We welcome an old friend who recently achieved the highest honor: He helped deliver his own new white life in the family whip of the parking lot of the birthing center! And lots more on politics, Bitcoin, dealing with aging parents, the ongoing black murder spree, and the Venezuela question. Break: For an Old Kentucky Anarchist Close: Down in a Hole 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.
As I was driving home through the spectacular West Virginia countryside the other day and listening to Moby's play from beginning to end, just to provide some scene setting, Junior, who's normally pretty taciturn on our sojourns, exclaimed, you know, November is an underrated month, not mid at all.
Jolted to attention by the unexpected burst of positivity from my young aspiring curmojin, I paid new attention to the stark gray sky and setting sun before us, the bare trees blowing in the wind,
but interspersed with the greens of the majestic pines, cattle lazily grazing in the fields, the utter lack of traffic as usual, and the realization that two of the greatest holidays of the year are on tap with lots of extended family quality time soon to boot.
And I then wholeheartedly agreed with my traveling companion.
As I'm getting older and am most likely over halfway through the journey, I'm getting a lot more pensive and introspective about life, hopefully not maudlin.
This will come as no surprise to some of you who have listened to us since 2019.
Maybe it's the creeping suspicion that one day I might actually get judged by a celestial despot for eternal pleasure or pain after kicking the bucket.
Maybe I'm just mellowing out in middle age as the tea production continues its slow, tragic decline.
Maybe it's genetic.
My old man is definitely a sentimental softie too.
But whatever the reason, I'm definitely noticing how quickly the time is flying by, how quickly the kids are growing up.
And increasingly, I'm hoping to live happier, healthier, and frankly, as much of that as possible with whatever time I've got left.
And don't worry, I don't have a cancer diagnosis or anything.
If you're listening to this, you've got lots to be thankful for as we approach Thanksgiving, on top of the pride you should already feel for your exquisite taste in podcasts.
You're not pushing up daisies like the billions before you who have already punched their ticket.
You can't say life in this wretched epic isn't interesting, even if it comes with loads of infuriating atrocities and hypocrisies.
And if you, like me, are sometimes melancholy this time of year with the shorter days, less sunlight, bleak landscapes, and cold weather, try to look on the bright side and be grateful that you're even still around to be a grump.
All right, we have special first-time guest on tap with you, and he's got a great story.
So let's get cracking.
Mr. Producer, let's go.
Welcome, everyone, to Full House, the world's finest show for white fathers, aspiring ones, and the whole family.
It is episode 218.
It's Sunday, November 23rd, 2025, as we go to tape.
And I am your sappy host, Coach Finstock, back with another hour, possibly two, of hopefully world-class commentary.
Before we meet the birth panel, though, big thanks to Johnny and the White Stag Athletic Club for their kind support of the show since last time.
And if you want to send some pre-Christmas cheer our way, we wouldn't deny it.
We wouldn't reject it.
Check us out at giftsandgo.com slash fullhouse.
And after all that, let's get to the birth panel.
First up, he's known as Mr. Holiday in his home and also in his entire zip code, or at least he should be if that's not the case.
Sam, we thank you for your service.
Well, thank you.
And first of all, you know, we had a couple weeks off there, coach, and stuff happens in between.
So happy related crystal knocked to all, you know, that kind of passed us right by.
Mentioned holidays coming up and uh, getting loaded tonight with my mother-in-law.
She's in town, so we're having some beers, yeah and uh, but yeah, good words there.
What kind of?
What kind of beer?
Sam, three floors, again pilsner quell, this time pilsner.
Ah, can't go wrong.
Good check, cannot go wrong, definitely.
And uh yeah, the Thanksgiving coming up, that's uh some some good words uh, there that you have.
Uh, everyone should practice what our ancestors always said, count your blessings, because if you're honest about it, you sit down, man, you got a lot to be thankful for.
Very much, if nothing else, that you're white, you know, that comes up before anything.
But tonight, you might notice I'm sporting this beautiful white stag athletic club t-shirt.
Hell yeah.
Hell yeah, yeah.
And, you know, these t-shirts, when you get a t-shirt from Europe, it's not just a t-shirt with a cool logo.
The t-shirt itself has, you know, like the cut of it.
If you got yours, you know, you notice it's kind of like a fashion cut of a t-shirt, I would call it, you know, as an American, but it's a cool, nice quality shirt and a nice cut to it that you could wear, you know, you could wear it as your shirt.
You know, I was wearing, of course, our handsome full house hoodie and I took it off because I wanted to show it on the camera.
But I was sure appreciative to receive that.
And it sounds like our guy over there, he appreciated the hoodie that you sent him.
And so that's the transatlantic merch trade.
Yes.
Yeah.
Trade and favors.
That was the least I could do.
And, you know, big, big, big thanks to our producer.
You know, because I didn't want to be like, can you make one sweatshirt for me?
Oh, by the way, it has to go overseas.
But Mercedes.
Well, that's how she, yeah, that's kind of how she makes them.
That's the process anyways.
Now, if we started giving her, you know, 100 orders or something, yeah, she'd have to figure out how to do it.
But yeah, she's a real peach and she gets it all done.
She'll crank out t-shirts, hoodies, coffee mugs.
And people love these sweatshirts.
I'm just telling you, people love the sweatshirts and t-shirts with the full house logo on it.
Yeah, I haven't mentioned it in a long time.
One, because it's kind of a pain in the ass.
I mean, obviously she's doing the production and I'm usually doing the fulfilling, sending them out.
But if you want one, mug, hoodie, t-shirt, you know, email the show will do.
It's kind of the pain in the ass and it's not really a money-making venture.
Yeah, we'll still do it.
That time of year.
Also, Sam, in terms of my drinking problem, tonight's flight is I had a tall mug of green tea.
I got a sparkling water here.
And then also, after we're going for a little bit, an ice-cold Sapporo.
They had these in Costco by the case.
Oh, I got to get that, which, you know, it's an okay beer, but it just reminds me of like going to a Japanese restaurant and having sushi.
Just comes out in the aroma.
So I'm very excited to crack that in a few, maybe after we meet our special guest.
But good to see you, buddy.
Welcome back.
Let's keep the party rolling.
Next up, we have a long-running joke or an inside joke where I swear that I recognize his visage in actors, musicians, and all manner of people that I see from time to time.
It's definitely not an obsession and certainly does not even require a no-homo qualifier, but it's true.
Rolo, welcome back, buddy.
Good to be here.
And I'm glad to be everywhere else, too, apparently.
Yeah, I know.
But you agree, like you don't think I'm crazy.
The most recent one, I think it's safe to say that there was a certain resemblance of you and Mark Lanigan, who was the lead singer of Mother Love Bone, finally died of an overdose, I don't know, 10 years ago, something like that.
Well, thank God.
Yeah, it looks like, looks like old wrinkly Rolo.
Yeah.
Somebody's going to look up Mark Lanigan and be like, I got him.
That's wrong.
Yeah.
This is what's going to happen.
They're going to look him up and then they're going to actually walk by me in public and they won't think twice about it.
That's what's going to happen.
It's like it looks enough like me that if you see me and look at him and go, oh, yeah.
But if you just saw me on the streets, you know, he's much more handsome than me.
I don't know.
Yeah, whatever.
I mean, and of course I could rattle off the other actors too, but then there's one that is so close that it's like, all right, then they might actually really get you.
Anyway, anything here?
You know who I'm talking about.
Anything here at the top you want to mention?
Nothing at the top, but, you know, well, bass and confused still rolling.
Bass and confused, still rolling.
Great time.
Check us out.
Rumble.
Wednesday's 8 p.m. Rumble slash bass and confused.
It's a good time.
Should we do this show on Rumble, even if we stick to just audio?
Is there a point?
Well, we're live and we have videos.
So I mean, well, I know that we're not, but I'm just asking, like, does it make sense to put Full House up on Rumble or not really?
I don't know.
Maybe, possibly.
I don't know how many people are doing Rumble, like just post facto.
Well, like audio specifically, because we have, yeah, we have a, we got the whole package.
You know, it's not just us talking over like a logo, which we have.
But because I made a nice promise that I thought the other side would never fulfill, I am doing a new parody song.
It's going to be available to base and confused members.
So five bucks a month.
Very good.
All right.
Well, the next time we last time we did a live stream was almost one year ago for the election, which, you know, Odyssey didn't work.
We did it on Telegram.
But the next time we do it, we'll look into doing it on Rumble as well.
Anyway, our special guest is champion at the bit here.
Finally, he's been a friend of the show for a long time, several years at least.
He's already a proud father, but he most recently added to his squad in the most spectacular way.
If he came to a meetup, I'd be inclined to eject him on site for looking like a high T handsome Antifa.
But for now, we still believe he's our guy.
Bob.
Welcome, buddy.
Thanks, Coach.
I am a bit self-conscious of that, to be honest.
I was a biker metalhead in my past life.
So that's kind of stuck with me.
And I do kind of feel out of place with the clean-cut, good-looking fellas.
Hey, you're handsome.
Yeah, I like you got the biker mustache handlebar going on.
I won't get into any other details, of course, but we're delighted to have you.
You know the drill.
Ethnicity, religion, and fatherhood status, please.
I'm truly American.
I trace my ancestry back to 1774 via Scotland.
But I would call myself Irish if we're going to get into the weeds.
Sure.
I don't know necessarily.
I think it's useless to break it up.
We're all American, but every different ethnicity has little quirks in here and there.
So yeah, I'm going to call myself a patty.
Ethnicity, father.
Religion.
Religion.
You're not the first one to stumble over the three simple questions that you've heard a hundred times.
I'm starstruck.
I'm starstruck.
I grew up.
I grew up Catholic.
Grew up Catholic.
I believe in God.
I've had my issues with the church.
I've actually spoke to Sam with it on the topic in the past.
But yeah, I believe God Grew up uh Catholic.
Um, it's kind of not gone great, and I've kind of dug into it recently, and I'm not impressed with what I've seen, so we'll just leave it at that.
I believe in God, and uh, I say my own prayers and I worship in my own way.
Fair enough, teacher.
Do you talk?
Yeah, do you talk to the older kids?
I'm jumping ahead of you, sorry, but you have older kids.
Do you talk to them about God, religion, that stuff, or are they still too young?
It's funny, I've had that in the back of my mind for a long time.
My oldest is still relatively young, but I have started to bring up like, you know, I can't really pinpoint a context, but recently I've said she's asked me something, and you know, that's just how God made us.
And I think that's going to be my route.
My wife isn't necessarily religious either, so it's that's going to be a conversation in the future.
Um, but I think I'm just going to subtly because I believe in the truth, and the truth is God, and I believe in nature, and nature is created by God.
So, I think that's kind of my route is just to when she asks why for the 15th time, because God made it that way.
I don't know that you could do a lot worse than that for sure.
Yeah, and it's, I was just thinking about our three kids, Junior is like a stubborn agnostic/slash atheist.
He thinks it's all hokeum.
Daughter is uh more Christian than you would think, given her upbringing.
She wears a cross necklace regularly.
And funny enough, when I say, Would you like to go to church on Sunday morning?
She's not that enthusiastic.
And then our youngest is too young, and uh, he's he's sort of like the joyous clown of the family, always jumping around and stuff.
So, we haven't had too many uh deep metaphysical conversations with him yet.
But uh, yeah, sorry, I sorry I stepped on you there, but you've got two and you just welcome your third if I have that down right.
Yes, sir.
Yeah, hopefully, there's a cross, a mother's cross going on my wife's neck soon.
So, hopefully, amen.
Well, you know, I mean, you know, I got my wine, my wife won after three.
So, if you want to fudge it a little bit, you know, I don't think uh uncle would be too upset.
We'll get into it later, but she's she's already talking about number four, so hell yeah, all right.
So, all right, so so lay it on us.
Your wife is pregnant, you can take it from there.
I mean, if you want to go back to the conception, you know, that's your business, you old horn dog.
But uh, do a little scene setting, you know, wifey's pregnant, things are going pretty well.
Uh, take it from there, please.
Yeah, she must like me or something, eh?
Uh, uh, yeah, so this summer, you know, obviously with a kid on the way, I reached out to boss man, and I'm uh, I'm kind of a big fish in a small pond, so I can kind of uh dictate my hours.
So, I ended up doing an absolute ton of overtime, um, you know, just stacking as much away as I could.
So, so this summer was pretty difficult for all of us.
But my wife's a trooper, she she uh held down the fort real well.
And um, you know, we started getting close to the due date, and she started getting bigger and bigger and bigger.
And um, that last week, I said, Hey, boss man, you know, I'm gonna take off until until we pop.
So, she ended up expecting for our third being either on time or you know, maybe even a little early.
Um, ended up, I ended up being home for uh 11 days just sitting around, you know, looking at each other and uh plenty to do, obviously, with two toddlers running around.
And I got you know, chickens and pigs and a garden a square away, but uh, yeah, we so so previous to it, uh, she had gone like three or four nights of like she was calling it false labor, but like, you know, serious contractions.
And, you know, I'm like, all right, well, better ramp it up, get better, call your mom.
And, you know, a couple hours go by and then it just fades away.
So it was like, you know, three or four nights of that.
And then finally, the night that it happened, you know, it's ramped up again and then kind of faded away.
8 o'clock, 8:30 comes around.
I'm like, all right, well, I guess we better nap.
I guess maybe, you know, better luck tomorrow.
And then, you know, 9, 9.30 comes around and she, you know, hey, my mom's coming.
So, you know, it's go time.
So it's go time.
Did you say I have to take a shower first real quick before we leave?
Oh, absolutely not.
No, It was urgent, urgent.
Yeah.
No, it was, it was, it was go time.
Yeah, yeah.
But yeah, her parents live about an hour away.
So it was, it was a little bit, a little bit of a wait and, you know, kind of looking at each other.
The kids were already in bed, which we were grateful for.
And, you know, just kind of making sure all the ducks are in a row.
And I went around writing notes for her mom, like, you know, the coffee machine's ready.
Just press on.
And, you know, this is what big sister needs.
This is what little sister needs.
This is where their clothes are and all that stuff.
And you didn't want to, and you didn't want to leave with the, you know, the grandparents are on the way.
You're like, we got to get to the hospital or birthing center.
You had to wait until they arrived just for the peace of mind, I guess, with the babes.
Yeah, well, yeah, I had the two little ones.
Yeah.
Two little ones asleep.
So, you know, I want to make sure her mom had everything squared away and, you know, making sure she's as comfortable as possible.
But, but yeah, so we had a little bit of wait there.
And then, you know, she comes and she calls the midwife and the midwife said, oh, we're not going to be there till 11.30.
So, you know, we're kind of sitting around for another 20 minutes, half hour.
And then, you know, it was like, all right, real go time.
You know, I got, I got to go in the car.
We got to go.
And that was, that was probably like 10.30.
So we were going to beat them there.
We ended up in the parking lot and it got sketchy a couple of times.
You know, hey, you might have to pull over.
Hey, you might have to pull over.
So we ended up.
Is she in the back seat or riding shotgun?
So she was riding shotgun.
We had three seats, three car seats in the back row.
So there was no room for her because she was ready.
And just to clarify, buddy, so you had a midwife, you know, sort of on speed dial, but she wasn't coming to your house.
You were going to take your wife to a birthing center or something.
They had their center set up.
Correct.
Yeah.
It's actually going to be our, it was our third child birth in the same room, which was very cool.
Sure.
Well, I guess this one wasn't birthed in the same room, but they have like a bed set up, a tub set up.
And it's very nice, nice, set, nice, you know, nice building, nice facility.
And it's not far from the house either.
So, you know, it's like a 15-minute ride or so.
So yeah, we got there at like 11-ish and, you know, looking at the clock, looking at the clock, looking at the clock.
And then at one point, I don't know how much she wants me to share.
She had asked me to get out and get on the side.
So I, you know, walked around and still not thinking anything.
And, you know, she just wants to hold my hand or whatever, you know, and she's like standing up.
And I looked down and I was like, oh, that's a head.
Oh, boy.
Oh, boy.
Yeah.
So, so, yeah.
So it was I'm a guy.
So I don't like, you know, I do my best to stay out of the way.
You know, I'm just like, I'm there for support.
You tell me what to do, but like, this is not my realm.
You know, that's why the women, that's why, that's why you have a higher doula.
That's why you are the midwives.
I am not a vagina doctor, sir.
I guess I'm not qualified for this.
Yes, I'm absolutely unqualified for it.
But, you know, I'm more than willing.
I will participate, but you just got to let me know, you know?
Sure.
But she had a big contraction and she's like reared back and like, I saw half of her head come out.
And I'm like, oh my goodness, like, where's the rest of her, you know?
And like, I started getting nervous personally.
And I don't claim to be an expert, but from what I've in our conversation after the fact, I guess it's real hard for women when they don't have the urge to push or whatever to like go.
And I'm looking down and I see a half ahead.
And I'm like, you got to go.
How long?
Well, my biggest thought was, how long can the baby sit like this without breathing?
Right.
Yeah.
Kind of like half half wedged in, half out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh, man.
I'm like, like, baby, got to get her going.
Like, get her out.
You know, you're right there.
And yeah, she, you know, caught her breath in, you know, another 10, 15 seconds and sent it.
And yeah, caught her, caught her with these hands.
And yeah, it was crazy.
Yeah.
I hate to be anticlimactic about it, but like in the moment, like, I'm not thinking about anything.
I'm just what needs to be done next?
You know, it's, it's literally like, like, getting my kids dressed.
It's like, you know, the pants go on, then the shoes go on, and then, and then the coat goes on, then we go to the car.
It's like, there was no, like, it was just like, you know, you get the kid out.
You get the kid out.
I catch the kid.
I hand her to you.
We make sure she's dry.
We turn the heat on.
It wasn't, it wasn't like no fear, no, nothing crazy.
It was just like, you know, very much business-like.
Staying how you're in.
Stand and deliver, literally.
Yeah.
That's it.
Yeah.
It's funny how your instinct takes over in moments like that.
And you just, you do the thing and time kind of is slowing down.
Everything's running in slow motion.
And you just kind of get on the same page and you do what you have to do.
Bob, go ahead.
Sorry.
Yeah.
I was just kind of trying to take her cues as much as I could too.
She's kind of in a little bit of a distress.
But like, you know, we're just kind of following her lead.
Was there a possibility of getting the midwife on the phone, like for speakerphone guidance?
Or did it just happen so fast that wasn't even like didn't cross your mind?
Probably wouldn't have made a difference, I guess.
Yeah, like, what are you going to say?
Yeah.
I mean, I guess I'd be nervous.
Like, yeah, I get, I get like, like, if I had to reach in there, like around the head, like, do I grab it, but do I try to find those baby shoulders?
Yeah, yeah.
And it's funny, too, because beforehand, maybe, maybe like a week or two, you know, before she was like, hey, you should probably look up, you know, what to do if we have a car birth.
And me being a guy, I was just like, you know what?
I'm going to just ignore that.
And it's not going to happen.
What are the odds?
What are the odds?
I'm just going to pretend that's never going to happen and live in my ignorant bubble.
It certainly behooves anyone.
In your case, many of us, if we live in an urban place, we're literally minutes from a hospital, you know.
And in my case, that was the case that I was never anything but minutes away from being where I needed to be.
But if you, if there's a delay or if you're rural area, you have to travel, something like that.
Yeah.
You better know what could happen.
Bob, did you cut the cord right away?
Did you let it stay connected for a while?
How'd you handle that?
No.
So after the fact, I made sure baby was dry.
And if I may side note, I was pretty surprised how much liquid came out.
But that was one of the craziest things.
And it was cold outside too.
And the baby was steaming like crazy.
I described it to one of my buddies, like, like when you take a pot of boiling pasta and you pour it over the colander and you get that steam right in the face.
It was, it was, that was wow.
It was, yeah.
So is the uh yeah uh so yeah, the umbilical cord.
Yep.
Yeah.
So, so we made sure baby was dry and warm, and I handed her to my wife and then got in the driver's seat.
And then we sat down and kind of looked at each other and it was like, oh, what next?
I guess we should probably call him.
And so she got in the line with the midwife.
And, oh, are you, I forget how she phrased it, but are you doing all right?
Or something like that.
And she's like, oh, yeah, no, I'm holding the baby.
Are you doing all right?
Yeah, no, yeah, we're great.
But go back home.
No birthing fee for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I had joked I should bill insurance for at least half.
But no, from what the midwife had said, you're okay with the cord for up to 45 minutes.
And previously, we had waited.
My wife had read somewhere that, you know, 15 minutes or so is enough time, but I wasn't like urgent to rush that process.
I'm grateful that it wasn't my first child because for my first two, we kind of like went through the motion and like, and that's kind of why we do a birthing center versus a hospital.
I've heard that hospitals are kind of like factory line, you know, go, This is much slower of a process and they kind of, it's more relaxed, I would guess.
I don't know.
I've never been to the hospital for a birth, but yeah.
So I was pretty aware that you didn't really have to rush everything.
And at the time, so she was birthed at 11:12, and I was expecting the midwife there for 11:30.
So I was like, all right, I guess we just hang tight for the next 15 and take a couple of photos.
Selfies in the car.
Yeah.
Did you have to take the car to a junkyard like just total biohazard or you think it's going to be drivable?
It's a new one, too.
Oh, yeah.
Come on, wifey.
We had to.
Chastise her.
Yeah, we had to get a bigger one for three car seats.
So we just got a little vehicle.
It wasn't that bad.
Before she had left the door, she had me grab her a towel.
So she was sitting on a towel.
So that caught most of it.
But I did have to wipe her down a little bit.
Do you think you'll ever be able to have sex again, Toons, or is it just too grizzly?
That's my own thought, man Awesome.
And seriously, I assume she'll listen to this after the fact.
Congratulations, ma'am.
Hell of a job.
That's an awesome story for all time.
I hope that car lasts you guys 20, 25 years because it's got it's got good life spirit imbued in it now.
Yeah, maybe we can pass it on to yeah, maybe that's and of course, yeah, Bob sent in a really nice long email, thoughtful describing what happened.
And I was going to read it on air and then I was like, hey, you stupid SOB, just ask him if he wants to come on to talk about this because this is good stuff.
And you mentioned how you heard, you know, Tom Sewell, maybe when the first time he came on the show, and his father, you know, constantly, these hands brought you into the world with these hands.
You got that one to read.
Yeah.
If that little sweetheart ever gets out of line, you know, don't forget what dad did.
Yeah.
It hits home way harder for a son, though.
It's difficult for him.
You know, I have daughters, so it's tough to be able to get too rough.
You had some commentary in there where you were very measured and you're like, look, I understand the risks and complications, but it sounds like, including this one, all three, you didn't go to a hospital.
You went to this birthing center with a midwife and things all went really well.
And you would advocate for it.
Yeah, absolutely.
100%.
I've just compared notes with other fathers that I've spoken to.
And most of the time, they don't have much bad to say about hospitals, but neither of us know the other side of the story.
But I just very much enjoy like it's very personal.
It's very, you know, there's no pressure.
There's no, everything feels more just natural, I guess, I guess would be the way to say, it just feels like how we would do it, you know, 50 years ago at home.
Back in memorial.
It's like being at home, but you're in a medical facility just in case something goes wrong.
Nearly all of my children were born in the same type of environment.
Yeah, at home.
Yeah.
It feels more, feels more.
It's almost like being in a nice hotel room or something.
There's a comfy bed.
There's like a couch, a recliner, rocking chair.
You know, it's a medical equipment is maybe hidden away or in another room.
And it's just kind of a more relaxed atmosphere so that the mother could feel less pressure and let it come naturally.
Less industrial setting too.
Yeah.
I mean, obviously we had all three hospital births.
We don't regret it for the one, for the last one with complications.
We were absolutely glad we were there.
The first one was difficult too, took forever.
But yeah, I mean, it's, you know, totally get it.
You know, I don't know what the percentages are.
It's dangerous to speculate, but would you guess nine out of ten healthy white couples have a that's it's a good question.
I won't even speculate what the percentage of like normal deliveries versus you know serious complications are any anymore.
The statistics staring you in the face will be how many cesarean births, which is exactly extremely high.
First sign of trouble, cut her open.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And if you need to have that, of course, thank God that it can be done in a way that's by the book and they know what to expect and all that stuff.
But yeah, how much is it like being done in a like a to protect the interests of the hospital and all that type of thing?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did she try to breastfeed right there in the car, Bob, or wait until getting inside or how did that go?
Because that's like the next stressor once the baby's out and healthy.
Yep, straight away.
Yep.
She lost straight away.
Yeah.
Actually, Frank, she's been the best out of the three.
Yeah, that's, that's all she's, she's a big baby, too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
And you're a blessed lucky man to have a wonderful wife and three healthy baby girls now under the roof.
Be honest, were you, did you know that it was another girl coming?
And were you a little bit disappointed it wasn't a boy this time?
Yes and yes.
And so was my wife.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Thank you for the honesty.
Yeah.
When we came down, she when she, when we found out, she came running down, she's like, another one.
Better luck next time.
I'm like, great.
Try again.
Better luck next time.
Yeah.
Well, the whole process is so fraught with worry and guessing what's going to happen.
What am I going to do?
What if this?
I mean, yeah, sure.
We'd all like to have boys and girls and guys in our thing.
Of course, we always want the boy and stuff like that.
But the most important thing is to have those babies and that you carry the thing through to success.
And that far outweighs whether it's boy or girl or anything like that, the way I see it.
And of course, one of our best friends of the show that Sam and Rolo have met has all girls as well.
And he's, you know, tip-top SS officer material like our friend Bob.
So don't feel bad.
Need to hear that, but just the way it rolls sometimes.
And I hope you try again, of course.
Yeah, yeah, if you can.
As soon as our third came out, please.
Yeah, uh, I was talking to one of our guys, and um, I you're always blessed with a new child, so I was never upset that it was a girl, you know, absolutely.
That's and it's just kind of um take it as it comes, you know.
But I was talking to one of our guys, and if I may read, he's a more religious man, and he said a line: take therefore no heed in the morrow, for the morrow shall take heed for the things of itself.
Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof.
So it's more or less, um, don't worry about tomorrow, don't worry about right, don't worry about the future, you just take it as it comes.
And, you know, what God graces us with is a full belly and a happy family.
And what else can you, can you, can you want in a good wife?
Amen.
Yep.
That's part of my whole maturation process here in middle age, going back to the opener is just like, when you just like, like, forget about your mood or how much vitamin D you're getting or whatever, like you people, you're, we're healthy, we're safe, we got the roof over our head, we got full bellies.
Like, that's anybody who's got that set up is better off than probably 99.9% of the, all the humans who have existed previous.
So, uh, yeah, put always put things in perspective.
Stop to smell the stop to smell the roses, even if your finances are a nightmare or you just got fired or you just lost somebody in your family.
Um, it's still not that bad.
It can all change in one day.
You could be at the top of the world, and tomorrow could all come crashing down.
So true.
You have to, you have to take today and make the most out of it.
Do the right honorable and brave thing that you can do today.
Do it, Bob.
Uh, we can add on to that experience for sure, but serious congratulations.
We salute you.
And I skipped the, we were going to do just a brief red pill story.
Uh, for the audience, Bob has always been very self-deprecating.
You know, he like our pal Durando, he described himself maybe as a ditch digger or whatever, even though he's well-spoken and obviously well-read too.
Uh, but yeah, give us just a little bit of background color on how you came to be in our uh worldview.
Um, I have like different, very specific chapters of my life.
So, growing up, it was athletics, that's all I cared about.
Um, hockey was my sport.
Um, after high school, well, during high school, I realized that I didn't want an office job, I didn't want anything to do with white collar work.
I, I just, uh, I couldn't sit in a desk anymore.
Um, and when high school started ending, I probably could have played at like a mid mid-tier college, but I, you know, I had no interest in white collar.
So, I went transitioned that into, you know, just straight into trades work and I kind of bounced around with that a little bit here and there.
Um, and at the time, I was in a band for a while too, and um got a motorcycle and kind of living by the seat of my pants.
It was, you know, I started making too much money too young and uh gotten too, yeah, we had fun, but you know, and I have great friends from that era, but um, yeah, kind of just screwing around.
And uh, you know, it was somewhere in my mid-20s.
I woke up, hung over, and thought, like, you know, I'm closer to 30 than I am to, you know, 17, 18.
I should probably start taking myself a little more seriously.
Um, it's a little pretty embarrassing.
Yeah, it's gonna be pretty embarrassing if I'm the old guy at the bar.
Um, with all that context, too, I had come across spinning squirrel, uh, Ryan Dawson really early on.
And that made me aware of the Holocaust.
And at the time, I just put it in my back pocket.
You know, who cares?
Everything's a lie.
Everything's fake.
I don't know.
I don't know what that word means.
Yeah.
Never heard of it.
But yeah, go ahead.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I was aware of that the whole time.
And I grew up in a liberal area.
So, you know, being racist is the ultimate sin.
And but growing up, like the black kids ate with the black kids.
The Spanish kids ate with Spanish kids.
It was segregated, like de facto.
And I had no black friends.
I, you know, I played hockey.
Like, that's not a black guy sport.
So, but I wouldn't think anything of it.
And then, you know, when I did start getting more established in the trades work, I kind of excelled from early on.
And I kind of looked around and realized that, you know, I'm busting my ass and I'm, you know, I'm getting stuff done.
You know, I'm moving.
And there's guys that are just dead weight because of affirmative action that we have to carry.
And they would brag about it.
They would say, you know, they would say, I'm here because I'm, you know, from the city and I'm black.
So I will always get my 40 hours.
And I'm like, why am I busting my ass?
Because, you know, I have to bust my ass because I'm a white guy.
You know, and if I don't bust my ass, the white guys get cut.
So that was kind of what the first racial pill.
But that was still early 20s.
And then everything kind of turned around real quick.
2020 was really weird for everybody, but for me in particular, at the time, I went through a little bit of a libertarian phase.
Just kind of leave me alone and I'll be all right.
But when 2020 kicked around, you kind of realized that like, oh, most of these people are just lemmings that, you know, literally like no thoughts.
Just everything about it kind of threw me off.
So like libertarianism will not work because if these people are free, then they'll go back to doing whatever they're doing.
You know, it makes no difference.
And around then, I, you know, found Telegram because I was the weirdo.
My friends were sick of hearing me.
My friends were sick of hearing me scream about masks and all that stuff.
And Telegram leans towards, I'll just say white positive creators.
And, you know, like, I came up one of my first big pushes was Tom Sewell.
So I hope we get to him at some point, but he's been an inspiration for me.
And then I was kind of a lurker for a long time.
And then, you know, I got married and my wife was pregnant.
So it was kind of go time.
You know, are you serious?
Or are you internet and on?
So at that point, I started reaching out to more tangible organizations, more trying to network with people in my area and stuff like that.
Sure.
Yep.
God bless you, buddy.
Amen.
I hear you.
Speaking of, yeah, we'll talk Australia.
And of course, congratulations to Tom and his family, at least for getting out on bail for now.
But also in your kind letter, I'm not fishing for compliments whatsoever here, but I was just frankly surprised when people say that we had significant or a positive impact on their desire or their moves toward, you know, starting a family or getting the ball rolling or have another.
Our show really like encouraged you to have more kids or settle down or I forget exactly how you phrased it.
100%.
Yeah.
And I do think we should get an organization for our children and grandchildren.
What is it?
What do I call it?
Children of Full House or Children of the House.
We'll have to open it up in like 10, 15 years.
Not Children of the Corn.
Yes.
Children of the Corn.
All right.
Okay.
100%.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You've said the line, have as many as you think you can handle and have one more.
And yeah, just I've had dads in my personal life that I've guys that I respect that started having kids when I was in my, you know, running around like an idiot phase.
And that, that, seeing that was one of the things that kicked me in the ass.
But absolutely hearing you guys talk about fatherhood, even like the mundane stuff of like just the day-to-day of like, you know, a diaper change can turn into like a memory that lasts forever.
Like sure.
When is when is going out with the boys at the bar ever going to be anything remote?
You know, that's what I always say is, you know, if you're lucky enough to lead a long life, come the end of your life, what will be important?
You know, what will you reflect back on and relish that memory?
You know, what will be an important thing to pass on to the world?
If you're surrounded by family, people that love you, that's that's going to be an important thing.
That's something that is of true value.
The amount of vacations you take, what kind of sports car you were able to drive, or what kind of fancy jewelry you bought, that's not going to mean anything.
You're not going to remember any of that.
Amen.
And to your point, too, Bob, about just, you know, a diaper change can become a lifetime memory.
Just what we haven't done a coach's comfy corner, quote unquote.
I guess this whole show is now a comfy corner as we've mellowed in our old years, old age.
But it was that long drive that I was describing with Junior on the way home, but we had gone to a soccer game.
And unfortunately, our boys were up against what appeared to be like the Mexican men's national team, 100% Hispanic, all Spanish speaking on the field, really good players.
And, you know, we were just getting killed.
We were outmatched.
And finally, I think the goalie had enough.
He was just like, I need a break from this onslaught.
And then for some God-unknown reason, the coach tapped my son to go and goal.
And he hasn't played goalie like six years since he was a little kid.
And he was terrible then.
I just said, oh my God, what is going on?
This is going to be a disaster.
And to my great surprise, he was actually competent back there.
And he was swatting him back.
Of course, they scored a few, but it wasn't his fault.
And I thought that he was going to be like dejected and embarrassed, even though he objectively played respectably back there, especially for somebody who hasn't played goal in so long.
And he was super proud and happy and on cloud nine, even though they got killed because he got thrown into that situation unexpectedly with virtually zero goalie training and sort of, you know, beast mode kicked in and he did all right, which was possibly why he was looking so positively at the November sky, you know, and saying, you know what, this month ain't so bad after all.
All right.
Yeah.
He didn't, he didn't like Moby play very much.
But that was a sentimental thing for me.
I was a freshman in college, fall 99, when a couple buddies came to visit.
And that was back in the day when you had to buy CDs.
Napster hadn't really taken off yet.
So we're like walking around like downtown DC, like, yeah, I'm in college.
This is where I go to school.
You know, really cool.
Stopped into a Tower of Records or something and bought Moby Play at the time, which was a sort of groundbreaking CD.
But thank you so much for that, Bob, for sharing that.
Absolutely.
Stick around for as long as you can or as you like.
And Sam, let's pivot to Australia.
Congratulations.
Those guys have been, can we just say that they've been killing it in terms of camaraderie, perseverance?
It's pitch perfect on the tone, if you ask me.
I have to say that I was super proud.
I did do the bit and wrote a letter to Tom when he was behind bars yet again.
And like the day I mailed it, I got home and I went to Telegram and it was like, Tom has been moved to another prison.
I was like, son of a bitch.
You know, it's never going to get to him.
But it did.
His lovely partner, you know, messaged me and let me know that he got the letter.
And I haven't bothered him since he got out.
It's almost like you guys keep doing what you're doing.
I don't want to bother you.
Maybe I'll ask Tom to come back on at some point after he's settled.
But he's probably got all sorts of conditions and stuff.
And then they got Joel Davis the other day, too, for suggesting rhetorical rape of a minister of parliament or whatever they call.
But yeah, still, still loony tunes down there in terms of the system.
And somebody, I just saw somebody said they are so ham-fisted with the repression there that it's got to blow down.
And I hope that's the case.
But yeah, go ahead, Sam.
Between the UK, Australia, and maybe Canada, those are got to be the three worst countries in the world in terms of the repression and the thought police and all that stuff.
But yeah, it was just one of those things when he had been arrested.
I took it up again in my prayer time praying for him to be released.
And then there it was on, it was the 12th, according to my notes, anyways, 12th of November.
He was released.
And I was just ecstatic.
You know, he's been a friend of the show.
We've had him on a number of times.
And I was absolutely ecstatic to hear that he was out to be back with his family.
I hope you watched that video.
They were trying to interview him, and these absolute asshole people are screaming.
Nazi scum off our streets.
Yeah.
And he's trying to talk.
Eventually, he does get a little louder, and you're able to hear his words.
And then he's walking along.
Then there's his wife with him.
I think it's a wife that he said as partner.
I don't know if she's a girlfriend, but I thought that's a good idea.
I don't think they formally tied.
I don't know that they formally tied the knot yet.
Okay.
But there she was.
And she embraced him.
And then she's walking.
And the reporters are trying to talk to him.
And it looked like some of the reporters, anyways, were being kind of respectful to him.
I noticed that too.
That was really interested in what he had to say.
And it wasn't like totally unfair, you know, microphone right in the face.
They were giving him the time of day and letting him speak.
It was kind of surprising.
Yeah.
And I, I mean, I found that in my own life as well.
You know, we are who we are.
And I hope anyone listening understands who we are.
But if you are somebody who has integrity and has something good to say and you carry yourself the right way, you can win people over, you know, and people you will get in conversations with people who are ostensibly enemies, but you can score some points.
And if you carry yourself the right way, they will realize you have integrity and gravitas in the way that you speak and that you have good things to say.
And the people, our people, they need our message, you know.
So we're speaking.
It's not like we're talking about something that's irrelevant.
We're talking about something very relevant.
Yep.
And I did, you know, I'll be honest, I did write to Tom and say, I'm partially glad that you're down there and not here, because if you were in the United States, I'd have no choice but to dust off the black boots and my Helly Hansen jacket.
Not proud to admit that, but like I would feel compelled to come and help out and certainly sign that petition.
They're going the political route.
You know, it's tempting to say, yeah, good luck with that.
But I don't, what the hell do I know about Australian politics and the vibe down there?
I don't want to be telescopic and be like, ruh rah, Australia when it's so far away and like, yeah, go, you know, NSN, but I can't help but find them to be extremely compelling and inspiring, frankly.
Well, and it's, it's not just, you know, you might say, oh boy, what a lost cause or long shot that is.
But it's not, it's not, it's not about that end goal.
Like we were saying before, every day is important, you know.
And if we're working on this long-term project, if we had a viable political party that's trying to do something, whether it's get a member of parliament or some other thing, try to make some progress.
Yeah, but there's all the things in between now and then, too.
There's all the people that we're reaching, there's all the lives we're changing.
We have a man on this show right now whose life was changed in some part because of what we do here on the show, and in large part because of other white nationalists and things that he looked into.
So don't tell me thanks, Sam.
Thank you.
Yeah.
And so, you know, it is all important.
And we know things that many of our people don't know and that are, frankly, they're life-changing.
You know, we've talked about it before.
Like it's almost like handing somebody a live hand grenade.
You pull the pin, you hand it to them and say, here you go.
You know, the message is very, very powerful.
Amen.
Sort of in line with this, Sam, we got a bunch of things.
We'll go to at least one of them before the break.
But I thought this would be mildly interesting to discuss on the show.
But just a couple of days ago, a small-time journalist emailed in.
You know, we get those, hey, we want to talk to you about white nationalism.
It's a lot of doctoral students.
Not often, but it happens occasionally.
And of course, the standard playbook is no response.
I don't personally, I'm not the kind of guy who can like send a picture of a nutsack back or be like, sure, meet me at the Taco Bell.
Or like, you know, I just, I'm not actually a troll at heart, so I couldn't do it.
But this one, you know, I was tempted to do it just to throw the old rule out.
Like, I was inclined, and I'll go to you right next, Sam, just because, like, why, first off, I could do a good job, of course.
Second, like, I'm almost just bored of the old playbook.
Obviously, there are guys who are really good at it who do interviews with hostile media and stuff.
But then, you know, I kick the idea in the brain trust and they're like, dude, like, no good can come from it.
Even, you know, it's like the downsides are way bigger than the upsides.
She's clearly not friendly.
And they always say a fair and a fair chance and it's not going to be biased.
And then nine times out of 10, it's a hit job.
Or you could give nine minutes of wonderful oratory and they only use the one minute where you sound scary or quote unquote radical.
Right.
Yeah.
And I also thought the worst case is, well, if I'm, you know, I'm not good at lying or a subterfuge, if I go on too much at like, that's almost just like giving information to the enemy for them to use.
It's like they, yeah, they're interested in white nationalism like a doctor is like interested in a virus in a petri dish or something like that.
So I'm inclined not to do it, but I did have that temptation.
I'll stop there.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, for sure.
And of course, it would be nothing but exactly what we want: that somebody who's working in mainstream media or wherever the hell this person is from, and they express an honest desire to hear our side and to have like a good conversation about it.
That's what we would love.
That's what we want.
That's what we're trying to do right now with the show is to talk to people, show that we have the truth.
We're real life people.
We're men who are having families and, you know, dealing with the circumstances of the society.
But the one thing that set me off about that particular communication you shared, Coach, was that woman did not realize that your regular name has been out there.
And she said, maybe, yeah, probably.
You know, you can use, if you want to use coach, you can be anonymous as though you're anonymous.
And so, you know, I was that was the other thing, Sam.
I was like, anything, like, if I talk about like making more white babies, they're going to know it's me.
Like, oh, am I going to say my name's Mike, you know, and totally have my cadence and stuff.
Yeah, it just wouldn't work.
Well, it's so that just shows that she does not listen to the show.
She's not genuinely interested in something we have to say.
It would be one thing if she contacted you and you started having a little back and forth about just ideas.
And, well, why do you think that?
And then you give some ideas and then she would say, well, yeah, you got a point there or something.
You know what I mean?
This is all just, and many, many years ago, before the internet, we had a P.O. box, and somebody contacted me almost the exact same way.
It was somebody from a university.
And it was a woman.
And she said, Oh, we want to know about your thing.
And you could tell us.
You can put it in your own words.
And we're doing research about it.
We want to understand and everything.
I'm like, well, okay.
So, what kind of information are you going to give me about yourself?
Like your real name?
Who are you associated with?
You know, this is this voluntarily put yourself under the microscope.
They've got cattle prods and electrodes to study you like an amoeba.
It's like you have our P.O. box, you got the name of the group.
You've seen our materials.
Obviously, you know what we're about.
That's it.
Like, if you, you know, write an article about that, that's enough information right there.
What do you need to talk to me for or get, you know, find out who I really am or whatever it is?
You know, the white race is being genocided deliberately through a number of vehicles that Jews are overwhelmingly responsible for driving that agenda.
There you go.
And we're pissed off about it.
We're not like terrorists or whatever.
And we're not irrationally filled with vile hatred.
Maybe some of us are, of course.
Maybe some of us are a little bit more.
And it would be justified.
But if it were.
Hatred is more than 100 times over justified.
The founding fathers had a temper tantrum over taxes and representation.
And we're literally being shrunk from 90% now to below 60%.
At what point between 60 and zero would you not expect us to chimp out in our own way?
I don't know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah, listen to the show, lady.
Yeah, maybe.
You can always send Darrell.
There you go.
There you go.
Here's our guy.
This is our spokesman.
Do you still have Darrell in a box there under the desk, Rolo?
Would he comment on the state of the white race?
Oh, yeah.
Just open the box.
Hold on, where is he?
I mean, he's never worked.
Yeah, he's sleepy.
All right, Bailey, what you all know.
I'll tell you about the wine race.
The wine race is the first in line at the Costco free samples after the sun.
Oh, so Darrell, you think that white people are still getting unfair benefits and perks in this society?
Do you really think that?
Nah, baby.
I'm just saying that that's the only race they be running.
Shit, you know, we be running.
We be running from the cops or we be running the 500-yard dash.
That's right.
You're not running the NBA as much as you used to be for sure, Darrell.
The white boys are coming back.
I think there's something in the water.
Or yeah, it's like a genetic revolt subconscious that's creating these monstrous white boys dominating the old schoolyard basketball game.
That's because we all be shielding each other and be gambling and shit.
You know what's being like.
Fair enough.
All right.
There you go.
Hopefully she'll just start.
Darrell, are you clean these days?
Are you like being a good boy and going back to school?
Or are you still a total mess personally when Rolo lets you out of the box?
Oh, you know, I'm getting there to college.
You know, I'm a go.
I didn't do nothing.
Of course.
All right.
Back in the box with you, Darrell.
Thank you.
thank you rollo for allowing our friend to make a rare appearance there um we are at yeah it's good Let him get a little fresh air.
Hit that nappy hair.
I was going to make a really bad joke, Bob, about when the baby came out, just making sure that it looked white and didn't have nappy hair, but I would never make such a distasteful.
No.
He's got to say, he's not laughing.
White is the snow, buddy.
Very good.
Well, yeah, I've made the joke before.
Sometimes they come out a little blue and you're like, oh, okay.
All right.
Good.
Well, it's funny.
We hold up baby pictures of our first two and they almost look like Mongolian, like Chinese, because they're so like swollen.
Swollen.
Oh, yeah.
The eyes are closed.
Yep, absolutely.
Those first 24 hours.
It's always funny, like when I talk to one of these Judeo-Christians and they talk about like Noah.
And so Noah had these three sons and that's where the different races come from.
You know, if you are with a woman and the baby comes out black, you don't go back to that woman, right?
A miracle has happened.
You don't go back to a white woman that has a black baby.
Yeah.
I just wanted to talk real quick and then we'll go to the break.
Speaking of like women cucking men and stuff like that, the Olivia Newsy, RFK Jr. and Brian Lizza public now cat fight.
Just for people who missed it or haven't been paying attention, it's totally the talk of the town left and I guess right too.
Olivia Newsy, who we memed into being like an SS female officer back in the day when she was reporting on the alt-right, because she was, you know, she's blonde and she's not hideous.
She's definitely the living ebotomy of like, you know, Olivia Newsy walks into a bar, bartender says, why the long face?
Because she's got a serious jaw and schnauz on her.
Anyway, so she's dating Ryan Lizza, who's sort of an old Mandarin from the DC politico scene, New Yorker, and he got me too, but then sort of rehired because it wasn't that bad.
Maybe it was a dubious accusation of sexual harassment or something like that.
So he's dating Olivia Newsy.
And apparently early in their relationship, this just came out because Lizza is now spilling the spill on the beans on Substack and giving his side of the story after being frankly, you know, humiliated by this woman who's been sleeping around.
And apparently she cheated on him with Mark Sanford, the governor of South Carolina first.
And I guess they put it back together.
And Mark Sanford's like an old guy, you know, old, old guy down there.
Maybe she's got a type.
And then later on, he finds out.
Now, it's still not clear whether it got physical with RFK Jr. or if they were just sexting.
It seems impossible to believe that they didn't.
And I think Lizza accuses her of, yeah, finally sleeping with RFK.
But the text messages and then something that's too disgusting for me to mention on air, I had to, I probably shouldn't have Googled it, but I did.
And I don't even want to know how I don't even want to know how that works in a heterosexual context.
Not a gay one for sure.
But it's just, it's kind of a really big DC popcorn moment.
It's embarrassing for RFK and his naughty text to Newsy.
And now Liz is, you know, giving his side of the story like a spurn lover while talking about fighting the bamboo in his backyard.
Of course, I put it up on the Telegram thing, his most recent revelation and he's putting the juicier stuff behind a paywall.
But just, yeah, if you got a faithful woman on you, on your hands, be grateful for that too, that you're not getting nuzzied all over town.
And Mark Sanford and RFK Jr.
And somebody says you have to read RFK's texts in that didgera doo voice of his, you know, you are the Kenyan, I am the river.
Sorry.
I just, you know, I like moment, I momentarily reindulged my old like, you know, DC, you know, political watching and whatnot, but just it's just gross all around, reflects terribly on her RFK Jr. and Liz is humiliated, but I guess he's like, oh, whatever, might as well tell my side of the story.
All right.
We're close enough to, we're close enough to an hour.
We got a lot more to talk about in the second half, including, you know, a little bit about the election, the massive Bitcoin puke.
Yes, we'll talk about that.
Marjorie Taylor Greene suddenly announcing she's not even going to run.
She's not even going to finish her term.
Are we actually on the verge of war with Venezuela?
The sort of farcical peace effort with Russia and Ukraine.
And Sam's got stuff too.
So stay with us and we'll see.
Bob, it's completely up to you.
You don't have to make the call now, but you absolutely got the music for the break, buddy.
And again, thanks so much for coming on.
Great, great time, first time guest.
And congratulations.
What are we going to listen to?
Thanks for having me, guys.
It's been a blast.
So this is the only track that I've ever heard of from this band.
It's for an old Kentucky Anarchist by The Orphans.
And the backstory is I was talking to one of our comrades last spring, and his wife was also expecting.
And, you know, we were just talking about, you know, money can be tight.
And, you know, everything is more difficult than it was for our parents.
And everything is only going to get more difficult.
And I had said something like, you know, if the choice is a little less difficult, but like having one kid or, you know, a big family and we're poor, then screw it.
We'll be poor.
You know, we'll just figure it out.
And there's a line in later on in the song where he had brought it up.
He said, oh, that reminds me of this song.
There's a line, you know, the whole song talks about having a big family.
But he goes back to see his mother and he says, some call it poverty, but we'd never know because, you know, they have a very big and loving family.
And, you know, who cares that we're poor financially?
We have all the wealth in the world with our family.
So it kind of hits home.
And it really, I love the, I love the track.
Yeah, good.
Amen.
And Junior, real quick, Junior just said the other day, he's like, well, if you have a big enough family, that's like your friend group right there.
I said, yeah, exactly.
Sam, you've, you know, said that for a long time.
Yeah.
Not only that, but I mean, if you're going to use the excuse about financial reasons, when they're little, you can teach them to steal.
And when they get caught, you get punished.
You know, like Oliver twist, you know, like where they have the kids steal and pickpocket.
My brothers, David.
And look at him now.
Especially, especially in California.
Yeah.
I did lie though, tunes.
I had one more question here in my chicken scratch that I missed.
Just, you know, our last show we had on Joe and he's making a, you know, midlife pivot to the trades.
Knowing what you know now, are you still an advocate for, of course, our guys with who might not be inclined for white collar work, as you realized early on?
Are you still an advocate for our guys doing the trade or is it kind of more horror show than reward at this point?
It's funny.
I thought about this earlier.
So you brought back, I guess, I guess I call myself a Boston guy.
I grew up just outside of Boston.
Joe wouldn't call me a Boston guy.
But yeah, back-to-back Boston guests.
I talked to, I thought, I talked to the kid was 18 and going to college.
I talked to him over the summer in our sphere.
And he, you know, he had asked me the same thing, you know, what do you think about the trades?
What do you think about going to college?
And it's 100% on your temperament.
Yeah.
I'm in kind of a niche trade, but it's definitely not easy.
But I'm kind of built for it.
You know, I don't like the person to person talk.
I don't like phone calls.
I don't like emails.
I don't like doing all that stuff.
I get my hands dirty.
I get in the dirt and I sweat.
And that's what I'm built for.
That's what I love.
So I would definitely say it's whatever your personal temperament is.
There's money in the trades for sure.
And the more I hear about H-1B tech work, that was always the route up until three, four years ago.
And it seems like they're pinching out the white collar guys faster than they're pitching out the blue collar guys.
And there's a ton of benefits for being handy.
I mean, just owning a house or just being able to help your mom with the water heater blue.
Oh, yeah, I'll be right over.
Silly stuff like that.
Or even being a mechanic and you drive beater cars that you repair for your whole life.
There's a ton of hidden benefits to being handy and to having, you always kind of get a network.
All my buddies went to the trades and I know all the electricians, I know three or four electricians that are either friends directly or friend of a friend.
I know plumbers.
I know iron workers.
I know, you know, I got two mechanics that I could call at any time.
I would definitely, it's a temperament thing, but I'm very glad that I didn't even bother pursuing anything white collar.
Fair enough.
Yeah, you got to be rich or handy, but if you're poor and handy and not handy, you're screwed.
Everybody, everybody, whether you have a degree or you're so-called white-collar worker, everybody should be able to work with their hands.
Everybody should be able to actually do things.
Amen.
And I'm so sorry, Toons.
He's like, can I please go to sleep now, coach?
Sorry, we'll fix that there.
How is it with the third under the roof?
And how are the other two welcoming their new friend and life mate?
I had expected it to be way worse because when my oldest met her, her sibling, there has been like huge beef, but they're closer in age.
Now my oldest, all she wants to do is help with the baby.
All she wants to do is hold her.
All she wants to do is, you know, anything happens, all she wants to do.
And it's funny, I had, I had some buddies up yesterday and my friend had asked her, oh, do you like being a sister?
And she said, oh, I like being a sister to her, not to her.
So in that aspect, it's been a great.
Yeah, I kind of know what that is about.
I've had some of that experience as well.
I think they're just too close in age.
And there's always going to be a little bit of a rivalry.
You know, she was the only one for a long time.
So she got all the attention.
And then when half of the attention got peeled off.
Yeah, yeah.
But other than that, it's been real good.
I mean, we're kind of old pros now.
So we kind of know the deal.
I have had a hard time being the like mom position.
So, like, you know, breakfast in the morning and getting the kids dressed and like real silly little stuff that I'm like, sure, whose socks are these?
You know, like, just little stuff like that.
That I very much appreciate my wife's role.
Um, but yeah, it's a lot of juggling, you know, it's a lot of, you know, this one has an appointment here at this time, you know.
But we're settling in, everything's gone very well.
Amen.
Thank you for break this half of the show.
Don't forget to come hear Bob, myself, and Ruckus on the Manor Bun dispatch.
That's right.
Bass and Confused Manor Bun Dispatch, full house.
That's a decent amount of con.
I won't take any credit for putting out too much content for sure.
But again, yep.
God bless you, Bob, your wife, your new family.
Wish you many more wonderful guests and good luck in the early days.
They're precious, challenging, the whole thing.
Thank you very much, man.
We salute you.
All right.
Finally, from an old Kentucky anarchist.
Enjoy, and we'll be right back.
Twas a yard that hadn't felt children's feet running for the mother long ago, taught her children how to fly within a simple cabin, untouched by industrial hands, sat the aged mother in her home.
You can't escape the picture frames, there's too many, she said.
They keep me from being alone.
She spoke he was an honest man He worked hard to put food on our plates.
Well, we had more babies and we had arms.
We struggled all our lives, but the rewards were great.
And when my son came home from the war, he rested his head on my breast and said, My arm's tired of being used and grinded down.
I feel so, though.
Can you make me feel like I'm the best?
Well, my best friend, truly, with a savage man, he wore her like that tattoo.
For his only love was for a bottle.
She said there's only one thing left for me to do to be wild once again.
To take back my life and run away.
Set flames to his truck.
He won't ever know what he's been missing.
I did every day.
Joy, freedom, dance, and love.
These are the stories that this mother spoke to me as I brought her garden back to grow.
I was rewarded with a warm meal tales never to be heard.
Some call it poverty, but they'll never know.
She said, All I got's my stories and this old guitar.
My crops have all come and gone away.
I got a head full of recipes.
It's it to the taste.
And I'm liking to wake up and greet the day.
Got bad back from raising my children from hugging my husband so tight.
Hell, I never cared much for any government.
Back up my Jesus when I feel the time isn't right.
Singing, I'm the richest I'll ever be.
I embrace the world I have all around me.
So sing a dyke song and slap your knee.
Back to
Full House, episode 218, second half.
Our special guest was too cool for school to stick around for the second hour.
No, just kidding.
Delighted that he actually skeed to go either get some sleep or help mom with those three beautiful babes in their house, if you will.
Really proud, happy, all of the superlatives for those guys.
Wonderful.
And hopefully a little encouragement for those of you in the audience too.
We got a wonderful new white life from a longtime, you know, remote online friend in another country.
And of course, I had my save messages here and they just disappeared as I went.
And I got it right here.
It's from Gumtree Party.
You'll probably recognize that one.
And he says, my son was born 5.21 a.m. this morning.
Oh, too much, too much, too much detail.
Let's look up the birth record.
Yeah, he's in good health.
The pregnancy was difficult in the final few weeks.
So we're very relieved that it's over.
But despite that difficult pregnancy, the labor was surprisingly easy.
So yeah, I guess that happened.
You know, you got doctor's visits and concern and blood pressure and all that stuff.
And then the baby's like, yeah, let's rock and roll, even if it's a little bit early.
We're grateful that in spite of the odds, we came out the other side with a perfectly healthy baby boy.
Gumtree party and wife, congratulations.
Wonderful.
Never met him.
Couldn't pick him out of a criminal lineup in the country.
But, you know, I'm sure he's top-notch.
You can always get the measure of a man.
Got another note here from a guy who goes by, where is it here?
I think I could say Suze.
Hey, coach, longtime listener, first time chatter.
I saw you.
Actually, no, I didn't want to do that one first.
I wanted to do Jacob first because the second one will tee us up.
Anyway, just kind note.
Hey, man, been a while.
Been kind of MIA from this whole scene.
I know those feelings, Jacob, but had been catching up on the show recently.
Just wanted to say I really appreciate you guys and your consistent content.
A little generous of you there to call it consistent, Jacob, but we appreciate that too.
Sometime earlier this year, I remember seeing the Full House website go down and my heart sank.
So please keep doing what you do and let me know if how I can help.
Thank you, Jacob.
Appreciate just a short kind note.
Always boosts my spirits.
Yeah.
I was tempted.
But yeah, I'm not going to beat that horse every damn show.
And of course, the website was down only because I had updated the payment information.
The card had expired.
I updated it, but it didn't like automatically set.
So that's why the website was down.
We discussed that before.
And yes, I believe I am still chained to the mast.
And despite my best efforts with a hacksaw to free myself from the chains on that mess, Sam keeps climbing up the ladder in Rolo two with a welding shield to keep me locked up.
No, you know, it's the grass is always greener on the other side, right?
Like there it's like, man, sure, I don't have to keep flapping my gums and doing this thing.
And then if I gave it up, I'd be like disappointed and depressed and call myself a shirker.
So let's, let's, we'll just keep it.
Keep doing.
Meet it, meet in the middle, just say that you're going to keep quitting and then keep doing it.
I mean, come on, just just constant postponing.
Yes, next i'll quit.
Next week i'll quit next week.
Right, just like an addict.
Yeah, tomorrow will be the day.
No, i'll keep doing it.
Um, but on that front yeah, everything's everything's good um, but I, you know it's, it's interesting sam, I did have I, I just I could tell it clear as day.
I was like huh, the melancholy's uh creeping back in and nothing bad happened.
On the contrary, everything's been really great.
I was just like that is totally I don't know if it's, seasonal affective disorder or whatever, but I was like that is either biochemical or a consequence of not getting as much sunlight uh it's, etc.
And I was just like okay, like this, this too shall pass, like I didn't pay it.
Uh, it was just interesting in case somebody else is getting lose.
November is kind of a bleak month, you know, and thanksgiving's not going to adjust.
When they change from uh, daylight savings time back to standard time it, it hits kind of hard at first, and but the biggest thing about melancholy is uh, just to expect it and know when it comes.
Okay, this is what happens.
When it comes, it will come to an end.
These are part of the cycles.
Like I was saying, um uh same uh, um the Jesuit guy uh um, Ignatius Loyola, saint Ignatius Loyola, with his spiritual exercises the the, the uh.
Consolation and this periods of consolation and desolation are natural in life.
You know, and if we, if we can come to expect it, we know when the good times come, we can also temper back, knowing that it doesn't last forever.
When the bad times come, we can hunker down and know that it doesn't last forever and uh, that's the whole, the whole thing.
Life is like the bitcoin price, one day you're on top of the world and the other day you're standing at the cliff ready to commit hurry cardio.
We'll talk a little bit coin later.
It's had.
It's had.
As you know, i'm i'm not happy and i'm not celebrating, but it has bounced off the lows and there's so much you could read all day long, technical analysis, big picture, what's really going on and come out of it more confused than you were before.
And you could go back and guy be like look, I nailed this one and then he's got like 25 other, like total stinker.
You know projections in terms of what it's going to do.
It's a long term well, we'll talk about later.
Um, but just but yeah, don't put your grocery or your mortgage money or your vital day-to-day money into bitcoin.
That's not what it's for.
And then, and yeah, you want to be in the position where if it has a big puke like it just did, you can say, okay, that is that that's part of the deal.
That's the volatility is baked in.
If you're a real, you know, iron bald, steely-eyed holder, you're, you're grateful for it and you back, you back up the truck and load up on more when it has that puke, which is a very difficult psychological thing to do.
Um, you know, because you buy and it drops, you're like, oh, crap, buy with what?
But I, yeah, there's been a whole lot of churn.
A lot of other things have turned down too.
There's anxiety about the AI.
Is that in the bubble?
And then on the other hand, you're like, just wait.
The liquidity is coming.
Quantitative tightening is ending.
We're going to get checks for tariffs and it'll be rocking and rolling again, which I tend to believe long term.
As I told a skeptic the other day, if they keep making money, which is, it's virtually impossible to suspect that they won't, then they're not, you know, of course, more Bitcoin is getting mined, but it's going to be set at the hard cap.
If they keep making money, Bitcoin will appreciate most likely.
But, you know, have to address the elephant in the room that's like, coach, you told me to buy Bitcoin.
Consider buying some more.
It's in the 80s.
I thought we would dip back to the 90s, not into the 80s.
It takes conviction.
A lot of the stuff that I've read, you know, is quantum computing going to crack the algorithm and the encryption and ruin it.
And somebody, if quantum computing gets that good, then virtually every bank and, you know, anybody related to anything that has security or passwords on it has a lot to be worried about.
And they could always just upgrade Bitcoin, fork it onto something more.
There would be a solution to that if it happens.
Maybe we should talk a little bit more later on that one.
Yeah, I know.
I'm going on.
Or we just covered the basics of it there.
But I wanted to read this nice note from Seuss who said, hey, coach, longtime listener, first time chatter.
I saw y'all had shared the article of Tyler Weaver's death.
Yes, this was another one that white man in his home, home invasion slash robbery, two criminal feral Negroes, shot him dead in front of his fiancé and she was able to flee to call 911 and get help before she too was murdered.
They got the guy's long rap sheet, et cetera.
Look like a happy, obviously talented young white man.
And also there was a picture of the front of his house and it looked like he lived in the middle of nowhere.
I didn't go to Google Earth to verify, but it's not exactly like he was in a ghetto neighborhood, which is kind of spooky.
Guy says, not to dox myself, but I went to high school with him and shared many friends with him.
While he per se wasn't one of us and definitely had his own issues, as we all do, he was a kind soul and I hated to hear of how things went down.
Through the rumor mill, and I haven't been able to do the digging myself, but the monster that killed him supposedly had been jailed 51 times prior and just got out of jail in the city of Charlotte, in which he was arrested for assault and battery against a woman, somehow still allowed to walk the streets.
Again, that's rumor, but yeah, look, they had a long rap sheet.
No doubt they shouldn't have been on the streets.
I don't know if me saying any of this really accomplishes anything.
I just know that a white man who would have been a father soon, buddy of mine who was at the funeral, said the fiancé was pregnant.
He's now dead and the child's going to be fatherless.
Because of that, I'm filled with rage.
It's one thing when we read the headlines or see videos like the stabbing in Charlotte of Arena, but it truly does feel different when it's in your own town and when it's someone you know.
Thank you guys for doing the show and keeping morale up in dark times, even when subject matter may be gloomy.
You guys are more important than you may think and way more appreciated than you might know.
Thank you very much, Seuss.
I'm sorry for the loss of your distant friend.
Yet another one.
It's hard to go back to the will.
Go ahead, Tim.
For sure, it's important to, as they say, say their name, right?
Say his name, say her name.
Tyler Weaver, Tyler Weaver.
Right.
And always killing them weavers, apparently.
Yeah, yeah.
But it's a sobering moment, and we should always honor the fallen.
And I always will memorize a few facts about the person so that I can bludgeon the weak-willed, passive whites that I know in life.
Faggots.
Well, there you go.
But there's always the hope that you, I always word it in such a way to enrage the person and to try to ignite that fire to show that these types of things are an affront to us all, you know, because what can we do about it, right?
Well, we can talk about it.
We can inflame and inform our fellow whites wherever they may be, whether it's if you can in the workplace.
I don't necessarily recommend that, but wherever it is in life, friends, relatives, neighbors, people you might meet, you know, say these inflammatory things in a way that would ignite their sense of honor.
Absolutely.
Racism will save your life at some point where it will make you safer.
That's God's honest truth.
I'll say the name too.
Cuitez Watkins and Jacquavius Craig, as I'm looking at the mugshots of the two killers.
Why don't white people chimp out, Sam?
I saw that question the other day.
What's going to take for you people to chimp out?
You know, like one methed out COVID criminal in Minneapolis and the whole country was ablaze.
Why aren't we chimping out?
Right.
Well, if and when it happens, it happens on a systemic large scale.
Just like I saw the meme, it's like all these Nazi soldiers marching in formation and the caption over it says, white people don't chimp out.
So it can happen.
It can happen that way, but I think it is happening now.
You encounter this all the time that white people, maybe they're not chimping out, but the charade of that we all bleed red and, oh, I have some of my best friends are black people and all that bullshit.
That is gone, in my opinion.
That's gone.
That is only a boomer thing.
And that sentiment will be dead when the last boomer cannot talk.
For most people, that's nobody is pretending anymore that you can be friends with blacks or that blacks are some, that there's good ones or whatever that dumb bullshit you used to hear.
So I do think we have made this progress.
Most people understand now blacks are subhuman.
Blacks are devils.
I think subhuman does not even really do it justice.
They are devilish.
They are not stupid.
They are clever in the way that they will stake out a white woman to know when she will be alone so they can rape her.
They're demonic and devious in the way that they will torture somebody or torture an animal or a person.
They're not just like an animal that will...
Well, even in how they try to hustle people on the street to buy their demo tapes.
Beyond the worst aspects of them.
Yeah, just, yeah.
They are not dull or stupid or whatever.
It's not like a wolf attacks you and kills you so it can eat you.
That would be one thing.
These are devils that are clever in their own way, you know.
Retarded, clever devils.
I do want to give the audience, yeah, why don't white people chimp out?
Well, let's go back to something delightfully called the Wilmington Massacre of 1898. also known as the Wilmington Insurrection or coup.
It was a municipal level coup d'état and massacre carried out by white supremacists in Wilmington, North Carolina, my birth hometown, by the way, 1898.
The white press in Wilmington originally described the event as a race riot perpetrated by a mob of blacks.
In later study, it's been characterized as a violent overthrow of a duly elected government by white supremacists.
The state's white Southern Democrats, back when Democrats were good, conspired to lead a mob of 2,000 white men to overthrow the legitimately elected fusionist biracial government in Wilmington.
They expelled black and white political leaders from the city, destroyed their property and businesses of black citizens built up since the Civil War, including the only black newspaper in the city.
They killed at least 14 or estimates range from 60 to 300.
Many leaders of the coup remained important figures in North Carolina politics, some into the 1920s, considered a turning point in post-Reconstruction North Carolina politics.
And it was part of an era of more severe racial segregation throughout the South.
And there's a picture of a mob of white boys with long rifles in front of the burned out Luganpressa newspaper office there, which is really cool.
So check it out if you want to learn more.
Here's a great picture.
It looks like the Haitian slave revolt, only it's the white people doing the slaughtering.
Very cool.
I had never heard of it.
And thanks to our pal Braxton for jogging our memories about, yeah, Ken Burns, give me a forget the American Revolution.
Let's do a 10-part mini-series on the Wilmington massacre.
Anyway, yeah, and to the guy's point, it's like, yeah, there's just so many at this point.
We've used it for virtuous propaganda for so long.
There's no excuse for someone not knowing anymore.
And the reality is that they know, but, you know, John Darbysher said, better dead than rude to some of these people.
They'd literally rather put themselves in a mortal, mortally dangerous situation than be rude or racist.
And it's your life.
Yeah.
No, that's true.
I have unfortunately run into that too, where you discuss the controversial thing.
And it's as though the old adages that appealed to a person's manliness don't apply anymore.
And I heard somebody say this recently, so I'm quoting somebody, but like you've heard things like, I'd rather live one day as a lion than a thousand years as a lamb.
These people nowadays, no, no, I want to live the thousand years as the lamb.
Of course.
Yep.
Yeah.
So boy cattle.
Yeah.
That was a good quote.
And but and unfortunately true.
But, you know, inside every white person, there's the potential of igniting the righteous indignation.
So I do try to try to sense the opportunity in somebody to tell them that.
And since we're talking about these things, maybe you're thinking, Coach, we segue into this talking about this Bethany McGee, which they wouldn't even release the name for a number of days.
This nigger Lawrence Reed's set her on fire.
Yep.
Was it on the L or on a bus side?
I missed the L.
It was an L train.
It was a blue line, which is like a downtown, where this occurred is kind of like a downtown area.
It's not like taking the green line through the hood or whatever.
This is like downtown Lake and Clark, which is right downtown.
So this is not like a very bad area or something like that.
They say there was an argument and that then he did that.
We don't know what the argument was about, but so what?
Like, what could it possibly be about that you should be burned alive?
You know, that's the thing with these niggers.
It's like everything about the black race, the black culture, black reasoning, if you want to call it that, or black logic, it's violence.
Whether it's their McChicken is not prepared correctly on time, or the you know, somebody's weave comes into play, whatever it is.
Whether there's nothing peaceful about these people, it's everything is resolved by violence.
You know, if you have a disrespect, is some perception of disrespect happens, then there's got to be violence and murder and killing.
And you know what I mean?
So it's an outrage for sure.
And we had recently an out-of-town relative that was coming here, and then she wanted to go to somewhere.
And she said, Oh, well, I'll just take public transportation.
I said, Absolutely not.
You cannot do that.
You're a woman who's going to be passing through that area on public transportation.
You know, you'll, you know, unless you're packing heat.
And even then, like, like some woman is going to pull out a gun and you know, like that may not even end well.
I said, absolutely not.
If you need to ride, you just let us know.
We'll make sure a ride is available or Uber for crying out loud, you know.
So, yep.
I'm just looking to update it, Sam.
And no real update on her condition, but she hasn't died yet.
So far as we know, she was 26 burns on 60% of her body.
She's from Upland in Indiana.
I don't know where that is.
Animal lover, churchgoer, close to her parents and her brothers.
And she, her father's a professor of biblical studies at Taylor University.
And LaQueva, not this guy had a white name, of course, Lawrence Reed, but he was freed.
He was on an ankle monitor.
Obviously, he looks like a retarded monster.
And it was a female Hispanic judge, total DEI affirmative action judge who had given him the slap on the wrist or the easy treatment.
Yeah, 70 arrests, 10 felonies.
And yeah, it's there's no like if any of us had been arrested for anything like twice, we would just like you wouldn't even hear from us again, you know.
But this guy somehow 70, 70 arrests, 10 felonies, and he's out there free to commit this type of crime.
Teresa Molina Coffale.
And I saw a quote something she said, I can't lock up everybody the DA wants me to lock up.
Just, you know, making like that's not your call.
Leave that to the jailers.
Yeah, I don't know whatever the exact details of his last infraction before this, but in this parts, we have this no cash bail.
You know, so of course, these people are arrested and immediately, almost immediately, released.
And of course, yeah, fat Jew governor of Illinois, Pritzker.
Oh, yeah.
They called it the Safety Act, the no-cash bail.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Safety Act.
What an inaptly named thing.
Incredible.
Yep.
So we've got Irina, we've got Bethany, and then absolutely beautiful woman.
Another one murdered.
And I don't have her name handy, but I'm just looking at the meme that Western Chauvinist put out.
Irina something.
Well, no, not the Ukrainian woman on the train who had her throat slashed.
Yeah.
But another one, particularly like even more beautiful than the other two, who were beautiful.
Not that that matters when it comes to being a victim, of course, but it's just it makes it more visceral and sort of striking when you lose that.
And he, this guy literally looks like he's possessed by a demon or retarded or on crack in every single one of these events.
Snubshots.
Yeah.
Yes.
All of the above.
And of course, longtime listeners will know I was a rider of the DC Metro for well over a decade.
And I had two violent interactions.
One where the black guy was having a really loud argument with his girlfriend.
She got off the train and then he continued to have the argument with her.
And I said, Hey, buddy, can you keep your voice down?
And that was when he was standing over me with a snapple bottle, threatening to smash me.
And I can be ice cold in those situations.
I just stared at him.
I didn't panic.
I wasn't like freaking out.
And I was like, I'm going to push that button, you know, the emergency button.
He backed off.
And then another time, a guy took umbrage at me for asking a black woman to remove her purse from the seat so I could have a seat because I had a long ass metro ride.
And he just took it upon, he thought that that was racist or I was, you know, being mean to that old granny.
And that was when he stuck his finger in his jacket.
It was comical almost because it was very obvious that he was doing a little pew-pew finger under his jacket.
But he stuck it into my side and like walked me out of the train.
I didn't actually think that he had a gun.
And I happened to be getting off at that stop anyway.
And I reported him to the police for, you know, that was an assault and pretending to have a deadly weapon.
God knows maybe he did.
And then I actually saw that guy on the train later and took a picture of him and sent it to the cop who was initially interested in hearing my story or at least pretended to.
And I never heard back.
You know, it's like pooky.
He had a pookie tattoo on his leg that I remember.
Yeah, it's very much your exact time and place.
I mean, I rode the green line back when I was in college for years and I never had a problem.
I was going through absolutely some of the worst area.
But, you know, it has everything to do with how you carry yourself and being situationally aware and being racially aware will, as you said earlier, coach, will absolutely save your life.
If there's one thing you take from anything we said around blacks, never relax.
If you got daughters in college or living in a big city, you got to have that conversation with them because it's no coincidence that they, there's clearly a trend now where they're going after young white women.
Yeah, exactly.
So you have, you have been advised.
And obviously they will certainly be doing the same under my roof.
Sam, we were talking about new white life in the beginning at the end.
And I was being a little bit morbid or grandiose there.
So, you know, I'm probably, you know, I'm 44.
Am I going to make it to 88?
Maybe.
You know, both my parents are alive.
Three of my four grandparents lived into their 80s.
One died in his 60s.
My Germanic paternal grandfather died of a brain tumor in his 60s, but he also worked heavy.
He worked heavy construction his whole life.
I don't know if it's a cope that that was the source of it or, you know, is it glioma genetic or can it be environmental?
I don't know.
But anyway, there's, there's hope for me.
But you, you, you're, you're coming into when you first said funeral home or not funeral home.
Uh, sorry, that was a Freudian slip.
Nursing home.
I thought maybe you were about to check yourself in, you know, just be a little piece of quiet.
Yeah, you bastard set up the, you do the Thanksgiving dinner and put up the Christmas lights.
I'm out of here.
Sorry.
But go ahead, buddy.
I'll tell you what, you're not wrong.
A couple of places that I've visited, I wouldn't mind getting a room in there.
Some of them are really nice.
Nice.
Yeah.
But no, I just thought I'd put the story out there.
You know, just like any of our stories, just like our first half, you know, it does help to hear people going through things.
No doubt, our friends and our listeners or colleagues that listen to the show, you go through things and it helps to hear maybe what somebody else learned in the process or at least the to commiserate.
We all have to go through some of these things.
Going back now about four weeks or so, you know, it was a it was a Sunday and I had visited my mother.
She called and she said, hey, I'm just having a little trouble getting up in and out of this.
She sits in this big recliner, you know, which I think anybody, even a very healthy, being healthy, you sink into that thing, you know, to get out of that chair is a little, takes a little effort.
It takes a little momentum to get up.
She said, I'm just having a little trouble today.
I said, well, let me stop over.
I have a walker right here and a cane.
I can just give it to you and leave it there, you know, to help you get up.
She's, you know, I'm not going to say her age, but the first number is a nine.
So that's, you know, pretty good age, you know, when things start to happen.
So I go over there.
I give her, give her a walker and a cane.
She seemed like she was okay, you know, just, you know, a little, little creaky, a little more creaking than normal.
And then that night, a relative calls her and no, no answer, no return call.
And then the next day, same thing, calls, no answer, no call.
And then this relative calls me and says, hey, you know, I called your mother last night and no answer, no callback, which, you know, I mean, you could be in the bathroom or something.
It's not totally unusual that you have to leave a message, but no callback was unusual.
And then call in the morning, no answer, no callback.
So it was in the late morning at this point and was said to me, you better go over there or send somebody over there and make sure everything's okay.
So I said, okay, so I go over there and I go in there and let myself in.
And there she is.
She's sitting on a wrought iron chair in the kitchen.
She says, I can't get up.
I've been here.
I don't know how long.
I haven't had breakfast.
And a wrought iron chair, you know, is at some point uncomfortable to sit in.
Absolutely.
You know, maybe for an hour you could sit there, you know, and then she says, and I haven't, I got to go to the bathroom.
I haven't gone to the bathroom.
And I said, oh, okay.
Okay.
All right.
So I said, well, here's the walker.
Here's the walker.
Let's get you up.
And so I go and she's so frail that it's, you almost feel like you're hurting the person to pick her up.
I said, all right, well, here, let me.
So I grab her and I said, okay, stand up.
I stand her up.
I said, okay, you got to get your bearings now.
And right away, she sits right back down.
And I said, okay, all right.
And he said, oh, I'm in so much pain.
I said, all right, well, let's talk about this.
So my wife was there.
I said, okay, we're going to do this again, but this time I'm going to stand you up.
My wife's going to hug you from the front and make sure you're standing securely and you got to get your sense of your feet under you.
But no, same thing, you know, same thing.
So I said, okay, all right.
You know, now this is now in the early afternoon.
And, you know, she's somebody who has, she's on medication.
She hasn't eaten all day.
She hasn't taken medication.
For all I know, she's been here since the previous night in this position, you know, unable to go to the bathroom, unable to eat, unable to move out of this position.
I said, okay.
I mean, you know, of course I'm asking the questions quickly.
Something happened.
What happened?
How did you get here?
And she's kind of also not making sense, you know, and some of the things she's saying.
So thank God you went over there.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And so we tried it again.
No difference after this, you know, three or so tries.
And so I get my brother on the phone.
I said, hey, you better get over here.
We're going to have to like together pick her up and move her or something.
All right.
Okay.
I'm 20 to 30 minutes away.
But, you know, when somebody is in that kind of state, I don't know how long you can hold your bathroom, Rolo or coach, but you don't want to hold it too long.
And she's been there a long time.
And, you know, anyways, when somebody's in this position where the person is in pain, they have to go to the bathroom.
They can't go to the bathroom.
They haven't eaten.
Like minute to minute, it's getting more severe.
It's not like you can be that way 20 more minutes.
You are like minute to minute getting more desperate, you know.
So after about five minutes, I said, I cannot wait for him to show up.
I called 911, you know, and they came and they, yeah, I had to, you know, you question yourself.
In retrospect, like you said, good call sounds obvious, but in that moment, what do I do?
Finally, I said, okay.
So we get them there.
And they, they came right away.
They, they grabbed her and took her to emergency room, broken pelvis, unfortunately.
And I said, like, I mean, did you fall?
What happened?
I mean, because literally, yeah, the day before somebody had visited her, she was perfectly okay on Saturday.
Sunday, she was kind of complaining and creaky, but the walker and cane seemed to help her.
And to keep in mind, that previous week and up to that time, including up to the previous week and before she was driving a car, going shopping, visiting friends, she'd frequently come over and visit me in my house.
So, you know, this is like an extremely rapid decline in condition and mental condition and physical condition within like 24 hours or less.
So they took her to the emergency room, broken pelvis.
And so she's there a day, another day.
And so they say, okay, well, you know, with that type of condition, it's not like they put you in some kind of body cash or anything.
You are, you know, you got to go to a rehab facility.
So they put her in a rehab facility, which it honestly did seem very desperate because in those first few days, especially the meal would come.
She would literally take one forkful of food.
I can't eat, you know, and when you weigh, let's say 115 pounds, you know, you don't have, you don't have a lot to lose.
So, you know, if each day seemed to be almost worse, you go to see the person, you know, or if you miss a day, especially in two days, the person just looks skeletal, you know.
And as I said, hey, if you're going to get better, you're not going to get better not eating.
Your body needs calories to heal and everything else.
So it was, it was really not looking good for a while there.
And like I say, this is about a four weeks period here that this all happened.
And so then so that she's in the rehab, but then she, you know, kind of started to get a little bit better here and there.
And they even showed me, they said, here, look, they have like a pretend staircase.
And look, she can go up the staircase unaided.
And look, she can go on the walker unaided.
They have like a phony car there as though to simulate like you sit on a seat and swing your swing your legs in like as though you can get into a car.
And so I started to say, all right, well, maybe she's doing a little better.
And, you know, the way the rules are with Medicare, Medicaid, and all that stuff.
So she had 14 days there, 14 days.
And then they got to move to here.
You know, you got to move to a different type of facility.
And that's for 20 days.
And then in 20 days, that'll be, you know, I won't say the day.
Coming up in a little while, but she'll have to move again, you know, to yet a different type of facility, because that's how you know, there's all kind of rules and there's different states involved because of the relative location that she lives and everything like that and so um, but uh, so then uh, you know, the last last few days though, have been actually really good.
You know the mental clarity it is has uh, cleared up and uh, you know that there's a connection of this.
Maybe you've heard of this this, there's a uh UTI, you know, your urinary tract infection.
That can actually kind of make you crazy a little bit and yeah, makes you like kind of it's almost like dementia, like where you're saying things, you're imagining things that didn't happen, stuff like that.
So uh anyways uh, I as a layman, I was not optimistic, going day to day or every few days and seeing the losing weight and and mental not being not mentally clear, but she has really kind of turned around and gotten better and getting more stronger and participating in the physical therapy,
and so we are, we are kind of hopeful that that maybe, I don't know in another month or two maybe there is the prospect that she can return home again.
When somebody is in their 90s, you know, you've you've kind of uh, beaten all of the percent.
You're in a pretty high percentile of the population at that point.
She does not have like a lot of things that maybe other people have.
She's not diabetic, she doesn't have heart problems, she doesn't have whatever all the co-morbidities that maybe somebody in late life has.
So um, you know, did you have the, the conversation with?
So, i'm sorry, did you talk to her about whether she does she want to go to a nursing home or is she stubborn and wants to go home and stay there?
Oh, she definitely wants to go home, she definitely wants to go home and I would say that that's that if she does continue to improve at least as of today, she does continue to improve I would expect that she could even go home.
Um, you know it's, it's.
The thing is, it's almost.
It's so similar to early life.
You know you your, your children are young enough you can remember where you you have a baby.
You know, in one month, two months, three months and then, but at eight and nine months they're getting to be more like this, more advanced and this way and that, and then, like at a year and a half.
Oh my gosh, it's not even the same person anymore.
You know what I mean.
So the same thing with somebody who's very, very old.
You could say like, oh man, these last three days have been great, but then you know they're backtrackers.
Then there is some kind of time clock where we all, it all expires for all of us, right.
There is some kind of time where the things time, just runs out.
So it's, you know, like a a week is a long time.
A month is a long time in the life of a baby or an old person.
And that's the thing to realize.
Yeah.
My, my, my two great, just a little content or, you know, supplementation is that, you know, my one grandmother, after her husband, my grandfather died, she moved to a sunny rancher in one of those, you know, over 55 or whatever the age cutoff was communities where you had to be an old person to live there.
And she stayed there until her last day in her later years.
She had a home health aide who would come, you know, once a day just to help her with the basics.
But she was a stubborn, tough, tough old bird who, you know, probably would have deliberately crashed her car into a pole if she had to go to a nursing home.
And then my other grandmother, you know, both of these lovely ladies made it into their 90s.
She, I only got to visit her once with the kids, and I'm so glad that I did because they remember it.
You know, it's like, it was like an awesome dormitory for old people.
There was a movie theater, a billiard room.
Yeah.
Like, you know, the kids were like, can we stay over?
Like, imagine a little kid saying, let me stay over in the old people's home.
And, you know, kids were really young then.
They were like playing with the balls.
And the old people were like, go ahead, have fun.
We don't care about the table.
Now, God knows how much that costs.
I didn't even ask or purchase it because I love, but I was like, that must have been super expensive.
But yeah.
And then, you know, obviously my parents and my wife's parents are getting up in years.
And so far, so good.
Knock on wood.
Obviously, they all have their, everybody has medical issues when you pass a certain age, but they're both very independent and stubborn.
And I don't think any of the four would willingly or want to go to a nursing home.
It would sort of be a last resort and whatnot.
God bless the people who welcome a grandparent, their parent in an advanced age, you know, into their home to spend their last years, which is real, real white people hours.
Because I sort of fear that possibility or prospect.
Like, what are we going to do?
Do you have to suck it up?
Cause that can be a real daily stressor, but it's also your duty and obligation.
Like, sorry, Charlie, you know, they dedicated at least 18 years of their lives to making sure you got off the ground.
You can suffer a little inconvenience and headaches, you know, as they're heading toward the sunset.
Well, yes, yes, for sure on all that.
And if you think of, let's say, 100 years ago or something like that, that's what would happen.
I mean, if this, if my mother was in this predicament 100 years ago, there's no nursing home.
I don't know, maybe or earlier.
I don't know how what the timeframe should be.
But, you know, there would be some relative who would say, okay, well, I'll be here to take care of you and make sure you're okay.
And that would be, of course, the loving thing to do.
But in this circumstance, I mean, my mother would not be well served in any way by that because she would not be getting the physical therapy that she gets.
She shows me the schedule of what she does every day.
And it's like hours, hours of activity that the person is involved in.
So it's, you know, if this had happened 100 or more years ago and my family member took, or I took her into my home and my wife took care of her, it would be just to take care of her until she was dead, you know, basically.
It would just be guiding her to death.
But in this circumstance, as you say, the place is beautiful.
It's like, and as I told her, I said, I know you don't want to be here.
I understand that.
Stubborn old birds.
Yeah, if you got to be somewhere, if you got to be somewhere, this is a very nice place to be.
You got all your meals.
You got your TV with your remote control right there.
Have activities, not only physical therapy, but they play bingo and you know they have dog shows and whatever stuff you know to to keep you engaged and occupied.
They have all the old folks.
They sit around the table, they have the meal together in a uh, cafeteria type setting and they talk together and they're not all negro staff.
Nightmare scenes for all people.
Yeah now, obviously they're expensive if you want a good one, but yeah, it's not like a criminal offense to send a parent to a nursing home, necessarily.
And that's where the Medicaid and you got to be on top of Medicare Medicaid because in in her case, apparently she had had Medicaid, but it had.
You know, it's something you have to reapply for periodically.
And uh, she didn't and so she was not on it.
But it's like okay well, get her, you know, get her on it.
And it just took some family members to step up and make sure everything is getting signed up for and it works its way out and in one way or another, and uh, you know it's.
It's one of those.
That's why I tell the story.
Somebody who's listening might be fearful like oh, how do you even approach this topic?
It's nope, it's just another thing in life you have to do.
It's nothing scary about it and uh, you know you the the thing is to be involved in your if it's your parents, especially involved in their life, just like they have been involved in your life when you were a baby, and just like we talk about on the show about babies having babies, raising families.
This is just another part of life, the circle of life.
For sure, thank you for sharing that sam, and I uh sincerely, sincerely hope she's able to stay independent and good on you for being a good, uh good, steward.
And check it, check it.
Did you?
When you knock, when you went in the house, were you worried you were going to find a body?
Did it cross your mind?
Yeah well my, my wife had gone there first and looked in the window and she had kind of seen.
So she let me know like oh yeah she's, she's sitting there, and she yelled through the window, I mean, you need to get here.
So then I came there.
Okay yeah gotcha, I was.
It reminds me of uh, I told Rollo that i've been deep in the depths of an Allison Chains binge, because this is somewhat related.
Uh, when I was I was trying to think of earlier was damn that river.
That was damn that river.
Yes that that, that's, that's pretty good.
Not what, not their best, but uh, for some reason, when I was growing up like I loved Pearl JAM 10.
That this is still probably my desert island thing and I resented Nirvana because so many people were gaga over Nirvana, even though I recognized the airline songs.
But I never really got into Allison Chains.
They were always on the radio but I never bought an album.
Um, it just didn't hit.
And as i've gotten older uh, Pearl Jam Nirvana, whatever.
But I will go back and listen to some of those Allison Chains jams and of course, Lane Staley.
Uh had the world in the palm of his hands and was addicted to heroin and in his later years essentially just shut himself up in his Seattle top floor condominium and got high and played, played video games all day, lost all his teeth emaciated, Like people would see, people would see him at the grocery store wearing a wig and a hat and they wouldn't recognize him.
His knees were all bent out and everything.
But yeah, then eventually he went quiet for two weeks and somebody, I think it was his mother or sister, you know, had the cops go and there he was, you know, probably the desiccated corpse for two weeks with a needle in his arm.
But I'm going to pick an Alice in Chains, my absolute favorite to close the show.
It just reminded me of, yeah, the welfare check haven't heard from a while.
And you have to go knock on that door, whether it's your parent or your brother or your friend or whatever.
And that trepidation.
Yep, absolutely.
Do the deed.
I wanted to talk a little bit of politics here, kind of late in the second half to do it, but I was irritated after the off-year election results came in from Virginia and New Jersey.
Of course, it always happens that like the year after a presidential election, those two states have their gubernatorial votes.
And there was a handful of other stuff across the country.
But I saw a lot of commentary from our guys, whether it was propaganda or they genuinely believe this, that said that, like, this is clear, like, Trump is failing us and people stayed home.
And I just thought that that was borderline pants on head retarded when to me, the most, it was a shellacking, but that is not at all unexpected in those off-year elections.
The party that won the White House previously, then those gubernatorial elections, they faced the backlash of the angry people, whether you hate Obama and then, you know, Bob McDonnell got in Virginia.
There's all this data.
You can go back.
It's pretty good.
It's not ironclad.
So they were likely to lose it anyway because the left was angry.
And my thesis was just that, on the contrary, I think that Trump did so much in his first 10 months, obviously not enough, not perfect.
Israelo, Israeli and Jewish gifts notwithstanding, that the most likely explanation is that he really pissed off the left and the mushy middle and that they all turned out.
And of course, obviously he wasn't on the ballot to get the MAGA, you know, true people going and the terrible candidates.
Now, the guy in New Jersey supposedly was like tailor-made to be a competitive Italian Republican in New Jersey, but he got blown out way worse than the polls suspect suggested.
And in Virginia, of course, they ran a dumb Jamaican woman at the top of the ticket, winsome Sears who didn't even face a primary.
I think they basically, like the party was like, nope, you're going to get it.
It would be racist not to pick her.
And I know at least two, maybe three guys who I said, hey, just curious, did you vote?
And they said, nope, I refuse to vote for a black woman for the governor of the old dominion.
So there's all those factors going out there.
And if any, you know, I'm not saying that Trump did enough or this has been like a wonder.
Obviously, the worm has kind of turned on Trump with the Epstein thing and then Marjorie Taylor Greene resigning and all the philosemitism.
And maybe we're on the verge of doing regime change in Venezuela, which actually doesn't have my panties in a bunch, to be honest.
Why would anyone care about Venezuela regime and Maduro?
I mean, like, you can principally oppose it.
You know, Congress should have to declare war.
Is it really?
Well, because you don't want us getting in another, because it could be a nightmare, Rolo.
I mean, it really could be.
I mean, think about all the problems that the squats cause for us.
Like as opposed to, like, we didn't, we didn't have a problem with the Middle East until 9-11.
So that problem was kind of created.
More or less.
We've had this problem with the border since as long as America's been a thing, like going back to the Mexican-American War.
Millions of Venezuelans here, many of them criminal drug dealers, gang members, of course.
Right.
That's what I'm saying.
Like, that's an, like, that's a, to, to say, like, um, oppose it on principle.
Well, that could kickstart a war that I would make the argument should have been declared decades ago because the invasion is that it's what it is.
Like they're invading the country.
Like that is an act of war.
Well, there's that problem, but also Maduro in Venezuela, at least what I read that usury is forbidden.
Yeah, and he's not friendly.
He's friendly with Russia.
It's a little bit like, you know, whether it's fair or not, it's understandable that the United States wants to dominate the West.
He can be the enemy of our enemy, but also still be our enemy.
Because it's not like the only problem we have with him is that he opposes Israel.
Like Venezuela, he's still not policing his borders and letting criminal gang members come in here.
And he knows he's doing it and he knows it disrupts us.
And is he really like taking it to Israel, like the Ayatollah and the Mulas and Iran?
Yeah.
I, yeah.
So, okay, I, it makes me uncomfortable.
I tend to believe that if the United States chose to, that they could probably knock him off or get him to flee relatively quickly and, you know, put in whatever stupid Western democracy-loving puppet they want to.
Ton of resources.
Yeah.
I just do not have any romantic or hyper-principled like support for this.
You know, he's basically like a communist gangster running Venezuela.
Any support for this guy is so gay and retarded.
If anyone's like, you are a gay retardant.
Yeah.
Like I'm sure Maduro has said something.
Right.
Like, I really care if he voted against Israel at the UN a couple times.
Okay.
Yeah.
And what matters is, yeah, is it going to, is it going to be a quagmire?
There's no scenario in which I think we go in and then all of a sudden we take in like a million Venezuelan war refugees.
Like that's just not the time on the calendar and the last thing that the immigrant that the administration wants to do.
For all the H-1B and immigration bruha, you have to give it to him.
I mean, they're still continuing to do the raids, you know, finding out how many school children in Charlotte, North Carolina are illegals, people hiding for their lives.
You know, they're doing a lot.
They're doing more on immigration, specifically criminal, illegal.
I hate it when they say criminal, illegal aliens.
It's like they're all illegal.
Yeah.
I think, you know, you could say that they're doing that to make the message more appealing, just to put in the speakers.
Or you could take the other view and like they're doing that because they don't really care about illegal aliens.
They just want to get the violent drug dealers out.
But obviously they're dragnetting a ton of illegals and doing a pretty good job of it.
And the numbers are not bad.
They're not satisfactory, et cetera.
But yeah, it's like, okay, yes or no, Coach, should we invade Venezuela to do regime change?
I would say no.
But if we do, I'm not going to, you know, need the feigning couch in my righteous indignation or whatever.
I do, you know, it's a huge, it's a huge freaking risk.
And I think they're probably, you know, the last thing I saw was that they've basically been like, okay, CIA, you can get the first stab at it, right?
See if you can do the overthrow.
There were leaked supposed terms of a deal in which Maduro was going to like hand over, like basically stop trading oil, which is about China and Russia too.
It's not just about drugs, but blowing up ships, I guess, looks cool.
And when you see them with the barrels, it's like, yeah, those are not little, we're not going around blowing up fishermen and claiming drug interdictions.
But if there were a way to do it relatively bloodlessly, and then we shore up our hemisphere and we don't have China and Russia expanding military presence there.
I'm sorry, that's what a serious country does.
And I wouldn't lose too much sleep over it.
So Rollo is basically on my page, but Sam, you think this is more like neocon bullshit, just like in our hemisphere for this summer?
It could be both, though.
Yeah, it could be both.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm just raising, you know, like, you know, how much that our country does could we say is good.
You know, I mean, it's always be dubious.
Yes, for sure.
Never assume noble intent.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Sometimes what Trump does or our government does happens by luck to run concurrent with our own interests, like throwing illegal aliens out of this country.
Of course, we love that, you know.
But, you know, what is really behind this thing?
I guess I'm just more like saying, I don't know.
And before we would rubber stamp and say, yeah, great.
Or, you know, probably we wouldn't, but maybe conservatards would or something like that.
Before anyone would get excited and say, yeah, bomb Venezuela, I'd say, like, well, there's other issues at hand that maybe are not good.
Like, yeah, you know, and call me a constitutionalist.
Well, and for me to clarify, I think it is neocon bullshit, but I just don't care.
Like, this is one thing like neocon bullshit can accidentally do something that I think could be.
It's not always Iraq.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Concurrent interests.
Yeah.
I'm pretty sure they don't want to start losing thousands of Americans in like a protracted war in Venezuela.
I have been in favor of a war with Mexico for years.
Like I've, I've always considered myself pretty anti-war, except for against Mexico, because I think that is a genuine invasion.
I think Shinebaum is absolutely complicit.
It's a narco-state invasion.
Yeah, I think all of them have, like, they know that they're in bed with the cartel that is helping people cross over to the border.
And they let a bunch of innocent people get by so they can use that as a scapegoat, tug on some heartstrings on some stupid libtards that are like, oh, there's poor people.
But they know that they're like for every, you know, 10 abuelas that are crying and bringing their kid in, there's at least one major drug lord that's that's bringing enough controlled substances in.
They know they're doing it.
And that's the only war I think would be a feasible war to fight that we should fight.
Because I don't think we should fight China.
Going to China and fighting them, I think would probably be a losing effort.
James smiles on you, Rolo, from up above.
And Shinebaum, it certainly looked like she had her own little January 6th there with a mob rioting outside the presidential palace and breaking things down because ostensibly politicians keep getting murdered by the narcos.
And I have no doubt that she's in bed with them in some way.
Yeah, of course, whether she has to stay alive.
Jewish woman.
She democratically rises through the ranks because she has great policies and she's good with people.
Great Catholic nation of Mexico going for Shinbaum.
There's a term being uh batted around for her, Putajuria Putahudia, Puta.
Yeah yeah, they spray painted on the on the palace.
Yeah absolutely, how do you?
How do you say shine bomb in a Mexican accent?
You know, like some unflattering pictures that are just her face reputed to, you know, of her in an act, shall we say, that are not very flattering.
Just like uh, you know I was thinking sam just like with bitcoin.
You know, one day you're on top of the world, one day you're down.
One day Maca is, Maca is dead.
The Democrats are going to come back and it's going to be terrible.
It's like well no, I think that they just got a very valuable teaching lesson from Virginia and New Jersey and, to a lesser extent, those local races, and they will, of course, correct.
I mean, the easiest thing to do would be to, you know, give you those people.
Pleasers say, all right, forget the hundred thousand dollar fee on H-1bs, let's just scrap the whole program together, if right, if Trump and his team actually care about maintaining power or maybe even growing it at the midterms which I really thought when Charlie Kirk got murdered, that it was that that was going to be a lightning rod for the right to come together even more, but it's going to work.
It's been worse for them since he got killed, which is oh, can I, can I?
So, can I, can I talk about that real quick, with the Charlie Kirk being killed.
Uh, so Marjorie Taylor Green had been talking about, like you know, all the stuff she was doing.
She was getting pretty close to like less civ Natty and she was starting to become a little more principled as she.
She was naming the the Israel lobby and calling to end aid yeah, but.
But the thing is like Trump's like oh, she's a crazy person she doesn't represent, and then she just says the worst of Trump yeah, of course, of course, but we expected that, no problem.
But but the thing that this is what's interesting to me, she says that, and then the next or he says that, then the next day she says I don't want to be defined by toxic politics, and then the next day she resigns or announces that she's stepping down, and then i'm just gonna say that, combined with the Charlie Kirk thing, I mean that should absolutely.
Yes I, I don't believe that she's just like, oh, i'm just black pill because, you know, if she was just cynical, she would just take the easy money, just like whatever, i'll just, who cares, i'll just, i'll just nay, and i'll just run and then whatever it is.
But she was, she just like stepping down immediately and it looked like like a cowardly fold like oh, I don't, I don't want to do toxic politics.
And then yeah, you've been popular firebrand for years, relish the attention, love the fight in person, you know, totally combative, and she had her Road To Damascus moment or whatever.
It's like, uh, somehow they got to her, somehow they got her and it threatened her or whatever it is.
Um, you know, I don't believe for a second.
She was not threatened, she absolutely was threatened, totally agree yeah, you know, in a way that was credible and convincing.
Maybe they have the pictures of her with, you know, with doing illicit acts with the dog.
Maybe they just said hey, remember Thomas Massey's wife, who knows?
But she was my.
My theory is that they actually have evidence of her sleeping with multiple staffers, or you know whether it's a?
Yeah, yes.
That's, I think that's the most likely.
And then, and then it's just like its career, its career is over at that point.
Yeah, she was like, okay, I really don't want my daughters to see that.
Because I mean, she, you know, her husband filed for divorce in 2022, I think it was, pretty obviously for in yeah, infidelitis reasons.
What do they call irreconcilable differences?
Yeah, but very, very jarring.
And I'm actually, you know, I've never been an MTG fan.
I thought maybe it was just an opportunistic pivot.
You know, it was the time on the calendar for people like Massey and Rogues to finally be able to name the Jew or at least the Israel lobby and to not even finish your term.
I'm pretty sure that they had serious dirt on her.
Maybe, maybe it was a, you don't want to end up like Charlie, although I tend to doubt they would be that you can't rule it out, though.
You cannot rule it out.
And I can't help but make the segue into, you know, Candace Owens.
I don't know if you saw this thing she posted.
She's claiming that she was contacted by a somebody in the French government who has said that that the hit has been approved on her and that they gave enough things for her to check out to know that it was a legitimate person giving the information.
And so she's put out that little message there about, you know, if anything happens to me, you will know what is involved.
And I don't want to give this nigger too much oxygen, but in some ways she does have points.
You know, she does have points that are relevant.
And it's interesting.
I don't know if we have time to go into it or if we need to go into it, but what is the collusion of events between this Brigitte Macron, who is a man, I think is pretty obvious.
You could look at the pictures, study the pictures.
I buy that way more than Michael Obama, Sam.
So Michael Robinson.
We already did that one, but I'll meet you halfway and say I believe that Brigitte.
It's just Coach's way of saying he's never been into a gym to lift weights.
If Brigitte Macron is a man, imagine what his penis, imagine what his penis looks like right now.
Maybe he had Kalman.
Maybe he, unlike Hitler, actually had Kalman syndrome and had imagine being born with a micropenis and then you turn into an old man pretending to be a woman and you're on hormones.
Like it's just like a like a like a black banana peel.
Sorry.
Well, Michael Robinson is most certainly a man.
All right.
To me, Brigitte McCrone, that one does take a little bit of study.
And like maybe somebody wouldn't come to the immediate conclusion.
They have to kind of think about it.
Here are a few facts.
Oh, yeah, I guess that is a man.
But it's interesting the collusion.
And, you know, you almost have to go.
Again, I don't want to necessarily recommend her, but when I read that thing, I went and I listened to her last two episodes because she talks about what is the connection between Brigitte McCrone being a man, which he is a man, and the assassination of Charlie Kirk and how does that involve Candace Owens?
There's actually connection to all that there.
And it's very interesting.
And, you know, if you start with the Kash Patel, remember when he made this ridiculous remark about.
I hate him the most.
I'll see you in Valhalla, brother.
Remember that.
Okay, well, like, okay, that just sounds like something crazy, but is it something crazy?
Because there's this Operation Valhalla Strike, which is Air Force units that come from Egypt.
They went to France, and then they were in Delaware.
And there's a hangar there.
Yeah, there's a hangar there.
And because she's being sued by their Macron's.
So where is the lawsuit being lodged?
It's in.
I forget the town, but in Delaware.
Valhalla, Delaware.
Yeah.
Well, no, so they say, so, so Candace Owens, her attorney says, you know, there's a Latin phrase for it.
That's like not convenient.
I mean, she lives in Tennessee.
Why wouldn't you make the lawsuit in Tennessee where her studio is, her staff is there?
That's where the alleged claims are made.
Yeah.
Probably because it's not for judges and juries there.
But yeah.
Well, because France has a hanger there.
They have a two-year lease on a hangar.
They claim it's for maintenance.
Again, I'm saying.
Can I stop you real quick, Sam?
Coach, why does this seem like it's like all of this weird crap?
And then you're like, oh, this, there's nothing here.
This is weird.
No, it is.
This is weird.
This is weird even for the U.S. government.
Like this, the U.S. government that is like a history of assassinating dissidents.
Well, half of it is like delusions of grandeur, insane Candace Owens, like high ones.
I would agree with that.
I would just say, go listen to those last couple.
You know, she doesn't put out episodes every day, but this is on a Friday and a Saturday.
She put this out because this is such like a, you know, currently developing story.
I would really advise you to go listen to those two to hear about this Operation Valhalla Strike, what that was all about, because that is weird for him to say that, you know, Valhalla, see you in Valhalla.
That's a weird thing.
It's weird to say it to Charlie Kirk, a devout Christian.
But there was a reason, you know, and there is all the interesting things.
Like she said, she worked for TPUSA.
She was very involved with that.
You know, if you, if you wanted, if Full House was going to host TPUSA event, we would, we would, we would need at least six months ahead because they're booked.
They're booked up.
This thing where he was murdered was set up in a matter of weeks, you know, to have this.
So, you know, it's hard to do it justice, but it's interesting.
And as she, if, again, I don't want to like, I'm listening to her and following.
I'm just listening to a couple things.
But like she has said, I've, she says, I already have like a lot of very crucial documents, damning evidence and things put in the hands of numerous people.
If something happens to me, this is, this will come out.
So it is interesting how it's, and she, you know, she literally got a call from Trump saying, I want you to stop talking about this Brigitte Macron stuff because this, this is jeopardizing the peace treaty with the Ukraine.
This is going back to like February of 2025.
That somehow this, like, now that is a weird statement.
Like, wait a second, that this man pretending a woman somehow jeopardizes Ukraine.
I mean, it's just like, it's weirder.
Like every that you hear.
Yeah, that's see.
Yeah, this is why you shouldn't be like rolling your eyes at it because this, like, this is a level of convoluted.
It's like, hey, coach, don't say soda pop.
You're upsetting.
You're upsetting my name.
Soda pop.
I love soda pop.
Drink soda pop every day, especially at the corner of Constitution and 16th Avenue.
Um, 17th and 76th, 1600 in Pennsylvania.
That's what I'm uh, but my if you force me to guess, I think that she is insane or lying, but I won't say that because I haven't done, I haven't done the work to list.
I, everybody's like, you got to listen to the Macron's.
I was like, I'm not, I just, I just can't, like, I'm not that interested.
So, I'm not dismissing it out of hand, Sam.
But there's absolutely like, you know, like she, she's almost like in a manic phase where it's all this stuff.
And it's obviously good for business, too.
I don't, I don't dismiss it out of hand, but I tend to take like Keith Woods is like, this woman's clearly insane.
But yeah, you know, and that's what we say, like, because occasionally we've put her on, you know, and at the end of it, we always say, like, certainly that white husband of hers, there must be a moment in the day where she acts black and he's like in his mind, well, I like her for this reason and that reason.
She's a trad Catholic, she's interested in this, she's smart in certain ways.
My self-esteem is really low.
I don't hate her.
At the end of the day, she is black.
And here you go, she's acting black, you know.
And she was ostensibly one of those ones who was groomed out of the like, you know, she was an inspiring model pre-OnlyFans.
And then all of a sudden, she's hoisted, you know, elevated to comments or status.
That's that stinks in and of itself.
All that's true, but I would just say that it's interesting the way that it's these things are coming to a crescendo, I think.
And I think that we can expect fireworks in it.
And it's interesting that the Macron's are so bent out of shape.
I mean, if somebody was going around saying, Coach, you're really a woman and now you're living as a man or your wife is really a man.
Why?
Then I could finally send, then I'd have a justification to send the nutsack pictures.
Yeah.
I mean, you could laugh.
And the way that they've handled the response to like, yeah, Regit Macron's wife is a woman.
How dare you?
We will, we will take a hair sample to prove it.
Like, what?
Methinks the old man protesteth too much.
So I guess that's all I'm saying.
Is I would, if you want to understand the Charlie Kirk connection, Candace Owens, the Macron's, Brigitte Macron, all that stuff, it's an interesting couple of episodes that just this, you know, like 21st and 22nd of November.
I was, you know, I don't know where it's going, but things seem to be working to a crescendo in different ways.
Even now, what we see going on with Ukraine with that whole war and everything is just possibly being tied to like some serious criminal obviously, obviously corruption.
And of course, the Jew flees to Israel, which hasn't been last year.
Yeah, giving these bulletproof vests that don't stop bullets and all that because they're siphoning the money and giving him an inferior most Jewish war profiteering ever, right?
Not just profiteering off the war, but giving and just trying to guilt everyone for not constantly giving him more money.
It is the most wild thing.
I might have to eat crow on this later, but I don't think there's a snowball's chance in hell that this 28-point plan is remotely close enough to Russia's demands.
It looks almost like I would laugh it out of the building.
And I suspect the Russians are just being like, fine, we can talk about your stupid 28-point plan again, just like, you know, going back to the Alaska summit.
Oh, well, you know, Putin literally inviting Trump to Moscow in English.
Too much baggage over dead.
Yeah, no, like, well, and the Russians are making more progress now than they have probably in the past three years.
Be like, since when does the losing army, you know, dictate the terms?
And it's so convoluted that there's going to be a like the Russians are going to de facto have the territory, but not du jour, I guess.
And there's going to be a demilitarized zone and the Ukrainian army could still be 600,000 men and they're going to join the EU.
Like, I strongly, and a lot of the pro-Russian commentary says, yes, this is, this is another farce, whether it's because Trump wants to, you know, pivot and get credit for ending whatever is eight, nine, ten.
I ended eight wars in 10 months.
But, you know, if I, if I were Putin, I'd be like, no, this, this train doesn't stop at least until the Dnieper.
I want Odessa.
I want Zaporozhia.
I want that nuclear power plant.
I want Kharkiv and maybe let a rump.
And I want him to nick my boot.
I want to end or I want to finish up on the Candace Owens point with that.
I think there is a good possibility that there is something substantial in those claims.
And I think just kind of like what we were talking about earlier, in that there is so much less ire on our camp and it's more in like the Fuentes Groyper camp now.
Yep.
Yep.
They're getting the alt-right treatment, arguably better treatment.
I think, yeah, well, I think, I think, yeah, it's like those were all people.
I'm pretty sure they felt like they had them under control.
But now they're starting to go against the grain and they have a big audience.
And it's and my way to stop it is to Streisand effect.
And it's just like these people are talking about Jews.
And if you just remove them from everything, it's like, oh my gosh, the Jews are real.
It's them.
I think they're real quick, Sam.
I suspect is where is the alt-right, it was like, we need to squash this and suffocate it out of existence.
And with Fuentes and the Groypers and all that stuff, they're like, we need to co-opt and manage and finesse this.
Obviously, there are people, you know, Chuck Schumer, we need to, you know, pass a pass a law, pass a resolution that gets you that that shows you that there are people there that actually think that they cannot co-opt it.
Yeah.
Fair.
Yes.
He has single-handedly, Nick has single-handedly like reached escape velocity or critical mass or something to the point where they can't just ignore him or shunt him aside.
Yep.
To his credit.
Love him.
Love him and hate him.
Candace Owens is the number one podcast, your number one internet show, whatever the right word.
Spotify or something.
Fuentes was until they banned him from Spotify.
Yeah.
So that's just and Candace Owens beat Joe Rogan, a guy that they gave hundreds of millions to be on Spotify.
So there's a lot of eyes on this.
I'm not rubber stamping in any way either of those people, but you got to take encouragement from it.
The numbers, the points, and the inter information is getting out about.
I question Fuentes' motivations and I question Candace's sincerity or sanity.
But I think no matter what credit credit were due.
Yeah, I'm just speaking my piece.
Not a hater.
think most people can pick up on that.
It's like, we're not, we're not telling people to go listen to them.
Just listen to us.
That's, I mean, right.
That's all you need.
Or based in confused.
But the thing is, it's undeniable that people are listening to them.
And even if it's a 1%, like, you know, the JQ gets through to.
I mean, how many people is that?
10,000, 100,000, a million?
I don't know.
If you're talking about the JQ, then it's cool with yours truly, for sure.
Unless it's like, you know, lunatic stuff.
And I wanted to add one of my local buddies absolutely listens to like every single Candace show, but he's also been brain fried.
You know, he's gone through the like totally MAGA QAnon to this guy sucks.
And yes, it's the Jews, but all this stuff.
And there's a lot of brain scrambling.
When you throw in all these elaborate, difficult to prove conspiracies, it makes me wonder if it's not some different flavor of QAnon where you're whipping people up into a righteous frenzy with stuff that can't necessarily be proved.
I'm not saying she's lying.
I'm not saying it's like, you know, just total BS, but it does make me suspect that it is a hustle and perhaps even a deliberate psyop to confuse people and get them, I don't know, distracted or something, even if to her credit, you know, it's focused on like literal Jewish power, globalist Ben Shapiro, all that stuff.
So I don't, I'm just, I'm just looking.
I'm suspicious.
I'm looking for somebody who's going to put a hit on her and what kind of earthquake that will cause.
You know, that's what I'm looking at.
Just got to get the fried chicken delivery man to, you know, pick up a pistol.
Just kidding.
She whips her white husband into the kitchen.
Make that chicken wags again, Nigel, whatever the British guy is.
Yeah.
We have, yeah, coach, did you see the model that I've completed and posted pictures of?
I did.
It was impressive.
I loved Rolo's comment that what's the scale one to one?
Sam's got a giant tank in his house.
That made me laugh out loud.
Good on you, Rolo.
And go ahead, Sam.
Spurg briefly on your model and then let's get the hell out of here.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, well, you know, I was chatting with some of the guys.
Like, you know, they asked me questions about it.
And honestly, the picture makes it look better than it does in person because it looks perfect in the picture.
And it's not perfect because it is hand-painted and it's hard to make everything look nice and uniform.
But, you know, the original impetus between all the models I've done, I've been doing models for a long time.
I'm not necessarily interested in doing models, but I did them to try to get the kids involved.
And I'd give them a part to do.
And I, you know, they, it never really took nobody, you know, it's just computer video games and all that.
I always lost out, but it is a, it is a good activity.
It teaches you patience.
It teaches you how to put things together.
Even like one of my first models I did with the kids was a NASCAR, you know, and that included like putting the engine components and the struts on the car and things you don't even see in the finished model unless you pick it up and turn it over or open the hood on it.
And, you know, it just teaches you how things are put together and it teaches its hand-eye coordination and all that.
And one guy I was saying, I said, hey, if you, if you, he said, I might try to do a model.
I said, if you do a model, you might inspire somebody else to do a model.
So that's, that's really the purpose of it.
I've done a lot of models through the years.
You know, the Imperial.
Isolate that one.
I'd like to do it.
I'd like to do a, I'd like to do a model with you, Sam.
You know, I've done the Invisible man, you know, like where you see all the organs and stuff like that.
And I've done like war, war models, you know, like the tank I just did.
And it was, you're right, coach.
It was not T70.
I don't know why it says sometimes these shows go a little late and I get a little tired at the end, but I wasn't crazy.
Okay, thank you.
No, no, it's a Roman numeral four.
So I don't know if that means Mark IV, but it's a panel, probably.
Yeah, Roman numeral four/slash 70/A is what it is.
And it was fun to do.
And I got a lot of compliments.
So that's all I'm mentioning.
And one final thing I'll mention before the show ends.
I just recently did an episode on White Noise Radio with the band Concrete Death Stomp.
Great.
Great.
Yeah.
And a good guy.
The guy had a six-month-old baby.
So he was really cool to talk to and did an interview, talked all about his influence and all that.
He's from Las Vegas.
Of course, I know skinhead bands from many years ago that were from Las Vegas.
So we talked all about that.
So if, you know, anyone who's listening, head over to White Noise Radio, check it out.
I did an interview and I'm going to be doing a show a tribute to Iron Maiden.
Document.
Right.
Yes.
Exactly.
So head over to White Noise Radio and check it out.
Amen.
White Noise Radio.
And yeah, I'm probably not going to do models.
It's just not my thing, Sam.
But I finally finished my stupid Bitcoin book.
The Bitcoin Standard was actually not, it was not a great book.
Like the first 75% of it is like an economics lesson in gold and fiat currencies and stuff.
And the last 25% is about Bitcoin and is not particularly enlightening.
Finished finally the audio book of Rise and Kill First, which was awesome, but other people were like mentioning that after.
So I was like, all right, I'm looking around.
I was like, I got to start reading more just because I used to love it.
And then just beep boop got addicting.
So I finally my autographed Gerbels biography from David Irving.
Right there.
You can see his autograph there.
Got that from the dinner out to him.
And I started this years ago, but you know, early biographies, it's like, I don't really care about baby Goebbels and, you know, his early troubles as a teenager.
And now we're getting into the good stuff and it's so good.
So just a brief, I'll do a brief free plug too.
I believe it's still going.
There's a Black Friday sale on IrvingBooks.com.
Focal point, of course, is the publisher.
I, you know, I've read Hitler's War, Destruction of Dresden, one or two others.
I didn't do the Churchill biography or whatever, but this massive book, you know, maybe 20% done.
And it's just so inspiring what they went through.
I mean, like SA men were, you know, just regular like volunteers were getting whacked by communists and like Berlin was like the belly of the beast.
And for them to turn it into a virtual stronghold and Hitler flying and doing five, six speeches all over the country.
It's it's just absolutely awe-inspiring.
Um, you know, Garibals is not like the archetype of Aryan purity and nobility, but brilliant in his own right, utterly dedicated, extremely hard worker.
Um, and it's it's just a thrilling yarn.
And I like, once I dusted it off again, I was like, you stupid bastard.
You should have finished this when you got it, you know, whatever, however many years ago it was.
So dust off, dust off your books, boys.
Don't be, it's not all useless.
Like, I feel, I feel awed and motivated by reading what those heroes and men sacrificed and toiled for all those years ago.
Still, like, because that, you know, that when I was like, oh, yes, race is a biological reality.
Maybe there's something up with those Jews.
But it wasn't really until I came to believe and know and trust that those men, by and large, were struggling against a worthy enemy and trying to do the best by their people.
They weren't genocidal, mad murderers and torturers, but almost pulled off the greatest miracle in modern European and white history.
Yeah, they did.
They did.
Yeah, they did.
Well, they certainly stopped.
If it hadn't been for them, the Soviet Union and communism would have taken over the West in a way that would have, you know, it was not a speed bump.
It was more than a speed bump.
They stopped what could have been worse for us for a while at least.
And they delayed long enough where now we have a chance to fight it as well.
So White Noise Radio, I'm going to be doing a motorhead tribute.
That's oh, hell yeah, Sam.
Yeah, definitely send that my way and I'll boost it.
Yep.
Yeah, because, you know, Motorhead, they were kind of our guys anyways.
And, but there's a lot of great, great songs that were covered by dozens.
Dozens.
Sam, do you want to break your heart?
Okay.
Lemmy said the love of his life was a black woman.
He was just playing Plantation Master.
It was a black woman who is a heroin addict.
She died of a drug overdose.
He said she was the love of my life.
My favorite motorhead song is Orgasmetron.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
Orgasmatron.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
So you know the name of the skinhead band that covered that one?
Auschwitz Symphony Orchestra is the name.
Chef's kiss to the Auschwitz Symphony Orchestra, wherever they might be today.
I'm absolutely going to listen to that one, Sam.
Thank you.
That's that's awesome.
This was a really fun show.
I think it was a great show, you know, and God bless.
Bob.
His name is Bob.
Family, the hero with his own hands.
Bob.
Sorry, Bob.
Bob just caught the, all he did was catch the baby.
It sounds like, you know, there's really no heroism there.
All credit to the wife and to the baby, but we'll, we'll, we'll let him feel good, good about himself for another couple weeks.
He knows I'm, he knows I'm kidding.
All right.
You know where to find us.
We wish you all a very wonderful, loving Thanksgiving.
Even if you're alone, even if you're sitting alone and have a little Thanksgiving dinner, be grateful that you're alive.
I mean that seriously.
Yeah.
Yep.
If you're on this earth and you're not like dying of cancer or AIDS or something, there's always something to be grateful for.
We'll save it for the next show, Sam.
But I actually, the other night, I went and read the Sermon on the Mount and I was like, there's too many things there for me to get hung up on there where I disagree with it.
So like, I'm definitely, I'm definitely still in the looking up at the sky thing, but the hang-ups on certain tenets and teachings are very, very difficult for this one.
Fair enough.
That might actually be fun and interesting to like go through the sermon, just the Sermon on the Mount and talk about stuff that's stuck in my craw.
And you can do, well, if you look at it this way.
Yeah.
Let's put that in your notes if you don't mind, Sam, for next time.
I'll read it again.
And let's bring this puppy home.
This has been a long one.
And I just have to do it.
Allison Chains Down in a Hole.
I was listening to it, and just that I never really appreciated the pure synthesis of the metallic Lane Staley and the buttery richness of Jerry Cantrell.
And that vocal harmony is magic.
The lyrics, the pain.
Maybe I'll go with the unplugged version because it's a little bit more poignant, but the studio version is just as good.
I don't know.
But, you know, and also Lane Staley was also a junkie.
But by all accounts, I didn't see any evidence that he was a really bad dude.
Like he loved this woman.
She died of an overdose.
And he just basically at one point said, you know what?
Screw it.
I'm just going to be a junkie and kill myself.
Tragic and Jerry Cantrell, by all accounts, is still making music and surviving and all that.
So, all right.
Down in a hole, Allison Chains.
We love you, fam.
And we'll talk to you next week.
Sam Rollo, me all together.
One, two, three.
See you.
I was too fast.
Thanks, guys.
I give this part of me for you.
Sand rings down and here I sit.
Rolling red flowers in a view.
Down in a hole, and I don't know if I can save my heart.
I decorated like a crime.
Oh, you don't understand who they thought I was up for to be.
Look at me now, I'm a man who won't let him be down in a hole.
Losing my soul down in a hole, losing control.
I'd like to fly, but my wing defends the night down in a hole, and they put all the door to their face.
I've eaten the suns on my tongue and the burn of the tears.
I'll be a big
Losing my soul, down in a hole, losing control.
I'd like to fly, But my wings have been falling in this world.
I give this part of me Working friends, Sad rains down and here I sit only when I stand, be safe,
Down in a hole, Losing my soul Down in a hole, Feeling so small, Down in a hole, Losing my soul Down