Hard Work Beats Handouts: Why Family Values Crush Liberal Excuses
Hard Work Beats Handouts: Why Family Values Crush Liberal Excuses
Hard Work Beats Handouts: Why Family Values Crush Liberal Excuses
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Okay, so... | |
Robbie, what are you trying to do to me? | |
This man don't have sense to pour piss out of a boot or a window to throw it out of. | |
What are you doing to me? | |
Well, I want to sit at the feet of someone who's actually lived and didn't go to Columbia. | |
So I just have a question for you from one redneck to another. | |
Just an observation and a quick comment. | |
Manila, your people there at the Navy Yard, you can solve that. | |
If you shoot like 20 or 30 of them, the fuckers will stop. | |
Robbie! | |
Oh my god, Robbie! | |
Lionel, let me just establish. | |
Robbie's answer to the borders is dig an alligator moat and take all the gators out of Florida and dump them there. | |
And then anyone that dares to cross, shoot them. | |
And your point is? | |
And your point, Manila, is? | |
That is Robbie's solution. | |
So now he's applying the same solution to the kids down at Navy Yard. | |
Let's just say, for example, if I was visiting you in D.C. and someone came up and they were going to rabbit punch your mama, would you want me to ventilate that bastard or let him punch your mama? | |
Well, I mean, you don't have to kill him, but I mean, you can slug him. | |
Sure. | |
Manila. | |
Okay, so this kind of feeds into what my question is. | |
And so this is an observation to kind of just kind of tie in to what you're talking about. | |
I submit that where Vivek is missing the boat, and I think this is where Ted's missing the boat too, is that the root of all this stems from the 1960s, specifically Johnson's Great Society. | |
That's when the attack on the American family started. | |
That's when they started pushing. | |
They started pushing the Bible out of church or out of school. | |
They started pushing evolution and all this other crap in. | |
And I submit to you that the government made a very concerted effort to wage war on and to destroy the nuclear family. | |
And I think one of the reasons why Asians, like your family, Manila, do so well is because y 'all come over with a mama and a daddy and your daddy disciplines you. | |
Your mama takes care of the home. | |
So right there, you get a massive advantage that Americans don't have because culturally, the American government tells women, you can go do whatever you want. | |
I will be your father. | |
I'll be the father to your kids. | |
Or if you don't want to have kids, just kill them. | |
That's okay, too. | |
Whichever way you want to do, live free, be hedonistic, do whatever you want. | |
Immigrant families don't do that. | |
Typically because they don't have, one, it's a cultural thing. | |
There's a reason why Chinese don't live in mud huts like they do in South Sahara and Africa. | |
They come from a real society, a real country that have real traditions and real expectations. | |
And I think that where we're missing the boat is, is that the American government, and it's by design, they want to destroy the American family because they want to dumb down and | |
destroy I think you have good, | |
sir. | |
In your short amount of time, summarized this and I think provided a peroration, and not a peroration, a review, a disquisition that absolutely nails what this has done. | |
Look, I am at the point in my life where I don't care why. | |
I'm sure I can, but there's all kinds of reasons why. | |
And we can do this, and we can, you know, whatever. | |
I start off with the point of for me to really respect you, I'm going to treat you just like me. | |
And I'm going to expect the same thing like forever. | |
And I'm going to tell you, here's the rule. | |
You've got to have a driver's license. | |
And if you don't have a driver's license and you get pulled over for whatever it is, you can't get a driver's license if you don't have a driver's license. | |
It's that simple. | |
And we start with that. | |
Now, I don't know why you don't have a driver's license. | |
I don't know why you find that difficult. | |
I don't know. | |
I don't care. | |
As an example. | |
And we can talk about the inequality. | |
Remember when they were talking about, how come black folks, by the way, I've got to tell you something. | |
I have no idea where this B-roll is, but I know what you're doing, Manila. | |
You're throwing this. | |
I forgot what I was saying. | |
This is just every Friday and Saturday night in Navy Yard, now that the weather's warm. | |
What is Navy Yard? | |
Is this in Maryland, Virginia? | |
No, it's here in D.C. It's right over, right when you crossed from Northern Virginia into California. | |
This area called Navy Yard. | |
It's a lot of dining. | |
Don't you have that Mayor Bowser? | |
That's right. | |
We do have Mayor Bowser. | |
This is what's happening. | |
This is from local news. | |
WUSA 9. This is their footage on the ground. | |
I'm surprised their cameraman didn't get attacked by these teenagers. | |
These are the teenagers I'm talking about. | |
Shoot them bastards. | |
Go in there and take them out. | |
People's children. | |
Listen, if you're acting like a savage, you get treated like a savage. | |
Okay, fine. | |
A baton. | |
Grab the nightstick. | |
Well, I think shooting is... | |
And I think what Robbie does, which makes sense. | |
Remember a while back, there was this feller, this young man who was in, what is it, Singapore, and he defaced something, and they were going to cane his ass. | |
Remember that? | |
Yes. | |
They did. | |
Well, yeah, but they did some modifying. | |
Anyway, he didn't really get one of those. | |
I mean, where you have flesh, shards of flesh ripped from your ass. | |
Anyway. | |
Which is the next, my next book is called Shards of Flesh Ripped from My Ass, which is, it'll be available on audiobooks coming up pretty soon. | |
Anyway, so people said. | |
I'll buy it. | |
People would say, well, you know, that's not fair. | |
And I said, excuse me, that's their law. | |
Remember when Brittany Griner went to Russia and they found one of the vape cartridges with THC and they said, excuse me, that's their law. | |
And the first thing you should do is you should say, wait a minute, that's their law. | |
Now, I don't know about you, but I think if I'm going to go to France and I said, you know, I'm going to go there for a while, but I want to find out what the rule is. | |
How long can I stay in France? | |
And do I live in France? | |
And do I have to get a green card there or whatever? | |
This is what I would do. | |
Now, people can't do that here. | |
I don't know why. | |
What am I, a schmuck? | |
Why do I say, you know, what are your laws about that? | |
You know, whatever. | |
There are many of us who have this problem with understanding why people have a hard time. | |
Just dealing with law and order. | |
Let me go back to what the initial premise of this was. | |
There is something that is called just plain old talent. | |
And the prototypical liberal, and this is a term I hated, because I started to talk radio right kind of when Rush came along, and I thought, I think this liberal stuff is being overdone. | |
But as our dear friend Ted was saying, he had an excuse for everything. | |
He had an excuse. | |
He had a reason. | |
He had a study. | |
He had something which excuses the way. | |
Translation, it's not their fault. | |
It's not their fault. | |
You don't understand it. | |
It's racist. | |
And I think in some particular, and it's not just Ted, it's other people. | |
In their strata, they love to feel sentient. | |
I feel more for you. | |
I'm empathic. | |
I feel for you. | |
I know that's bullshit. | |
Absolute nonsense. | |
I often tell Ted that he's letting his white guilt show through. | |
I got that problem. | |
I do not have that problem. | |
And I'm serious. | |
I guess theory would be the best word for it. | |
Mr. Lionel, I think it's all by design. | |
I think this is a control mechanism. | |
Let me put it to you this way. | |
Let's do this, Ted. | |
Let's say you and I went to Laos. | |
Ted? | |
I ain't Ted. | |
I'm sorry. | |
I'm sorry. | |
So far. | |
Remember that? | |
Who was it? | |
I'm not Lisa. | |
Jesse Coulter. | |
My name is Julie. | |
Remember that song? | |
I'm not Lisa. | |
I'm not Ted. | |
You know, Robbie, if you and I were to go to Laos, and we said, well, listen, I want to go in there. | |
I want to destroy this. | |
I'd say, well, I'll tell you what. | |
Give me 25 years. | |
I can't do this overnight. | |
But the first thing I'm going to do is I'm going to affect mom and daddy. | |
I'm going to affect your culture. | |
I'm going to affect your family. | |
What do you do? | |
What is your religion? | |
Well, we're Buddhists. | |
What is it? | |
What is the national religion, Manila? | |
Most people there are Buddhists. | |
I want to destroy Buddhism. | |
I want to get rid of the temples. | |
I want to make sure that we have this phony baloney fake virus. | |
And we're going to shut down. | |
And I just want to minimize. | |
I want to mock. | |
I want to destroy traditions. | |
I want whatever you do, whatever this nationalistic, nationalized tradition of love, I want to destroy it. | |
I also want to destroy gender and family and the tradition of family. | |
And I want to do everything in my power. | |
And I'm going to bring in a bunch of people and I'm going to use social media as a means of injecting this by creating the image that somehow this is cool. | |
Are you George Soros? | |
What is happening here? | |
That's exactly what I would do. | |
I would do everything that Robbie is suggesting is going on right here. | |
That's what I would do. | |
Now, I'm telling you right now, I am irreligious, but I recognize the benefit of that. | |
There is a benefit to this. | |
When somebody acknowledges You know, it's AA. | |
I've not been a... | |
Too many, what was the old joke there between a drunk and an alcoholic? | |
Drunks don't go to meetings. | |
But one of the things which they do, and I find it very interesting, is that he always says there's something higher. | |
There's something above you. | |
You are an insignificant little speck. | |
And it teaches humility. | |
And I kind of like that. | |
You are not the center of the universe. | |
You are a little proton on the ass of the elephant. | |
You are nothing. | |
Know your place. | |
Know your position. | |
Get along. | |
You are not special. | |
You're not daddy's little girl. | |
You're just like everybody else. | |
There are kids today who think they're special. | |
You don't understand they do this. | |
Have you seen these kids today? | |
Do you remember this Manila? | |
When you were growing up, did you ever see girls and, oh, I'm so worried. | |
Yeah, yeah. | |
Oh, my God. | |
Oh, my God. | |
Yes, yes. | |
You yelled at me. | |
Anyway, I could go through this. | |
But all I know is, you know, I'm here in New York City, and I don't know, Robbie, if you've ever been here before. | |
No, sir, I never have. | |
I would love to take you around. | |
I would love to say, first of all, we're going to go to some places. | |
I'm going to take you to Brooklyn to, uh, to, um, little Odessa. | |
We're going to take you on to, uh, parts, these wonderful, um, Then we're going to go to Little Korea. | |
Then we're going to go to Little Greek. | |
I'm going to show you ethnicity. | |
Hardest working people you've ever seen in your life. | |
I'm going to take you to an apartment complex in Queens where there's like 30 shoes outside of a little apartment. | |
30 people! | |
Because they all take their shoes off. | |
Oh my God. | |
I just went weird. | |
Maybe it'll come back. | |
Blurry. | |
Yeah, maybe it'll come back. | |
Okay. | |
This is what it looks like. | |
This is like porn for the myopic. | |
This is macular degeneration porn. | |
Macular degenerates. | |
Hey, you're back. | |
How about, as I call it, immaculate degeneration? | |
That's what I call it right there. | |
So aside from this, there are these wonderful, wonderful places. | |
These enclaves. | |
And what do they all have? | |
Tradition. | |
And family. | |
And language. | |
And food. | |
And music. | |
It's the most beautiful thing in the world. | |
And let me ask you this, Robbie, Manila. | |
What's our culture? | |
What's the American culture? | |
What's our tradition? | |
Don't have one anymore. | |
No, I was talking to Ted Manila. | |
Sorry about that. | |
I was talking to Ted Manila, I don't know, probably a week ago now. | |
They had me on the show. | |
Talk about Southern culture. | |
What is it that makes somebody an American? | |
What is an American? | |
Nowadays, I couldn't tell you. | |
Back in my granddaddy's day, he could tell you, you worship God, you take care of your family, you serve your nation, and that's an American. | |
You have the freedom to make your own mistakes. | |
You live your life to the best of your ability, and the government leaves you to hell alone. | |
And that's it. | |
Nowadays, We don't have that anymore. | |
You know, like you just said, everybody's a victim. | |
And to have a permanent victim class, you've got to have people who are uneducated. | |
You've got to have people who feel like everyone else has an unfair advantage. | |
And you sure as hell can't take any responsibility for anything that you've done yourself. | |
My son, when he went into middle school, I gave him a blank piece of paper. | |
And I said, boy, that's everything in this life that you're entitled to. | |
And he said, there's nothing there. | |
I said, that's correct. | |
What you put on that paper is what you earn. | |
And it's a boring concept. | |
But, you know, but the thing about it, though, is that I don't know of anything. | |
Bless his heart. | |
As we say this out, bless his heart. | |
You know how this is. | |
You can say anything you want to say, that no good son of a bitch, two time and four, but bless his heart. | |
And somehow that just absolves, it absorbs the grease of my exhortation. | |
But when you went, if you go to a doctor, they tell you, Young lady, you've had your share. | |
You never had one doctor who said, oh, it's not your fault. | |
No, no, no. | |
This is normal. | |
No, no, no. | |
Fix this. | |
Address this. | |
I'm not here to absolve my... | |
No, it's not your family. | |
No, you don't have a predisposition, some iron. | |
No, no, no, no. | |
You say, excuse me. | |
I don't care whose fault it is. | |
Fix it. | |
I don't care about blame or guilt. | |
Fix it. | |
Fix it. | |
My breast cancer. | |
I don't care. | |
Just fix it. | |
My mother was a nurse. | |
And she always believed that whatever happened, I got a fever. | |
That's good. | |
See, that's good because that burns, that kills. | |
I got diarrhea. | |
That's good. | |
Because that gets rid of the, I'm throwing up. | |
That's good. | |
Well, excuse me. | |
Help me. | |
Now you're telling me, not only is it okay, fix this. | |
So here's what I want to tell people. | |
You know, Rob, you'll love this one. | |
If ever you get a chance, just go on YouTube and put in, Karen's getting arrested. | |
And watch what happens today. | |
Anybody who wants to be a police officer, watch what people say. | |
First of all, their phone, they will not let go of their phone. | |
They'll say, excuse me, you don't stop me. | |
Don't put your hands on me. | |
Excuse me, I didn't do anything. | |
I'm going. | |
I don't like this. | |
Let me talk to your supervisor. | |
I can't breathe. | |
That's my favorite. | |
You know that George Floyd, however, as a friend of mine who's a physician, says, you know how you can tell he could breathe? | |
Because you could hear him say, I can't breathe. | |
People who can't breathe, you can't understand what they're saying. | |
Well, he is five years sober now, too. | |
That was an old. | |
Only, only, only. | |
Now, this Derek Chauvin, this guy was so railroaded. | |
Oh, by the way, if you want to see a case of some people being really hurt by this, don't you? | |
Who is that? | |
Chauvin? | |
Derek Chauvin's wife. | |
His wife was Lao. | |
She was Mon Lao. | |
I'm sorry. | |
I thought you said loud. | |
I'm sorry. | |
Excuse me. | |
No, no, no. | |
She was Lao-American. | |
She left him shortly after the conviction. | |
And the other, the Asian police officer involved was her brother. | |
Well, there you go. | |
You know how them Lao people are. | |
They get crazy. | |
Anyway, but this is a, we live in a world. | |
That is absolutely, it has been for the longest time. | |
And see, remember, you understand something, and I've been doing this for a long time in terms of talk radio. | |
If you say anything, by the way, get my newsletter today that went out. | |
I hope you saw it. | |
It's about how race is who we are. | |
We love to excuse everything because of race. | |
Race is, it's, it's, but it's always, it's not white, it's black. | |
And by the way, you do know, Robbie, that you have no identity as a white male. | |
Or a European male? | |
Oh, sure I do. | |
Oh, I absolutely do. | |
I'm a racist. | |
I'm the boogeyman. | |
I'm the bigot. | |
I am the cause of all of your problems. | |
Robbie gets that on the show. | |
If you're some river swimmer, come across the river and you get deported, that's my fault. | |
I'm serious. | |
It is all my fault. | |
Matter of fact, my wife, if you talk to my wife on the phone, she sounds bad. | |
Like, you have no idea. | |
Be careful. | |
Be careful. | |
Don't care. | |
When she was growing up going through school, she used to get beat up because, oh, you're acting white. | |
Oh, you sound white. | |
Now, how many boys did you screw today? | |
And she's like, I haven't screwed anybody. | |
That's the so-called black culture. | |
I'm telling you, this crap manila is by design. | |
Before the Great Society of the 1960s, The marriage rate among black Americans was higher than it was with whites. | |
Blacks earned more. | |
Poor blacks earned more than poor whites did. | |
Welfare. | |
Welfare and all of that stuff. | |
The welfare state did what slavery couldn't do. | |
It did what Jim Crow couldn't do. | |
It succeeded in destroying the family. | |
It's by design. | |
Daniel Patrick Moynihan's study about, that famous study he did, it was commissioned by, I think it was when he worked with Nixon. | |
And they drummed him out. | |
He said basically that black society, and this is a guy who was raised where I am right now in Hell's Kitchen. | |
He was so poor, his family, they had to break into homes to try to live to beat the rent. | |
I mean, he came from impoverished, like you can't believe. | |
And he said that welfare has destroyed the black family. | |
And ran him out of town. | |
Ran him out of town. | |
Robbie, do you remember years ago? | |
Are you born in Florida? | |
Yes, sir. | |
I was born in Florida. | |
I moved out to Montana back in 2010. | |
So you're a cracker. | |
And a cracker is somebody who is a native. | |
I'm a second generation cracker. | |
Florida cracker. | |
You're born in Florida. | |
So that was a place we had in Tampa years ago called Morrison's Cafeteria. | |
I don't know if you had them up there. | |
This was a cafeteria. | |
And it was manned by an ex-Pullman porter black gentleman who left the porter and they became waiters at a cafeteria. | |
Let me explain to you the con behind that. | |
There are no waiters at a cafeteria. | |
He basically picked a tray up, walked two feet, dropped them down, and he gave them $20. | |
It was the biggest con in the world. | |
But they were always very, hello, Mr. Robby, Ms. Manila, how are you? | |
And they were like, hello, Henry. | |
And he knew the grandkids of the people that came. | |
And it was a tradition. | |
And these black gentlemen made a fortune! | |
And they were observed and believed by a lot of white folks to be subservient, servile, obsequious. | |
What's all this step and fetch it? | |
Yes, sir, Mr. Bob. | |
Made a fortune. | |
Okay, one day they came in there and said, you know what? | |
We have to shut this down. | |
We just can't do this anymore. | |
Why? | |
Because it looks terrible. | |
What looks terrible? | |
Black men serving you with white jackets. | |
What are you talking about? | |
This was our profession. | |
And it started to change. | |
And little by little, the liberal got it, stuck his nose under the tent, you know, and said, we're going to fix this for you because you don't realize that you're being. | |
And the next thing you know. | |
And the message became among Black America, not all, but a lot, it's not your fault. | |
You don't understand it. | |
You never had a chance. | |
You're never given a chance. | |
And whatever happens to you, it's a racist situation. | |
It's a racist, it's, and I have, believe me, I have been, A prosecutor in 13th Judicial Circuit out of Hillsborough County. | |
And I have seen this. | |
And I'm thinking, I don't understand what's going on. | |
Little things, little things, little things about I don't I thought, this is terrible. | |
Well, guess what? | |
Now it's kids. | |
Kids can't do that. | |
Remember when I was trying to explain to Ted, I said, why can't somebody write five sentences about what you do? | |
And that's all. | |
And he had every excuse in the world. | |
He had every excuse. | |
It wasn't their fault. | |
It's like, you're stupid. | |
You get out of here. | |
I mean, bless his heart, he's not here. | |
But I thought that used to be the old thing. | |
There used to be this terrible reference in the South called CPT, color people time. | |
We all know that. | |
Well, that's my wife. | |
My wife will tell you, when we first moved here to Montana, she was like, well, I ran on CPT. | |
I said, not anymore. | |
You're in Montana. | |
You're in Whiteyville. | |
You're going to be early. | |
If you're on time, you're late. | |
That's your CPT. | |
Right. | |
Well, that now is part of this new, younger generation where it says, I don't have to abide by this. | |
I don't have this. | |
But let's go a step further. | |
I have a relative who teaches fourth grade. | |
You know, Robbie, when we were kids, I'm older than you, but pretty much the same thing. | |
We had this thing where we would take this thing called a ball, and we would throw it. | |
And when I took this ball, I said, okay, this is spherical. | |
And my brain's going, and it weighs this. | |
So for me to throw it, I have to gauge the, and next thing you know, I'm doing distance and I'm throwing it. | |
And my brain is spherical. | |
Climbing trees were the greatest thing in the world because remember, it's not climbing the trees, it's coming down from the tree. | |
That's the problem. | |
It's not climbing up. | |
And then you rode a bike and we didn't have a helmet and we could fall down and my mother would give me Bactine. | |
I could have a femur poking out of my leg. | |
I'm hurt. | |
Bactine, go outside. | |
We drank from hoses and we came home when it was dark. | |
And the reason why is our parents didn't want to see us. | |
Get out. | |
Go play. | |
Did you ever go Baja riding? | |
Pardon me? | |
Did you ever go Baja riding? | |
What is that? | |
Baja riding is when y 'all go get in the truck. | |
Now, there's two ways you can do it. | |
One way, if you just have a bunch of guys just get in the cab with the truck and just go into the piney woods and go through the biggest mud holes that you can find and the goal is to not get stuck and let the water and the mud just come on in. | |
Now, if you have girls with you, you put them in the bed of the truck and try to bounce them out. | |
Bounce them out? | |
Try to bounce them out of the truck, out of the back of the truck. | |
Yes. | |
Have you heard this fellow named James Gregory? | |
He's a comedian. | |
Please, please, as soon as we're done, he passed away. | |
But he said, you know what I want to know? | |
He said, these people, the reason I bring hurricanes to their sides, people on the West Coast couldn't do it. | |
Hell, they go crazy over mudslides. | |
It's mud! | |
We get in a truck and drive through it, and they can't handle mud. | |
But the best thing he did was he said, I want to meet these people who figure that they have found the miracle to plywood. | |
Because whenever there's a hurricane coming, we just put plywood on it. | |
Anyway, I want to send you something about things we learned in the South because I loved it about fried green tomatoes and all that jazz. | |
And there was this wonderful sensibility. | |
Do you know that kids today love this stuff? | |
Do you know what the number one show for kids on cable is? | |
Friends. | |
People say, do you have friends? | |
Because kids don't have friends. | |
They love to watch The Sopranos. | |
Why? | |
Because they cuss and they're racially insensitive and politically incorrect and they kill and they murder. | |
They've never seen anything like that. | |
Kids really want to see this. | |
Tell us what this was like. | |
What was dating like? | |
What's a love letter? | |
What is courting? | |
What does this mean? | |
Wasn't it nice to know what a woman was. | |
I mean, just the most basic things. | |
We can't even decide nowadays what the hell a woman is, what bathroom to go into. | |
I mean, it's crazy. | |
If you have extra plumbing, you're a dude. | |
If your plumbing's on the inside, you're a girl. | |
It's pretty common, but we can't even agree on that. | |
I never, I never. | |
Much less, forget about agreeing with what an American is. | |
If you can't even agree, if you have a schlong, if you're a guy, I mean, forget it. | |
You know, I have a, there's some friends of ours, in fact, in 1969, there was a group of folks here in New York, the Stonewall. | |
Gay fellers. | |
And what they did was they decided that they've had enough of this shit. | |
That in 1969, there was a place called the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street. | |
And it was the Genovese crime family that said, you can come on in here. | |
We're going to charge you extra for this lousy food. | |
But they just wanted to be left alone. | |
One night, they said, that's enough of this stuff. | |
The police came in and rousted them. | |
And they said, we've had enough. | |
And they actually had a riot. | |
And they said, you don't understand what happened. | |
The police retreated. | |
They thought we were just a bunch of faggots. | |
Well, guess what? | |
Those guys were tough. | |
And the New York City police retreated. | |
Next day was the beginning of the gay pride parade. | |
Okay, cut to the chase. | |
I've got a friend of mine who I swear to God, I don't know how big you are. | |
You look like a big feller. | |
But this guy I know could take us on. | |
And he wears like golemé. | |
He looks like, remember Waylon Flowers and Madame? | |
He looks like Madame. | |
He looks like Bea Arthur. | |
And he talks like this. | |
And he's about 6 '2". | |
And he said, let me tell you something. | |
And it's so funny. | |
He loses the affectation when he's here. | |
He goes, let me tell you something. | |
All of a sudden he goes, oh. | |
He said, I don't know what this T bullshit is. | |
We were LGBTs. | |
He says, where's hetero? | |
He said, we didn't. | |
He said, I don't know any trans. | |
I knew people who dressed up. | |
He said, I fancy a nice, you know, gold lame in a wig. | |
But I'm a man. | |
I'm a gay man. | |
And the T's pushed out the gays. | |
So guess who came along? | |
Guess who came along? | |
Who was it? | |
Donald Trump. | |
Yay! | |
And all of a sudden, they loved him. | |
The most pro-gay president in history. | |
His words come on. | |
Yes. | |
The Amish. | |
And the black folks in Brooklyn and the barbershop folks. | |
They loved this guy. | |
And they have nothing. | |
He's a billionaire, but he said they recognize actual legitimacy. | |
And the number of gay folks. | |
Let me tell you something. | |
Believe it or not, you know who was really conservative? | |
Black folks. | |
There was this prop made in California years ago. | |
Remember this about gay marriage? | |
And they went, and the Supreme Court in 1967, in a case called Loving Against Virginia, And you'll enjoy this, this decriminalized anti-miscegenation, or excuse me, miscegenation, which was ridiculous. | |
So anyway, to make a long story short, they did this property, and they went to black folks, and they said, well, you should be in favor of marriage, gay marriage. | |
They said, what? | |
You should be in favor of gay marriage. | |
What do you mean? | |
Well, you know, you had anti-miscegenation. | |
Excuse me, do you think being gay is the same as being black? | |
They said, what are you talking about? | |
And they summarily, Hands down, rejected it! | |
Because black folks are as, because they still believe in some tradition, the AME Church, and tradition, and real serious values, they're not what you think they are. | |
They are not what you think. | |
It's not all about ditty. | |
So what I'm trying to say is, the people, bless his heart, Ted, this is a, say goodbye to these folks. | |
He is going to be a vestige. | |
You're seeing the last throws of a guy. | |
And a mindset that was considered popular, that was considered laudable. | |
Not anymore. | |
Well, we really believe it, and I believe in the Constitution. | |
Everybody's equal. | |
Everybody's equal. | |
That's it. | |
I treat you equal. | |
But nobody's special. | |
That's the thing. | |
And we will go through a little, you know, for example, there are some times I have no problem with extending accommodations for people who are physically incapable. | |
I'm no problem with that. | |
I'm not hurtful. | |
But I do not, there is no such thing as an excuse. | |
And the worst thing I can do is treat you with equality. | |
And by the way, separate, enjoy our differences. | |
Equity. | |
Equity. | |
Equity is good. | |
Equity, the other E. Equality can be good. | |
Equity is that finishing the result. | |
It's that last thing. | |
And let me tell you something. | |
bottom line is simply this. | |
I hope that the, um, Because if you think these aren't lefties, these aren't progressives, these are radical nihilists or whoever they are. | |
Liberals. | |
They're worse than that. | |
Liberals kind of used to be good. | |
When I was in the 60s and I was a kid, we believed in anti-war and civil rights. | |
I don't know where those folks went. | |
I don't know who these people are. | |
They're on my side now. | |
They're your MAGA types now. | |
And you know what? | |
Robbie, you bring up a good point. | |
This is important. | |
This is critical. | |
The people who voted for Trump are not Republicans. | |
The Republican Party, you can have them. | |
I have no idea who they are. | |
They do nothing for me. | |
I'm sorry. | |
Charlie Kirk and all these folks. | |
I don't care what they do. | |
They're such grifters, ain't they? | |
Charlie Kirk, he's the biggest Zionist bitch I've ever seen. | |
Maybe second to Ben Shapiro. | |
At least with Shapiro, he tells you what he is. | |
He's a Jew. | |
Charlie Kirk, I don't know what the hell he is. | |
I mean, he sure is telling America first. | |
Trump got people like me to vote for him, and I'm not a Republican. | |
I thought you had your middle finger just now out there. | |
I saw you going like this. | |
I'm thinking, what is she doing? | |
I thought it was like this. | |
That was me. | |
That was me. | |
I voted for Donald Trump, and I'm not a Republican. | |
Let me tell you a couple of things as far as foreign affairs go and all this. | |
I think that the biggest con is this Ukrainian stuff. | |
Vladimir Putin, absolutely 100% correct when he said, you are not going to put a NATO country on my border, just like in 1962, you didn't allow Russia to put nuclear warheads in Cuba 90 miles away. | |
So I'm over here. | |
Right. | |
I'm not going to get into AIPAC and all this, but I'll be goddamned if I'm going to kick somebody out of Columbia University because they said something that is anti-Israel. | |
When you could say something that's anti-American and get away with it? | |
Yeah. | |
What? | |
And that's the big split in MAGA right now. | |
That is the big split. | |
Anti-Semitism, I have yet. | |
I know they're somewhere. | |
But somebody who actually says, I am against Judaism? | |
I hate Jews! | |
I hate Jews! | |
This is about Israel. | |
Never seen one. | |
What you talked about, Zionism, this is another issue here. | |
And how dare you, how dare you have somebody basically called out because they're quote, anti-Semitic, but you could be anti-American? | |
It's your right to be anti-anything you want! | |
It's up to you. | |
Just don't do anything. | |
Don't hurt anybody. | |
It's just like hate crime. | |
Hate crimes drive me crazy because that's taking a cognizable law, let's say battery or arson, and aggravating the situation by involving a law or something which is constitutionally protected, namely speech, hate. | |
You can hate anybody you want. | |
But when the two minics... | |
What does that mean? | |
Show me what a love crime is. | |
But the thing, what he said was, he probably would say, let's assume he said, for the sake of argument, my goal was not to say that I hate Jews or hate Israel, but I am pro-Palestinian. | |
And this is the way I show this. | |
What? | |
What does that mean? | |
Well, if I show that I'm pro something, it's not always, and I don't even involve myself with it because this has been, It has been so hijacked. | |
And you'll know this, Manila and Robbie, when MSDNC and Fox agree on a subject, there's something wrong there. | |
There's something very, very wrong. | |
Did you see what happened? | |
In any event, my friends, I hate to do this, but I've got to go with it. | |
We took too much of your time. | |
I meant to keep you only for an hour and we kept this going because I haven't picked your brain in a long time. | |
This man is a gem. | |
Robbie is a gem. | |
You, sir, you should have your own. | |
I'm serious. | |
Do you do any private stuff, Robbie, yourself? | |
Yes, sir. | |
Do we ever talk about that or is that verboten? | |
Is that part of the contract? | |
Well, let me know. | |
What I'm saying is you are Absolutely, positively perfect for, I think, a new, not a new, the resurrection of an old America, of a traditional America. | |
I'm sorry. | |
There's going to be a backlash. | |
There's going to be a reckoning and a backlash. | |
The elections we're seeing in Europe reflects that. | |
It is a rejection of neoliberalism. | |
And that's where I am. | |
And you've got to be blind not to see it. | |
Well, you know, I hope we get to the point. | |
You know, I was explaining today, like I said, I do radio and the person that I thought, I still think the greatest voice I heard, I don't know how long ago, was Alex Jones. | |
I never heard anything like that in my life. | |
Never heard anything like that. | |
And this guy, basically, they tried to shelve him because he said some terrible things about Sandy Hook. | |
And I don't want to get through that again. | |
I'm going to go through that. | |
But do you know what it's like for somebody to basically be, be prosecuted because you said something where you defrayed. | |
Let's say you didn't believe in the moon land. | |
Let's say there was a time where we didn't believe in the Gulf of Tonkin, which turned out to be a false flag. | |
Let's say you don't believe in a lot of things. | |
And you say that. | |
I don't believe the land on the moon. | |
I don't believe in 9-11. | |
What have you? | |
Do you know what it is to be sued because you dared to reject a... | |
I don't think anybody realizes how dangerous that is. | |
But because it's Alex Jones, nobody cared. | |
They came after him. | |
And I'm thinking, I told all my friends in talk radio, you are idiots. | |
Don't you see what they're doing to him? | |
They're going to get you next. | |
It's that simple. | |
We always revise history. | |
We're always saying, that's not what happened. | |
That's not what happened. | |
And nobody gets it. | |
Mr. Lionel, I work for a hospital here in Montana, and I know it's a matter of time until I get doxxed and get fired from my job. | |
It's going to happen. | |
For your opinion. | |
I mean, that's where we are in the world, but you know what? | |
Robbie is fearless, and he's going to keep talking. | |
We do. | |
Lionel do. | |
Look at what they're saying now about COVID that they said before, which about hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin, and now it's okay. | |
And I'll tell you what, unless, there's one thing about this president that you've got to understand. | |
He's got to, I need a perp walk. | |
I need somebody behind bars, cracking rocks upstate. | |
And three state judges, that's not what I'm talking about. | |
You've got Fauci, and you've got, you've got, oh, Mayorkas and other people who deserve to be, including this Biden administration, who need to be behind bars. | |
Because the auto pen is void. | |
Those pre-pardons are void. | |
That auto-pen does not count. | |
The Epstein thing is bigger. | |
The Epstein thing is bigger, and here's why. | |
I know you've got to go, so I'll just say this and I'll shut up. | |
How can you charge this guy for sex trafficking but not have any clients that have been trafficked to? | |
That makes zero sense. | |
How can Dan Bongino say at first there was a murder? | |
This was, I believe, only in French. | |
I believe in forensic evidence. | |
And Michael Biden said specifically in the case of Epstein, he had a fractured hyoid bone, fractured thyroid conglomerate, particular hemorrhaging, all of the signs and all of the indicia of homicide. | |
That's simple. | |
I'm not making it up. | |
That's the way it is. | |
And so Bungino says it was a murder. | |
Then he says, I've looked at this. | |
I was a public defender. | |
It was a suicide. | |
And then he said, and I'm going to show you now. | |
They're bringing it up again. | |
Even Pam Bondi realized, I'm going to back off of this one. | |
And he said, I'm going to show you a film. | |
Excuse me, you showed me. | |
You said there was no film. | |
You said the two people fell asleep. | |
He doesn't even know what the hell he's talking about. | |
The cameras went out. | |
And he happened to be in the cell with a guy who was there facing the death penalty. | |
It was an ex-cop for killing like four people who was a bodybuilder who basically choked them out once before. | |
I mean, look, you don't need Quincy for this. | |
This is not tough. | |
But yet, we're being red-herringed or black-pilled or whatever this is, hopium or memory hole, whatever your particular phrase is. | |
This is nonsense. | |
And with that, dear friend, Manila, my dear friend, many, many years. | |
I love you. | |
Many, many years. | |
I love you and I love your family and I love everybody else. | |
And now, Robbie, you're my new best friend. | |
You know that? | |
You are my new best friend. | |
Mr. Lionel, I've watched you for years and been able to talk to you. | |
It has been an absolute honor. | |
I appreciate you. | |
Well, thank you, sir. | |
And I'm going to send you some good stuff, too. | |
I've got your address. | |
Let's do it again, friend, shall we? | |
And by the way, follow me on YouTube at Lionel Nation. | |
And I thank you, sir. | |
At Lionel Nation. | |
I'll put that back up there. | |
It's been up there this whole time. | |
Right there. | |
at Lionel Nation right there on... | |
And I'm Putin Bot. | |
That is me. | |
I am Putin Bot. | |
Putin Bot. | |
There's a story behind that. | |
He'll inbox you. | |
Let's go to Putin Bot, Texas. | |
Waylon and Willie and the boys. | |
Do it. | |
With that, thank you, gentlemen. | |
It's been a pleasure. | |
Adios, amigos. |