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April 4, 2018 - Get Off My Lawn - Gavin McInnes
41:41
Get Off My Lawn #110 | The Devil is Nada?
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From New York, it's Get Off My Lawn with Gavin McInnes.
That probably sounds like a cacophony to you, but I trained my ears to appreciate hardcore.
That was Bad Brains, band in DC, black guys from DC, who revolutionized the genre, and the genre is hardcore, which is America's punk rock.
And it is quintessentially American because it is stripped down, frills-free.
Not unlike the word color, right?
Americans saw the O-U and they said, no, just make it O-R.
C-O-L-O-R.
And they stripped the British English of all the extraneous vowels.
Boom.
That's what hardcore is.
Just fast music.
And, excuse me, even the way they dress, right?
Punk rockers in Britain have the blue mohawks and the studs on their jackets.
What do American punks have with hardcore?
Shaved heads, champion sweatshirts, Nikes.
That's it.
They actually went so far that they invented straight edge, which meant no booze, no cigarettes, no one-night stands.
They really went for it.
Front page of the post, The Devil is Nada.
And Daddy's Home.
I won't bore you with the parochial New Yorkian headlines, but Anna Wintor is out at Vogue.
She's a wonderful woman and very talented.
We got a fun show for you today.
We got Steve Schaefer.
Do we have Lauren Cooley today, Dave?
Yeah.
We got Lauren Cooley, and then we got a dude who was in a fist fight.
We're going to have fist fights all week.
Fistfights are important.
As it says at my boxing gym, fighting solves everything.
You need to punch people in the face.
Sorry, you have to.
Especially if you're a young man.
It doesn't come up here in adulthood when we go to little league games.
You shouldn't punch a fellow dad in the face.
But as far as being a teen, it's a wonderful, healthy way to be, to be violent.
I got a lot to talk about before we get to our three guests.
So we got Dude in a Fistfight.
We have Lauren Cooley, young college Republican who recently met Donald Trump.
She went to the White House.
And then we have this guy, Steve Schaefer, who went to an anti-gun rally with a sign that you can see right there that says rapists against guns, which is a brilliant piece of performance art.
But before we get to any of that, I want to introduce you to something that is pretty epic.
It's called the Perry Project.
And about a quarter of a century ago, a young comic named Perry Caravello, scary Perry, got on stage at an open mic in LA.
And he was participating in a comedy night run by a guy named Don Barris.
And he sucked.
He was not funny at all.
He's an idiot.
And Barris told him to get the hell off the stage.
Perry vowed to have him killed.
He said, I'm in touch with the mafia.
You're a dead man.
Don Barris that day decided to torture this man for the rest of his life as a comeuppance for this idle threat.
And since then, he has been punishing Perry Caravello by telling him he's going to be famous and telling him he's going to be in movies and telling him he's a star.
And he's not.
And they made a movie about this prank called Windy City Heat, wherein Perry is convinced he's the new De Niro.
It is an incredible film.
It's on YouTube.
I highly recommend it.
You can check it out for free.
My review is on the back of the DVD.
And my review is, this isn't the best movie in the world.
It's the best thing in the world.
And this has been continuing.
It's been going on and on and on.
They have prank calls.
They have a podcast you need to check out called The Big Three Podcast.
And most, I'm part of it too.
He knows me as William Randolph Hearst.
And he looked me up and saw that I was dead and was then told that I'm William Randolph Hearst's great-grandson.
The beauty of Perry is you can always update the story when he gets on top of Google and realizes you're lying.
He might see this and there'll be a twist on it.
It really is the gift that keeps on giving.
He beat me up once.
I challenged him to a fight.
Anyway, I'm reticent to tell you about this guy because once you get into the Perry Project, it's like heroin.
You cannot get out.
It's totally addictive.
And there is so much content there.
I mean, thousands of people are involved in this thing.
It goes on and on and on.
I believe the Joe Schmo show was a ripoff of the Perry Project.
But most recently, some guys have put together a news station.
And this news station covers Scary Perry exclusively.
And Perry is convinced that it's a real station, and he hates it.
And he hates Hannity, because Hannity did a whole feature on Scary Perry, wherein Hannity discussed Perry's potential homosexuality.
And Dave, if you're going to play this clip, don't play it to the end where there's public defecation.
Just crop it.
I don't want to show our viewers how fecal this video gets.
But check out what some brilliant editor did to make it look like Sean Hannity cares about scary Perry Caravello.
No one's defending this idiot, but there is an element to this case that really hasn't been discussed, and that is, is Perry gay or lesbian.
You know, speaking about this guy, you know, he's gay, that's great.
You know, that's his life.
I don't have a problem with seeing him kiss his boyfriend on television.
That's who he is.
I feel like you should be able to be who you are.
But don't see the media gratuitously again and again and again.
Well, you know, again, I'm focusing on the fact that he's not afraid.
He came out that he's gay.
Big deal.
The mob, the PC mob is running the economy now.
And it's just like the Mafia insists.
We got to take a break, but you guys are staying one more segment.
You don't want to miss this when we come back.
Now, when we get back, amazing, right?
So now, everything Hannity tweets, Perry responds to in a rage.
He hates Sean Hannity for saying that he's gay.
And by the way, this is a fun prank because Perry is a racist, sexist, homophobic, blah, blah, blah, blah.
He's basically Islam.
So it's not like you're picking on some mentally retarded guy for no reason.
This guy deserves your ire.
So yeah, we'll talk to Lauren Cooley.
We'll talk to a dude in a street fight.
But before we talk to either of them, I want to check out Steve Schaefer.
Now, this video, Steve Schaefer is a prankster who, not unlike the Perry Project, he trolls the left.
He's an anarcho-capitalist.
I love those guys.
I don't like how much they hate cops.
That bothers me.
I'm a cop guy.
So we tend to split there.
They get mad at checkpoints and all that DUI stuff, DWI stuff.
They have a point, though.
You know, I was driving last night.
I went to see Deathwish, which is it's okay.
The most telling thing about Deathwish, by the way, is the reaction to it.
That people hate Vigilantes and they hate that he exposed, you know, crime in the south side of Chicago, blah, blah, blah.
All the bad guys are white.
It's not a politically correct film.
I mean, it is relatively politically correct.
I'm going to say sorry.
But I don't know.
It could have been a lot more violent, a lot more badass.
It's funny because the critics don't like it because it's not PC and I didn't like it because it wasn't un-PC enough.
But as I was speeding on the way to the theater with my brother in the car, I thought, these cops, I mean, they're really just pulling you over because they can, and it's financially viable to charge you a fine for going 10 miles over.
It doesn't cause any danger.
It's not like there's all these car wrecks if the cops don't arrest you for speeding, but they just went, if we arrest everyone for going one mile an hour over the speed limit, we get in trouble and people get mad.
But I've noticed that the people don't fight back if I only do, say, 20 miles an hour over the speed limit.
Then I seem to get away with fines.
So I'm going to fine you.
It's like getting a fine for wearing seven fedoras.
People don't really get mad.
They tend not to wear seven fedoras.
But if you, they notice that if they fine everyone with a fedora, people get mad and say that's ridiculous.
So under the auspices of protecting people from excessive hats, these police are pulling us over for going 85, ooh, 85 in my perfect BMW that could sustain an avalanche.
I'm daring to go fast on a freeway that is perfectly straight.
God forbid I should get to my destination faster.
Anyway, so he's right, I guess, in that sense.
But cops are just doing their job.
Anyway, this guy, he brings a sign to an anti-gun march that says rapists against guns.
It's hilarious.
And what I think is telling about this is he's right.
Rapists do hate guns.
Criminals do not want you to be armed.
But what they do at these marches is they create a false narrative.
And the narrative is, this is a march against dead children.
We don't want children.
We don't want nine-year-old girls to get shot in the head.
So if you don't agree with me, you want children to die.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
No, I'm not letting you do that.
You can't just make your narrative that simple.
It's like gay marriage, where they go, we're for love.
So if you are against gay marriage, you don't like love.
No, that's not how it works, actually.
We employ logic here on earth.
And that's what Steve Schaefer did.
So this is like a 20-minute video, but I'll just randomly pluck some parts from you.
As a rapist, it's easier for me to rape people who do not have guns.
I do not want my potential victims to be able to defend themselves.
I feel like all rapists feel this way as well.
What do you mean?
This is an anti-gun rally, and I'm against guns.
It says rapists against guns.
As a rapist, it's easier for me to rape people who do not have guns.
I don't want my victims to be able to defend themselves.
We can quarterfight cheese.
It says rapists against guns.
It means that as a rapist, it's easier for me to rape people who do not have guns.
I don't want my victims to have firearms.
That's why I'm here to advocate for gun control.
Really charming.
Thank you.
Really charming.
You know, it's funny, the very beginning of this video, you can see he was kind of scared.
I'm about to go rock out with my rapist against gun signs.
So many fucking people.
He's scared.
Mike, what's the problem?
Okay, so then, about 14 minutes in, he comes across Antini.
I cannot believe they call him ugly, and they also call him a walking turd, which hurts his feelings.
You can't believe to watch the video again.
The gall some people have.
Calling me a turd.
Hit the what?
How much lower can you get than a rapist?
Come on, man.
What else is there?
Wait a minute.
By the way, one of the guys has a bad brains shirt on.
That's the opening song we played.
That's why I played it.
A lot of punk rockers like to like the bad brains because they're black and it makes you feel woke.
But disarm the police at an anti-gun rally.
If you're pro-gun control, that means arming the police.
See, That's what I mean.
That's why this guy's sign is so brilliant.
Because no one is thinking about what they're doing, no one is thinking about the message.
Logic is gone.
The Women's March had nothing to do with women's rights.
Women have all the same rights men have.
Everyone has the same rights in this country.
The march in Boston was idiotic.
It's against hate.
The entire Western world is against hate.
In fact, that is the pillar of Western civilization.
It's about freedom from persecution.
Your march in Boston was completely fucking insane.
And now, these gun marches purport to be, we don't want children to die.
Nobody wants children to die, you fool.
What are you marching for?
Let's talk to Steve now.
Steve, are you there?
I'm here.
We were just watching your video, and I'm a little hyperbolic, but I think it's a work of art.
Thank you.
I mean, art should have a purpose, right?
Performance art should have a message.
And I think that is such a brilliant message.
I remember in the 80s and 90s even, the feminists used to have a mantra, and they'd say, you can't rape a 38.
It was like signs and songs and stuff.
And now the left is so determined to be one big hive mind that to be anti-gun is the same as being a feminist.
And that's linked to immigration and Mumaya Abu Jamal and everything, all one big ball.
But they end up contradicting themselves, don't you think?
Yeah, statists in general, what happens is I protest these protesters, and then every single time, no matter who I'm protesting, no matter what I'm protesting, they go straight to the police and they try to have me removed because they don't like my opinions.
So this time I switched it up and instead of going along, going with a sign that was against them, I decided to support them.
Right.
Rapists love gun laws.
If you're a rapist and you're walking through some abandoned parking garage late at night, the idea that a woman has a gun in her purse is scary.
Correct.
Yes.
No, absolutely.
They don't want that.
They want to eliminate those possibilities.
You want to be able to enjoy your rape.
Pardon me?
Eliminate those possibilities.
Yes, yes.
Yeah.
Well, the fun thing about it, too, is seeing their logic, because first they get outraged when they see rapists, as they should.
And then they realize, well, this is what you're advocating.
You don't want women armed.
You want women less safe.
And you are creating a world that rapists love.
Right, correct.
Yes.
No, that's exactly what it is.
Any criminal does not want people to be armed or anything like that.
And it's important to remember, though, that the biggest criminal is the state, the government.
Yeah.
Well, I noticed, and I meant to bring that up when you mentioned it at the beginning there.
These people are anti-fascist.
They warn of a police state.
They talk about how Trump is Hitler.
And then they say, give all those people the guns.
Correct.
And it's a really mind-boggling thing to see this, that people are so in favor of more government control and more government manipulation, and then they want the rights tripped from the citizens.
But interesting enough fact is that when I go to the other rallies and I see people in support of gun control, I tell them, well, okay, I want a .50 caliber mounted machine gun on a tripod on my front lawn pointing down my driveway.
And they say, well, you know, you can't have that.
That's illegal.
Well, okay, so now you're advocating for the exact same government control that the other side is advocating for.
So you want zero control on guns.
We can have machine guns, tanks, anything.
Well, I'm an anarcho-capitalist.
And as that, I disagree with the existence of the state.
So I believe that everything should be privatized.
And drugs?
Drugs.
Oh, my God.
That's the big one.
Okay, so aside from my ANCAP views, I do preach some things should be like, you know, less government control, more of a libertarian view.
Drugs is absolutely one of those things that should not be government controlled at all.
All that is, is a monopoly.
Right.
It doesn't want you to buy street drugs.
They want you to buy the FDA-approved OxyContin.
And we're in the center of an epidemic where people are dying.
I just saw this Judd Appetow movie about Gary Shandling, and they sort of gloss over the fact that he was killed with government-approved opioids.
So he was killed by heroin dealers, the state heroin dealers, and that's just ignored because Big Pharma is a great advertiser.
And I think, well, clearly letting the government deal heroin isn't working.
Let's let someone else give it a try.
Right, right.
But then that's money out of their pockets.
That's the monopoly that they want.
Okay, last question here.
I was watching your video.
I appreciate your bravery.
You must have been a little bit scared.
I mean, you picked a fight with 3,000 people.
10,000.
10,000 people.
I don't care how good of a fighter you are.
Even in the movies, they can only really take like five.
Right.
So here's the thing about that.
I started out these protests.
The first thing I ever did was I started protesting police cell phone checkpoints where they would hide behind a telephone pole.
So it started out as me just against probably seven or eight cops.
And then it turned into DUI checkpoints.
And then I started going to these bigger protests.
And then the first big one was probably 50 people.
And they were all in favor of, I think, government-controlled free health care.
And my friend and I went there with a sign that said, we want free shit.
And nothing happened.
And then we went to the New London rally when Trump came to Connecticut.
And that was, I want to say, probably 300 or 400 people.
And it was probably about 60% against Trump, 40% in favor of Trump.
And I went there in traditional Middle Eastern garb with a sign that said, let the terrorists in.
That's great.
It offended everybody.
Everybody.
There was no political person that wasn't offended by it.
But the people at that time was the first time they became violent towards me.
I had a group of people there called the Bikers for Trump, and they started pushing me.
And I'm not saying like people that are in their late teens.
These are full-grown men, men, 50s, 60s, or 50s.
You're not getting your sign, though.
Trump wants to build a wall to stop terrorists.
He doesn't want to let the terrorists in.
Right.
So I went there and I offended them as well.
That was the first time somebody started actually putting their hands on me.
And I was a little bit afraid there.
And then the next big rally was after the Charlottesville incident.
We, my friend Mike and I, we went to Boston.
And that rally, oh my God.
It's ridiculous.
We talk about it on the show all the time.
20,000, 30,000 people out there screaming that they hate hate.
Okay.
Great.
Congratulations.
Right.
And so I don't know if you saw that video, but that was where I infiltrated Antifa.
I went and dressed in all black, and I put something around my face as a bandana, and I looked just like them.
I blended in perfectly.
And then I had a sign that said, I have Down syndrome.
And all I did, all I did was just said the exact same thing they said, chanted with them, and I didn't say anything against them, nothing else.
That's it.
And that was when I started getting pushed around.
And there were so many people there that if there was any sort of violent incident, it absolutely would have ended with me dying.
It was a mosh pit almost.
Yeah, well, those, I mean, we talk about this all the time.
Lauren Southern at Berkeley rally saw Antifa putting plastic bags over guys' heads trying to suffocate them to death.
They want to kill you.
Jesus.
Right.
At least the feminists and stuff, they want to like scratch you.
But Antifa, they want your blood to come out of your juggler veins on your throat.
Right.
Yeah.
If you look, it's odd because if you look up the videos on YouTube, obviously they're very sensationalized and everything, but you see videos of people getting hit over the head with bottles, people bleeding.
You see some shootings, some stabbings.
Look at the weapons that get confiscated.
They look like they're from the 700s.
Right, right.
They make like homemade swords.
I have never, ever seen anything like that.
Nothing.
The scariest incidents I've ever had are when the police arrest me.
Because that, that is extremely scary.
I was arrested at an anti-Muslim rally in Waterbury, Connecticut.
I went, I had on a full costume.
I had on blue overalls.
I had a fake beard that went from here all the way down to like halfway down my abdomen.
I had on a straw hat.
And I had in one hand a plastic pitchfork.
And then in this hand, I went to Lowe's.
And I got a really long 15 feet of rope.
And I made a noose, an actual hangman's noose.
Oh, great.
And I started running around this anti-Muslim rally screaming, get the Muslim.
Let's get them.
We're going to hang them.
Tie them up.
String them.
And I bumped into a woman there.
And immediately, immediately, the same four cops who had hassled me in the past at a taxation protest, they swarmed me.
And they said, come over here.
We're separating you.
And they went back, they talked to her.
I'm sure they fed her some bullshit.
And then they came back and they said, you're under arrest for disorderly conduct.
Wow.
And that time when I was arrested, I spent four and a half hours in the holding cell.
In that time period, I saw other people come in and leave within 30, 40 minutes.
But me, because I had protested them before at a taxation protest, they f ⁇ ed with me.
They held me for four and a half hours.
And it was all because we had protested those same cops before.
So they used their authoritative position to hassle me.
Let's not stray from the subject here.
Were you scared as you pulled out your rapist sign and walked into a mob of 10,000 people?
So that time, the fear was a little bit, but it's when you're looking at the crowd.
The fear was when I was in the car looking at the crowd and I was thinking, holy shit, what am I doing?
But when you're actually in there and I had the sign, there was no fear.
None.
None at all.
Well, it made for a hilarious video and not just trolling for trolling's sake.
You made a great point.
Hey, thanks for coming on the show and thanks for fighting the good fight.
I love hearing stuff like this.
It's fun.
Always.
You know I will.
Thanks, buddy.
Lauren, are you there?
I'm here.
How you doing?
Good.
How are you?
I'm wonderful.
So you just did something that I think I would like to, I deserve to do, and that is you met President Trump.
Yeah, that's right.
I was invited to the White House for a millennial forum just the other week.
What did you say to him?
Well, it was an extremely structured event.
The way that they had it set up was that there were three panels.
One was with Ivanka Trump and the Secretary of Labor, and that's actually when I was able to ask a question.
The second panel was with President Trump, and he didn't actually field questions, but he talked for a good bit of time.
And then the third was with Kellyanne Conway, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, and someone from the Department of Justice.
And so when I was able to ask a question, my big question was, what is the Trump administration doing to make sure that the cost of a college degree doesn't outweigh the value of a college degree?
Because we see so many times kids go to college, they're told, you know, spend four years and $300,000 and you're guaranteed a good job.
And we all know that's just not the case anymore.
Yeah.
Well, I think you guys have a case for a class action suit.
You've been swindled.
You've been lied to.
A college degree has been worth something up from like Socrates until now.
And you guys are the first generation to get totally and utterly ripped off.
Yeah, I mean, there's tons of reasons for that, too.
You know, some colleges still teach you how to think critically, but we're one of the first generations that you don't just go work for one company and go up the corporate ladder and retire with that company.
Some people change their careers almost four or five times, have to come up with reiterations of themselves.
Part of that's due to the fast growth of technology, the ever-changing markets that we're living in, which I think are all positive things.
But at the same time, for whatever reason, our government's really done a bad job funneling cash into the school system only to then say, well, we have more money so we can do more programs, but now we need to charge more money.
And I think college students obviously are getting the short end of the stick there.
You want to hear a crazy theory?
Let's go for it.
You ready for this one?
This is out there.
What if corporate America, the root of their abandonment is divorce?
For the first time in history, divorce is a thing, right?
Your parents were probably divorced.
Are they not?
No, my parents are still together.
Okay, so you and I represent like a fraction of the population, 40% of the population.
And that doesn't include all the remarriages, too.
So I'm going to say less than that, maybe 20%, because a lot of people get remarried and their kids grew up in a normal household, but they were, you know, a Brady Bunch scenario.
But maybe one of the reasons these corporations abandon their employees so readily is because we live in a divorce culture where you go, ah, this isn't working out.
Bye.
Whereas a generation ago, two generations ago, you would say, this isn't working out.
You're a terrible employee.
Let's fix this.
You know, here's strike one, strike two, strike three.
You got to come in early.
Stop being late.
I want you to work at this company.
Get better at it.
Maybe the millennials are all suffering from divorce, both at their home life and in corporate culture.
You know, that could be a part of it.
I think also a lot of it comes from just this demand culture that we have.
You know, I wake up in the morning and I decide what do I want to drink for my coffee.
I can go to Dunkin' Donuts.
I can go to Starbucks.
I have dozens and dozens of options there alone.
You know, and that can go out throughout the day.
Whatever choices I want to make, I always have tons and tons of options and it's always easy and readily at my fingertips.
I think in the same way, jobs, well, you don't like it, move on to the next thing.
Find the next readily available option.
And I think that's a big part of it as well.
Lauren, we are hitting on something huge.
This doesn't usually happen on this show.
It's usually just a little light interview and how was your day?
And then we move on.
But I think we are unmasking something enormous.
I think we have become too opulent.
We've become too rich as a society.
And now we're suffering from our own indulgence.
We're like the spoiled America.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's obviously always positives and negatives to any situation.
And so look at obesity.
Look how fat we are.
People love to bash capitalism.
And I mean, here are some of the few critiques that you could actually say are, you know, negatives of having constant opportunity and options on your hands.
But I think culture doesn't always have to match the economy, right?
We could have a culture where we are appreciative and understand that, you know, we're not like socialist countries where you go to the store and there's one choice of bread on the shelves if you're lucky.
You know, we should be able to understand that and have that culture not necessarily be impacting things like holding down jobs or being able to go and get a job after college.
I mean, it's two different things, but unfortunately, our culture is really matching this on-demand economy for sure.
Well, in a sense, I think Christianity predicted this.
And it said, all right, you're going to have too many riches.
You're all going to be kings.
I mean, the life you and I have today is like Queen Elizabeth 100 years ago.
Definitely.
We are that indulged.
And I think Christianity said, you're going to have everything you want.
So let's institute some checks and balances, confession, Lent, some things to make you not get too self-indulgent.
Go to church every Sunday and recalibrate because you're going to have too much stuff.
Well, I think also just everything in moderation.
I think that's a really simple way to explain it, but that's a biblical principle for sure.
Look, you could have said all this to Trump.
We could have shared this epiphany with the President of the United States.
Well, that's what we're working towards.
I thought that the Millennial Forum was a really good first step.
I think it was not to be critical, but it was overdue.
But a lot of times politicians don't listen to young people, even though millennials are really the largest generation voting population right now.
Just happened in the last year statistically that millennials are really, if they choose to be, a huge voting block.
And so also Republicans are not always known as this youth candidate.
But President Trump did a great job engaging with about three or four dozen individuals that were there, talking about issues that are really important when it comes to the bias on college campuses that conservative students are facing, the free speech issue, then more general, the opioid addiction problem that's happening on campus, one of the number one killers for young people.
Also talking about student loans, talking about the economy.
And so there was a lot of headway made in this meeting, but I'm hoping to see even more of that in the coming months.
Well, you're making tons of sense, but most millennials are retarded.
And if there's one thing we're learning with this gun debate with Emma Gonzalez and David Hogg is that I don't want to listen to millennials.
You're one of the few exceptions.
Technically, they're the generation below millennials.
So I'm not going to take credit for them.
But yeah, young people in general, I think we have two eyes, two ears, one mouth.
And I think we need to use our senses to figure out and understand policy before we're advocating for it.
I know when I was in high school, I was a member of the Teenage Republicans.
I loved it, but I can look back and know that my policy ideas were not very deep whatsoever.
I didn't have a grasp on them.
And, you know, just because you've lived through a terrible, terrible tragedy doesn't mean that you have the answer to how to fix that tragedy, right?
I mean, you have an important story to tell.
You can be a cancer survivor and have a really powerful story to tell, but it doesn't mean you know how to cure cancer.
And I think it's the same thing for these students.
Wow, you nailed it.
If anyone deserves to speak to Trump, it's you.
This has been very fun, and I hope we get you back on the show soon.
Let's do it.
Bye, Lauren.
Audios.
Ronnie, are you there?
I'm here, man.
I'm here.
Now, Ronnie, I'm watching this video.
There's some sort of free speech march in Hamilton, Ontario, and it looks like Antifa showed up to, I guess, shut down free speech?
Yeah, they were there to kind of just interfere with the rally and with the protest.
Protesters were down there just to, you know, show the local community that we support them.
Antifa trashed a whole bunch of businesses down there.
Why did Antifa go through the main street of this tiny town that's, what, like two hours from Toronto?
Well, actually, in Hamilton, Antifa has like a pretty big following down there.
They actually got a pretty big crew.
And a lot of the times, when we have protests up here in Toronto, it's the people from Hamilton that are actually coming here and representing them in big numbers.
Wow.
And why did they go down the main street of this tiny town and smash windows?
Honestly, I have no idea.
Like, Antifa is trying to create a little bit of distance and saying, oh, it was black block.
It wasn't us.
But I mean, the two organizations are like this.
They're one in the same, right?
They're not fully anymore.
Oh, that was the Anarchist Black Cross.
We had a falling out with them two years ago.
Yeah, sure.
All right, let's look at some of the video this future.
A lot of bad words.
Oh, geez.
Someone's getting punched into an alley honk there.
Oh, I like the standards going.
There's going to be a police, dude.
And then the cops show up.
Boom.
What's he saying?
So, why don't you just briefly explain to us what happened there?
So we just see a melee here.
Yeah, it's hilarious.
As soon as I say the cops are about to come, like, they're right there.
I thought that was pretty funny.
But yeah, we just wanted to go have, you know, talk to them, ask some questions, see what they had to say.
And of course, they have nothing to say at all.
They just want to tell us to f off and whatever.
So yeah, they just started swarming.
They have these tactics where sometimes they try to put like a tarp over your camera, cause some confusion, cause chaos so nobody can actually get them on film.
So my main priority was just keep a little bit of distance, make sure I get everything on camera.
That way, you know, if we have to defend ourselves or anything like that, we got the evidence.
So who won?
Honestly, I would say they won just because they outnumbered us, like what, like 20 to 5 there, 20 to 4.
So, I mean, yeah, the numbers weren't on our side.
But, I mean, it was a victory for us.
It was a moral victory, I consider it.
Now, this is a little off topic, but I couldn't help but notice when these female cops show up, they don't do anything.
Like, they're just sort of touching people.
They don't even have the strength to pull a guy off a guy.
Yeah.
It reminds me of when I used to play football, and, you know, the classic arm tackling, just kind of sticking your arms out there and trying to grab somebody instead of really getting in there and muscling them out.
Trying to clothesline them.
Look at that.
I'm watching them now.
They're just sort of there.
In fact, they seem to be part of the fight.
They're so bad at separating the fight.
Now, this is back on topic.
Why are there so many women at these fights?
It seems like Antifa always puts these broads on the front line.
Yeah, yeah.
They're cowards.
They're wimps, right?
Like, who puts your women on the front line?
What kind of group does that?
Jihadists, the Iranian, the Ayatollah Khomeini.
It's a dirty trick throughout history that is usually indicative of a barbaric group.
A lot of parallels there between terrorist groups and Antifa, eh?
Yeah, a total lack of morals.
Well, I really appreciate that you're out there.
I'm glad you filmed this, but it's fun to see that people are out there defending free speech and teaching these bizarre mentally ill lunatics that there are repercussions for their actions.
Yeah, absolutely.
Some of the boys there, some of the warriors that were involved in the fight, they have a couple things they'd like to say, if you don't mind.
Oh, yeah, let's throw it in.
First thing, Andrew wants to know, Gavin, have you ever been in any fights before?
And if so, how many roughly?
Good question.
I've probably been in about 10 fights.
Roughly 10 fights?
Roughly 10 fights, yes.
I think that's a good number.
Yeah, anything else?
No, I guess the only thing that I would want to ask you, maybe personally, is what do you think about Canada in general?
Like, what do you think about what's going on up here with Justin Trudeau, the mass immigration, the fact that we're basically culturally depleted?
Yeah, I think the CBC, the state-run media, has done a good job of brainwashing Canadians.
And they think that there's Nazis around every corner.
They're having fucking gun marches for crying out loud.
Gun marches?
There's no guns.
They got Black Lives Matter up there talking about slavery and how the Underground Railroad ended in Halifax.
It's the opposite of slavery.
In fact, Miles Davis and all those jazz guys from the 50s and 60s used to come to Montreal because they thought, holy shit, there's a magical land in the north where there's no racism and I'm a normal person.
So for Canadians to be complaining about guns and racism just shows that they are fucking brainwashed and I blame the CBC.
And I wouldn't be surprised if Justin Trudeau gets elected again because even though he's the laughingstock of the world, Canadians are so stuck in this fucking social justice warrior path that I don't know if anything can shake them from it.
Yeah, no, I hear what you're saying.
In general, I totally agree.
Trudeau's polling absolutely horribly right now.
Sheer's actually taking significant leads.
So I'm encouraged by that.
I really do hope that we can get Trudeau in 2019.
But as you said, Canadians, for the most part, are just stuck in this whole social justice swamp, I guess.
So boring.
Racism in Canada is the dumbest thing.
I don't think it exists in America, but At least there's an argument.
Ronnie, thank you for coming on the show.
Check back.
Every time you have a fight, I want to have it on this show.
We appreciate you literally fighting the good fight.
Thanks a lot for having me, Gavin.
I appreciate that.
Thanks for coming on, buddy.
Uhuru.
Aquava, y'all.
Uhuru.
I was just catching up on Gazzi Kadzo, who is having some trouble with Stefan Clark.
Stephon Clark was that guy who was shot by the police recently.
He was out smashing windows.
Let's cut the crap.
He was out smashing windows.
I don't know why.
Why would you smash?
I guess I was a teenager once.
I did stuff like that.
What am I talking about?
So he's acting like a 14-year-old, a drunk 14-year-old.
And they chased him to his home and pulled out a phone, got shot by the cops.
Now, this gentleman, Stephon Clark, is not making the best hero.
I can find you, black people who were shot by the cops unjustly.
I can find you way better than Trayvon, way better than Mike Brown, non-thugs, non-aspiring rappers, normal middle-class black people, educated, shot by cops.
I can find you them.
I'll tell you what, tomorrow I will give you real black heroes you can focus on.
But they choose the worst guys.
So this irrelevant vandal, Stefan Clark, was shot by the cops for not complying.
And in his Twitter history, it turns out he's racist.
He doesn't like blacks.
He doesn't like black women.
He thinks they're gross.
He doesn't want to have a baby with one.
And the blacktivists are having trouble with that because they're championing a dead man that wanted to marry an Asian chick because he thought black women were gross.
So what do black feminists do?
Check out this Logic Pretzel.
We have to understand that the reason why he was murdered in the first place is because he was colonized.
And the reason why he was saying calling a black woman a black bitch when his mother is black and you know everything that comes from him, no matter who he has babies with, is black.
You know what I'm saying?
And his little Asian baby is black and dark complected.
And so we understand that this African is colonized.
Dark complected.
It's very complex being dark complexed.
You know what I'm saying?
It's through his slave master.
So yes, I'm going to protest for him.
African people got to be free.
By the way, Gazi has a shell in his hair.
He's got a bunch of wire around one of his dreads, and it ends with a tiny puka shell.
You have a shell in your head.
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