That's not one of those like This Is England on the last show where you really want to play it out to the chorus.
That was Anal They lost their guitarist today or yesterday?
No, yesterday.
He was sliding down the banister of an escalator and he fell.
That happened to my friend's stepfather, actually.
Sorry to laugh, dude.
But yeah, don't do that, guys.
Don't slide down those escalators.
Escalators are in malls, and malls have high-up floors where you fall onto hard marble and smash your head open.
So he's dead now, and I thought it was a great opportunity to play probably the most offensive band in the world.
That's why they called themselves Zano C. I'm sorry to give Dave so much bleeping homework in the edit.
Do you know what the album's called?
I do not know what the album.
Well, that song was called Tim.
The album's called Everyone Should Be Killed.
That was, well, yeah, they weren't going for subtleties.
Some of their other biggest hits are I Just Saw the Gayest Guy on Earth.
You may want to see if you can dig that up.
It's pretty funny.
They also have a sweet ballad called Hitler Was a Sensitive Man.
And then, of course, their number three smash hit, You're a fucking c ⁇ .
I remember working at a record distributor, and my job was, I worked in Montreal.
My job was to go to the States, pick up all these records, and then take them up back up to Montreal.
It's cheaper to ship them to the border and then have someone drive them over for whatever reason.
You don't have to pay the individual customs.
So I had to talk to customs guys all the time and talk about these bands.
I remember there was the butthole surfers, and the customs guy goes, are these guys surfers that are just like complete buttholes, or are they people who surf on buttholes?
And I said, I do not know.
I've never thought of that.
Actually, I'm very familiar with the band.
I have all their albums.
I actually know the singer, Gibbie Haynes, but I never parsed it down so acutely.
And he said, well, I don't take that as an excuse.
Maybe he didn't like me using the word acute.
He said, I need, you're the one taking these over.
They're your responsibility.
So I had to come up with, I think they're surfers that are like jerks, annoying, they're the annoying surfers.
All right, fine.
Now this band, we'll call them AC from now on, were also pretty hard to get through the old border.
But the guy, what was his name?
Josh?
Josh Martin.
Wait, do you have the Gayest Guy song?
Let's just hear the beginning of that.
It's beautiful.
All their songs are grind chords, like you heard, but this one is very different from their usual.
I just saw the gayest guy on earth.
He hands around in Austin.
He always was a trick.
That guy's dead, by the way.
The singer's also dead.
He had a heart attack.
Could have been cocaine.
Every time a musician, anytime someone who's in a kind of a popular weird band or any band or any kind of entertainment, actually, let's be honest, dies of a heart attack, I think cocaine.
But one of my favorite things about Josh Martin is he was also well known for heckling Gene Simmons.
Gene Simmons is the scary monster guy with a huge tongue from Kiss.
And Gene Simmons was doing some super lame concert in Providence, Rhode Island.
And he had the mayor or some councilman come out and award him the best guy in the world Rhode Island Accomplishment Award.
Gene Simmons is from New York, I believe.
He's like a Long Island Jew.
I'm not sure why Rhode Island wants to honor him so much.
And when you go to see a...
You don't want to see some politician bring his daughters up on stage and present Gene Simmons with some irrelevant plaque.
Check this out.
I'm his Providence City Council, Brian Farrion.
Yay!
First, can we please give it up for Gene Simmons and his fantastic band tonight?
Yeah!
And also for our young Max, who got up here on the horse, and tore the house down.
Woo!
Here, sweetie.
I want to first say that I am humbled tonight to be in the stage to honor Gene with a proclamation.
Can you just pause it?
I am officially honoring Josh Martin today on this show with a post-humis World Achievement Award for being in the most offensive band of all time and for heckling this boar at what was already a particularly slow metal show.
Now, I usually read these proclamations, but if I were to do this proclamation with all the achievements, we'd be here all night.
So are.
I just want to say a few things.
While I'm here representing the city, I'm also here representing all of you that's a lot of people.
You hear what he's saying?
He's yelling expletives at this politician, and he's also saying, don't go full screen on me when we do these.
He's also saying, play some kiss songs.
And he's totally right.
Why is this guy on stage?
This is a complete waste of time, and it's totally unmetal.
Go ahead.
...for his long and very successful career.
Could you do us a favor and put the lights on?
I want to see where this jackass is.
Where is it?
Bet Gene Simmons has never been in a fight in his life.
He's just tall.
Hey, tall guys.
We're not scared of you.
I watch short people kick your ass on a regular basis.
You want to be intimidating?
Be short.
Short men can beat up people.
I don't think I've ever seen a short guy lose a fight.
I've seen a lot of tall trees fall down.
This is the guy who just played the guitar in the opening song.
This is an ice cube.
Ice Cube thinks he's so scary.
Dude, you're older than my dad.
Just because you're black when you went to NWA 100 years ago doesn't mean you're still tough.
You do kids movies.
Look at him.
He's like Grandpa Zubi.
Oh, the Orthodox Jew in Tel Aviv, in Jerusalem.
I am in the band, kiss.
I'm going to kick your ass.
Oh, boy, I'm going to kill you.
I'm tough.
Anyway, the footage, Josh was up in the rafters, so we don't get to see what happens, but I guarantee you, he did not back down.
He said, shut up and get that turd off the stage and go play your songs, boy.
What's in the paper today?
Rosie the bigoter.
And one thing no one's talking about this, too, is she didn't just insult Valerie Jarrett, whom I honestly believe she didn't know was black, because the woman does not look remotely black.
She insulted George Soros and called him a Nazi.
And you know what that did?
And Soros hates this.
He's been waging war on Ezra Levant for decades, ever since Ezra dared to point this out, the 60 Minutes interview where Soros admits that he worked with the Nazis in confiscating Jewish property.
Out, in fact, and helped in the confiscation of property from the Jews.
That's right.
Yes.
I mean, that sounds like an experience that would send lots of people to the psychiatric couch for many, many years.
Was it difficult?
Not at all.
And said he felt zero guilt and said it was the best time of his life.
You're allowed to have been hoodwinked when you're 14 during World War II, I guess, although 14 is pretty adult.
But to look back on it with zero shame, that's the disturbing part.
Anyway, Rosie brought attention to that, and then everyone started tweeting out examples of George Soros conceding that he was basically a Nazi.
I don't know how you define a Nazi, someone who worked with the Nazi party in Germany during World War II and helped facilitate the deaths of Jews.
That sounds pretty Nazi to me.
We tend to bandy around this word quite a bit in this day and age, but I would say, yeah, that's a Nazi.
We have a great show for you tonight.
I think we're out of time, right?
Yeah, we're a bit over.
We're going over?
I want to talk about this LGBT cripple who's mad that gays don't want to have sex with him.
We're going to do a little video on that because we're at the point now with the oppressed and the obese and the unusual that they demand normalization and they demand they are lust and they demand they get laid.
Sorry.
If you're not good at cheerleading, you can't be on the cheerleading team.
If you're not an incredibly gorgeous homosexual, you're not going to get laid.
And I can't, the state can't change that.
I'm sorry.
We can't culturally make ugly people gorgeous.
And if you are severely handicapped, you're weird.
Get a dictionary if you don't believe me.
It's not normal.
I'm not saying it's bad.
I'm not saying I want you to go to hell.
You just can't demand that you are the equal to Brad Pitt as far as attractiveness goes.
But at the very end, we have, I'm not good with these South African names.
Willem Willem Petzer, who does a show, a YouTube channel down in South Africa.
He had his relatives killed.
He's a farmer's son, brutally tortured and hacked for six hours.
And another girl that he met who's going to give us the female perspective down there.
South Africans, the boars are very traditional.
They don't do slut walks.
They don't do any of this partying orgy.
They don't really have STDs down there.
All young Boers are virgins.
I did not know that.
So we'll talk to them about the horrors of South Africa, but also lighten it up a little bit with...
Good.
Oh, you can see the label.
Lighten it up a little bit with the sort of dating world of the boars and what it's like to court ladies down there and eventually get married.
And it's kind of interesting because these farmers, we keep saying from this perspective, leave, get out of there.
And they go, would you leave your country?
I'd rather fight and die.
I'd rather die with my boots on.
And you go, touche.
Good point.
So let's start with the very handicapped gentleman and then talk to the South Africans who are being murdered on a daily basis.
Hello.
I'm here with a gentleman.
He appears to be very unattractive.
He is gay and he has cerebral palsy.
And his beef is that people don't want to have sex with him.
He should be considered totally hot and popular.
Now, cerebral palsy is a very unusual disease, about half a million Americans have it.
As far as men, that's probably 250,000.
As far as sexually active men, what is it, 100,000?
So we have someone, and gays are about 1% of the population.
So this guy is in the dictionary under unusual.
I know it sounds bad to say you're not normal or you're unusual or you're weird, but when you get a dictionary and you read it, you go, oh yeah, you're not of the norm.
Sorry.
And here's another thing.
We genetically are not attracted to the severely handicapped.
My heart goes out to the severely handicapped, but part of attraction is based on evolution and breeding.
And when we see someone who's severely handicapped, we go, I won't breed with you.
Now, gays don't breed anyway, but they still have the same sort of wiring.
Sorry, it's not attractive.
You're not a badass.
But anyway, let's hear what he has to say.
I feel very accepted within the disability community.
I don't always feel accepted in the LGBT community.
Oh, gays are shallow.
Who knew?
I'm gay and I have cerebral palsy.
I think that as LGBT people, we feel so marginalized already that when we see people who are different within our own circle, we push them off to the side.
We're trying to be normalized.
Can you just pause it here?
How do you not know that gays are shallow?
It's as true as lesbians are not shallow.
If you're a lesbian, they have lesbian bed death, right?
You ever heard of that?
Lesbian couples, they stop having sex after the first year or so because you have to pull out too many toys and stuff.
So they end up just being plump and they wear makeup and flannel shirts and Timberlands and they have nice dinners for their friends and they're very sweet, except the ones who antagonize Christians and make them bake a cake and have a wedding.
Gays, on the other hand, are always on the market because men are always horny.
So you need a six-pack.
You need to work out.
If you're going bald, you got to get hair plugs.
You got to be buff.
You got to try.
You can't have cerebral palsy.
I'm sorry that shallow men don't want to screw you.
That's like going to the Jersey Shore and being obese and saying, here in the Jersey Shore community, because I don't gym, tan, and whatever the other one was.
What is it again?
Laundry.
Because I don't gym, tan laundry, these Jersey shore chicks don't want me.
Yeah, that's the culture.
How do you not know that?
I'm sorry.
People don't look at a disability and think normal.
It's not normal.
I'm just trying to exist in the world.
I want you to exist.
It's a space for me.
By the way, I'm pro-life.
I need you to.
I want to fit in.
Liberals want to support your community, which I'm supposed to be able to call my own community.
And I've had people say, aren't you setting the LGBT community back by being critical?
No.
Just because we want rights and we preach acceptance doesn't mean that we are perfect, and I am not perfect either.
Could it be that?
Just pause here.
Can you turn it up on my monitor?
I can't hear it very well.
What does he want here?
Because there's acceptance and there's acceptance.
Is he not invited to parties?
Or are people not having sex with him?
Is he basically guilting people into having sex with him?
I guess whatever works, right?
All right, buddy, let's hear what you have to say about sex.
Society completely desexualizes people with disabilities?
Okay, pause.
You missed it.
But how, that's really what he's saying.
I've been desexualized.
Gays don't find me sexy because I have cerebral palsy.
Yeah.
Duh.
And yeah, it sucks.
I'm sorry that you have a disease that only 500,000 Americans have.
It's very rare.
It's literally crippling.
But now you're on stage saying gays don't want to have sex with me and then we sit back and we see you in your walker?
I don't understand what the end game here is.
What are we supposed to do?
Do you want me to make out with you?
I'll give you a kiss.
But I'm here to tell you right now, I have a higher sex drive than anyone in this room.
Okay?
Okay.
Just pause.
I don't get that joke.
And how do you know?
Go ahead.
This is a f ⁇ ing.
I am super corny all the time.
So I'm walking into a gay bar and I'm going, oh my God, people are going to make out with me.
Maybe I'll go home with somebody.
Who even knows?
And you sort of parade around the bar gracefully, elegantly.
Just pause.
You're not graceful.
You're not elegant.
Your feet are strapped into plastic heels and you use a walker.
So this is this guy's problem.
He's trying to pretend horniness is some sort of medical trait and he needs to rub one out with a dude and he's being denied that by some sort of evil prejudice.
I mean, is there a thing called beauty anymore?
Some people are less attractive than others.
If you have cerebral palsy and you're already an ugly, small, gay guy, people aren't going to want to sleep with you.
That's nobody's fault.
That's life.
There's winners and losers.
And I'm afraid, sir, as far as sex goes, in the gay community, you are a giant, small loser.
Hi.
Sorry.
Hey.
And people still weren't doing anything except trying to squirt out of my way.
Well, I want you to interact with me.
I want you to say hi to me.
I want you to engage with me as somebody who's here for the same reasons that you are.
Yeah, I know.
And they weren't.
Once I feel the same way around supermodels.
And he grabbed my, which was fine.
I invited him to do that.
And then he said, oh, it does work.
And I didn't know what to say.
Now I would say, did you catch that?
Certainly does.
Someone who grabbed his penis and then they were rude afterwards.
And he's complaining and we're doing a little feature on it on the Huffington Post.
Wait, wait a minute.
Remember when the Huffington Post said they're not covering Trump in the political section because he's just entertainment and it's wrong to put him in the political section?
What section is this masterpiece in?
Hey, severely handicapped gays have trouble getting laid.
Stop the presses.
We got a story for you.
And you didn't have to grab it in order to find out.
You could have asked a question.
I think people aren't inclined to say yes to dates with me or with other disabled people because they don't see representation of disability in a sexual, hungry, desirable context.
And John Chose.
Did you catch that one?
The reason that men aren't attracted to him is they don't see that in the media, in movies and stuff.
So what we need to do, and he's not joking, is have, say, a gay movie like Nine and a Half Weeks, remember that movie?
But gay, and then have him with his crutches be this sexy, horny, lustful sex object in the movie.
And then people's brains, because this is a liberal mantra, by the way, see it to be it, right?
You need to be in Hollywood.
You need to be in movies For anyone to conceive of any kind of future.
Ben Carson, he must have seen black brain surgeons to become a brain surgeon because there's no way you can just think of that on your own.
You need role models, you need depictions.
Prove it.
That's a central thesis of the entire liberal mentality.
And I've never seen any proof.
It's just something they assume.
All right.
How long are we going to be able to say no to us?
Or, oh, isn't that nice?
It's so annoying, too.
Maybe that's another reason.
I'm not a disabled individual.
No.
We go home and we have sex.
We have a lot of sex.
Because I think when people see that, they will be more inclined to realize, oh, that person is sexy.
And recalibrate their definition of what sexy actually means to include people of all different bodies.
Okay, can you just pause it?
I used to be in the magazine industry.
I'd be around a lot of models and stuff.
I used to hang out with Terry Richardson a lot.
He'd be doing fashion shoots.
My experience at these shoots was that the supermodels there did not find me attractive and they didn't see me as a sexual being.
And what I think we need to do with these models is recalibrate their thinking so they find me sexy because I'm very horny and I want to have sex, lots and lots of sex with supermodels.
But they seem to have a problem with their definition of beauty.
And they don't see skinny armed, slightly pudgy, hairy old guys who look like a pumpkin that got left in the back of a car in July.
They don't see like a worm with glasses who's 5'11 as sexy as a super rich other model.
And that's society giving them a bad definition.
I want them to see this as gorgeous and to perform sex acts on me.
Is that too much to ask?
We'll be right back.
Philum, are you there?
Yes, I am.
Now, in the TV industry, here in broadcasting, it's not usually very exciting to tell your listeners that you've got a boar on the show, but this is B-O-E-R, and it actually is quite interesting.
Well, I would hope so.
Thanks for having me.
I want to talk to you for two reasons.
One, you're a farmer's son, and I want to hear about the climate over there.
But two, culturally, I don't think people understand the Boers.
We're in a very simplified time right now.
And the general understanding is that it's British people that had slaves in South Africa, tortured them to death, and now all they want is some of their land back.
That's the narrative.
Yeah, well, I mean, then they completely ignore us here.
We are the majority of the white people, 2.7 out of the 4.5 million.
And we are actually from German and Dutch ancestry mostly, but a little bit of French in there as well.
Yeah, I actually didn't introduce that very well.
There's the narrative of the Boers and the history of South Africa.
And then there's the truth.
And the truth is, you're a very unique culture.
Definitely.
Well, I think we are basically cut off from the West in the whole cultural revolution that happened in the last century, especially in the postmodern times of the sexual revolution and so forth.
We still hold on to the old values.
We are basically like the old Europeans were before all of these things, post-World War II happened.
Yeah, you're very traditional.
Yes, yes, we are.
Now, let's go back a little bit here.
You say you're the majority of the whites there.
I thought every white person in South Africa was a boar.
No, no, we also have Anglos here in South Africa.
They are the descendants of the British who came here to colonize South Africa after the Dutch set up their trading post here for the East Indian Company.
Ah, and that became, because that's a fascinating whole other story that people don't know about.
In 1800, the Boers were totally colonized by the English.
And at the beginning of that war, Churchill was there, the Boers were winning, and they were shooting, they were playing fair.
They were noble, very noble men.
But it was just guys with great guns on horses who could handle themselves.
Whereas the Brits, they were so top-heavy, they were bringing gyms with them and restaurants and all this other crap, these big food tents.
And they weren't mobile enough in the brutal South African weather and the rain.
And the only way the British won was to have concentration camps for the Boers, to murder their children, to murder their wives, to burn their homes to the ground.
You guys have your own culture.
People just, it's actually very racist just to see you as yet another oppressing white.
Yeah, I mean, technically speaking, we never colonized South Africa.
We came here with the Dutch East Indian Company and set up a trading post here to be a sort of a halfway house for the ships to farm here and produce food so that the ships can stop here halfway on their trips to India.
Because back in those days, the Suez Channel was not open yet.
So everyone who wanted to go from Europe to India for the spice trade had to go around Africa.
And you stole all the land from the beautiful, peaceful Zulus who were stationed there already?
No, actually, we came here in 1652.
Jan van der Beck, the first governor of the Cape, came here.
And then the Zulu Empire, you can go look it up on Wikipedia, was set up in 1816.
So it's almost two centuries.
I always talk about seven generations after us that the Zulus came here.
That's amazing.
I was also shocked to read that Bota, the first prime minister of South Africa, spoke Zulu, worked with the Zulu tribes, and the land that the South Africans originally acquired was acquired through negotiations.
People were not murdered.
They fought with tribes.
They fought with Zulus alongside Zulus in exchange for land.
The assumption that it was just robbed from these peaceful black natives is just a lie.
Yes, actually, what happened, the first contract that we signed was with Udengane, the second king of the Zulu kingdom.
And the guy that signed the contract with him went to his hometown called Ungungungluvu.
And then he signed the contract.
And just after he signed the contract to give the land to the then Fuertrakers, they killed them all in quite a dishonourable way.
I think the contract said that if the Fuertrakers or the Boers went and they made war with another black tribe and they eliminated that black tribe and brought the cattle to the Zulus, then they can have that piece of land.
And the Boers did exactly that.
And then the Zulus never took up their part of the bargain.
And that's where Blood River came in, where the Zulus were basically annihilated for the next 30 to 40 years.
By the Boers.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, it was because of the fact that they killed the leader, Petratif.
Petratif.
Funny language.
Yes.
Okay, well, what about apartheid?
That's got to be pretty bad.
Well, I think there's a bit of a very skew view on it in the world because as we know, mostly the countries that voted that apartheid was a crime against humanity were all the old Soviet bloc communist countries who basically just did so in a political move in order for the communists to take over South Africa.
And that hasn't been good for us here in South Africa since the communists have taken over.
But were blacks not second-class citizens in South Africa up until the 80s?
Well, it depends on how you look at it.
You can say the official policy was separate but equal.
What happened was that we built all these cities here and we had these huge industries and farms and everything and our economy was great in this country.
And we had all these migrants just walking over the Zambezi and the Limpopo River here to come and work because there were nothing else in the rest of Africa.
The rest of Africa was basically people were starving to death and there was no food.
So they came here and we said to ourselves, we have to do something to protect ourselves.
We can't have all this, well, I guess you can call it illegal immigration in today's terms, but in those days, the borders wasn't as protected as they are today.
So we said to ourselves, we can't have all these people coming in here and basically taking over by the mere force of numbers.
So we had to implement a system to protect ourselves.
But there was never any, we are better than you.
There was only a, okay, we live separate from you.
And we also built universities and schools and all that stuff for the immigrants coming in in their droves, as the so-called architect of apartheid, Tendrik Fevoort, described it.
So they were like, the blacks were like refugees that weren't originally here.
I think the best way to make an analogy with America, you can say they were like the Mexicans that come to America today are exactly how they were in those times.
Okay, now let's jump to you culturally, because another thing people don't understand about the Boers is you're quite square.
Yeah.
Um, we still have an old culture, like the old European traditional culture.
We don't, Still, most of the girls here in South Africa live on traditional values.
And I would say a very significant amount of them still live like the Europeans did.
There's no slut walk.
200 years ago.
There's no, well, there was a slut walk like two years ago.
I think it was the first one that I ever heard of.
But it was mostly at the University of Victoria.
And it was mostly just black people going because they are very into the whole new Marxist idea.
All those ideas are being pushed on them.
Yeah, they love Marxism because they get a farm out of it.
Now, you're a farmer's son.
Was your farm ever attacked?
My great-aunt and great-uncle were actually attacked, and they were tortured for six hours.
My uncle was also with them.
But my great-aunt and great-uncle were killed and tortured for six hours.
My uncle was also tortured.
How were they tortured?
What kind of torture?
They've been cut out by what we call a ponga, which is basically a large machete with what you call it, ooks and stuff in it to rip out small pieces of flesh.
Yeah, and they cut their throats and later they died.
We estimate it was about six hours.
And then after that, he took their blood and he wrote on the walls 666 white devils.
So, yeah.
And what happened to that?
That is what my story is.
Well, it went to my other uncle.
The uncle that was also attacked, he didn't die on that night, but he died much later.
But then my other uncle got the farm from my great-uncle and great-aunt.
The security you need at these farms must be like a prison now.
I mean, you'd need round-the-clock guards with M16s walking the perimeter.
Well, I guess that would be good to have, but I don't think anyone can afford the same security as President Obama has.
But what about relatives?
I mean, surely when there's all these attacks, it gets to the point where, all right, we've got to go on shifts.
This uncle, this brother, this cousin, all take the night shift.
Yes, we do have that.
It's called a Birdwach.
And it happens quite often.
But the thing is, you can't prevent everything from happening.
Like, if you look at the statistics, the farm attacks have risen a lot in the last five or six years, but the actual murders didn't rise that much.
The attacks rose from about 200 per year to almost 700 per year in the last six years.
And out of Those 700, about 80 of them are successful, and that's basically the same as six years ago.
It was also about 80 successful.
So that shows you that the Birtwach and the security that we have implemented is working.
It's just the attacks that are becoming more and more frequent.
And we're pretty bad here with people in self-defense.
If they're acquitted for shooting a thief or a rapist, they can then get sued.
Can you just shoot these guys when they come up to your farm?
I think it's a lot worse here than that side.
Firstly, to get a gun is almost impossible.
It's a bureaucratic nightmare.
You have to go apply for it at the state and then you wait six months and then they tell you, no, your application has been denied.
And then you apply again and you wait six months again and then your application has been denied again.
So actually myself, I don't have any criminal record.
I never committed any crime in my life and I have applied twice now, waited for 11 months thus far.
So and I still wait for a license for just a nine millimeter pistol.
Well, you'd need Uzis.
If I was a farmer, I'd have illegal M16s.
Yeah, well, that's not legal.
It's very difficult to get them.
And we are not a people who like to commit crimes or disobey the law.
So maybe you're not being used against you.
This is sort of like the English.
First, you had the English taking advantage of your good nature, and now you've got the black establishment taking advantage of it.
Yeah, well, that's the story of our lives, but I guess we'll get through this.
I hope we do, because I really don't want to move to Europe or so because of the culture that we discussed a little bit earlier.
The culture is so different.
What is your culture?
Do you have a girlfriend?
Yeah, our culture is basically, as I told you, it's very traditional.
We still hold on to traditional values and biblical values.
We are Christian.
I would say almost 100% of the Boers are still Calvinist Christians.
And we really take the Bible and the teachings of the Bible seriously.
And that way, we don't have all these slide walks with the sexual revolution and stuff like that.
So I actually have a girl here that I want to talk to.
I think she can come sit here.
And then she can tell you a bit more about that from a female's perspective.
Okay.
Come, Renee.
All right, everybody, this is Renee, and she'll talk to you about that spot.
Hello.
Hi.
I like your necklace there.
You don't often see a girl who looks like you with an Africa around her neck.
Well, I do love Africa, and I'm a proud African and Afrikaner, so I always, almost always wear an African necklace or African earrings.
Well, if you guys move to America, you can become African Americans.
And there's all kinds of affirmative action we could give you.
You guys could get great jobs instantly.
Thank you, but no, thank you.
Yeah, so Vela mentioned that you wanted out of a girl's perspective about the whole culture we have here that is different from abroad.
And the first thing that I can say that I just overheard you talking about now is the sexual revolution.
Well, in my groups of friends and all around, you don't ever talk about sex like, oh, how was it last night?
Or what are you going to do?
Are you going to sleep over at your boyfriend this weekend?
That is not even acceptable.
So it's more like, so are you excited for the first night of your marriage?
And as Vela mentioned, it is the biblical way.
So, yo, that is the one thing.
And then our culture also, in the way, it's also different that the ladies here aren't always that career driven, which I don't think is necessarily a bad thing for me, for example.
My biggest dream is to be a housewife and the best mom and the best wife that I can be.
And it is like that for a lot of my friends as well.
Unfortunately, or fortunately, this dream always takes place on a form because I love the form so much.
And for a lot of Afrikaans girls, that is the dream, the big dream.
But just speaking out of my own experience, a lot of my friends have adapted these dreams because of what is going on with the form attacks and just how dangerous it is to be a former.
So that is quite sad.
Yeah, I gotta say, I've never seen a happier couple than a young Catholic couple who gets married at a young age and just starts popping out kids.
It's rarely possible here in America, but it sounds like it's much more possible culturally where you guys are.
Are you both virgins?
Yeah, yeah, we are.
But the thing is, we are definitely not a young Catholic couple because we are Calvinists.
Right.
All of us were.
Sorry, is that a fan?
That's one thing.
No, no, not at all.
It's just, I just had to point that out because that's part of our culture.
The other thing I just want to say is like every time I talk to Renee, she always just tells me about how excited she is about becoming a mom and stuff like that.
And I think that's admirable.
I think that's the most natural instinct that a woman can have.
And that is what is being suppressed in the West by basically feminism and the whole culture of the sexual revolution and everything that says, okay, you should be a career-driven, strong, independent woman who just sleeps around with everyone for fun and then become a CEO of whatever company.
How long have you guys been dating?
No, we're not dating.
Oh, so what do you do?
How do you court a woman for marriage?
Well, you...
And I would tell her, I think that it's, that Jesus is calling me to court her.
And then basically, that's how I would have a procedure.
No, no, we're not.
Why not?
I don't know.
Ask or no.
Well, our Buermaises, we're not that easy.
And Villemi is a great guy.
I've only known him for a short while, like two weeks, perhaps.
So, yes, we are friends.
But it's possible this could lead to something else.
Actually, what happened was I started making these YouTube videos about the situation here in South Africa.
And then she told me that she really feels it in her heart to do the same thing and really feels it in her heart to also stand up against the whole thing of foul murders that we have here.
So that's the way that we actually met.
And then now I'm actually just helping her to also set up a channel and start talking about those things.
That's great.
Now, your shoulders are touching right now, right?
Not really.
Now they are.
A little bit.
Does that, when your shoulders are touching there, does that just feel like your buddy, like you're sitting close to someone on the bus?
Or is there some sort of electricity there?
Do you feel like there's warmth, you know, in the area of your shoulder?
Well, I mean, of course, she's a woman, so it will never feel the same as sitting next to your body, Gavin.
I understand, but is there a sort of an ethereal joy being next to each other?
Are endorphins being released?
Because God will sometimes send you little messages when you're sitting close to each other.
Yeah, well, of course.
I mean, she's a beautiful woman, so you can't.
Yeah, no, I'm not talking.
You're being very clinical here.
I'm talking about spiritually.
Is there something in the room there?
I mean, her scent.
Do you feel like if I was to make it a sound, it would sound sort of like this.
Yeah, I think, I guess you can say that it is, y'all.
Oh, that's exciting.
Well, maybe we'll tune in when you put a ring on it on the next visit to the show.
Guys, we're way over time.
Brilliant wingman, yeah.
We're way out of time.
We went way over because you're the least boring boars I've ever spoken to before.
I want to have you back soon.
And I think, you know, this romantic look at traditionalism and how happy you guys seem is really inspiring.
But there's this sort of black cloud of farm murders in your future.
And a lot of us Western chauvinists here in America can't help but think, get out.
Yeah, well, that's the thing about us is it's the culture that I can't leave behind.
I mean, Renee can also talk about this.
She lived in England for two years and I think she hated it.
Yes, not to insult anybody, but it was the longest two years of my life.
Too much hedonism?
Yes, a bit.
And among other things.
And y'all, the culture and the whole, the land, just everything of South Africa.
We love it so much.
I can't explain how difficult it would be for me to ever leave South Africa behind.
Well, what about what's the nearest?
There's all these refugee programs in surrounding countries.
What is it, Zaire?
In other countries near South Africa.
Couldn't you get kind of closer?
Well, there is a program in Australia.
I know 50 farmers have already gone, but me myself, I would rather fight and die before leaving.
I won't go to Australia.
I'll rather stay with my own people.
We had a general in the Boer War.
His name was Christian De Vet, and he said in Afrikaans, but it translates roughly to, I would rather live on a dung heap amongst my own people than in a castle amongst foreigners.
So that's the same way that I feel.
That's a beautiful way to sum it up.
Guys, thanks for coming on the show.
Let's have you back soon.
And good luck with your imminent nuptials.
Thank you very much, Gavin.
Thank you for having us.
Bye.
Thank you.
Crazy times.
Who's winning?
The left or the right?
We're talking about the entire Western world here, so it's a hell of a swath.
South Africa is losing.
Germany's losing.
The left's ploy to destroy their countries is winning.
In Italy right now, the left is winning.
The people elected a far-right government, and the president is refusing to abscond the throne.
Here in America, we lose a lot of cultural victories.
You know, in Britain, Tommy Robinson's in jail.
Roseanne makes a dumb tweet and gets her show canceled.
That's a loss for us.
Who Antifa is being totally normalized by mainstream media?
That's a win for the far left.
It's hard to quantify, but it's important to pull back once in a while and remember that we won.
Trump is living in the White House.
Trump is president.
And the reason the left is so apoplectic is because they have Trump derangement syndrome.
They still don't have the words to describe what happened to them on November 8th.
What was it, 2016?
Let's have a little look at Ben Rhodes, one of the most arrogant liberals out there who would not shut up about how sure he is that Hillary is going to win.
Let's see him discuss Trump's victory the night of the election.