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unidentified
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*music* *music* *music* *music* | |
*music* *music* *music* | ||
Wall. Wall. | ||
Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Wall. Wall. Wall. Wall. | ||
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Wall. Wall. | ||
Wall. | ||
Wall. | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. America first. | ||
America first. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you today. | ||
Fortunately, with some better news. | ||
A little bit more of a low-key show tonight. | ||
I know yesterday was a little bit heavy. | ||
A little bit depressing, right? | ||
It wasn't exactly a great day. | ||
Today was a slower news day. | ||
I didn't want to say anything about it. | ||
You know, because yesterday was a slow news day and I tweet out, you know, it's kind of a bummer that nothing's happening and then a cathedral bursts into flames. | ||
So today I was tempted. | ||
I was like, should I put something out there? | ||
Should I retweet it? | ||
Should I tweet out? | ||
Uh-oh, slow news day. | ||
I said, better not. | ||
I said, you know, better spare the great religious holy sites and places of worship of the world and just, you know, Give it a break for today. | ||
But nevertheless, we do have a big show. | ||
There's a lot to discuss. | ||
We'll be going over some of the aftermath. | ||
Of course, if you remember the Notre Dame Cathedral. | ||
And who can forget? | ||
It's on everybody's mind. | ||
We'll be discussing a little bit of the aftermath, what is planned next. | ||
The President of France, Macron, saying that he vows the cathedral will be rebuilt within five years. | ||
Estimates say that people could be back in there within three years. | ||
And some of the philanthropic efforts to raise money for the rebuilding. | ||
We'll talk about that. | ||
We will also be talking about, in the feature of our show tonight, we'll be talking about a new Emerson poll about the Democratic presidential primary. | ||
We've got the freshest national numbers for where people are and also some fresh numbers about matchups with the president, Donald Trump, who is The leader in fundraising in and polling so far. | ||
So and we'll talk about why that is. | ||
And it should be a pretty good show. | ||
We're looking at that as well as some fundraising numbers from Axios. | ||
We have now compiled all the first quarter fundraising numbers, which is actually premature. | ||
We'll be looking at all that tonight. | ||
We've got a whiteboard, which I know it's been a long time since we had a whiteboard. | ||
People miss the whiteboard. | ||
I don't know why people love it so much. | ||
It just goes to show what great sense I have that I had the idea, you know, maybe we should have a whiteboard. | ||
People like the visualizations. | ||
We're a very visual culture. | ||
So we do have a proper whiteboard for you to lay out all those facts, figures, names, and everything. | ||
And it should be fun! | ||
Should be a great show. | ||
I'm in a great mood, I have to tell you. | ||
I went out today, got myself a Big Mac. | ||
It's been a while. | ||
Been a while since I had one of those fellas. | ||
One of those little nibbas. | ||
A Big Mac. | ||
It's actually a Big Nibba. | ||
A Big Nibba Special. | ||
That's what I call it when I go. | ||
I pull up to the drive-thru. | ||
Can I get the Big Nibba Special? | ||
They're like, oh he wants a Big Mac and a hamburger with extra ketchup and no mustard. | ||
And they're like, let's do it. | ||
So I had a Big Mac. | ||
It was 70 degrees, sunny, finally. | ||
You know, if you're in the Chicagoland area, you know the weather's been a little bit volatile lately. | ||
Two days ago, snow on the ground. | ||
Today, 76 degrees, sunny. | ||
So I'm driving around. | ||
I'm eating my Big Mac. | ||
I got a little ice cream. | ||
So it's been a pretty good day. | ||
And I have to tell you, some of my thoughts while I'm driving around, I really have been sort of trending in this direction lately. | ||
And this is just a little words of wisdom from your friend and host of the show before we get into the current events. | ||
Because it's been sort of a tough week. | ||
And I got to tell you, after the Notre Dame thing, people are like, really feel like it's the aftermath of 9-11. | ||
Like this cathedral... | ||
is on fire for whatever reason and people are acting like there has to be action like we haven't even ascertained any of the details yet but anyway it's a dark week but i have to tell you i'm driving around today and it's the weather's perfect it's beautiful there's a nice little breeze the sun's out i'm having my big mac and i really got to thinking about life and you know the funny thing about life is it's basically all the same for the most part | ||
You know, because I feel like you look at people who have more money, or people who have less money, you look at people who have, you know, nice things, or bad things, or they're older, or younger, or, you know, whatever. | ||
Live over here, live over there. | ||
But I really thought about it, and I realized it's all basically the same. | ||
At the end of the day, everybody just goes to bed, you know? | ||
At the end of the day, everybody's gotta eat three meals a day, or they gotta travel, you know, they gotta commute, or whatever. | ||
Most of life is just a lot of waiting around, doing kind of menial things, brushing your teeth, taking a shower. | ||
And that's for everybody. | ||
And I guess what changes based on class or other things is just details, you know, or maybe leisure. | ||
But I think that's sort of the, that's the sort of like middle-of-the-road pill that we're trying to take. | ||
I know that's not as clean and catchy as black-and-white pill, but as we look at the country these days, and it can get a little bit depressing or pessimistic, I think you have to realize that Basically, at a fundamental level, nothing really is gonna change. | ||
You know, I guess in the macro sense, there are large trends that are happening, and they're sort of trending in the wrong direction. | ||
Things are not really going so well. | ||
But, you know, really, I think the fundamental stuff of life is kind of constant. | ||
And don't get me wrong, it's not like there's not pain and suffering that will Take place regardless, but it just feels like to me. | ||
I've gotten to a certain place where I'm not really Not really white pilled or black filled. | ||
Maybe that's the ultimate white pill is realizing It's just kind of life. | ||
You know, you just gotta take it a day at a time, right? | ||
So just some of my thoughts. | ||
Is that a little too? | ||
Is that a little too existential for this kind of a show? | ||
Are you just expecting me to bully super chatters? | ||
Are you just what do you own me? | ||
You think you run the show now? | ||
I'm just giving you my thoughts. | ||
All right? | ||
So that's what I'm thinking these days, but with that out of the way, we are going to move into some more substantive things here, some of the news, and I do want to sort of wrap up, give a little bit of closure to the Notre Dame thing before we move into the White Board, the Democratic primary, and just tell you about what's going on. | ||
So now the Parisian police have said they've ruled out that this was arson. | ||
Which, if you're willing to believe everything the government tells you, you're like, okay, case closed. | ||
It's not arson. | ||
They rule about arson. | ||
Okay, I guess it was just an accident. | ||
They say it was a renovation-related accident. | ||
Which, now I am actually less certain that it was an accident than I was yesterday. | ||
Because yesterday I said there's no evidence that there was foul play or was an attack or anything like that. | ||
But that they rule out within how many hours The fire was put out, what, last night? | ||
This morning? | ||
They say we've ruled out arson? | ||
I've heard that with regular homes of normal people, it takes a month to rule out arson, once they investigate a house burning down or something like that. | ||
You've got this mega cathedral, it's a massive fire, the roof caves in, And within, what, 12 hours, you know for a fact it's not arson, it's not terrorism, it's not some other kind of motivation. | ||
Now I buy it a little bit less. | ||
So, I doubt we'll ever know the full story, all the facts. | ||
And you know why that is? | ||
Because if it was foul play, if it was arson, either on the part of left-wing activists or agitators, whatever, or it's Muslims, The French police and the French government knows they could never tell the public that. | ||
Because if it was either of those groups, the country would turn upside down and you'd have Marine Le Pen as the next president. | ||
Right? | ||
And everybody knows that. | ||
Especially with the Yellow Vest protests going on already. | ||
So, I doubt we'll ever know the facts on this. | ||
And not only would they never tell you if it was an attack, but now instead they have to sort of shut that down and stifle that because, conversely, if it was just some freak accident, now Macron gets to be the Jupiterian leader who rebuilds the cathedral and he gets to be the unifying national leader. | ||
He'll take advantage of the crisis, in short. | ||
So that part is a little bit unfortunate. | ||
I guess that's really the only black pill that is the result of this, well besides the fire itself, that is the result of the fires. | ||
We probably won't know what happened and there's a strong possibility it was foul play. | ||
Maybe it was an accident. | ||
I don't think we can really be sure unless we were there ourselves at this point. | ||
So So they say arson is ruled out. | ||
The good news is is that they looked at the damage and actually it wasn't all that extensive. | ||
They say that there was this critical half-hour period during the fighting of the fire where it really made a difference and they were able to stop like the worst damage from happening. | ||
You know, they were reporting yesterday afternoon that like the whole structure would be gone. | ||
They were saying that nothing would remain. | ||
The whole thing would basically just be leveled, burnt to the ground. | ||
And they say that if it wasn't for that critical half hour during this firefighting, that it wouldn't have been saved. | ||
But now, obviously, the two bell towers have been salvaged. | ||
The main structure has been salvaged. | ||
I guess if you look at the materials used, they say that the actual roof that burnt was something that was restored in like the 18th and 19th century. | ||
And the real authentic roof from medieval times from the 14th and 13th century remains because it was made out of different material. | ||
And I don't know all the exact details about this, but they say that basically all of the old structure dating back to the original cathedral remains. | ||
Including two of the three stained glass windows. | ||
People are very concerned about these are some of the most famous and beautiful stained glass windows in the world. | ||
They have three of them, three very large, they call them rose windows. | ||
One of them was destroyed. | ||
Again, I guess this was something that was largely restored in the last two centuries. | ||
But the original ones remain two of them. | ||
They retained the crown of thorns, which we talked about yesterday. | ||
They were able to save that. | ||
A lot of the sculptures that were in the spire were taken out and saved. | ||
A lot of other artifacts were able to be salvaged. | ||
So really the damage, in light of what we saw yesterday, which was pretty traumatic and jarring to watch the fire. | ||
And you saw the whole roof on firing. | ||
I think there was an aerial photograph that was taken. | ||
For what we saw yesterday, it seems like the damage was relatively minimal. | ||
Not to say that it wasn't a big loss and it's going to take a lot of repairs and it'll take a lot of time for it to get back to where it was, but All things considered, not the end of the world, right? | ||
So it looks like a lot has been salvaged, a lot has been saved. | ||
On top of that, we now have a figure here that philanthropists from various countries, a lot of them from France, a lot of them European, from other places, have pledged $452 million for the rebuilding of the cathedral in total. | ||
So you had a few French billionaire families, a few organizations, they all stepped up and contributed enough money that you have almost half a billion dollars to rebuild the cathedral, which is great. | ||
Macron has vowed that the cathedral be back within five years, and people have estimated that it could take as little as three before people are back inside. | ||
So it looks like, at the end of the day, it wasn't that bad. | ||
You know, not to say that it wasn't, like I said, a very traumatic, jarring experience, but it does look like the artwork has been salvaged, the structure remains, the funds are there, there is a will to rebuild, so it looks like there is a silver lining here. | ||
It looks like... | ||
you know, it'll end basically on a positive note. | ||
Not a great thing that you have a fire, but like I said, all things considered, not so bad. | ||
So I am just curious though, because a lot of people do look at this and seeing the reaction today persist from yesterday, which is like this was, there really is this perception that it was an attack, which I understand why people might speculate that it could have which I understand why people might speculate that it could have possibly been an attack, but people are treating this like, no, a Muslim set this cathedral on fire, which I just can't wrap my head around that | ||
I mean, like I said, yeah, it's a possibility and maybe a strong possibility and maybe believe enough circumstantial evidence is there, but I just, I don't understand. | ||
I see all day on the timeline, well we better stop this from happening again. | ||
I hope the French wake up and learn what's happening. | ||
It's like, I don't know, do you, just like... | ||
Car accidents, random fires, other things that go on. | ||
Do you look at that and say, I hope France learned their lesson. | ||
I hope we're learning our lessons. | ||
It's like, and again, not to minimize it. | ||
I saw people in the comments the other day, they're saying like, oh, Nick is minimizing the tragedy. | ||
He's saying it's not a big deal. | ||
I'm not saying that. | ||
But understand where I'm coming from, where people are treating this like, yep, case closed. | ||
It was a Muslim terror attack. | ||
And I don't know. | ||
We have enough to substantiate that. | ||
Maybe things will come out later. | ||
Maybe it's a possibility and it got covered up, but there's really, again, there's really nothing there except for circumstantial, which I don't think is really good enough. | ||
So that's the Notre Dame Cathedral, and it looks like it's it's not that bad, right? | ||
So I hope everybody can kind of relax. | ||
You know, people are unironically saying yesterday, this is worse than 9-11. | ||
It's like, yeah, I don't know about that, right? | ||
So seems like it's gonna be alright. | ||
So that's Notre Dame, but like I said, the real feature of our show tonight is back here in America, back in the epic country. | ||
Not the gay continent of Europe, no offense Euros, but this is America first, all right? | ||
It's about America tonight. | ||
So we have some new numbers, very exciting, and it's kind of actually silly because all these numbers are... what is the month? | ||
April 2019? | ||
So to give you perspective here, all these numbers obviously pertaining to the Democratic primary for the presidential nomination in 2020. | ||
To give you a little context, a little perspective here, in 2016 the first candidate to announce he was running for president was Ted Cruz and he announced in April of 2015. | ||
So we are at right now the point in the 2016 election when the first candidate announced and already we have 18 announced candidates on the Democrat side. | ||
That's a little crazy, right? | ||
So in the last election the first guy to announce it was April 2015, April the year before the election. | ||
Here we are April before the 2020 election. | ||
We've got All 18 with maybe a couple exceptions who are still holding out. | ||
Most notably Joe Biden and also I imagine a few others. | ||
18 candidates. | ||
We've got millions of dollars in funds raised. | ||
We've got polling done. | ||
We've had town halls. | ||
The first debate is scheduled for I think a couple of months from now in Miami. | ||
It's a little bit premature, I have to tell you. | ||
A lot of people are asking me, who do you think's gonna get the nomination? | ||
What do you think's gonna happen? | ||
Why don't we wait, like, six months? | ||
Because, you know, in six months, it's still three months before the first caucus is held, you know, and then you have the whole primary, and then you have the, you know. | ||
So it's a long way out, but we do have some figures here, we do have a whiteboard to tell you. | ||
An Emerson poll, and it's national polling. | ||
Now, I will say, at this stage in the game, national polling really doesn't matter. | ||
Because, you know, again, and this is something I learned about politics as I got into it, you realize that things are actually very process-oriented. | ||
So, people might imagine that, well, the national polling matters more than anything because it's the biggest, it's, you know, the nation, the election's obviously a national election, but you gotta think about it in terms of process. | ||
What comes next? | ||
You've got candidates that are announcing, they're campaigning, they're raising funds. | ||
In the next so many months, there will be debates. | ||
That'll be a new feature, but it'll also be just a lot of campaigning, a lot of fundraising. | ||
And then what you have is the beginning of the primary season, which starts in two states, Iowa and New Hampshire. | ||
And then based on the results from those elections, that sets the stage for the whole primary. | ||
If you have a good showing in Iowa, it can cancel out months of bad performance in fundraising, in polling, etc. | ||
And we saw this obviously in 2016. | ||
People that were expected to do really well underperformed in Iowa and New Hampshire and then were totally wiped out. | ||
By Super Tuesday in the middle of March, right? | ||
So, I will say, you know, a word before we look at the polls nationally. | ||
You know, people might expect, oh, a national poll? | ||
This really matters? | ||
What kind of matters more is Iowa and New Hampshire, but we're gonna look at these anyway just to kind of gauge what's going on. | ||
You know, it is a good metric, I think, at this stage in the game to kind of track our progress here for the different candidates. | ||
Let me adjust this. | ||
I'll turn down our brightness just a little bit so you could see the writing there better. | ||
Okay, there we are. | ||
And we'll get our pointer. | ||
Somebody was complaining the other day that I, uh... Normally I use this Mickey Mouse pointer, and they were complaining that you couldn't really see the Mickey Mouse pointer against the whiteboard, because it's a white glove, a white gloved hand, versus, uh, you know, the whiteboard. | ||
Which, I don't know, I guess you could kind of see it, but yeah, it doesn't really work so well. | ||
Look, if you're not retarded, you can see where it's pointing. | ||
Use your imagination, right? | ||
So, I guess we'll use this one instead. | ||
We'll use this pen pointer. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me get it to a good length here. | |
Okay. | ||
So obviously, leading the pack, title of the show is the new Democratic frontrunner. | ||
Spoiler alert, it's Bernie Sanders with 29%. | ||
In second place, we have Joe Biden with 24%. | ||
And just a word on this, this is a major shift. | ||
This is the first poll, well the first major national poll since the scandal, I guess you could call it, a series of mini scandals about Joe Biden touching or groping women has come out and you see obviously a major shift here. | ||
Previously, if you looked at any national polling, you had Joe Biden polling above 30% and Bernie Sanders polling below 30%. | ||
So the numbers varied a little bit, but generally speaking, you had Joe Biden number one, Bernie Sanders number two, Joe Biden had a floor and a ceiling of about 30 to 35, and Bernie Sanders was between like 23 to 28, I think were some of the highest numbers I saw. | ||
So that you see them switching places here is pretty big. | ||
So Bernie Sanders is 29%, Joe Biden at 24%. | ||
Surprisingly, this is the biggest surprise of the poll, I think, is Pete Buttigieg at 9%. | ||
So two weeks ago he would have been polling at 1%. | ||
Seriously. | ||
But he's got a lot of big press coverage, a lot of grassroots support. | ||
He's now polling at 9% which is pretty substantial. | ||
Beto O'Rourke at 8%. | ||
Kamala Harris at 8%. | ||
Elizabeth Warren at 7%. | ||
So obviously you have your top tier candidates up here. | ||
And that's by virtue of name recognition, a number of other factors. | ||
These are going to be your Tier 1 candidates, Sanders and Biden at 29 and 24. | ||
These are going to be your Tier 2 candidates, like Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio level for comparison and 16. | ||
You've got Buttigieg, O'Rourke, Harris and Warren, 9, 8, 8 and 7% for Warren. | ||
This is going to be your lower tier, which is Julian Castro at 3%, Andrew Yang at 3%. | ||
and Cory Booker at 2%. | ||
Someone else is at 2%. | ||
So everybody that's below 2% I kept off. | ||
You've got Tulsi Gabbard, Klobuchar, Gillibrand, a lot of others you probably haven't heard of, Gravel, Tim Ryan, a few others that are just sort of unexceptional. | ||
So I didn't really include them. | ||
If someone else is polling higher than you, and by someone else I mean people in the poll responded, I'd like someone other than all the options. | ||
Um, so that's a 2%. | ||
If you're below that, I think you probably shouldn't be counted at this point. | ||
So these are the polling numbers. | ||
If we look at fundraising for quarter one, so that's between the beginning of the year and March, you've got Bernie Sanders, who is number one by far, with $18.186 million raised in total, total contributions. | ||
There's no fundraising data available yet for Biden because he has not actually announced he's running yet. | ||
In theory, we don't know that he's running, but he probably will. | ||
Buddha Judge is at $7.87 million. | ||
You've got O'Rourke with $9.373 million. | ||
Harris with $12 million. | ||
So right away you see with the polling, or rather the fundraising, it doesn't really match the polling. | ||
Sanders is number one. | ||
Harris is actually number two in polling with 12 million, O'Rourke is number three, and Buttigieg, I guess it makes sense because he's actually a recent addition to the second tier here, he's only got seven million dollars. | ||
You've got Warren with six million, Castro with one million dollars, Andrew Yang with close to two, and Booker with five million dollars. | ||
So Booker, he's not going to be president, frankly. | ||
You know, he may have a lot of support because he's a major senator from a major state like New Jersey, but you look at the polling and honestly you look at a lot of the campaign material, the stump speeches, things like that, it's just not impressive. | ||
So to me, Booker's really just sort of a non-entity at this point, not really a player here. | ||
But these are your numbers and I have to tell you what strikes me as interesting right out of the gate. | ||
We're gonna get into this from a variety of different angles, ideology, other things. | ||
But right out of the gate, what strikes me as the most interesting is, look at the real frontrunner. | ||
Sure, Bernie Sanders is technically the frontrunner. | ||
He's got 29%, but I look at it a different way. | ||
I look at Sanders at number one, Biden at number two, and they're one and two by a long shot. | ||
They constitute more than 50% combined. | ||
And then you look at Buttigieg, and then you look at O'Rourke. | ||
The top four, what do they all have in common? | ||
What do the top four all have in common? | ||
They're all white men. | ||
And yeah, I know technically Bernie Sanders is Jewish, and Jews are not white. | ||
Everybody knows this, but he is ostensibly a white man for our purposes, for the purpose of this Alright, for the purposes of this polling data, the top four are all white men. | ||
And yeah, Bernie's technically Jewish, and Beto has this Hispanic nickname, he's still 100% Irish, and yeah, Buddha Judge is gay, but the top four are all white men. | ||
And it's interesting, because what has been the Democratic narrative Increasingly, since Barack Obama was elected, I think you could say in 2008, it's been anti-white male. | ||
Anti-white, anti-men. | ||
And I guess you could also say anti-Christian and other things, but predominantly, it's the white men that are the problem. | ||
So the real frontrunner isn't Bernie Sanders. | ||
Yeah, it's Sanders. | ||
The frontrunner in the Democratic primary is the white man, and I find that fascinating because you'll find a total disconnect between, of course, the rhetoric and the people campaigning. | ||
Now, here's the problem with this. | ||
I guess there is no problem if you're a sensible person, but the problem in the Democratic primary is that it makes sense. | ||
Look at the states that Trump tore away from the Democrats in 16 to win the presidency. | ||
He won Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania. | ||
You know, those were the ones that were really groundbreaking. | ||
And you had a breakaway electoral vote for Maine, but predominantly it was those Midwestern states. | ||
He did win Ohio, he did win Iowa, but the ones that had been Democrat for like 25 years were those Midwestern states. | ||
And why do you think he won those states? | ||
It was because of the white working class. | ||
Can't be said enough. | ||
People have various explanations for why it happened, but that's really what it came down to. | ||
It came down to a few thousand votes in a handful of midwestern states, and it was probably people who never voted, or they were union, or they were, you know, democratic because of labor, whatever, and they came over to Trump because he was talking about trade, he was talking about immigration, he was cultivating something called white nativism. | ||
And so the way for the Democrats to sort of recapture that tiny electorate, again, it was only a few thousand votes that he won by, for example, in Michigan and Pennsylvania, which swung the whole election. | ||
You're probably going to need somebody like Joe Biden. | ||
You're probably going to need somebody like Bernie Sanders who can talk. | ||
To average white working middle class people and make sure that they understand that you care about them, are empathetic about their concerns and the problems in their lives. | ||
And so the pragmatic choice for the Democrats would be a white guy. | ||
The pragmatic choice would be a Sanders, would be a Joe Biden, somebody like that. | ||
Not so much Buttigieg because he's gay, but he is from South Bend, Indiana. | ||
That's the pitch. | ||
I'm a small town mayor from Indiana, and I also happen to be a homosexual, right? | ||
But that's the pitch with Buttigieg, even if it's not going to work out so well. | ||
And Beto O'Rourke, he's a little bit more of a progressive, but still, people are pitching him as a Jack Kendi type figure. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Normative. | ||
That's what that means. | ||
It means white, Irish male. | ||
And this is borne out This is borne out in the polling as well. | ||
If you look at the match-ups between Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden, in each case, they're leading Trump by four points, four to five points for the both of them. | ||
Buttigieg would lose to Trump by a few. | ||
Beto O'Rourke would lose by a few. | ||
Kamala Harris would lose by a few. | ||
But that's the message, is that the pragmatic choice would be a white man for those reasons. | ||
Now here's the problem. | ||
Enter in the Democratic narrative. | ||
Enter in the Democratic talking points. | ||
How do you nominate a white man? | ||
And maybe Buttigieg is the only case where this is an exception because he does have these intersectional points because he's a homosexual, but for Beto O'Rourke, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, what's the pitch? | ||
We've been talking for how many years on the Democratic side about how this is a nation of immigrants and the problem in the country is white nationalism, white supremacism. | ||
We need to make the country more inclusive. | ||
We need to make the country more gender neutral, or gender equal, or whatever. | ||
How do you make the pitch if you're a white guy? | ||
So I think that's going to be a fundamental problem. | ||
I think that's going to be a problem, again, not if you're looking at the vote in Iowa, not at the vote in New Hampshire, some of these early states, or, you know, going on throughout the primary, but it's going to be a problem on the debate stage, when the question is inevitably going to be asked, why should it be you? | ||
You're a white man. | ||
And it was interesting, because this Buttigieg character, He was on Ellen earlier this week, and I caught this clip on Twitter, and she asked him the question. | ||
This will be the question of the Democratic primary. | ||
She said, you know, look, I'm a woman. | ||
Many people are excited in 2016 to elect the first woman president. | ||
What do you say to people who want to see a woman become president in 2020? | ||
Why should it be you, basically? | ||
Why should we pick you? | ||
Persuade us to not vote for a woman. | ||
He didn't really have a good answer. | ||
What did he say? | ||
He said, well, you know, regardless of who the president is, I think it's very important that we have women in high positions and, you know, we have to have inclusivity in the administration. | ||
They have to be serving in senior roles and maybe I'll have a woman as a vice president, but I don't really know. | ||
I can't commit to that. | ||
And you could tell that neither Ellen nor the audience were really convinced by this. | ||
They were not really persuaded. | ||
So again, on the ground, If you were just, if this was just in a vacuum, if you played this out in like a computer simulation in some model, just on the basis of who they are, their names, their persona, it'd probably be the right option. | ||
You probably wouldn't run into any issues. | ||
Sanders and Biden getting on the ticket, becoming the nominee. | ||
The problem is they're gonna have to answer questions from Huffington Post, from Slate, from The Root. | ||
They're gonna have to go on a DNC debate stage and take questions from MSNBC and CNN and basically ask point-blank, why should a white man run the country anymore when this is now a non-white country, right? | ||
And, you know, Sanders, I don't think he can play the you-know-what card, and nobody else will have any card to play, so I think that'll be very fascinating. | ||
That's my initial takeaway, looking at the top four. | ||
Now, moving along, aside from that, the other takeaway is, again, you look at the two frontrunners here, the top tier candidates, right away you see a cleavage between the two. | ||
Sanders, of course, represents progressives. | ||
Joe Biden represents the establishment. | ||
Joe Biden served as the vice president for Barack Obama. | ||
He can be seen as sort of the heir apparent to Hillary Clinton. | ||
And this is how the Democrats basically operate. | ||
You know, Barack Obama finished off in 2016 and it was Hillary Clinton's turn. | ||
You know, she was going to be the nominee in 2008. | ||
Didn't work out. | ||
That's okay. | ||
Your Secretary of State will give you a helping hand and you'll be the president in 2016. | ||
So it was her turn. | ||
Didn't work out so well. | ||
Well, now it's Joe Biden's turn. | ||
He was another Obama acolyte, another DNC guy, a party guy, an establishment guy. | ||
Now it's his turn. | ||
So he's the establishment representative. | ||
He represents sort of an older Democratic Party. | ||
He's been around forever. | ||
And then, of course, you got Bernie Sanders, who fought Hillary Clinton in 16. | ||
Didn't work out for Sanders. | ||
He got screwed out of the nomination, and he said, you know what? | ||
I'll take the Bernie bros. | ||
I'll take my supporters. | ||
I will tell them, support the nominee. | ||
Support Clinton. | ||
You have to do your part. | ||
You have to sort of take one for the team. | ||
Swallow your pride. | ||
Line up on Clinton because we can't have Donald Trump. | ||
And now it's a little bit of a different attitude. | ||
Now he's got a real shot here because it is in limbo what the Democratic Party is going to be. | ||
So you've got Sanders leading the pack and it's basically a statistical tie I would say at this point for all intents and purposes. | ||
Maybe Sanders is up a little bit but this may have the potential to rip the Democratic Party in half. | ||
If Joe Biden can't come around and maybe try to placate the progressives with something like Medicare for All or I don't know what he could say, but obviously represents two very different visions for the party. | ||
And then I guess the rest of them kind of line up in different ways. | ||
You know, Buttigieg would probably represent maybe more towards Joe Biden, Beto more towards Sanders. | ||
Harris more towards Sanders. | ||
Warren towards Sanders. | ||
Castro I don't really know enough about. | ||
Yang is maybe in a third position one might say. | ||
Booker probably towards Sanders. | ||
So it is interesting how the party is being redefined by the progressives, the radicals, and I will tell you For a lot of the conservatives, they would look at this race, and they would look at Sanders, and the show tonight, for somebody like Sean Hannity, or somebody like Bill O'Reilly, if he were still around, would be to say, if he were still on Fox News, that is, would be to say that, well, you know, Bernie Sanders wants Medicare for all. | ||
Bernie Sanders is a socialist, and what does that tell you about the state of the Democratic Party or the country that one of the major parties is being led by a socialist? | ||
And to me, I guess you could look at that, I guess you could bemoan socialism coming to our shores, America will never be socialist, all this garbage that, you know, Charlie Kirk is putting in the President's ears and mouth and all that other stuff. | ||
But to me, what I look at more than that is, why is the Democratic Party evolving in this way? | ||
I looked at a little statistic earlier this week, Jeff Giza put it on my timeline, where if you look at Democratic attitudes about immigrants, they were polled on this question, do you believe immigrants and immigration at large is a strength for the country? | ||
In 1994, 32% of Democrats agreed with that statement. | ||
just about the same as Republicans, agreed with the sentiment that immigrants make the country stronger. | ||
Now, it's 83% here in 2019. | ||
So Democrats went from 32% in 1994 all the way to 83% in 2019, saying that immigrants are a strength, vastly diverging from the Republican Party. | ||
Republicans had increased a little bit, but Democrats obviously exploded, nearly tripled the amount of people saying it makes it a strength. | ||
And that is really the feature of the Democratic Party. | ||
The more the party becomes non-white, the more the country becomes non-white, the more candidates like Bernie Sanders you're going to get. | ||
Do you think it's any coincidence that we went from Al Gore to John Kerry to Barack Obama to Bernie Sanders in the same span of time that states like Georgia, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico came into play for that party because of Hispanic, largely non-white immigration? New Mexico came into play for that party because of Of course it's not a coincidence. | ||
The people that are coming into the country are bringing their attitudes with them. | ||
They are importing their economic destiny. | ||
People that come from Mexico, people that come from Central America, for a variety of cultural factors, and you could say that cultural is more or less downstream from racial features, biological features, You could say that they are bringing with them the very socialist attitudes that a lot of people would have you believe were left behind in Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala. | ||
They're coming with them. | ||
You know, their bad ideas, their crime, and everything else, it's coming with them. | ||
So it's always very interesting to me that a lot of these types will look at the town hall, for example, this week with Bernie Sanders, where people are enthusiastically cheering for Medicare for All and things like that. | ||
How people can look at that and divorce it from what is so obvious, which is the demographic change, which is the root cause of it. | ||
That's the root cause, and you're going to see a lot more of this down the pike. | ||
That's the real story. | ||
It doesn't matter if it's Sanders, Biden, Buttigieg, O'Rourke. | ||
Biden is the last holdout from a dying Democratic Party. | ||
He's literally going to die in the next couple of decades. | ||
And who are you going to be left with? | ||
If you look at this middle tier in the field, these are the more younger types. | ||
You're going to get O'Rourke, you're going to get Harris, you're going to get Castro, Yang, Booker. | ||
You're going to get a lot of these last names. | ||
Last names like Yang, Castro, Booker. | ||
Uh, you know, things like that. | ||
And you might get a token white guy who knows how to jive talk, you know, a white guy who uses hot sauce on his wings, a white guy who can fake an Hispanic-sounding nickname or something like that, or maybe he's just gay, or maybe he's transgender. | ||
But that's the future of the party. | ||
That's a Democratic Party, and pretty soon that's going to be the Republican Party, too. | ||
Either the Republican Party is going to get smart, and they're going to bring in their diversity picks, and they're going to bring in Medicare for All and a lot of these other diverse policies, or they're just going to go away. | ||
And so in short, you look at this little list here that we've compiled, and honestly, the numbers don't matter. | ||
Yeah and we're gonna do the democratic thing or whatever the election thing and we're gonna watch the polls and we're gonna get the charts out and we're gonna look at the fundraising and I don't know what what do you think I guess Sanders he's got a good shot this year I don't know though Biden's got a mean stump speech and he'll you really want to have a beer with him that's gonna play a factor look at the betting markets Frankly, what difference does it make? | ||
Same shit. | ||
It's all the same people. | ||
It's all the same policies. | ||
If we're gonna get some bald, closeted sociopath like Booker Black, or we're gonna get some radical, black power, Kamala Harris, who would do anything for power, we're gonna get Elizabeth Warren, some crazy Native American, Somebody with the last name Castro. | ||
It doesn't matter! | ||
It's all the same! | ||
The Democratic frontrunner, it's all the same, you know, and I will say it does say something about maybe like white exceptionalism, right? | ||
Maybe we get away from supremacy. | ||
Doesn't it say something that even at the end of the day you have an all non-white party, you have all these non-white candidates, and how does it break down anyway? | ||
White guys, well, like some white guy at the very top, a couple of white guys, you know, some women, and then I guess some non-entities. | ||
It's kind of interesting how that all breaks down regardless, you know, how things tend to sort themselves out. | ||
So we'll see. | ||
It's very early, like I said in the game, and the national polls don't really matter as much. | ||
At this point, there's really more a gauge of sort of like name recognition. | ||
Again, the fundraising is going to matter. | ||
People are taking notice of viability. | ||
I guess that's really what's critical, you know, because for somebody like Buttigieg, he's polling 9% nationally. | ||
It really matters a lot more what his polling looks like in Iowa. | ||
Because the primaries don't start until a little bit less than a year. | ||
If he doesn't perform well in Iowa, he's gonna get knocked out immediately, right? | ||
Or if he doesn't perform well in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, he'll be knocked out within the first month. | ||
So it really matters a lot less to where he's at nationally, more where he's pulling at on a state-by-state level. | ||
However, it matters that he's at 9% nationally, because then all the big money people, and a lot of voters as well, even people in Iowa or people in media, Take a look at him and they say, Oh, he's at 9% nationally, given that he never held a major office like statewide or anything like that. | ||
Even a congressional district, he was a mayor of a city, a small city at that, the fourth largest in Indiana. | ||
They look at him and they say, Oh, he's viable. | ||
We should give him more money. | ||
Right, or we should do a town hall for him, we should do a spot for him, whatever. | ||
So that's really what this data means at this point. | ||
It's a little bit... It's a little less about, you know, who's really a frontrunner, who's really... Like, does it matter that Buttigieg is 1% higher than O'Rourke at this stage in the game? | ||
Not really. | ||
These numbers are gonna change drastically for a variety of reasons. | ||
You're gonna see some scandals, some new information come out. | ||
Maybe Buttigieg will fall after this week or month or whatever of buzz that he's having. | ||
He'll have that flavor of the month type effect, which he himself has described. | ||
So that really is a little bit arbitrary at this point. | ||
really matters is who's going to be a contender, who's going to be viable, who's going to have an operation, an organization in 50 states, who's going to have enough money to go that extra mile to fund a year-long campaign like this. | ||
And so that's what that means at this point. | ||
Again, like I said, some of the standout features are the white men. | ||
But beyond that, Buttigieg polling this highly should make people nervous. | ||
I think he really does have a path to the nomination. | ||
Yang pulling at 3% is pretty substantial. | ||
You know, it's less impressive than Buttigieg. | ||
And I think that kind of speaks to the limitations of Yang, perhaps. | ||
I know Yang is a total outsider compared to Buttigieg, who's just a small town mayor. | ||
But if he could poll 9%, why isn't Yang | ||
Pulling more than three you know so that that you know in contrast shows that Yang might not be doing as great as people say they're like afraid he's gonna get the nomination and I wouldn't go that far you know but three percent is quite substantial so I think that's really what we're looking at is the tiers being formed your top tier your middle tier your bottom tier and then the fundraising is why the national stuff matters so that's the polling like I said we'll continue to monitor monitor this throughout the election Very early. | ||
So we'll see the debates, we'll see people kind of go on and do their thing and do their stump speeches, and we'll see the rhetoric evolve. | ||
And this is the last thing I'll say before we move on to our Super Chats here, is the other thing that's notable, which I actually forgot to mention, is policy substance. | ||
It's interesting that out of all the major candidates here, you look at the Tier 2 candidates, Buttigieg and O'Rourke just don't have a platform. | ||
You know, I would say that Sanders has a platform because he ran in 16. | ||
Joe Biden hasn't announced yet, so he's not really, doesn't really count yet. | ||
Buttigieg doesn't have any positions yet. | ||
And people have asked him, can you give me, like, one specific policy proposal? | ||
A lot of it is process-oriented. | ||
That's why he's dangerous. | ||
It's things like, let's get rid of the Electoral College, let's change how voting works. | ||
But nothing substantive. | ||
Beto O'Rourke has nothing substantive. | ||
People have asked him the same thing. | ||
Can you give us one specific policy? | ||
And he says, no, this is a moment in time that is important. | ||
And so he's got nothing. | ||
Kamala Harris has a little bit more, but not so much. | ||
Elizabeth Warren is probably like Sanders. | ||
You know, she's a senator. | ||
She's ran. | ||
She's got policies. | ||
Castro, don't know enough about. | ||
Yang has a lot of substance. | ||
So it'll be interesting to see how this fleshes out. | ||
And that's why O'Rourke and Buttigieg are ones to watch, because they're chameleons. | ||
They will kind of go up the flow. | ||
They'll sort of see what the appetite is in the Democratic Party. | ||
Is it more progressive? | ||
Let's see what the race thing looks like. | ||
We'll see, you know, is climate going to be a big deal? | ||
Whatever. | ||
And they'll kind of fall into place where they need to. | ||
But that's a Democratic field. | ||
We're gonna move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll take a look and see what's going on there. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Tell me what your favorite candidate is. | ||
Tell me who you're gonna vote for. | ||
I'm gonna vote for Andrew Yang in the Democratic primary. | ||
No, I don't know. | ||
I don't know how it works in Illinois if I could even vote in the Democratic primary. | ||
I think there's a work that if you vote in the primary you have to vote for them in the general. | ||
I think that's the way it works. | ||
So unfortunately I can't vote, but we'll, like I said, we'll keep an eye on that. | ||
We'll see how it goes. | ||
Let me just bring back our brightness here and then we'll take a look at our super chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying. | ||
And let's see, we've got, wow, we've got a lot of super chats, big super chat night tonight, and big viewership as well. | ||
Very good to see some big numbers. | ||
Lauren Rose says the premium show will be up Sunday, my fellow Knickers. | ||
I think you'll really love it once I post it on Wednesday. | ||
Excited to show you on Saturday. | ||
Wow, so that's how we're gonna start it off, right? | ||
Busting my chops about that. | ||
Look, Relax. | ||
All right, relax. | ||
Nicholas J. Puptez says this vet is so proud of hashtag my president for giving Tiger Woods the Medal of Freedom. | ||
Finally golfers are getting taken care of in America. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I didn't really mind that so much. | ||
It's whatever. | ||
It's like a symbolic thing. | ||
Is my hair kind of messed up right now? | ||
Does it really, are we really gonna get upset about that? | ||
Is that the thing we're gonna really get bent out of shape about? | ||
No wall. | ||
He vetoes a resolution from the Congress demanding an end to a war in Yemen and we're mad about the Medal of Honor going to, or the Medal of Freedom going to Tiger Woods. | ||
I think there's other things to be upset about. | ||
I don't really care about that. | ||
He's a good golfer, so what? | ||
Give him the Medal of, you know, freedom. | ||
Doesn't matter. | ||
It's a symbolic thing anyway. | ||
You know, I think everybody gets one of those. | ||
If you do anything, you get one of those. | ||
CG says a weird thing to complain about. | ||
CG says about to head to McDonald's for dinner. | ||
Any tips on how to maximize my Big Mac experience? | ||
Get bacon on it. | ||
Get bacon on it. | ||
Ironically, you want to know how to maximize that? | ||
Get bacon on it. | ||
That's a good one. | ||
I don't mean to be one of those, like, Reddit tier type people. | ||
Bacon! | ||
You know what makes everything better? | ||
Lay bacon! | ||
People like that, people like that need to be pushed into traffic. | ||
If I saw somebody, you know, because that was a moment in our cultural history when it was on t-shirts and hats and it was all over the internet. | ||
Bacon strips, you know, that kind of thing. | ||
If I, well I don't know, if maybe if I had less prospects in life, if I was less smart, if I was less handsome, if I was just working in like a cubicle, in short if I was like you, if I was a cuck wagey like you and I had all that to look forward to in my life, if I saw somebody doing the bacon thing and it was in front of like a crowded intersection and cars whizzing by, big trucks passing by, I think I'd push. | ||
I think I would push them in front of traffic because Honestly, that kind of stuff... I don't think there's any bigger way you could signal to yourself you're a normie than the bacon thing, but... | ||
However, now, nevertheless, despite, I do have to say that the bacon on the Big Mac is a very good addition. | ||
Normally, I don't go in for the bacon. | ||
Normally, I think it's a meme. | ||
It doesn't really, it's not that good, okay? | ||
It's whatever. | ||
But on the Big Mac, it did make a difference. | ||
It did, on my palate, make a difference. | ||
Because I had the big, rather, the Quarter Pounder Deluxe with the tomato and the leaf lettuce. | ||
It didn't really do anything for me. | ||
But the bacon on the Big Mac, I was like, wow, okay, this is something to work with. | ||
So that's a good way to maximize. | ||
The other thing I've heard, I've heard that Donald Trump actually eats his Big Mac with the middle bun removed. | ||
So if you know how it goes, it's a bun, a patty, another bun, another patty, and then the top bun. | ||
So I hear that Trump takes out the middle bun probably because he eats like four sandwiches, so it's less filling, cuts down on the carbs. | ||
Now, I've done that before. | ||
I prefer it with the middle bun, but just an idea. | ||
My tie looks a little bit... That's better. | ||
It looks a little bit crooked. | ||
That was bothering me. | ||
Okay. | ||
Lauren Rose says, someone find the missing MDE Williamsburg episodes. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
I don't know what you're talking about there. | ||
I think I know, like the Fashion Week ones, or the comedy, the stand-up thing about, you know, the facts about homosexuals. | ||
I'm not sure which one you're talking about. | ||
But I think those are all still on YouTube, if those are the ones you mean. | ||
Steve Z says, currently drinking from my New America First mug and playing on the Amran Minecraft server. | ||
Was curious if you had any advice on how to maximize my XP. | ||
No, I haven't played Minecraft in a long time. | ||
Actually, it's been a while. | ||
I can't find a server to get on because everybody's always like, Nick, Nick, here's the thing. | ||
I'm the kind of person where if you tell me to do something, it immediately makes me not want to do that thing. | ||
So it's like, I probably would have played Minecraft at this point in the past month or so, but I have so many people that want to crawl up inside my ass and tell me, Nick, Nick, please. | ||
It would mean so much. | ||
Just get on my Minecraft server. | ||
Nick, here's a link to my Minecraft server. | ||
It just... Now I just never want to do it again because that's all I get is people nagging me. | ||
Get on the server. | ||
Get on the server. | ||
When are you going to come on our server? | ||
You never play with us. | ||
So, and then I want to play and then I'm like, you know what? | ||
I don't want to get into that. | ||
I don't want that coming back. | ||
I don't want to deal with that right now. | ||
So, um, so I haven't played in a while. | ||
I can't really tell you how to maximize your XP there because it's been so long for me. | ||
Used to be a big crafter, but people ruined it for me because then the, then people are telling me come on my faction server and I go in and there's all these weird rules and there's like countries and Like, I don't wanna, you have to build within this part of the map and you have to, like, claim land. | ||
Look, you're talking about claims and markets. | ||
I just want to mine for God's sakes, all right? | ||
You know, all these complications. | ||
Life is complicated enough for me, and then a video game, you've got to learn, like, how to, like, breathe basically again. | ||
People are like, play Crusader Kings 2, play Europa Universalis 4. | ||
My life is hard enough. | ||
I want to play a game I want to escape, you know? | ||
It's like the Red Dead Redemption 2 thing. | ||
Anyway, Bill Ding says, in Kickstarter TV2, Sam called Sargon his guru. | ||
Maybe he's your end. | ||
Yeah, I'll call up my friend Sargon. | ||
Get him to hook me up with Sam. | ||
Sargon and I are not friends, you know? | ||
I mean, we teamed up for that debate, but he's tried to stay away from me, I'm sure. | ||
Because, uh... You know, he doesn't want to get arrested in his country or lumped in with the alt-right or whatever, but... | ||
Yeah, I don't really know Sargon, don't really know... I mean, I know Sam's stuff, but I don't know him personally, so... I don't know why people think I need an in, like... All these greedy fans collaborate with, you know, this other guy, like... How about I just do my show, okay? | ||
Rob says, Hey Nick, I'm about to watch you get angry at Super Chats for the next 45 minutes. | ||
Any tips for maximizing my experience? | ||
Yeah, that's how this show goes. | ||
I don't have to get angry, by the way! | ||
That doesn't have to be a feature, but people just send in these Super Chats, and it's just like... | ||
unidentified
|
What's wrong? | |
What are you doing? | ||
What is wrong with you? | ||
You know, so they don't have to be like that. | ||
But people, I don't know, they want to get my goat. | ||
So how do you maximize your experience? | ||
Just have a Big Mac, dude. | ||
That's, that's the way to do it. | ||
Uh, Meaty Spartan Guy says, Hey bro, been a fan since the start of the year and the Super Chats are trying your patience. | ||
Remember what doesn't kill you makes you stranger. | ||
Yeah, that's a good point. | ||
That's a very good point. | ||
I'll have to remember that. | ||
You know, when I'm reading Super Chats, um, you know, when you get up to like nine o'clock and you're still reading Super Chats, I'll have to remember I agree. | ||
I'm a believer that whatever doesn't kill you only makes you stranger. | ||
I agree. | ||
I tend to agree with this. | ||
Leo says Nick is cringing a chat right now contemplating whether or not he should start the show. | ||
I was actually looking for that figure about the um... | ||
The immigrants. | ||
I realized I forgot to put that in the notes. | ||
And I'm scrolling in my Twitter feed and it's not loading so I had to refresh and I'm trying to find that figure about Democrats saying, you know, are immigrants a strength? | ||
Because I knew that when I was going to put it in there I realized I forgot to drop it in there. | ||
That's why it took a little delay there. | ||
The Angry Inch says spirituality is important. | ||
Whites will be a minority. | ||
But before that happens, Christians will be a minority in terms of worldview in the States. | ||
I'm not sure if that's true because the people that are coming into the country are religious. | ||
Christians in particular. | ||
The Hispanics are Catholic. | ||
So I don't know if that's true. | ||
I haven't looked at the figures yet, but I believe the country is more Christian than it is white. | ||
I think it's something like 70% Christian and like 63% or 62% white. | ||
So I don't know if that's true, but I agree with the sentiment that, yeah, we do have to be religious. | ||
We do have to be, not spiritual, we have to be religious. | ||
And that's obviously the root cause of it all. | ||
You know, you want to talk about understanding the whole picture. | ||
Maybe your baby boomers say the problem is socialism and like whatever. | ||
What's the root of that? | ||
Well, it's immigration. | ||
Like we said, it's demographic change. | ||
Well, what's the root of that? | ||
People stop at demographic change typically. | ||
What's the root of that? | ||
It's apathy. | ||
It's the fact that the fertility rate is low. | ||
Immigration in itself would not be as big of a problem if the fertility rate were not as low as it is. | ||
Why does the fertility rate drop? | ||
Contraception, other things, you know, the family breaking apart. | ||
Our society would be collapsing without immigration, be a different problem. | ||
Don't get me wrong, but the society would be collapsing regardless. | ||
The immigration exacerbates it and accelerates it, but that you have the divorce rate so high that you have this horrible dissonance between the two genders, this horrible breakdown in that relationship, the destruction of the family, and so on. | ||
I mean, that's the root of it all, is the societal decay, and that's what you get. | ||
When the society decays, you're going to get bad policies. | ||
You're gonna get people that allow the borders to be open, the floodgates to open, and so on. | ||
So, yeah, exactly. | ||
People sort of forget that. | ||
They think, uh, we can just be racist liberals. | ||
We can just be, you know, totally libertine, hedonistic degenerates, um, but we're racist. | ||
You know? | ||
But, but we're, uh, you know, whatever. | ||
That's the alt-right race. | ||
You have to have a more traditional and conservative worldview altogether, which is religion. | ||
Klondell says this guy Pete seems like a real butt geek. | ||
Good one. | ||
That's good. | ||
Well, and that just goes to show what a clown country you live in that you could have an openly homosexual man whose last name starts with a butt running for president and people take it seriously. | ||
30 years ago, that would be a joke. | ||
30 years ago, that would be a skit on, you know, Saturday Night Live or whatever. | ||
A sketch on Saturday Night Live or one of those shows. | ||
And now that's our reality. | ||
What if we had a president, we had an openly gay president named Peter Buttigieg, with a husband named Chastin. | ||
He's talking about having a kid now. | ||
What a joke, clown country that we would live in. | ||
Imagine our president, President Buttigieg, going to other countries and meeting with world leaders. | ||
With the husband, Chaz10! | ||
I mean, I think that would be more than I could take. | ||
I would have to go off. | ||
I don't know what that means, by the way. | ||
Totally peaceful. | ||
My going off would be, you know, going into VR. | ||
I've said this before on this show, I would strap on the VR and I just wouldn't leave. | ||
You know, I'd strap on VR, I'd get in a Grand Theft Auto V, first person, on VR, put an IV in my arm, and then you wouldn't hear from me for decades. | ||
You know, I think that would be the time. | ||
Uh, ass idiot says, say Reagan backwards, also you should exercise. | ||
Well I'm not gonna do that. | ||
And I'm also not gonna exercise either. | ||
Look, I don't like exercising. | ||
I'm gonna exercise when I'm 30, okay? | ||
I'm gonna exercise when I'm 30. | ||
Because, you know, I talk to people that are all about the fitness, and I realize that's really just not something that's meant for me at this point in my life. | ||
You know, all this worry, all this stress, all this Constant scurrying and toiling and everything, and for what? | ||
You know, I have to eat this salad, I have to whip up and get my macros, I have to drink three protein shakes, and then I'm running, and then I'm running, and then I'm taking a cold shower, and then I'm doing this, and it's like... Oh! | ||
unidentified
|
Oh! | |
Oh! | ||
My dawn, relax! | ||
unidentified
|
Take it easy! | |
You know, so I'm embracing a little bit of a different lifestyle. | ||
I've been taking it easy, alright? | ||
I've been watching The Sopranos. | ||
That's critical to the mindset. | ||
You know, I've been eating a lot of pasta, and don't get me wrong, I've been doing a lot of work. | ||
I've been doing a lot of work, a lot of business, taking care of business. | ||
Um, but you know, all these, all these white people, the caucasity, all these white people constantly telling me, eat this, go run, take a cold shower, take these pills, drink this shake, put this in your water, it's like... | ||
Oh, relax, relax. | ||
When I'm 30 years old, I'll start worrying about it. | ||
You know, I'm 30 years old, I start deteriorating mentally and physically, because that's when it starts, I think. | ||
Then I'll worry about that. | ||
Then that's when I'll start to get into shape. | ||
But for now, I'm young. | ||
I'm 20. | ||
I'm almost 21, all right? | ||
My youth is fading. | ||
Every day, you know, comes and there's no way that you can fight back against time, which is marching forward ceaselessly. | ||
Got to enjoy it while you can. | ||
Got to enjoy the 20s while you can. | ||
So, so no, no, I'm not going to exercise. | ||
I was going to do that. | ||
And then somebody told me something really profound. | ||
I said, once you bulk up, you can't un-bulk up. | ||
They said losing weight is basically impossible after you're like 30. | ||
They told me, if you bulk up and you get muscular, that's great, but if you lose it, you're just fat then. | ||
So, think about that before you bulk up. | ||
I said, I never thought of it that way. | ||
I never thought of it that way. | ||
So, I'm gonna enjoy being a skinny, young, 20-year-old, handsome guy for now, and then maybe when I'm 27 I'll be like the rest of you neurotic freaks all the time. | ||
It's like, you got all this paperwork just to figure out what you're gonna fucking eat for lunch. | ||
Well, and according to my calculations, you got like a pencil and glasses. | ||
Well, if this times this, protein times this many, and the eggs equals, divided by Relax, alright? | ||
Relax. | ||
So no, I'm not worried about that. | ||
I'll just get a gun, okay? | ||
If it comes down to defending myself or whatever, I'll just get a gun. | ||
Oh, you gotta lift, you gotta lift, man, and you gotta... No, no, I gotta worry about... I gotta worry about being me, okay? | ||
Taking care of me and praising God. | ||
That's it. | ||
Joshua, so in short, I will not exercise. | ||
Joshua Larson says, feel the Fuentes. | ||
Yeah, all day. | ||
Joshua Larson says, people just don't understand Mediterranean punctuality. | ||
I guess you're, what are you, busting my balls because I was a little bit late? | ||
Relax, you know. | ||
Enjoy the intro music. | ||
Think about, you know, count your blessings while you're waiting for me to come on the air. | ||
Enjoy a Big Mac. | ||
Have a glass of wine or a glass of pop or something, you know. | ||
Everybody just relax a little bit. | ||
Everybody enjoy the decline. | ||
Country's going away. | ||
Might as well enjoy a little bit, right? | ||
Ron Perlman says, thanks fam, let's get these bags. | ||
Yeah, always. | ||
POTUS says, F in the chat if you'd like to see Warski peacefully sunset himself. | ||
Okay, I can't read that part. | ||
Disavow. | ||
Well, actually... | ||
Actually, you know what? | ||
Andy Warski unfollowed me on Twitter when we were mutuals. | ||
So I don't care what happens to Andy Warski anymore. | ||
Previously, I would have defended him. | ||
I would have said, oh, don't say that about Warski. | ||
Of course, you know, I hope no harm comes to him. | ||
But you know what? | ||
He's dead to me. | ||
OK? | ||
Unfollowed me on Twitter. | ||
Yeah, I don't really care about you anymore. | ||
Fuentes says, tell us a story about your mom. | ||
How is she, by the way? | ||
She's doing all right. | ||
What do you want to know about her? | ||
What do you want? | ||
I don't think she wants me disclosing any of her personal information, but she's doing alright. | ||
She's doing good. | ||
We love mom. | ||
We stand mom. | ||
David Sperner says Nick is so many minutes late, based, and med-pilled. | ||
Unbelievable, unbelievable. | ||
You stay, you do a show for, you stay an hour late. | ||
Nobody says boo. | ||
They don't say thanks. | ||
But sure, a few minutes late and people are, you know, they'll never let it go. | ||
Ruggles says, don't you ever get the McDouble? | ||
But you're still here, by the way, aren't you? | ||
People, he's late, he's late. | ||
But you're still here, aren't you? | ||
Doesn't that tell you? | ||
Ruggles says, don't you ever get the McDouble but with the mac sauce? | ||
No, no, I don't do that. | ||
I don't do that. | ||
I go to McDonald's for the convenience. | ||
If there's extra preparation, it defeats the purpose. | ||
You know, if I gotta get a McDouble and then, can I get map sauce on the side and then I gotta prepare this? | ||
You know, that's not the point. | ||
Uh, Big Racist, I got fired but it was all worth it because now I can sit at home and watch these live, your biggest fan down under. | ||
Yeah, that is, uh, that is a white pill. | ||
I guess that is a subtle white pill. | ||
No longer wagey, and you get to catch America First live. | ||
Sounds like it's pretty good to me. | ||
Italian Pal says, Hey Nick, did you see the article, The Opportunity of White Anxiety by Andrew Sullivan? | ||
Interesting to see a mainstream journalist make some of the same points as you. | ||
Anyway, keep up the good work. | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
Excuse me, just had a hiccup there. | ||
I hope I don't have the hiccups because I don't have any water on hand. | ||
This is empty. | ||
But no, I didn't see that article. | ||
But yeah, a lot of people are starting to write about this now, you know, a lot of the more brave journalists. | ||
So I think you'll see a lot more of this in the coming years. | ||
That's got to be critical, is trying to get in with them and get away from the, you know, The crazy people. | ||
Zuma Hobbes says Christians are Europe's original invaders. | ||
What a stupid thing to say. | ||
Hyper Conservative says lit a votive candle for you and Knicker Nation at St. | ||
Paul's in London recently. | ||
Big guy. | ||
God bless! | ||
Well, thank you so much for the votive candle. | ||
God bless you. | ||
Eric writes this extremely derivative and worn-out joke. | ||
Honk honk. | ||
Well, I think that is an extremely derivative and we're not joking, but I guess that's the case in point. | ||
Caddy Shaxx's I Live Near South Bend under Buttigieg is termed the murder rate increased 20% and is statistically equal to Chicago. | ||
Well, there you have it. | ||
Well, from what I understand, he wasn't a successful mayor. | ||
There was a very good article by one of the people who was in the Studebaker family, who I don't know if he was the heir to the Studebaker Corporation or whatever, but he wrote an article about how Buttigieg failed as the mayor there, but it doesn't matter. | ||
That's kind of... that is also a demographic thing, is it really doesn't matter what you do or don't do anymore. | ||
We talked about this back before when Elizabeth Warren announced. | ||
You have a whole slate of candidates who haven't done anything, right? | ||
Just look at some of the names. | ||
Bernie Sanders... | ||
Has he passed any major legislation? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Warren? | ||
No. | ||
Beto O'Rourke? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Buttigieg? | ||
Failed. | ||
Kamala Harris? | ||
No. | ||
Castro? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
I mean, none of these people have done anything except for Yang. | ||
And Joe Biden was the Vice President, but aside from that, like, do we know him for anything? | ||
No. | ||
So... And by the way, non-white people typically don't care about this stuff. | ||
They just pull the lever for the Democrat. | ||
You know? | ||
And we know this. | ||
We know this about Illinois. | ||
We know this about Chicago. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Yeah, no surprise there. | ||
there. | ||
Lazar says, you might already know, but Shawnee got kicked out of Yang 2020 campaign. | ||
Jared Holt is responsible. | ||
Yeah, I saw this before I went on air. | ||
Well, it's just such a joke. | ||
And I love Jared Holt. | ||
He's tweeting about it. | ||
He's like, oh, I've got a scoop incoming. | ||
And it's like, what's the scoop? | ||
He gets some low-level volunteer for a fringe campaign fired because three or four years ago he was in Identity Europa. | ||
Like, really? | ||
It's just such a joke. | ||
It's just such a stupid... | ||
What a situation we find ourselves in where if you have the wrong opinion at any time in your life and voice it in the wrong way like you just can't have a normal life, can't have a job, can't have a campaign. | ||
There are literally journalists who are getting paid by political operatives to write hit pieces about normal everyday people who have the wrong opinions. | ||
They say that Sean is a racist alt-right podcaster. | ||
I would hardly say that's what it is, you know. | ||
I would hardly describe him in that way. | ||
More like normal Catholic guy, you know, tries to get a job and, you know, you follow and stalk people like that and you get paid to by a major think tank called People for the American Way. | ||
What a dumb situation, and people don't see anything wrong with that. | ||
People don't even know about it. | ||
You know, and that's somebody where it's like, he's not even, it's not like he's on Fox News, right? | ||
It's not even like he has a YouTube channel, or like a substantial YouTube channel, no offense, but you know what I'm saying. | ||
This is a normal guy, who has like, you know, he tweets online sometimes, will never have a normal job because, again, a few years ago he had, he held the wrong opinions. | ||
So, that's a free country, huh? | ||
Eric Wright says, wow, femoid's really out here feeling like a woman is entitled to being elected to the most important office in the world. | ||
Everything is cool and men suck. | ||
Yeah, femoids, huh? | ||
Yeah, femoids are really something these days. | ||
And that's what it is. | ||
The entitlement mentality with them. | ||
Glass Half Empty says, dude, I remember when you had as many subs as you do viewers right now. | ||
Yeah, yeah, it's been, uh, it's been a long time. | ||
Couple of years and now here we are. | ||
It's grown. | ||
Which is a good thing. | ||
So, George Henry says, Nick, favorite film from 1983? | ||
Answer? | ||
Return of the Jedi. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know what you're getting at. | ||
Off the top of my head, what movies are, uh, 1983? | ||
Let me think. | ||
I don't know him by the year. | ||
You know him by the title, actor, director. | ||
I don't know. | ||
What was in 1983? | ||
Couldn't tell ya. | ||
Marco, my favorite is 76, Taxi Driver. | ||
Or was that 76 or was that 73? | ||
I don't even know anymore. | ||
Marco says, do you think there's a chance a Republican could challenge Trump from the right on the wall in immigration like Ted Cruz? | ||
No. | ||
No chance. | ||
Trump has a 90% approval rating in the party, so good luck. | ||
Who's the challenger? | ||
Bill Weld, who ran on Gary Johnson's ticket, who was the governor of Massachusetts? | ||
That's your challenger, and maybe John Kasich, or somebody that Bill Kristol puts up, but you're not going to get anybody to the right of Trump. | ||
So, no, doubt it. | ||
Cruz would never do that. | ||
And who else would there be besides Cruz? | ||
You know that Kobach wouldn't do it. | ||
And people, oh, Tucker! | ||
Tucker will do it! | ||
Eh, Coulter will do it! | ||
Okay, retard. | ||
You know, that's not gonna happen. | ||
So, no. | ||
A retarded department says, imagine being a democrat boomer that voted for JFK and LBJ and lived through the cold war and seeing a Castro running for president in your party. | ||
To be fair, I don't think he's related to Fidel Castro, if that's what you're getting at. | ||
I don't think that's really, I don't think that really, uh, you know, is that really relevant? | ||
Is that really connected? | ||
I don't know if that's, uh, Somebody with the same last name as this dictator is running. | ||
Real sign of the times, huh? | ||
I don't know if they're related, right? | ||
And I don't think Julian Castro is a communist anyway, so... I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think there's some other pretty damning things about what's going on than that, right? | ||
That would be sort of shocking for somebody who voted for JFK. | ||
Goodtimes says, this is going to be the first time whites are exposed to white privilege as national policy after it's not only politically legitimized, but triumph over Zogknob. | ||
Things are going to get interesting. | ||
Yeah, things will deteriorate pretty quickly. | ||
People don't seem to understand the peril we're in right now, because people don't see it in their day-to-day life. | ||
But, you know, it is coming. | ||
What we're talking about is not made up. | ||
It's not conspiracy theory stuff. | ||
It's just what you see every day in Baltimore, South Side of Chicago, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, but just coming to your doorstep. | ||
It'll just come to everybody's doorstep and things will just deteriorate and decline. | ||
So, so yeah, things will get interesting. | ||
Billy says, got my mug. | ||
It's beautiful. | ||
Gonna ironically drink milk out of it like it's 2016 again. | ||
I guess that's the way you could maximize your experience, huh? | ||
Yeah, that'll be good. | ||
My friend Milk Drinker, he'll, uh, He'll be glad to hear that you're using it to drink milk. | ||
I guess that's the crossover, right? | ||
Moff says, oh no, Nick has a weapon and he's killing the super jetters. | ||
Yeah. | ||
America Only, our favorite. | ||
Our favorite. | ||
Says, if there are hundreds of cultures in one nation, there is no culture really at all. | ||
We've become Babylon in the flesh. | ||
What would God do? | ||
What would God do? | ||
I don't know, that's a good question. | ||
He'd probably destroy it. | ||
He'd probably smash it into a million pieces, right? | ||
True, very good point. | ||
Robot says, first time Super Chatter, love the show. | ||
Give Hardee's Monster Thick Burger a try. | ||
It's delicious and Hardee's hates the homos. | ||
I'll have to give that one a try. | ||
I've never eaten at Hardee's before. | ||
Actually, have I? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I think I ate at Carl's Jr. | ||
when I was in Los Angeles once and I had tacos there. | ||
Or no! | ||
No, what did I get from there? | ||
I had like loaded nachos or tater tots, something goofy like that. | ||
So I don't actually remember. | ||
I got a few things. | ||
No, I went to Jack-in-the-Box, not Carl Jr.'s. | ||
I went to Jack-in-the-Box. | ||
That's what I was thinking of. | ||
Hardee's. | ||
Yeah, I've never been there. | ||
I'll have to try that one. | ||
Monster Thickburger, huh? | ||
I'll give it a shot. | ||
Never been. | ||
I hate trying new things, but I'll give it a shot. | ||
Gruzzi's is Honk Honk, Pee Pee Poo Poo. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
Friendly Juice says Blackie wins golf championship. | ||
Big deal. | ||
Hey, that doesn't sound right to me. | ||
That's very disrespectful. | ||
He's an African-American. | ||
Please. | ||
Will you please mind the terms there? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Why is that the thing we're triggered about? | ||
People are so stupid. | ||
Like, who cares? | ||
Like, there's so many things to be mad about in the country today, and people are like, oh, Tiger Woods getting the Medal of Freedom, clown world, am I right? | ||
It's like, yeah, okay, man, sure, sure. | ||
That and how many other things? | ||
America only says we are in the age of the New World Order. | ||
That's a really interesting take. | ||
Hey, that's really fresh. | ||
I think I'm gonna use that one. | ||
That's not 30 years old. | ||
Andrew says, my dad was born in 1952, a vet, and he's a committed Catholic. | ||
His name is also Andrew, and he is a big fan. | ||
A shout-out would be great. | ||
Hey, shout-out to Andrew, my friend, who was born in 1952, a veteran who's Catholic. | ||
Shout-out to you, my friend. | ||
God bless. | ||
Hope you like the show. | ||
Gonzo says, hey, I found an epic. | ||
I see we have another Realm Royale player. | ||
Very Chad. | ||
Good to hear. | ||
Joblo says, if Batman were real, would he be accused of racism for beating up minorities? | ||
That's a really good question. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know, but that's a thinker. | ||
I'll have to think deeply on that one after the show. | ||
Some Swedish name, Bjorn or something, says, Nick, the only marriable women near me are Prozzie. | ||
Do you mean Protestant? | ||
It's marriageable, right? | ||
Prozy. | ||
Yeah, well, going to have to move to another country then, right? | ||
Going to have to be a rootless transnational. | ||
Or you just convert some woman. | ||
Frankly, that doesn't really, like, phase me if a woman's, like, not totally on board with your politics. | ||
As long as she's, like, a woman, you know, and she's, like, you know, normal and doesn't have a hundred body count or even, like, one body count. | ||
You know what I'm talking about. | ||
As long as she's, like, conservative in that sense, to me it really doesn't matter what she is because as long as you set the tone, then the rest doesn't matter. | ||
As long as she just kind of goes with the flow and, you know, does what you tell her to, then... Look, maybe that's, maybe that's a too straightforward way of putting it, but that's the way I look at it, you know? | ||
Imagine like marrying a woman and she's liberal and being like, oh no, like you're just going to, you're just going to eventually conform to what I say. | ||
And I think that's just how it's supposed to go. | ||
That's just how it's supposed to go. | ||
You got to be the man of the house. | ||
Got to lay down the law. | ||
You're going to become Catholic, babe. | ||
End of story. | ||
She says no, then she's not marriageable. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if that's true. | ||
That's a little premature. | ||
That's just the dumbest thing I've ever heard. | ||
We've gone over that a million times. | ||
You can't be moral without religion. | ||
It's just a non-starter. | ||
Gonna go get damned to hell and preach to Christians about the Bible. | ||
Pee-pee-poo-poo sodomites. | ||
Yeah, basically. | ||
Basically. | ||
Well, that's the funniest thing, is he's telling Mike Pence, you know, you're actually not the Christian one, while he's, what, butt-slamming his husband? | ||
Like, really? | ||
What a joke. | ||
We live in a clown country. | ||
It should just not be tolerated that that should be going on, you know? | ||
And we were the crazy ones for saying it would eventually come to this, right? | ||
You know, we were out there 10 years ago, and I remember when I was in like 7th grade, I was debating this gay marriage stuff when it was really like the height of the cultural revolution. | ||
I was out there on the front lines debating it even then. | ||
And we were saying the same stuff. | ||
Where does it end? | ||
Where does it end? | ||
You know? | ||
How did it start? | ||
It was, just leave them alone. | ||
They're funny! | ||
They're just like your favorite character in Modern Family, you know? | ||
They're just like us, but they're like, funny! | ||
But they're funny, though! | ||
But they're funny and quirky and, oh, they're so flamboyant and cute! | ||
They just want to get married. | ||
It's all the same. | ||
And now, now look at what it is. | ||
Now look at what it is. | ||
This sickness spreading all up and down the society. | ||
It's everywhere. | ||
And it just goes to show how far we've fallen, that that kind of depravity is tolerated at these levels, you know? | ||
And that somebody like that would even think of running, and they're viable. | ||
Crypto says, don't go off on me, it's one of these questions, but do you think a Catholic theocracy would be the ideal form of government? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, it would be. | ||
But ideal is not really something I like to traffic in because there's no such thing as design when it comes to politics. | ||
And there's no such thing as ideal. | ||
There's the pragmatic. | ||
That's what politics is. | ||
It's the art of the pragmatic. | ||
So yeah, I mean yeah, in theory it would be the ideal form of government to have some sort of monarchy, to have some sort of empire with a monarchy. | ||
And you have all kinds of components in there. | ||
You have I think, aristocratic as well as some democratic components. | ||
And by democratic, I don't mean universal suffrage. | ||
I mean, you have some voting or plebiscite or something like that. | ||
But, yeah, it would be governed by natural law, by Catholic law. | ||
That would be ideal. | ||
And if you're a Catholic, how could you believe anything but that, you know? | ||
How could you believe there's any law superior to God's law, right? | ||
So, that's ideal, but, you know, I don't know if we'll get there in our lifetime. | ||
Sneaker says it's called basic morality. | ||
No such thing. | ||
No such thing! | ||
Basic morality. | ||
What is basic? | ||
What is basic? | ||
It's basic because you're living in the ruins of Christian civilization. | ||
It's basic because you had a Christian civilization for, you know, 1700 years. | ||
Effectively, right? | ||
So what is basic to us is based on Christianity, but there is no such thing as this, you know Substanceless contentless morality that is standard for everybody You know, you have to believe in God to get morality So Thrall says how long until America collapses and how will that collapse look like will it be fast? | ||
Or in 10 years or slow like 50 years. | ||
Collapse is not coming. | ||
Don't be an idiot. | ||
How many times do I have to say it on the show? | ||
Collapse is not coming. | ||
Collapse does not... That is a myth. | ||
That is a myth by young, stupid people who believe their life is a movie. | ||
You know, life is not a movie. | ||
Look at history. | ||
You know, even look at like the Soviet Union, which collapsed. | ||
Did you get like a collapse? | ||
This empire, which was insane! | ||
You know, it's crazy the idea that for like, how many years did you have this communist empire? | ||
It's crazy that that even happened. | ||
And it all came crashing down in the span of a couple of years. | ||
Did that constitute a collapse? | ||
Was there a total breakdown in order? | ||
Yeah, for like a day. | ||
And then it was business as usual, very quickly, right? | ||
Did it turn into a Turner Diaries type situation where there was war in the streets? | ||
No. | ||
And even when the initial revolution happened a hundred years ago, before the invention of modern communication technology and modern military technology and the centralized state and bureaucracy and so on, before the managerial revolution, even then, you had a civil war that lasted five years. | ||
Business as usual. | ||
Nye Avenue. | ||
Nye Avenue Czar. | ||
It's called the General Secretary. | ||
So, the collapse will not come. | ||
You know, all these people. | ||
The collapse. | ||
The collapse. | ||
What are we going to do when the collapse comes? | ||
There will be no collapse. | ||
There will be no breakdown in order widespread like that. | ||
At least, I don't think so. | ||
Things will just get worse and you just have to deal with that. | ||
This collapse eschatology is denialism. | ||
It's denialism. | ||
It's, I don't have, I can just sort of separate myself out. | ||
I can look forward to this date when it's all just going to be cleared and reset. | ||
It's not coming. | ||
That day is not going to come. | ||
And history don't get these days. | ||
You know, you get something new, right? | ||
And you're just gonna get, you're just gonna get a society that deteriorates. | ||
I said it before, Brazil has not collapsed. | ||
Sub-Saharan Africa has not collapsed. | ||
You know, and you might have a civil war here and there, a regime change or whatever, but it doesn't collapse. | ||
It's just really, really bad. | ||
It's just gonna be really, really bad. | ||
Or worse. | ||
It's just gonna have, you're just gonna have a bifurcated society. | ||
This is what it'll look like. | ||
You'll have cities which are going to be have areas in them which are very wealthy and that is going to look like the first world. | ||
It'll be multi-racial but it'll look like the first world. | ||
It'll be rich. | ||
It'll be clean. | ||
You know you'll have high-end shops and technology and then you'll have the rest which will be poor and sad and miserable and there'll be debt and there'll be crime and so on and that's what the country will look like. | ||
You know, and Kaplan described this in, um, The Coming Anarchy. | ||
He said it would be like, uh, picture a limousine driving through a ghetto. | ||
That's the bifurcated world. | ||
Inside the limousine, which is nice and rich, and if you have enough money you can afford to live inside there, and on the outside, it'll be miserable. | ||
You'll have climate change, you'll have all these other things going on, crime, poverty, corruption, and so on. | ||
It'll look like Brazil. | ||
How long until the collapse? | ||
Dude, just take yourself out. | ||
You're not gonna make it, my friend. | ||
Ruggles says they add mac sauce themselves during prep, you pleb. | ||
I've never heard of that before. | ||
Billy says, winning the meme wars. | ||
Benny Johnson. | ||
Yeah, that's great. | ||
Ron Sun says, welcome to McDonald's. | ||
We sell three bacons for the price of three. | ||
Okay, I don't even know what that means. | ||
Fuentes says, tell us more about your dad and your XGF. | ||
Well, I don't know where you're getting any of this from, but I don't know. | ||
For $2 at 840, what do you want to know about my dad? | ||
Oh, I don't know. | ||
My dad's a good dude. | ||
Again, I don't want to give out too much personal information because I don't want people to go around doxing or whatever. | ||
Yeah, not much to tell. | ||
He's from the city. | ||
I don't want to tell you what he does or anything like that because I don't want you to go to his place of business or whatever. | ||
Yeah, I don't know why people are prying on the details. | ||
Yesterday I'm getting people asking me, what's the biggest super chat you ever got? | ||
What's your income look like? | ||
What's your social security number? | ||
Today it's tell me about your mom, tell me about your dad, tell me about everyone you ever knew. | ||
Why don't you mind your own business, okay? | ||
David Sperner says, love it when Nick can't take the nags from the super chatters I was explaining to the Anglos and nature of the Mediterranean man. | ||
Great show, big guy. | ||
What do you mean I can't take the nags? | ||
I love when people It's just, I just can't deal with it anymore. | ||
I can't take the nags. | ||
I do the show 300 and so many times with the Super Chats, with the nags. | ||
Can't take it. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
What does it mean when someone can't take it? | ||
Obviously, you can take it if you do it in good fun and you laugh at it every night. | ||
Can't take it. | ||
It's like when people, it's like when I block people on Twitter and they're like, oh, he couldn't handle my bants. | ||
It's like, no, it's just annoying, you know? | ||
You can't take it. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Love when he can't take the negs. | ||
What a joker. | ||
Legalize says, what advice would you give to someone facing a felony like me? | ||
I don't know, man. | ||
Talk to your lawyer. | ||
POTUS says, Warski's IQ technically makes him semi-retarded. | ||
F in the chat if he should become a hero. | ||
Okay, well, not gonna sponsor that. | ||
Disavow that part. | ||
But what's his IQ? | ||
Did he get it tested? | ||
I haven't seen that. | ||
Sneaker says, Nick, get yourself a nice Protestant girl and work on her like an antique car. | ||
This is the only route to happiness. | ||
What? | ||
Okay, no. | ||
Forget that. | ||
I'm gonna find a Catholic girl. | ||
This guy comes to me and says, well, they're all Protestant around me. | ||
Well, I'm not gonna settle for that if I can find someone else. | ||
If you leave in If you live in, you know, gay, pagan Sweden, that's probably the case. | ||
But in America, we can move around a little bit. | ||
Also, I could go to my homeland, Italy. | ||
You know, we can figure that out. | ||
So, no. | ||
No, I'm not gonna deal with that. | ||
I got enough to worry about in my life that I'm gonna be converting some Protestant woman. | ||
Doctor...okay, I can't read that username, but he says, went to Walmart yesterday. | ||
The customers there look like Robert De Niro's Mudd Children, but with more beans. | ||
Okay, disavow. | ||
That's a very racist thing to say, and I disavow that actually. | ||
Bill Dings says, Nick big guy been drinking straight tap ever since I moved into my new apartment and I can feel it making me retarded. | ||
What water filter do you recommend? | ||
The $300 Infowars one? | ||
I don't know the name of mine. | ||
It's in my refrigerator. | ||
You know, I get the water from the refrigerator dispenser and there's a filter inside there. | ||
So I don't know which one I use. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Do your own. | ||
Why? | ||
Why would the recommendations? | ||
I don't know the one I use. | ||
Just look it up. | ||
Look up best water filter. | ||
And I'm sure you can find an article that says, here's the one with the most bang for your buck. | ||
Here's the best one overall. | ||
Here's one that's expensive, but it's the best one. | ||
Is it hard? | ||
Nick, which one do you recommend to look it up? | ||
How about you look it up? | ||
How about you just look it up, my friend? | ||
How about you just Google it? | ||
This is why we have the internet. | ||
I don't have one I can recommend. | ||
Do you think I sample them? | ||
Do you think I'm like, oh, I'll try this one and that one? | ||
You just get the one that works on the fridge, you plug it in, the water comes out filtered, okay? | ||
So, I don't have a good answer for you, in short. | ||
Sammo says Jesus is Lord. | ||
I agree. | ||
I agree with that. | ||
Lauren Rose says, did you watch Kickstarter TV 2 yet? | ||
No, I haven't. | ||
Haven't had time yet. | ||
Nathan says, Nick, I'm thinking about stopping by the gas station to fill up my car and maybe grab a bang energy drink. | ||
Any tips on how to maximize my experience? | ||
Don't do the bang. | ||
Do Monster. | ||
Do Monster Zero Ultra. | ||
Anon says, Nick or Meetup when? | ||
Also, pee-pee, excuse me, pee-pee-poo-poo. | ||
I don't know if we're ever going to do a Nick or Meetup. | ||
Why does everyone want to meet me? | ||
Why do we always have to do a Meetup? | ||
Isn't it enough that you just watch the show? | ||
It's always more. | ||
It's always, Nick, have this guest on. | ||
Nick, do this upgrade. | ||
Nick, put it on iTunes. | ||
Nick, when are we gonna meet up? | ||
Nick, start your own political party. | ||
Just watch the show. | ||
It's Monday through Friday. | ||
It's free. | ||
Nick, show up on time. | ||
It's Monday through Friday. | ||
It's free to watch. | ||
Can't you just Say it's a good thing. | ||
Let's just watch the show. | ||
You know, I go to McDonald's and I know the program. | ||
I order a hamburger. | ||
I don't say, I don't stop at the window and say, hey, you know what you guys should do? | ||
You should start offering tacos. | ||
And you know what else? | ||
You should have me, Michael Jones, be the manager here. | ||
And you know what else? | ||
I think we should hang out on Sunday. | ||
What's your name? | ||
What's your phone number? | ||
Let's hang out. | ||
Tell me about your parents. | ||
I just go. | ||
I ordered the hamburger. | ||
Here's my five dollars for the hamburger. | ||
And then I'm out of there. | ||
And then I eat the hamburger. | ||
And I enjoy the rest of my day. | ||
Okay? | ||
When are we gonna meet up? | ||
When are we gonna meet up? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I don't know. | ||
We'll meet up in heaven one day. | ||
We'll all meet up one of these days. | ||
Okay? | ||
We will all be reunited, living in the dead. | ||
The kingdom will have no end. | ||
We know how the rest goes. | ||
Alright? | ||
That's the meet up. | ||
We're crying out loud. | ||
We're all going to meet up in Guyana. | ||
It's called Nickstown. | ||
And guess what? | ||
Everybody's... No, I'm joking! | ||
That's a joke! | ||
That's a joke! | ||
Joke department. | ||
Hello, joke department. | ||
Time out. | ||
Blow the whistle. | ||
Time out. | ||
Joke department. | ||
I'd like to file a claim. | ||
That was a joke. | ||
I am not going to kill my followers. | ||
I am not going to kill my followers. | ||
That was a joke. | ||
Okay? | ||
It's a joke. | ||
Everybody relax. | ||
Jared, hey! | ||
Oh! | ||
Jared, put down the pen. | ||
Stop typing. | ||
It was a joke. | ||
Me, implying that I would go to Guyana, just like Jim Jones, and have Jonestown type mass suicide or homicide, perhaps, of Super Chatters. | ||
It was a joke. | ||
It was totally a parody. | ||
It was all in good fun. | ||
Just simply satire. | ||
All right? | ||
Kidding. | ||
Kidding. | ||
It's a show. | ||
All right. | ||
Maybe we'll do a meetup. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not planning one anytime soon. | ||
I don't know what the use would be. | ||
So, eventually. | ||
Maybe in 10 years. | ||
All right. | ||
Marco says God didn't give Nick an Italian Tony Soprano father to look up to. | ||
Okay. | ||
That's just rude. | ||
I'm not reading that one. | ||
Some other guy in all caps. | ||
I'm just not reading that one. | ||
Nick is in society already collapsing in many places. | ||
It's... | ||
Why do you put it in all caps? | ||
I don't want to read in all caps. | ||
Insane person's message. | ||
You might as well just send me a piece of notebook paper with, like, letters cut out from a magazine. | ||
You know, you might as well do that and have a super chat in all caps, right? | ||
It's collapsing. | ||
This is not sustainable. | ||
Over many decades, it will fall apart. | ||
I've answered this question. | ||
Nick Fuentes' Bad Optics says, Hey Nick, great show tonight. | ||
I was wondering your opinion on Just Kidding interviewing Michael Jones. | ||
Yeah, great. | ||
Anon says, Knickers for America when? | ||
Also pee pee poo poo soon. | ||
Legalize something says, Do you think lollicon is morally okay? | ||
No, and I disavow. | ||
Check says Nick Hong Kong. | ||
Yeah, I'm feeling that lately Boomer nation says Italians aren't white Castillo's aren't white, but Italian Castillo's the true master race Yeah, Italians are not white and Castillo. | ||
Why would we want to be white? | ||
Why would we want to be a part of a civilization which is destroying itself? | ||
You know people are like you're not white. | ||
You're not white. | ||
It's like um Thanks And people, you're a Mexican. | ||
I'm pretty sure Mexicans are inheriting the country, so maybe you're just upset. | ||
Maybe you're upset at the scoreboard or something. | ||
You know, or Italians aren't white. | ||
Or, you know, you're only a little bit Italian. | ||
Italians don't want to be white. | ||
We want no part of your, you know, globo-homo-anglo-Protestant empire. | ||
We have the Roman Empire. | ||
We have the Renaissance. | ||
We have the Vatican. | ||
Pretty sure we're doing fine without being white. | ||
All right? | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
All right. | ||
So, um, so I agree. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Ron Sons says, Nick, do you know you can buy a TV for $200? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's good to know. | |
Hokey says, hey Nick, when can we meet up and see all the guests? | ||
We want you to interview and get legal advice from you. | ||
Also, what should I order at McDonald's? | ||
That's so funny, dude. | ||
That's hilarious. | ||
It's so funny and so relatable. | ||
Gruzai says, pee pee poo poo. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Dissident Tech says, I give and I give, Nick. | ||
Yeah, it's true. | ||
It's what it is. | ||
I am a giver, truly. | ||
A selfless giver. | ||
Pilled Knight says, hey Nick, what is the best priced fertilizer for my home garden? | ||
I'm growing blueberries. | ||
Great question. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not a gardener and I have no other use for fertilizer, so I couldn't tell you. | ||
Blue Force says, when are you writing a book? | ||
I'm not going to write a book. | ||
People are always like, Nick, why don't you write? | ||
Why don't you do the written word? | ||
Write in a medium that nobody's going to read? | ||
You do the medium that people are communicating in. | ||
Jen Shaw, what's your opinion on blonde men? | ||
Uh, fine. | ||
They're just as good as anybody else, I guess. | ||
Sure. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't really have an opinion on blonde men. | |
Uh, I do believe in, you know, brown hair master race. | ||
So, eh. | ||
But they're fine, you know? | ||
What difference does it make, really? | ||
Now, I did see a study that said that women prefer more Mediterranean-looking men as opposed to Anglo. | ||
They said, you know, women rated white as the most attractive, but they said that the Mediterranean type, like white with dark features, was the most attractive as opposed to white with light features. | ||
So, I will say that. | ||
Observer says, you think you're free? | ||
Knicker, we own you. | ||
Yeah, something like that. | ||
You think you do. | ||
You think you do, but you don't. | ||
George Zachrisson says, you have the patience of a saint. | ||
God bless lol. | ||
I really do. | ||
You know, maybe not saintly in all characteristics, but I do have the patience of one. | ||
Certainly. | ||
Hokey says, what do you think about mergers and acquisitions? | ||
What kind of question even is that? | ||
Okay, we're done with the Super Chats. | ||
That's the last one. | ||
That's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
It's just every day it feels like they get worse. | ||
It feels like the Super Chats are getting worse. | ||
Right? | ||
We got two more. | ||
We got three more. | ||
Four more. | ||
Wow! | ||
Wow! | ||
Okay, Joe blows the last Super Chat I'm gonna read and then that's it. | ||
Even if I get more. | ||
Okay? | ||
So just be advised. | ||
Black Ops says you have no idea how bad it is down on the border. | ||
It's worse than you know. | ||
Can't go into detail privately. | ||
No, no, thank you. | ||
But that's good to know. | ||
unidentified
|
Briggs can't go into detail privately, implying, what do you think I'm gonna like give you? | |
Hey, hey, hey, tell me about what it's like at the border. | ||
Like, I'm gonna indulge that. | ||
Can't go into detail privately. | ||
unidentified
|
Please give me a break with these people, my own. | |
Can't go into detail privately. | ||
Yeah, no thanks. | ||
No, thank you. | ||
Anything you got to say, you could say it with the super chat starting at $1.99. | ||
All right. | ||
Briggs says, hey Nick, just want to say thanks for doing the show, big guy. | ||
Have a good night. | ||
Well, thank you. | ||
Thank you for a little positivity there. | ||
Ella says, is your patron saint, Saint Jude? | ||
Uh, no, it's St. | ||
George. | ||
Also, Berkey Water Filter. | ||
Thanks for the great show. | ||
Hey, you're welcome. | ||
And, uh, Berkey Water Filter. | ||
I'll have to put that one down. | ||
Joblos says, post your pinky. | ||
It'll be funny. | ||
Uh, no, I think it's creepy. | ||
Leo says, tell me a bedtime story. | ||
No. | ||
Uh, Ruggles says, God bless you, Nick. | ||
You know how to take the bants. | ||
How not to take the bants to heart. | ||
Very true. | ||
You have to have a thick skin. | ||
Look, if you do this, you have to have a thick skin. | ||
And people say, he has a thin, he has a thin skin because he blocked me on Twitter. | ||
No, that just means you don't like to have your mind polluted with people that hate you and spread negativity. | ||
But you couldn't do this and have a thin skin, right? | ||
CG says $2 super chat. | ||
Yeah, thank you. | ||
Okay, now that's all our super chats. | ||
So that's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Okay, there's more. | ||
I'm not, you have to cut it off at some point. | ||
Remember to check us out. | ||
NicholasJFuentes.com slash premium to get your premium membership. | ||
It's only five bucks a month. | ||
That's the best way to support the show. | ||
We're 100% viewer funded. | ||
Who else would fund this show but the viewers, right? | ||
I imagine, like, who else would be funding this operation? | ||
What would be the interest? | ||
What would be the motive that somebody would fund me putting people on blast, like, in this fashion? | ||
You know, I imagine like a foreign country or some big conglomerate, you know, funding this and putting me in their office. | ||
All right, Nick, you got to stop with these, you know, bullying your audience and this kind of stuff. | ||
So it's 100% viewer funded. | ||
You got to buy a premium membership to support the show. | ||
Five books a month. | ||
The link is down below. | ||
NicholasJFuentes.com Remember to subscribe to the channel, give us a big thumbs up, leave a comment down below, click the notification button to get notified every time I go live. | ||
Remember, we're on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
As always, thank you guys for watching the show. | ||
Thank you, Super Chatters. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thanks to the premium members. | ||
Thanks to everybody who watches. | ||
We love you folks and we will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America first! |