And then again, like Fuentes did like a four-hour show on Tucker being a Fed.
So like there's no excuse from him.
Tucker does have the excuse.
He's always been in media.
His dad is a CIA asset.
Like we know all these things about Tucker.
So it's not surprising that Tucker would be doing that, but it is surprising that Fuentes would allow that.
Play nice and not even, you don't even have to say Jew.
You could just hear him in his weird nasally voice, like, well, Tucker, you know, did you know who owns OnlyFans?
It's just waiting there.
Yeah, well, gee, I wonder who's behind OnlyFans.
I wonder why it's not necessarily made public.
Like, yeah, like, it's really a tough question.
Yeah, whatever.
Porn and drugs are bad for young men and corrupting their, yeah, real, real breaking stuff there.
Or I never told this before to anyone before, but I used to listen to Mark Levin and he semi-radicalized me.
It's like, you know, I used to listen to Mark Levin too.
Michael Savage used to say borders language culture, and that would be just enough red meat for the white middle class Goyen, but of course it wouldn't be borders, race, language culture.
That would be anathema or evict the civilization, civilizational snake whisperers, worm tongues.
So yeah, a lot of damage control and Overton window management going on as opposed to expansion for sure.
I'm pretty sure I heard that and I wasn't being paranoid that it was a deliberate decision.
I blame Tucker more, blame Nick a little bit less for not taking more stabs.
And the other thing, Sam, too, is when they talk about, like, I felt less charitable toward Christianity when I hear them talk about the Jew stuff and so of thy neighbors.
I was like, if that's the Christianity, you're peddling.
Yeah, I'm not that.
No, that's Christianity.
We reject it 100%.
Yeah.
Anyway, thank you for coming to my Ted Rant.
It's rare that I, you know, I had not listened to a show or a program in quite a while.
And I thought maybe that would be juicy and worth some popcorn.
And it was, it was quite the opposite.
So maybe worth checking out to see if you think I'm crazy and also to see if you can hear and sense or see that management going on that come under the wing.
You don't need to talk about the Holocaust and all those Jews.
Yeah, we can be normal.
Let's keep, let's keep this project.
Let's get those young men back under.
Oh, and the other thing, too, is they talked about the lunatic who had already murdered a few people and then showed up at Nick's house.
Let us not forget that they are humans with concerns about themselves and their loved ones.
And that is in the back of their mind too.
So credit a little bit there where due when people might actually come to kill you.
It changes your calculus or the way you talk just a little bit.
A little bit of a quick movie deviation.
It is now currently October 31st here in the Mountain Mama 1214.
I, of course, enjoyed weapons as a quality film.
I didn't find it terrifying or like the best horror movie I ever saw.
But if you haven't seen it, it's worth it.
It's well done.
I was interested until the very end, you know, throughout the entire movie.
And a surprise, actually, my son, have you seen weapons, Sam?
No, I haven't.
I was just laughing at the soy jack face that Rolo made Rolo was less charitable toward weapons, but you recognize it was an entertaining movie.
What?
Right?
What?
Weapons.
Are you joking?
No.
I gave weapons.
I gave it a 10 out of 10.
Oh, yeah.
Sorry.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No.
Yeah.
My bad.
It was Hereditary and Evil Dead.
See, Rolo and I are geeking out on horror movies so often this time of season that I'm missing.
Evil Dead was average.
Evil Dead 2013.
Yes, the remake I thought was well done and scary and creepy.
That was one where I was like, yeah, I'm going to actually use the toilet instead of peeing off the deck tonight.
You know, I wasn't like terrified or spooked, but I was like, that was creepy enough.
Plus, my house vaguely looks like a cabin in the woods.
But if you want to be creeped out and see tons of gore that's not CGI, Rolo said it has too much girl power.
But the Spanish director of that said, no, I wanted to make it true to Evil Dead.
It's not as jokey, not as campy, but that's the Evil Dead 2013 that I was pleasing.
It is joking.
Well, that doesn't always have to be, you know, they made it a little bit more serious and creepy, of course.
I want to make a Spider-Man true to Spider-Man.
He won't be shooting webs.
He won't be climbing on walls.
He won't be quipping.
But a spider bit at one point.
Where do I see this movie, Weapons?
That's everywhere on stream.
You might have to rent it.
Yeah.
Yep.
It's on everybody.
That's everywhere.
I don't know if it's free anywhere yet, but I can't.
It may be free for Sam.
Somebody might show up in my email somewhere.
Some kind of link.
Something I enjoy every Halloween is I have this CD, which I've had for many years.
It's called Classical Terror, and it's the London Symphony Orchestra playing stuff like Night on Bald Mountain in the Hall of the Mountain King.
One of my favorites that I remember from a child, Dance Macabre by St. Sens.
And I remember when I was, this is, you guys are too little to know anything about this, but when I was a kid in school, they had film strips, right?
And so they would put literally a record, a vinyl record on a little player, and then they would advance the film strip when it would beep.
And I can remember even now the music teacher going through all these songs and he had these slides.
And one of them was about Night on Bald Mountain.
The other one was Dance Macabre.
And I remember those very well.
But the CD is really good.
It has Dance of the Goblins and March to the Scaffold.
It's really, really good stuff.
And I listened to it last night while I was carving the pumpkin.
And I will listen to it again tomorrow.
Yeah, I love that.
Takata and Fugue by Bach.
I've got it on Halloween playing all this stuff.
And that's a new industry might even be on YouTube now for sure.
Yeah.
Hereditary was another one that Rolo and I largely agreed on.
Like if you haven't like that was, it's a very, it's like weapons in that it's beautifully shot.
Great actors in Gabriel Byrne and the woman you'll recognize me.
Tony Collins.
She's the mom in the sixth sense.
Yes, very good.
And the only detraction is that their eldest son looks like a continental.
Yeah, he looks like an Indian or a Pakistani or a Jewish pack.
And he's actually like the son of Michael Wolf in some like Anglo, like I think there's an Indian in the wood pile there somewhere.
It doesn't make sense if you look up his genealogy that he looks like that, but supposedly a white mother and father with a son and a daughter.
And the son looks like an Indian and the daughter looks like she's got serious problems and she's sort of central to the story, but very creepy if you can get over the fact that the son looks like he was adopted and that's not in the storyline.
Hereditary, you'll enjoy it.
Ready.
Okay.
Yep.
And God.
You know, that's all that I have to say, gentlemen.
Frankly, even if we're a little bit early, you know, I feel like crap, but that doesn't mean we have to stop.
Sam, Joe, Rollo, anything in your stack that you want to hear from Joe off the wall?
Yeah, Joe, Rip.
Yeah.
Anything you want.
Oh, just thanks for having me on.
It was a lot of fun.
Good discussion.
All right.
That works for me.
Thank you for listening to us for so long and always being so kind.
You know, I never, you wrote a really long email into the show that I would have felt a little bit embarrassed to read in full on air.
So instead, I just said, hey, how about you come on?
And really, really glad that you do.
I'm really impressed that you decided to go back out there to work.
Sounds like you have a wonderful family and you did a hell of a job, knock on wood, that they've got success and health and happiness so far.
I hope you guys, you know, you don't have to have a compound and all live on the same property, but if you can get within the same county or zip code, that would be awesome.
And I wanted to ask, when you were raising your kids, did you deliberately educate, inculcate them with pro-white or perhaps Jew skeptical views?
Or did you just play it safe?
Vague, roughly, vaguely.
Yeah.
Well, Jane and Wayne is getting calm until they were older.
Sure.
My boy, my daughter, I don't discuss politics.
But, you know, she knows how I feel about things.
But she's a woman.
You know, she's doing what she's supposed to do.
You know, she's getting careful.
You're really, yeah, really quiet there, Joe.
Yeah, you're really quiet.
That's okay.
We're getting signs really.
I could hear what he was, what he was dishing out, but go ahead, Sam.
Yeah, well, you must size up where the person you're talking to, where really they are, what is really will be helpful or useful to them, you know, to burden certain people with certain ideas can be negative, actually.
You know, if you, if you blackpill them in a way that really does diminish their outlook or scare them or depress them, yeah, those types of things.
So you, you need to feel out that person and not everybody needs to know everything or needs to be presented in a certain way.
The thing that I personally put a premium on is is trying to inspire or activate the person for the for them to uh have enthusiasm for life and for doing the good things.
So there's different ways that you um that you talk to somebody, a different type of information you give to somebody that will help them move in that direction.
You know so, whether that's your children or anyone you come to in life, you you got to size them up and and and give them that thing they need absolutely.
Your mileage may vary, yep ab n r w j y, l around Blacks.
Never relax with Jews.
You lose.
You can do worse than that.
Uh, it's pithy right, it's accurate.
Teach them the accurate.
I, I had to write that out.
I've never actually seen that accurate.
It might uh save your life.
Might save your life.
Yeah, the other one, uh uh w a g f k, y.
You ever see that one?
No, you see a lot of those.
Uh wait wait, waiting for that one to come out of the DHS uh twitter shop for sure.
They are certainly pushing the envelope.
I I love it from putting abl will list that one as a uh hate, uh slang or hate symbol or something.
Yeah, I couldn't believe they put.
They put like seven black illegal aliens in blue crystals in one of that twitter posts.
Oh, they're HALO posting, yeah.
And then SBLC is like we need to find who that poster is.
We need to dox the DHS social media manager.
It's just.
It was like D's right yeah yeah, definitely something, something Morris D's, Morris D's Nuts, old old handle of Strikers.
Anyway uh, I am gonna try to get a good night's sleep here guys, and be ready to rock and roll tomorrow evening walking around the streets with at least.
You know, the oldest is definitely into jaded halloween territory, but he might he, he might come out, we'll see.
I think by high school I was like I don't need to go out on on trick-or-treating, but basically everything through eighth grade is good.
But uh, if you're hearing this on halloween, go out and make the most of it, especially if you got young ones under the roof.
If you're hearing it afterwards, I hope you had a lovely one, even if it's just you and the old lady watching a scary movie.
Consider weapons hereditary, or if she doesn't mind some gore.
Uh, Evil Dead from 2013.
Those would be my with a with a woman.
Fair enough, at least it's funny and God bless our pal Joe, honored and happy to final finally have him on.
And and I am touched Sam, that you're, you know you're like i'm the one who's got to keep up these family traditions right, these right.
Yeah, I I always joke, you know.
They're like, hey dad, can you, can you pour me some more milk?
I'm like what do I got to do everything around here and they roll their eyes because I Yeah, I'm the one hanging the Christmas stockings.
I'm the one, you know, playing meal.
Lights up in the house.
I know.
I'm starting to get criticism that I am babying or perpetuating youthfulness for our youngest.
And I said, but he's our youngest.
He's like, come on, like, you know, humor an old man, humor an old man.
Let me, you know, yeah.
But he still, he still loves getting stories before bedtime.
So I am totally going to that well as regularly as possible, even if, even if I don't really feel, I'm like, can you just go to bed?
I'm like, no, yeah, let's reach out.
Like Joe was saying, one, one time will be the last time.
So exactly.
Yep.
We love you, fam.
And happy Halloween.
Happy All Saints Day, November 1st, of course.
And we're coming into the Christmas season.
Stay healthy.
Don't kill your liver.
Love your wife and kids.
Stay faithful to your family and to our beliefs and cause too, even if it's sometimes a clown show or I won't say dumpster fire overused, but you know what I mean.
And Sam, why don't we play your favorite, whatever it is, you know, whatever version from your Night of Terror and the London Symphony Orchestra.
You can, you can choose now or after the show your favorite orchestra.
All right.
Let's go with Dance Macabre by St. Sons.
Dance Macabre.
Coming up.
We love you, fam.
We'll talk to you sometime in early November.
Let's see if Joe listens to the end of the show.
Joe, it's all yours.
See ya.
All right.
My man.
Later.
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