And today we are going to be discussing the fraternity question.
It is probably the one traditional right-of-center group on a college campus.
They have taken the lead in opposing some of these pro-Palestine protests at college campuses.
But of course, there has been a very mixed reaction among the online right.
Though Fox News has been promoting it, a lot of other people have been critical of it.
And there's been a real difference in treatment between what happened to some of the fraternities and what happened to some of the others, specifically between what happened at UNC and Ole Miss.
And it raises a larger question, which is, can white students on campus ever take their own side?
Now, I was Greek.
I was a SIGAP, a traditional not balanced man, for those of you who know what that means and how it matters.
So, you know, the typical Hazing and you got to earn your way in and I've always been a big fan of the fraternity system.
Were you Greek?
I can't remember, Paul.
Oh my god!
I was 100% Greek at one of the quintessential last standing universities where the Greek system is still predominant.
Right.
Yeah, so no patience for GDIs.
But it is remarkable how, I mean for years, I remember the very beginning when I was doing organizing on college campuses, I always said the fraternities are the key.
For the right.
And every once in a while, you would see these fraternities organize something where they would sweep the campus elections at some Southern schools, they would do it.
But the campus right-wing organizations, specifically like the National Conservative Organizations, the nonprofits in Northern Virginia and stuff like that, they hated the Greeks.
They would even, I remember, I think LA even had a workshop one time where they were bragging about how they organized some sort of an election thing to get the Student government in the hands of non fraternity members and how this was like some great triumph and to me that the real question about campus politics is what networks and resources do you have that are not totally controlled by the left because the way it works on campus is that everything
That is multicultural, everything that is non-white.
It's all a product of the school administration.
They all get official funding.
They all get set-asides.
They all get a lot of these campus buildings now.
And I don't think it's any coincidence that when the fraternities get driven off campus, usually their buildings end up being given to non-white student groups.
At this point, they even give it to just openly political groups.
They'll call it like the environmental house or something like that.
No, it's fascinating to think about what's happened, especially at Southern, at the state universities.
It's really embarrassing in the South.
Talk about the ACC, the SEC, where the culture was so incredibly intertwined with the role of fraternities, whether it was for something as simple, a lot of our listeners are going to laugh when I say this, but for football games at the major SEC universities, the system would be where the fraternities, the pledges would all dress up in ties denoting the university colors.
If you're talking about UGA, University of Georgia, they'd all wear red and black ties and they'd show up before the game.
To save the seats for the brothers.
That's what you had to do as a pledge if you were a pledge during the fall semester.
It was a rite of passage.
It was hierarchy.
You had to earn your way in the fraternity.
And I am a fan of hazing.
Hazing now is 100% gone from the universities.
I was probably... The very first column I ever wrote was in defense of hazing.
Hey, I wrote a column one time demanding that KAs be able to bring back their Old South Parade.
And I've actually got a quote to read later in this podcast An author by the name of Jeff Pearlman wrote a book called The Last Folk Hero, The Life and Myth of Bo Jackson, and there's this amazing passage about how amazing the fraternity scene was once at Auburn, which I'll read later.
But my point is, this is such a important role because you have interaction with not just people you've never met before from, say we're talking about a school like Ole Miss.
So Oxford is going to attract some of the best White students, white high school students from Oxford, or I'm sorry, from Jackson, from Memphis, from Birmingham.
You're going to interact with people that you never would have otherwise.
And you get to, you know, you don't get to choose your family.
You get to choose your friends, Mr. Hood.
You get to choose the people you interact with.
And I think that's one of the beautiful things about fraternity is because You know, the whole system, at least where I went to school, it was a bidding system.
You had to go, you would go interact.
I was a legacy at two fraternities at Pike and Lampakai.
Bids at both.
I ended up going somewhere else.
But the point is, it was a very interesting procession of, they'd take you out, they would introduce you to the little sisters.
You would interact with the older brothers and they would, you know, obviously they would take you out to really nice dinners, they'd take you out skeet shooting.
For those of you who don't know what that is, that's when you have a shotgun and, you know, you go pull and you'll shoot a disc into the air.
You would go on fishing trips, you would go to lakes, you would go to brothers' homes who were very well-to-do.
Like where I went to school, my undergrad, a lot of Birmingham, Montgomery, Huntsville, Mobile, and Atlanta kids.
And so you're interacting with kids who went to a lot of the top prep schools.
And you'd go golfing, you would do, you would go to their beach houses.
It was amazing because it became a brotherhood and you would, you, the guys that I went through pledge with, it was tough because it was right before the whole hazing system was complete.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was, I mean, being, uh, being a pledge was always tough.
I mean, that's the thing though, is that the idea it's become not just, not just Banned, but it's totally illegal to the point where you're facing very severe punishments for these kinds of things.
And every once in a while, you get some incident where some kid dies or some kid gets hurt and it becomes a huge media crusade and everything else.
Because they drink too much and they're stupid.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
But I mean, one of the things that's really interesting, of course, and a lot of people have brought this up, is that you have a lot of openly racial fraternities.
You have your Jewish fraternities, you have your black fraternities, you have your Hispanic fraternities.
I know the black fraternities, I can't speak to the others, but I know the black fraternities were notorious on my campus for how hard they hissed, and there were not a lot of black kids at William & Mary.
And, I mean, some of these fraternities were, like, super small, but they were rough.
I mean, at least that's what the rumors were, and, like, you could see these guys, like, limping around and stuff.
And, but you never see, like, these guys get punished.
The idea of fraternities being, The stereotypical bad guy in American culture, even in movies like Animal House, where they're sort of the heroes, when you actually, I mean, those who have eyes to see, I mean, the subversion is off the charts when you look at what that movie is really saying, where the wasps are sort of the upper-class wasps, sort of the stereotypical bad guys, and somehow they're actually running things with the campus administration.
That movie PCU, Where they, it's supposedly a critique of political correctness, but the underlying message is that somehow the WASPs and the upper class Republican fraternity is in league with the school administration and they're the ones using political correctness as some kind of tactic to actually run the school.
All of these things, and of course Revenge of the Nerds, all of these things are so ingrained in the culture now that the assumptions are just taken for granted.
You just assume That fraternities are the bad guys and you just assume like, oh, they're all date rapists, they're all assaulting people, they're all doing all these things.
The very first thing that ever happened on my campus was you had this huge incident, which basically torpedoed the Greek system at William & Mary, which is, you know, where it really began in a lot of ways.
And the whole, I don't want to get into the whole incident too much, but basically the way it was advertised is it turned out to be a lot different in terms of what actually happened.
And, but the damage was done.
I mean, nothing, nobody went back.
The Greek system was basically annihilated.
And at all of these different campuses, you see school administrations working harder and harder to bring these things to heel.
You see the fraternities themselves, the national organizations going along with it, mostly because of fear of liability, constantly selling out the chapters, constantly throwing their own guys under the bus.
And You even see, of course, what I would say is the biggest scandal in journalism is the last few years, which is, of course, what happened with the broken glass hoax at the University of Virginia.
Right.
Was it Hannah Montana or what was her name?
It wasn't Hannah Montana, but that was the yeah, the name of the supposed victim or whatever it was.
But yeah, that was the basically was the.
Rolling Stone wrote this article where they said that there was this brutal rape at a fraternity at the University of Virginia and conjured up all these stereotypical images of upper-class Southern white fraternity guys like raping somebody on top of broken glass and all this sort of thing.
Of course, the whole thing collapsed.
They ended up having to pay all this money.
But, you know, nobody learned anything from it.
The war on the Greek system is pretty much constant and you can see it just about everywhere.
Now there has been some sort of a pushback with there's sort of a soft media fraternity media with sites like I don't know if Total Frat Move is still around but that used to be big but Old Row of course is the most prominent one and that's of course very much rooted in the South.
The South tends to be where it's stronger but you don't I mean, let's face it, the problem is that the Greek system is fundamentally focused on networking and partying, and it's not politically minded.
And there was a time, I think, where maybe it could have been politically minded, but nationally the organizations don't seem to be very interested in that.
They seem to be going along with the assumptions of the culture.
They just don't want to get in trouble.
Certainly the kids don't want to get in trouble.
And that really brings us to what's been happening at some of these Southern schools where and you and I may even get into it here because I've got very mixed feelings on these protests.
On the one hand, it is good to see people waving the American flag and standing up against You know, what's obviously, even though it's directed against, you know, Israel and it's for Palestine, whatever else, but I mean, the root that's motivating a lot of these people is they're just anti-white.
But at the same time, the protests are not really taking their own side.
I mean, the fraternity protesters, and you certainly see this in what's happened between, just to take two quick examples, you had a protest at UNC where they basically got Yeah, he donated $10,000.
by Fox News, I think one of the guys got interviewed and made it very clear that the protest was about
defending Israel and everything else.
They got a lot of money raised for them, I think they're gonna have a rager or whatever else.
I think Bill Ackman is actually one of the donors who was influential in getting
the president of Harvard terminated.
He was one of the donors to that, am I correct?
Yeah, he donated $10,000.
Yeah, $10,000.
Which raised a million dollars.
Right, but then you contrast that to Ole Miss, where it's not even really a protest.
I mean, it was just kind of like some guys mocking these, this, you know, fat black protester and they're saying, well, the one guy was making monkey sounds.
I mean, if you look at the clip, it's like a one second thing and it's not particularly clear that that's actually what he was doing, but everybody was saying like, oh, you know, this is the frat boy uprising.
It's white boy summer.
Well, white boy summer just got brought to a screeching halt because the fraternity itself expelled the kid.
And Ole Miss, you know, ah, big Southern school, yeah, it's standing up for everything, is investigating.
And furthermore, what has happened to Ole Miss and what has happened to these Southern schools where the best you can do now is wrap yourself in Old Glory as opposed to the Confederate battle flag, which was the big thing a few years ago.
I mean, you remember, Ole Miss, it was only a few years ago where you had alums and you had fraternity members and you had a lot of people rallying to defend the Confederate flag.
Not just the Confederate flag, Mr. Hood.
They were defending the destruction of a couple of really big symbols.
I actually attended an alum.
A lot of games with Ole Miss where the band still played Dixie into the late 90s.
And they had the big chant where they, and the South will rise again at that one part.
And they all flipped out about that because we got to make sure that we have the great football team.
They started playing Elvis Presley's Oh gosh, what is the one where it's Dixie, then it goes to Glory Glory?
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
American Trilogy.
Yeah, and they started playing that, and that's been retired.
I think that's been retired for about seven years.
Of course, they got rid of Colonel Rabb.
They got rid of Colonel Rabb.
Yeah, they no longer play the American Trilogy Presley song.
You can actually go on YouTube and watch the last time they played that, but I remember going to games where they were playing Dixie, where the Ole Miss fans, the alumni, And the students would bring, and they would wave the Confederate flag.
Even at William & Mary, not when I was there.
I'm not going to tell a lie and say that that was going on when I was there, but I remember looking through some old records and, you know, not that long ago in the 60s, William & Mary football games, you would see people waving the Confederate flags.
I mean, and back then, of course, it was the William & Mary Indians.
Yeah, exactly.
Now it's the tribe.
No, it's funny.
It's not even the tribe.
It's not even the tribe anymore.
I think it's like the Griffins or something stupid like that.
What, is this some sort of Harry Potter reference?
No, it's like, uh, I don't even know what the heck it's supposed to be.
It's just, they can't...
There's never a point where it's enough.
No.
This is sort of the larger point that I'm trying to make here, where you have the American flag and that's the best you can do.
That's it.
That's the most right.
That is now incredibly right coded, as they say, on an American college campus.
And certainly on the online right, you're going to see people being like, well, these fraternity members are being used.
You know, they're not taking their own side.
Now, my At UNC they were saying like, well, you know, it was, uh, I think there were members of like Hillel, which is like the Jewish fraternity.
And so there you, it's kind of an identity politics versus identity politics type thing.
I think at Ole Miss it tended to just be more of a anti-left thing.
But again, I understand the people who are like, yeah, this is it, white boy Somer, we're doing it.
But again, I remember what it was like after 9-11 when you would see these anti-war protests on campus and it was the same kind of dygenic coalition, although they didn't have trainees then.
And the people who would oppose these anti-war protests tended to be, you know, kind of Greek aligned, American flag waving, more better looking people.
And it was like an anti-left thing more than a pro-war thing.
But at the end of the day, like, what exactly did we accomplish with that?
And this is, I think, like Oren McIntyre, columnist on The Blaze, Had a had a column on this or I had some tweets on this not
that long ago where he basically said look Right now what you have at these campuses, especially at
Columbia where you haven't had great pro I don't even know if there is much for Greek system there
at least not in the same way you have in the south still At Columbia and a lot of and a lot of these Ivy League
schools. You basically have a left on left Fight because you've got these huge pro-palestinian
protests that are attacking Israel in ways that make a lot of the professors
and a lot of the donors and a lot of the college presidents and
a lot of the media associated with these institutions very very uncomfortable and very offended and
The people who are trying to crack down on this stuff that then radicalizes the pro-palestinian
Protesters and then you have I think it was at GW or one of these places where they even had this
This is a great question.
Graphic that they put up on the side of the school that had like genocide Joe and all this stuff and there was one There was one place where they even had conservative protesters and pro-palestinian Protesters chanting together F Joe Biden.
So a rare moment of unity in the United States That was that that actually happened at LSU in Baton Rouge.
That's right.
That's right, Alabama I'm gonna go back real quick and just talk a little and how important it is to understand the context of how Let me just finish this point with McIntyre, though.
What he said, and this is before Ole Miss, this is before what happened with these kids and everything else, what he said was that you don't actually have to get in the way of this, because what's going to happen, and he was referring not just to potential counter-protesters, because this is before that really started, but he was referring to Governor Abbott in Texas and Governor DeSantis in Florida using pretty overwhelming force to shut these things down.
And people like Marco Rubio saying, oh, well, we need to actually, like, expel all these people and if they have visas, deport them and everything else.
You're giving them the villain that they want because then they're just going to kind of vaguely associate, like, all that anyone's going to remember is that, like, the right wing shut down these protesters.
Just let them fight.
Just let them fight.
And you could say, well, it's cowardly.
And there's, believe me, I get it.
Like, nine times out of ten, I say, like, you got to show the flag.
You got to get out there.
So I get it.
But in this case, if you get out there on a college campus, even just to oppose the left, no one's going to have your back.
No one.
The only reason there was some backing at UNC is because you had a pre-existing network aligned with these other institutions that was going to back these students.
at Ole Miss where it was just an anti-left thing and it probably wasn't even all that political.
It was just, you know, guys spontaneously like mocking these people. Look at what happened.
Nobody had their back. The institutions promptly threw them under the bus. The campus is falling
all over itself to embarrass the fat protester. I mean, that's, she's just made her career. She
just won the, well, what's the affirmative action equivalent of the ghetto lottery.
I mean, she can dine out on that.
And from the looks of things, she dines out pretty well already.
She can dine out on that for the rest of her life.
Because, you know, I was mocked by a Southern white fraternity member.
So you're putting yourself out there for people who aren't going to deliver for you.
Now, look, maybe this just happened.
Now, maybe I'm wrong.
Maybe, you know, Bill Ackman will donate $10,000 to this kid.
But somehow I doubt it.
No, and it's even more.
It's even more important for some of our listeners who might have not seen the video of what happened at Ole Miss.
Let's put some context.
Context is king, as one of my favorite podcasts always talks about.
So, there's this very, very obese black woman.
Have you ever seen that great meme of the black woman wearing this bodysuit in front of a PowerPoint presentation that says, all white people... Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
Send me money or whatever.
This woman literally looks like she stepped right out of that meme.
It's a very obese black woman.
They start chanting the what all the white boys.
There's a there's one white one white Chad who's wearing American American flag overalls who kind of confronts her then backtracks as if he's you know, the crocodile hunter got a little too close to the to the That I thought was actually a pretty genius taunt because the media has been telling us for years that Lizzo was this, you know, ridiculously obese like black flute player or something like that.
how you pronounce the singer's name.
See, that I thought was actually a pretty genius taunt because the media has been telling us for years
that Lizzo was this, you know, ridiculously obese, like, black flute player or something like that.
They even gave her, like, James Madison's flute to desecrate or whatever.
And they keep saying over and over and over again, like, oh, she's so beautiful.
She's so sexy.
This is the greatest thing ever.
This is what it's all about.
So, you know, if you're chanting this and everybody understands what this means, it's really a genius taunt because you can't even articulate why it's offensive.
Yeah, it's an emperor wears no clothes moment.
Yeah, exactly.
You've told us this is the height of femininity, this is the height of sexiness in the current year.
Yeah, it's like telling a woman that they look like, you know, some trans actor, actress, whatever the term would be.
I mean, nobody's actually flattered by something like that.
No, it's very unflattering.
Then, of course, one of the guys, and again, it's out there, so let's just talk about it.
I mean, the guy's name is...
He's been doxxed, J.P.
Staples, and he was a member of the Phi Delta Theta chapter there, Ole Miss.
The university, I'm sorry, the NAACP called on the school to expel him.
Well, guess what?
The National Fraternity responded to the Ole Miss protests, and they're the ones who stepped in.
Everybody who's Greek, everybody who's Greek identifies with this.
My fraternity lost its charter.
Nationals didn't do anything for us.
I think they reconstituted afterward in a very lame way.
But this is always how it is with Greek organizations.
Your national organization never has your back.
Your national organization is always so quick to throw you under the bus.
You can't possibly be surprised by this.
And this is one of the key things.
I mean, not to pick a fight or get into it with Yep.
some of the elements of the online right or whatever else, but I think we have to think
critically about this, which is that you could say, you know, these guys are being used as shills.
And I think that if you look at what happened at Old Miss, that's actually true. That is exactly
what happened. At the same time, if you say, well, the people who, if you look at the way these
pro-Palestinian protests are being shut down, it's like, yeah, the left is understanding what
what it means to actually confront institutional power.
At the same time, these pro-Palestinian protesters, they have more institutional power than these Ole Miss frat boys, because within hours of this happening, The kid gets doxxed.
His family, all the information about his family is out there.
He's being doxxed on X, which supposedly has a policy against doxxing.
Of course, nothing happens.
Although Nick Fuentes is back on X, which is, I think he's doing a space right now with like 27,000 people, which is pretty cool.
Mark my word, Jared Taylor will be back on.
You think so?
I mean, that was the next thing I was going to say.
I hope so, but like, let me just make this point.
There is a no doxxing policy on X, and it's because you doxxed, totally doxxed, and nothing happened.
All the people who did it are still online, as far as I can tell, at least as of this recording, and nobody in any of these organizations, which we are told over and over and over again, from academia, from pop culture, from, you know, so-called experts in the media, when you think, what is white privilege, you think Southern, Old Boys Network, White guys who, you know, I've had four generations at the same school, rich, dad is a legacy and that's how you get into the school.
Like that is what people think of when they think of white privilege.
And you know what it means?
Nothing.
It doesn't, it does not exist.
When it comes down to it, none of it matters.
And you can say, well, the pro-Israel people are institutional power and the pro-Palestinian people are confronting institutional power.
Yeah.
Well, The lowest pro-Palestinian protester has far more institutional power than some Ole Miss frat boy whose family has gone to that school for five generations.
That's just the reality.
It's fascinating you talked about where the power lies because Rutgers has, I believe, agreed to most of the demands made by the pro-Palestinian protesters.
number of campuses, a number of leadership at these schools across the country have acquiesced and they've
surrendered to the demands made by these protesters, which shows you again, you have a couple moments where, like you
said, at UNC, the American flag was taken down, they were trying to tear it down. And these kids went there and one
of the guys said, we went there explicitly to support and defend Israel against this.
And you said that on Fox News. I mean, that's why it's, you could say like, well, it's one kid or whatever else. It's
like, okay, but that's the kid they put on Fox News. So like,
that is the narrative that's going to get out.
That is the narrative, regardless of whether there's Barassi in it.
Yeah, regardless of what people think about it, that's what was
said on Fox News.
Compared to the Ole Miss thing, again, let's talk about Mississippi. Let's talk about what's going on in
Mississippi.
Let's talk about this because it's important context as King
Tommy Tuberville is the current senior senator of Alabama.
He coached at Ole Miss, then went to Auburn.
He was very successful at Auburn.
At Ole Miss, he said, hey listen, we're not going to be able to recruit the black talent necessary to compete against your Auburns, your LSUs, your Alabamas, your Tennessees, your Georgias, if we're waving the Confederate flag.
So he basically banned waving the Confederate flag.
in the mid-1990s before he went to Auburn in 1999.
Flash forward to 2020 during the George Floyd stuff.
There was a black running back at Mississippi State in Starkville who said he would not play in the upcoming season if the state of Mississippi kept the Confederate flag, the Confederate battle emblem, on the state flag.
So what does the Republican-controlled legislature do in Mississippi?
They create a stupid flag with a piece of cotton on it.
And then what happens?
This black running back, this beloved black running back in Mississippi State doesn't even play that season.
He transfers.
It's the most cucked, embarrassing, asinine situation in the world where you will give up all your traditions
just to try and become a above 500 football program, which is what Ole Miss has traditionally been.
You know, Ole Miss was a powerhouse back when it was a segregated school
before they started to integrate the football team.
Archie Manning, there was a course back in 1962 when James Meredith.
was the first black man enrolled at that campus.
There was a massive riot.
The National Guard had to be called out.
I mean, it was insane what the students did.
And now, of course, you've got a situation where this probably a—it was probably a
coalition of multiple fraternities.
They were probably all friends.
They said, hey man, let's just go confront these weirdos.
Let's go confront these commies.
What does Mystery Grove always say on Twitter about what commies are?
They're just resentful, ugly people.
And now you've got this group of good-looking white guys who show up.
One of the guys, I think the guy who got doxxed was actually a model.
They're good-looking guys, and they're finally able to confront people who hate them.
Now, again, they just show up to just basically say, F you, we don't really care about what's going on.
Again, my view is this.
I don't care about either side and what's happening in the Middle East.
Why do we as Americans have to care about this and have to put our needs on hold about a situation that literally, if we didn't allow Muslim immigration in this country, which of course has accelerated significantly post 9-11, which is just an absolute tragedy, Why would we care about this?
You know, I mean, I think the argument would be because America's funding a lot of what's going on.
And you're right.
I mean, you know, people will say things like, well, actually, you know, there's that meme where it's got these missiles being launched from, you know, Lebanon or Palestine or whatever.
And you see the Israeli and it says like.
It says my tax dollars, and then you see the Israeli missile defenses shooting them down, it says somehow also my tax dollars.
Now, the Israelis obviously get way more money and diplomatic support from the United States than the Palestinians do, but both sides do get something.
And as people like me sort of predicted at the beginning, the end result of all of this is going to be the U.S.
largely backs Israeli foreign policy and then to mollify the Pro-Palestinian protesters, we're going to admit, you know, unlimited Palestinian refugees to the United States.
The Biden administration is already moving on that and that will be the grand compromise, which of course will make everybody happy except whites in this country.
And this is sort of the whole thing is that People will say, you know, well, this side, these guys are being used as shill.
Well, some will say these guys are being used.
Some will say these people are shills.
I think the truth is probably, you know, it depends on the specific case.
I think the situation at the different campuses is obviously very different.
But that's what happened to the kids.
But what's clear across all of them is in no case are there whites being able to advocate for their own side.
When people rage against fraternities, when people, it's an implicit white thing, but there's still no explicit white thing.
There is no white student group on campus anywhere in this country.
There are black student fraternities.
There are a million multicultural student groups.
I mean, this is what YWC was back, you know, 20 years ago, whatever else.
And even we weren't like a white student union or something like that.
Perhaps we should have been.
It was 15 years ago.
Don't date yourself that much.
Come on.
Well, the point is that The point is that like these things haven't, there's no counter to any of this stuff from our own side.
And so everything is always being, you know, are we going to be used for this thing or that thing?
Or are we going to be used as shills?
Or are we going to, should we align ourselves tactically with this because we'll get some great advantage or whatever else?
What I would say is that clearly the reaction in the last few days has shown that you shouldn't actually allow yourself to be used as a cover by any of this.
You actually should just step back and play beer pong and let the leftists fight each other.
You should let these disgusting campuses tear themselves apart.
You should let them fall apart.
But at the same time, if we're ever going to get anywhere, we actually have to take our own side.
And you don't have to be clever about it and say,
well, before we can take our own side, we have to confront this thing.
Like, actually you don't.
You actually have to take your own side first.
And because if you don't take your own side first, why do you care about who's holding you down
or any of this other stuff?
Like you do have to take your own side at some point.
And one of the key elements here is that the people that I'm really mad at with all of this,
and this is something that has been going on for a very long time,
it's not fraternity members, God knows.
I mean, when I was in college, even though I was very politically minded back then, it's not like I obsessed about campus politics all day.
You're never going to get college kids to do that kind of thing.
But what really frustrates me is you have all these donors who keep giving, conservative donors, who keep giving millions of dollars to these institutions.
Just stupid nonsense, like the football program or like, you know, the academic thing they were involved in 50 years ago because they're all nostalgic or whatever.
And it just gets used to subsidize people who absolutely hate them, who absolutely hate everything about them.
And they never learn.
They just keep cutting the checks.
The left does not operate this way.
And fundamentally, you never see people not just withdrawing support, but like subsidizing the right.
As an alternative.
And until we get to that point, this is just going to keep happening.
I mean, fundamentally, I think the focus needs to be on these big campus donors because, I mean, again, I quote him probably too much on this for people to get frustrated, but Hanani was talking about when the, after October 7th, when you had these college presidents being fired for criticizing Israel or being insufficiently pro-Israel or whatever it was, he pointed out that, look, you know, these donors, Who are demanding action on this, are very committed on this issue.
And that's why they're getting results.
Well, people say like, well, it was never a problem when all this anti-white stuff was being taught for decades.
It's like, yeah, but no donors complained about it.
Where are the white donors complaining about it?
Where are the white donors at Harvard or Yale or any of these places?
I mean, these conservatives, these Conservatives oftentimes who end up like losing elections or selling out their own side.
I mean, they're thrilled to get teaching jobs at UVA or Yale or Harvard or whatever do these things.
They don't care about any of the anti-white stuff.
They're just happy to be on the to get their turn of the trough.
And until that changes, I mean, we're always just going to be kind of in the middle.
And I don't think there's really a winning play for white kids on campus.
And so therefore, if you're listening to this, I would encourage you not to let yourself be used because until we can change this right now, nobody has your back.
Except us.
We're not the ones with institutional power.
We have no power.
We can't keep you from losing your position at a fraternity.
What I'd like to see is, you know, there's this big fundraiser for the UNC.
Like, throw them a rager or whatever.
Like, okay.
I think it would be far more fruitful for people to get this particular kid who just got doxxed and expelled from his fraternity, like, let's make him a millionaire.
That is the kind of thing that I would like to see.
But of course, you know, the fundraiser goes up, it'll get taken down.
Yeah, and again, not to be cynical in all this, because again, I was very excited to see what happened at Ole Miss.
I was very excited to see what happened at LSU when the fraternity brothers, again, I'd rather hear them sing Dixie as opposed to the national anthem, because let's face it, the people who are the elite of our country who run things, both right and left, they hate the fact that these white guys are still there.
They're like, why aren't these guys dying?
Why aren't these guys you know, volunteering to go to the military so they can go
spread the global American empire.
They don't want these kids to actually stand up and believe in an America that no longer
believes in them. That's my view. Again, I see this and it's so sad because these kids
at UNC who held up the American flag, they deserve a country that loves
them and their posterity as much as they love the flag.
And they were willing to take the risk of being, you know, taunted and thrown at, just as the kids at Ole Miss, who laughed at this fat black leftist and called her Lizzo, whatever.
It was hysterical.
I mean, again, that's what you need.
You always talk about how spite is so important.
I just think laughing at these people is so important.
But unfortunately, when you laugh, it's whoever laughs last.
That laughs the loudest, and that's what happened to this kid.
Because again, we see that these fraternities not only have no spying, but they have no spying when it comes to something as simple as, you know, a keg violation.
I remember I was really sad when I graduated from undergrad, and a couple years later I found out that a bunch of the guys who I'd recruited to join the fraternity, who had really helped make our fraternity into one of the top fraternities in my undergrad school, They were expelled for a hazing incident where we had a pit during parties, and we would throw all the trash there.
And then after, you know, after a football game Saturday, Sunday, we'd make the pledges clean up what was in the pit.
Nothing bad.
Just to clean up.
It was basically to build up, to show that, hey, we all did this.
We all had to do this at one point when we were a pledge.
This is your rite of passage.
And one of the guys threw ice on some of the pledges.
Well, guess what happens?
He called the hazing hotline there at the university and they did an investigation and six of the guys that I had had a huge hand in recruiting and having come on board and helping really establish our reputation academically and with extracurricular activities and just raising our profile with sororities for wanting to do
events with us, they were all gone and they lost all their privileges. And so it was really sad to
see all that effort that you're doing at the micro level, it's just destroyed at the macro
level by the governing apparatus there, the IFC. And that's why this whole Ole Miss thing.
That's why I would actually go back to reiterate something you just said.
If you are a college student listening to us, stay away from all of these protests.
There's no reason to go.
Don't put yourself out there for these things.
I mean, if you absolutely must do it, you got to make, I mean, you got to plan this like a military operation in terms of optics and everything else.
But you got to ask yourself, what's to be gained?
Because the only way you're going to get on Fox News, say, the only way you're going to get backing from the conservative movement is if you specifically frame it as this is a pro-Israel thing.
And if you do it as like a pro-America thing, it's going to very quickly get turned into a white supremacist and everything else thing, which, frankly, I mean, given that America is a white country and we eventually do need to get there, That is where we have to get to, but...
You're not going to get any support from the National Conservative Movement.
You're not going to get any support from Fox News.
The National Conservative Movement is not particularly interested in defending these kinds of things.
I mean, maybe I'm wrong, maybe I'm being too cynical, but we'll see what happens with this situation in Ole Miss, but I haven't seen very many people stepping up to defend him.
I've seen people quibbling online, I've seen people whatever, but they're not actually backing him with money and resources the same way you saw it with UNC.
Ultimately, I think that the big problem with Greek organizations, and this is something that I noticed the very first trip I ever took to Europe.
Well, I was in Flanders, and there's a national student fraternity, which I think Philip DeVinter, who's in the Vlaams Belang, started, and it's called the NSV, I guess for English speakers, and it's actually co-ed, but it's kind of modeled a bit on the old German student fraternity, so they have like the sashes and the little caps and whatever else, and They've got the traditions that you might associate with anti-fraternity.
I mean, there's certainly drinking, there's songbooks, there's all sorts of things that they do.
But it's explicitly a political thing, and this is something you really notice in Europe.
In Germany, too, these things still exist.
The German student fraternities, a lot of them were actually founded under the Napoleonic occupation, so they've always been kind of quasi-secret and underground and whatever else.
And you see this name, the same sort of tradition in Flanders and a few other places I'm told.
I've met some people in Austria and Germany where they still do the fencing thing, where they do the saber wounds and everything else.
And there's an element not just of aristocratic, you can call it pretension if you're hostile, but I would say actually this is what it was supposed to be, but there's a political mindedness to it.
And the left has their own fraternities too.
But you don't really see that in the United States, and it just becomes purely a drinking-for-its-own-sake exercise, which is fine as far as it goes, but they're just not going to let you do that anymore.
Like, we're at a point where you just can't be neutral.
You're not going to be allowed to have any kind of organization that is not totally under managerial control.
And by managerial control on a campus context, I mean directly given sanction and funding And staffing and everything else by the administration.
I mean, if you look at these multicultural student groups that are doing stuff on campus now, I mean, in a lot of these places, they are winning concessions.
None of these kids were would be very surprised if any of these kids were getting arrested or whatever else ever have to do actually do anything.
I mean, people are saying like, yeah, they're confronting institutional power for the first time.
Yeah, they are more than they were in 2020, certainly, but on campus, they're not gonna pay a price.
I don't think any, especially these professors who are getting arrested or anything like that.
And.
You certainly, I mean, a lot of these guys, of course, are also getting their student loans forgiven.
I mean, they're essentially getting paid to do this.
They're going to get hooked up and with jobs in the NGO racket after this is done, or the government, if Biden gets reelected.
And this just kind of goes on forever.
And the counter to this is essentially this unorganized Self-interested.
We're not political.
We just want to be left alone.
Good old boys network, which is in the crosshairs of people who have been trained to absolutely hate them.
And the people in charge, all they can think of to do is basically apologize and beg for concessions.
And the more politically minded people, I think, are going to put themselves out there and just get annihilated, you know, from orbit because nobody has their back.
I mean, that's to me the big thing we need to change.
I mean, if I could be reborn, so to speak, and say, like, well, what is the one thing you could do on a college campus?
I mean, I would love to see some sort of an American variant of the NSV.
I don't think it's possible under the current regime.
No, absolutely not.
I mean, look at the war you're seeing just on the current fraternity system.
Well, and look at how quickly a lot of them have sort of backed down.
I mean, KA, which was explicitly modeled on Robert E. Lee and everything like that, they've They can't stop apologizing.
They can't stop cringing.
Every once in a while, some K.A.
chapter will do something the way their ancestors did it, and the Nationals runs out, and it's, oh, this is terrible, and everything else.
And he said the same thing with all these other national organizations.
I mean, what they're essentially trying to do with the survival strategy of these fraternities is basically to turn everything into an honor fraternity, where you basically sign a piece of paper, there's no hazing, you pay some money, You get a house, and there are certain GPA standards and little things that you go through, and that basically helps your resume, somehow.
But, that's it.
It's not really a fraternity the way we would think of it.
And you could argue, to some extent, I mean, you'll have to tell me which one, which one were you in again?
Uh, I was eight.
You don't want to say?
Okay.
It's a big one.
Yeah.
I still remember.
A large one.
I was in, well, I think, I think technically the biggest Sigma Phi Epsilon and SIGAP.
Yeah.
And SIGAP was, you know, one of the things when you're pledging is you learn about the founders and you learn about who these guys were and it was started in Virginia.
And a lot of these, I think they were like Baptist ministers.
I mean, these were very high minded, People.
Carter Ashton Jenkins is the only one I can still remember now.
And, you know, they're all very sober, serious-minded people and very high ideals and everything else.
And then you look at kind of what it became over the next few decades, and it is, there's certainly a departure from that, those kinds of ideals.
Now, I think hazing and it's the very, the model of like, you know, you can call it, it's not quite a manor boon, but let's, you know, with a male organization that's built on friendship and loyalty and solidarity, that is a very powerful thing.
I mean, certainly when I was in the fraternity, I learned, the biggest lesson I learned is just the awesome power of a group of people who are loyal to each other, even if they're not devoted to any particularly high ideal Just that alone has incredible power, and that's why they're targeted, because you have to break these things down.
You have to make sure that whites Never have a group like that, and that mostly white groups are not allowed to exist.
That these people are basically cut off and atomized and deracinated and thrown out on their own resources while everybody else gets to have a group.
Like, that is the agenda.
What's your point on one of these campuses, Mr. Hood?
You're basically self-governed.
You police your own institution and It's really cool to think back as you and I were just talking about this and I'm thinking about some of the memories of, you know, how I wanted to advance and if I wanted to run for what I wanted to do on campus.
I was like, yeah, you know, I'd rather represent the fraternity by being a part of, you know, SGA or other activities, whether it's Columnist or whether it's a radio show or whether it's being like I said part of the SGA or then do an IFC because one of the fascinating things about the Southern fraternity Southern colleges some of the big ones like you know your your Georgia your your Georgia Tech your Auburn your Ole Miss Mississippi State, Tennessee, Alabama They actually have senior secret societies where basically the best of the best are Chosen to be part of an even more secret society at Auburn.
It's called the spades and 10 members, 10 men every year.
It's largely, they're selected and you're groomed by what you've done from an extracurricular standpoint of what you've done to advance the idea of that college or that university and it's grueling.
I remember a couple of my fraternity brothers actually became members and one day one of the guys was severely limping.
He went on to be a doctor, but he was made a spade, he was limping one day, and I go, dude, what happened?
He goes, oh, we had this event last night, I really can't talk about it.
And I just kept thinking to myself, what type of physical activity did they make the members
who were becoming the new spades at Auburn have to undergo to be part of this brotherhood?
And it's like, I love that concept.
I mean, that's so foreign to so many people because it is about honor, it is about duty.
Because from talking about an anti-democratic institute, it is forbidden for basically every student at Auburn
except for the elite of the elite, and they're largely chosen from the fraternities.
And then there's this sense of You're part of this elite secret society that you have access to the past members, you're going to have access to groom, in a positive way, I use that term positively, future members.
Because again, that's what a fraternity is.
In a normal society, if we were not a multiracial society, if we were a monoracial society as we were up until basically the 1990s when the demographic change really started to kick in, you and I are basically Kids in the 90s, in a lot of ways.
And I look back fondly on the 90s.
I think it was a great decade.
And you think about how the fraternity system existed.
It wasn't until about the 2000s that you had to deal with a lot of the insanity of social media, pictures being taken.
I've actually looked back at my dad's glom.
I've looked back at his yearbook, and there are pictures of frat brothers in blackface.
Yeah, well that's, I mean, this is one of the things, though, is that Think of the former Virginia governor and the sorts of pranks and things like that that people would do.
It doesn't carry over to political action.
I mean, I hate to sound kind of like a stiff or something, but I think we're sort of past the point where you can have an organization Where it's just drinking for drinking sake and partying for partying sake because you can just do that without like actually having a formal group.
And at this point, the formal group is going to be targeted.
So if you're going to have a formal group, if you're going and look guys.
When they get together, like, this is just what we do.
We're gonna form hierarchies.
We're gonna haze.
We're gonna have complicated membership things, because that's just what you do.
There's always an in-group and an out-group.
I mean, this is something girls just don't really understand.
I mean, it was always funny when you would talk.
On the freshman hall, you would talk to the girls who were joining a sorority, and you'd come back, you know, looking like you've just been through a war.
You haven't slept in a week.
You smell terrible.
You're covered in God knows what.
And the girls are like, oh, my big just gave me a present.
This is so much fun.
You're sitting there like, oh, I wish I was dead.
But this is this is just how you you do things.
But if we're going to do something, I think and especially at this point that even the harmless hijinks of a campus fraternity, you can get expelled for that now.
Hazing, you can get in prison for hazing now.
You can get sued for like a million dollars because when little Billy goes to campus and drinks himself to death, mommy and daddy are going to blame everything else.
And if you're going to do something, if you're going to actually have an organization, why not have something other than just drinking yourself into oblivion?
Why not have something that can actually work towards something?
If you're going to have something that's secretive and underground and formal and whatever else, why not have it be something that can actually accomplish something?
Now, Very easy to say when you're a grown man and looking at this whole situation.
When you're 18, you're not really thinking about it in these terms.
But then again, I mean, I think about the types of guys who started Sigma Phi Epsilon, and I mean, these were serious, committed Christians who had very high-minded ideals, and they were thinking about these terms when they were 18.
In many ways, they were way more serious than anything I'm even talking about with this.
You know, I want to go back and mention and read real quick from this book, The Last Folk Hero, the likeness of Jeff Perlman.
So for those who don't know, Jeff Perlman was the Sports Illustrated author who wrote probably one of the most famous sports articles of the past 50 years, documenting John Rocker's rise to being one of the top Major League Baseball players in the late 1990s when he was having just this unreal run in the postseason for the Atlanta Braves.
It turns out that he made fun of New York and gays and immigrants and Basically became a pariah in the eyes of many but in the eyes of many more he became a hero a folk hero Well, he just wrote a book about the last folk hero the life and myth of Bo Jackson Bo Jackson was a black athlete who went to Auburn during the early part of the integration before You know blacks just basically took over all these schools to a point where it's kind of humorous to think that all these SEC schools are overwhelmingly white and yet they're
The rosters of the football and basketball teams are blacker than the NFL and NBA.
Well, this is what he writes about Auburn and the K-A fraternity, which you mentioned.
Here we go.
As Jackson was emerging as the king of Auburn football, the red brick Kappa Alpha fraternity house was one of the centerpieces of student life.
Born in 1865 with Robert E. Lee as its spiritual founder, KAA was known for its enormous Confederate flag that waved in the wind and its annual Old South Parade, a procession from the frat house down College Street and back, where we turn back The hands of time to the period when the South flourished.
The event was held every April, the month of Confederate Memorial Day.
The vast majority of Auburn student bodies seemed to love the Old South Parade.
The all-white KAA brothers dressed in Confederate Civil War uniforms while riding horses.
Their all-white girlfriends, meanwhile, transformed into Southern Belles by breaking out antebellum dresses with matching parasols.
It was a return to the good old plantation days, capped off, and this is not a misprint, By the dozen or so local black children the brothers of Kappa Alpha hired to, again not a misprint, dress as slaves.
Once a black student named Nedra Dodds led a petition drive to end the Old South celebration.
She approached James Everett Martin, a former KA brother and now the university president, seeking support.
Martin's response?
What's the big deal?
So, I mean, I remember, I can tell you I'm not trying to doxing myself right here, I remember seeing This chaos on on College Street before it was torn down and turned into a parking lot.
It was an old yeah, it was an old house.
It was basically what you would imagine something from the 1970s where Leonard Skinner would come up with the concept of free bird and and sweet Alabama.
I remember the Confederate flag.
I remember driving down College Street and seeing it and being like man.
I can't wait to go to this school.
And K.A. built a massive new home after they were kicked off campus at Auburn.
They built a new house with the, I think they still have a portrait of Robert E. Lee.
You're no better than a GDI, honestly.
It's a rite of passage.
It's a rite of passage.
I mean, my point is this, though.
I mean, when you think about, because I've always railed against what happened with integration and what that did to basically cuck white males all across the country into believing that.
Particularly in Southern schools, because so much of the harmless rituals, and there's a problem here, and we should get into this for the last five minutes.
The contradiction here is that so many of the things that are fun, drinking before you go to a football game, having the fraternity members align in a certain area, waving a certain flag, singing a certain song, getting pumped up to cheer for your team and whatever else.
The problem is that now these sports teams are so totally identified with blacks and The blacks, in contrast to the whites, are very clear about advancing their own ethnic agenda, their own racial agenda, which is subsidized by the school, which is promoted by the media, which is promoted by the political institutions.
And so it's not a question of, well, we're doing something so we're moving beyond race.
We're doing something so we can all just get along.
One group is advancing its own collective identity and the other group is not allowed to do it.
One group is championed and the other group is demonized.
And what makes things especially absurd is that one group, frankly, earned its way in and the other group was admitted either via affirmative action or athletic scholarships.
And particularly what you're seeing with a lot of these protests is that there's this huge infrastructure for of entire majors and departments and everything else where the only thing these people are going to do forever is just protest and basically serve as parasites on the United States forever.
And clearly, They're seizing on October 7th and they're seizing on what Israel's doing in Gaza and everything else, but you know, next year it's going to be some, and people can argue about that and we can, certainly there's a big discussion to be had about that, but next year it's going to be something else.
And the year after that, it's going to be something else.
If Trump wins and starts actually deporting illegals, you're going to see these same sorts of things.
And we're not going to be able, you know, no one's going to be talking about like Israel when that happens.
We're going to be talking about stuff that's happening in this country.
I mean, maybe that's what we needed to get to.
I mean, that alone is a reason to have that Trump get elected, because we actually need to bring the battle home, so to speak, bring the war home, as the Vietnam protesters said.
But until you deconstruct these networks, literally, not just in some philosophic sense, but you actually break up the funding, ban these majors, ban all these things, we're just going to keep doing this over and over again.
And what's so frustrating, and I think this is why I haven't, I mean, five years ago even, I would have been totally on board with the fraternities doing this and saying, you know, we need to defend these guys at all costs and everything else.
Whereas now I'm saying like, guys, don't be used because you see these Republicans who are saying, oh, we need to expel all these protesters.
We need to cancel all these people.
We need to make sure that the cops move in.
It's like, where were you guys in 2020 when this was happening to us?
For that matter, where were you like 10 years ago?
Where are you in 2017?
It's pathetic.
It's pathetic.
And there's something just so shameful that the best we can do, even in the deep South, is like wave the American flags and say something like leftist, you know, socialism sucks or leftist sucks.
Leftism sucks.
And then get expelled anyway.
I mean, it's, Down, you know, down bad.
And ultimately, I think that maybe you're right, that it is unrealistic, but you are going to have to have some sort of maybe nationalist student fraternities along the same way you have in Europe.
But I think the first step to get there, the biggest thing that people need to start doing is start looking at who's donating to your colleges.
I mean, if you were saying like, OK, well, how do you actually accomplish something at campus?
Well, I'll tell you, because I've seen this actually work.
You set up an alumni organization, you identify who the big donors are at your school, you find out who are right of center, you find out what these guys are donating to, and then you convince them to stop.
And you either get them to donate to you, to donate to other organizations, or just simply to stop donating.
And that by itself is going to accomplish more good than all the protests put together.
Because the one thing, and we've certainly learned this with what's happened at the Ivy League protests, The one thing that will actually get campuses to change their policy is withholding donations.
Oh, 100%.
100%.
Especially as we start to see the whole realignment with, again this is a conversation for another day, but with college sports, basically with Title IX and with what's happening with men playing, but then of course with NIL, with name image likeness and how these college kids now are, some of them are making substantial six figures Just to go and play at these schools.
There are some schools now.
Mr Hood some of the bigger schools in the Midwest when they're trying to bring recruits on to campus They're actually have to pay these recruits now or else they won't show up and this is all legal as part of the whole NIL name image likeness and of course a lot of people have gotten really upset because of Some of the highest paid athletes aren't necessarily the best athletes, but they're the most beautiful white girls.
There's a girl at LSU who's a gymnast.
I think Olivia Dunn is her name.
She has one point.
She has like three million Instagram followers.
And well, yeah, I mean, this is the thing.
There's a thin line now between athletes and influencers.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I mean, they're all it's all it's basically it's like you can't even call it a semi pro sport when they are being paid and compensated significantly.
They're pro-athletes.
You're a professional athlete.
If you're making money off of your avocation, that's now your vocation.
And so the whole collegiate sports thing is really going to change, I think, in the next two years because the NCAA is irrelevant.
You've got a massive push by the Big Ten and the SEC to basically create these mega-conferences.
So a lot, it's interesting because I think you're going to see a lot of the smaller schools get left behind and just drop sports altogether.
There are a number, there are a number of schools that are just straight up closing.
Um, and this is another big thing that's happening, but there's one of the major things about these protests and it, it raises certain questions that, I mean, you can see it when the way people make jokes about it on, on SNL and kind of establishment comedy things.
People are beginning to understand that the elite institutions are a joke, that you can't even trust the credential anymore.
Certainly because we can't use, because of Duke versus Greg Power, you can't use IQ tests for jobs, which by itself, I mean you reverse that and that goes a long way by itself to solving a lot of our problems.
But until you do that, Basically, the closest thing you can do is you look at the college degrees, and that's not like you remember that much of what you learned on a college campus, depending on where you went.
But if you were somebody who got into Harvard, you know that the person you're hiring was smart enough to get into Harvard.
So other than networking, the point of the degree is basically to wave it around and be like, look, I went, I was smart enough to get into Harvard.
I was able to do these things.
But, when people are getting into these schools because they wrote Black Lives Matter a hundred times, when people, right, when they're abolishing advanced placement classes, when they're abolishing standardized testing, when all of this is just so nakedly a patronage system, and when the people who are being, it's not that they're leftists, it's that they're stupid.
I mean, this is the last thing I'll say, and then I'll close it on this.
I think I might have even said it a previous time, but I think it really gets to the heart of what we're facing here.
When Marcuse was teaching on campus, he was getting hooted at by a lot of non-white students because he was talking about how we need to overcome white supremacy and blah, blah, blah.
But he was still smart enough that he knew the Western canon.
He knew Plato.
He taught about these kinds of things.
And he didn't understand the reaction.
He said, don't you want to be smart?
And they said, no.
Because it's a toxic source, so why would you need to know these things?
Well, that's where we're at now, except there are no more Marcuse's, and maybe this is an advantage.
It's precisely because you don't have these leftist professors who are familiar with the material and can sort of cloak themselves as the guardians of the Western canon.
Even as they try to subvert it at every opportunity, now you just have these affirmative action professors teaching affirmative action students, and there's probably not a person with a three-digit IQ in the whole building.
And it's increasingly clear to all of this.
We're very close to a point, I think, where you could start advocating for taxing the endowments for a lot of these big colleges, especially because, I mean, and again, this is one of the reasons to stay out of the way and don't be used by some of the people with an agenda here.
Let the leftist civil war go on.
Let these campuses destroy themselves.
Let them disembowel themselves.
You know, tanks in Harvard Yard.
No, I think the most important thing is that there, as someone who wishes we could be left alone and wish, you know, just have a clear... Let me just rephrase that.
By tanks in Harvard Yard, I don't mean sending police to crush the protests.
It's actually the opposite of what I mean.
What I meant was...
I'm the kind of guy who wishes that I could have never gone to the library where I went to school and picked up a copy of Camp of the Saints and Pass of the Great Race and Yeah.
I loved Stoddard's book and it was astonishing, Mr. Hood, to see that I was the first person to check these books out
since like the early 1980s.
And I'm like, this is insane.
I'm reading these and I'm like, this is, I'm looking around like, I wanna go out to these parties.
I can do this, I can fake it.
But it's like, I have a sense of duty.
No one else is gonna do this.
And that's the horrible thing.
And I think the most important thing of the fraternity situation we're seeing
at the UNC versus Ole Miss debate is no one's coming to save us.
And I think I think the big thing that people have learned is or people should have learned is that there's no way you can sort of cloak yourself in a different agenda and be clever.
And that's how you're going to defeat the left.
We're either going to do this openly for ourselves.
By being pro-white or we're not going to do it at all.
And if the circumstances are not right for you to do it at all, then don't throw yourself on the grenade.
And that's why there are other things you can do.
You're more used to us.
If you're employed and you're building a network and you're building money, you're building resources, you're building a family, you're doing things and you're engaging on your own terms.
Whereas if you put yourself out there confronting, you know, basically taking one side in a left on left civil war, You know, you're not you're not going to get any credit.
I mean, I think the difference between what happened at UNC versus Ole Miss really.
Establishes that.
And look, if I'm wrong, then let's see what happens in Ole Miss.
Let's see if any of these people will come out to defend this kid.
Let's see if he gets a job.
Let's see if Republicans stand up for him.
But speaking about Mississippi, I mean, as you pointed out, this is a state where you had total Republican domination and they couldn't even save their own flag.
Yeah.
And I think here's all in with this.
People want, like I said, no one's coming to save us, but we all want to see signs that there's something left to be saved.
And I believe that the United States is irredeemable.
I believe that our government hates us.
I believe that every institution, every NGO is basically doing everything they can to further facilitate and hasten the Great Replacement.
As you've mentioned, they want to bring Gazan refugees over here who hate Jews, who have a resentment against the American people, since we are the ones who funded the bombing.
We spend so much on the Israeli military.
Who are they going to hate?
They're going to come over here and there's only going to be an increase of anti-Semitism.
I mean, this isn't hard, guys.
It's not hard, but the thing is...
I actually am going to be interested to see what happens now moving forward, because we do know that, again, we're not endorsing candidates, but this election cycle is going to be very, very interesting, because President Trump came out and said two words that you're not supposed to combine in a sentence, anti-white, in a Time Magazine interview.
That word now is no longer verboten.
It's being used by normal conservatives, normal Republicans.
And I do believe we are going to see more and more confrontations like what happened at Ole Miss, especially as Trump goes and is allowed to do events all around the country, doing speaking engagements, as the left starts to mobilize more and more, as these polls start to show, hey, wait a second, this is going to be really hard to stop this train.
So as much as I say that do not go to these events, do not engage the left, the point is there are going to be people who want to go to these speeches and stuff.
I think we're going to see violence.
I think we're going to see, remember in 2016 when Trump was going to try and do an event in Chicago and they had to cancel it because they gave up.
Oh yeah.
That was one of the biggest things in the whole campaign.
Oh yeah.
And then of course, Ted Cruz attacked Trump for it.
He's like, this violence is your fault.
Everybody now on the right knows, and this is one of the great things about what happened in 2020 and since, the right actually knows the left is violent and there is this pushback against that.
And so my great hope is, The old misstep doesn't stop.
And even though I know this is going to sound paradoxical, we're encouraging kids not to, but I think there is a spirit that has been awoken and that there are people who want to go out now and confront these people just to say, F you.
And I think we are going to see more and more of this all across the country.
And the question is, Is the dox of this kid at Ole Miss and his expulsion from the fraternity by the National Fraternity, will that be enough to stop some of this and make people say, whoa, whoa, whoa, let me think about this?
Or is it already too late?
And are people, because you and I aren't on college campuses anymore.
I went to UVA recently to go see a country concert.
That was the last time I was on a college campus just to see a concert.
But I have no idea what type of chattering is going on in campuses.
But like you said, Nick Fuentes is back on Twitter.
As we're speaking, there are 35,000 people watching his little conversation he's having.
We have no idea what's influencing these people, and we have no idea what could happen on one of these campuses to once again galvanize.
Again, the UNC event, when it first hit, everyone was like, oh man, this is amazing.
And then like you said, Fox News, well, we went to defend Israel.
Again, I have no problem with that, whatever.
But the point is, when a kid show up to basically laugh at a fat obese Black woman, call her Liza, and then unfortunately
one kid makes some noises that could be considered guerrilla-esque, he becomes the number
one pariah in the country.
And is that enough, though, at this point? Or are people beginning to become battle-hardened?
And I think if there is hope, it is going to rise from people who are ready to make mistakes and
make mistakes over and over and over again because they no longer care, because they have nothing to
And I think that's the scariest thing for our elite, is white males who have nothing left to lose.
Yeah, I think a lot of people are getting to that point.