Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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Thank you. | |
you you Thank you. | ||
Wall. Wall. | ||
unidentified
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Wall. | |
Wall. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
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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. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
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 this Thursday, and we really are excited to be back because that means that we're still here. | ||
That means that we're still here. | ||
We can still collect ad revenue and super chats, and that's a great thing. | ||
So we are Normally, I just have to say that. | ||
It's one of the things I am required by Ezra Levant and my producers to say. | ||
Which is, I'm excited to be with you. | ||
And you know, some days I am. | ||
Some days I'm less excited. | ||
But today we are excited. | ||
We've gotten another day. | ||
Every day is a blessing that we're able to do America First. | ||
So we are excited. | ||
There's a lot going on in the news, for real as well. | ||
And we'll be talking about immigration again, one of our favorites back in the news. | ||
We'll be looking at some new numbers from Breitbart talking about just how bad it is. | ||
We thought it was bad last month. | ||
The numbers from this month were worse. | ||
We thought it was bad in April when I think it was a 15 or 16 year record high number of Apprehensions. | ||
And now it's May and the numbers are a lot worse. | ||
20 year high illegal immigrants apprehended. | ||
So we'll be looking at those numbers. | ||
We'll be looking at the progress being made with Mexico. | ||
there is a little bit of a white pill at the end of tonight's show that it seems to me, and it seems like President Trump's threat of tariffs, not only is actually going to go into effect, our biggest concern last week was that this tariff threat would not actually materialize in anything our biggest concern last week was that this tariff threat would not actually materialize in anything concrete, but it looks like not only is that going to happen, but we'll also get a So we'll look at the immigration situation. | ||
We'll be looking at a new bill by Josh Hawley, the senator from Missouri to target YouTube and all that that entails. | ||
I don't think the substance of the bill is really the most important thing. | ||
We'll talk about what's in it, but also just the general legislative approach to go after the big four tech companies. | ||
And, of course, the feature of tonight's show, we'll be talking about D-Day, 75th anniversary, June 6th. | ||
So it is 75 years to the day. | ||
1944 was when it happened. | ||
It's 2019 now 75 years. | ||
So we'll go into all of that I have to say I've been I've been doing this show for two years now so I think This is our second D-Day anniversary that we're covering and two years you kind of see all the takes that are there. | ||
It's going to be difficult for me to sort of make my way and find some kind of a new take, a new statement about the day because you know I'm just looking all around online and it's just the same stuff it seems like every year and really the D-Day thing is something that people talk about a lot as a point of contrast maybe for | ||
The current day so we're gonna try and find a fresh take something a little bit more original and that'll be our show that is gonna fill us up I think I do have to apologize I'm I think I'm sick I think I got a bug you know normally when I tell you I'm sick it's because I'm throwing up you know it's like | ||
I've had Taco Bell or Chick-fil-A and I go crazy, you know, I like one time I got Wendy's at like midnight and I got, you know, like 10 different things and it's like, well, you can kind of blame me for that, right? | ||
I mean, that was self-inflicted entirely. | ||
Or it's I've been awake for 72 hours and I'm going crazy, you know? | ||
And I'm talking to my mom at breakfast about how we really need to start taking it up a notch if we're ever gonna solve things. | ||
And she's like, you know, maybe you should skip the show tonight. | ||
You seem a little bit off. | ||
But I feel like I am actually getting sick now. | ||
I have some kind of a bug. | ||
You can hear it. | ||
I can hear it. | ||
It's settled into my throat, I think. | ||
Yesterday I was telling you my throat was hurting. | ||
And it's a big bummer because, you know, I haven't gotten sick in, I think, years, really. | ||
I can't remember the last time I got, you know, actually like a bug, like a cold or a virus or something like that. | ||
So I think we're here, you know. | ||
I thought it was happening yesterday. | ||
It seems like I'm coming down to something. | ||
So I do apologize if I sound a little bit... | ||
Scratch here. | ||
I'm a little bit out of it. | ||
I'm trying to keep up. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm trying to. | ||
The show must go on. | ||
But I do apologize. | ||
Might have to be taking frequent sips out of the water. | ||
I might hear some throat clearing and, you know, nasal things going on, sinus things going on. | ||
But I'm gonna do my best. | ||
Power through. | ||
Just take it easy on the super chats. | ||
unidentified
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All right. | |
I know a lot of people have this penchant of, it's 9 15 p.m. | ||
I can still send a super chat. | ||
He likes this. | ||
You know, I'll take the money. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
But it's like, you know, We're gonna try and power through. | ||
Maybe we'll answer them very quickly tonight so I can get to bed, get some rest, you know, get some fluids in me and all that. | ||
Additionally, one other housekeeping thing before we get into... | ||
The news. | ||
I know a lot of people were freaking out at me on Twitter saying, oh my god Nick, they gotcha! | ||
unidentified
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I just checked your YouTube channel and all your videos are gone! | |
I did have to go in yesterday and I privated all of my videos after the show last night. | ||
I did not private last night's show, but all the shows up until last night I put on private mode, which means you can't see them. | ||
And I know it sucks. | ||
It's a big bummer. | ||
Obviously, I know a lot of people catch up on the shows, you know, if they can't catch them live. | ||
I put out a lot of content in a week, so people are catching up, and now they can't do that. | ||
But it's just a precautionary measure. | ||
YouTube is obviously being very aggressive with the enforcement of these new policies out of a clear blue sky. | ||
You know, they changed the rules, and they judge old videos based on the new rules, and they're expanding the old rules, and you know, we know the craziness that's going on. | ||
So I thought, as a precautionary measure, gotta lock them up. | ||
Maybe that'll change in the future. | ||
Maybe I'll unlock them if they roll this back or something changes. | ||
But for the foreseeable future, we're gonna have to lock those up and be a lot more careful. | ||
That said, all my videos, I think... | ||
I'm not sure when this began, but I do have a channel on BitChute, actually, where all my shows have been mirrored. | ||
So if you go on BitChute and you look up America First, BitChute is an alternative to YouTube. | ||
It's BitChute, B-I-T-C-H-U-T-E, for people that don't know. | ||
What is he saying? | ||
I get a lot of boomers. | ||
What is he saying? | ||
They'll leave the timestamp. | ||
What is he saying at 21 whatever? | ||
BitChute? | ||
So it's BitChute. | ||
It's like an alternative video hosting website. | ||
And like I said, all of the videos that I privated, I believe, are there. | ||
And maybe even ones that were previously unavailable that I privated before the latest privating purge, as you could call it. | ||
So for people that are wondering what's going on, did I get banned, was I purged? | ||
No, I'm good. | ||
Just had to take that precautionary measure, but you can still find them elsewhere. | ||
And I have them all backed up at home, you know, in the event that everything gets taken down. | ||
So I know people are worried. | ||
We're good. | ||
So with that out of the way, those are some housekeeping things. | ||
Kind of a, you know, bummer. | ||
I'm sick. | ||
We're privating videos. | ||
It's like Zog. | ||
You know, it's one of these days, one of these days where Zog is just coming down hard. | ||
And I wonder, how does a person like me even get sick? | ||
I don't even leave the house. | ||
I don't even talk to anybody. | ||
How do I get sick? | ||
And then I realized, you know what it was? | ||
I went to the doctor recently, and after I went to the doctor, I think I started eating, and I was like, oh, I forgot to wash my hands! | ||
After I went to the doctor! | ||
And it's always that, you know? | ||
And isn't that the way it goes in America? | ||
Go to the doctor, get sick? | ||
What the, what is that? | ||
And it makes sense, because that's where all the sick people go, but it's like, that's why I don't go to the doctor! | ||
My mom's always like, why do you need to see the doctor? | ||
You don't believe in medicine, you don't believe in this stuff, you're crazy! | ||
Go to the doctor, get sick for the first time in years, naturally, right? | ||
So whatever. | ||
We'll deal with it, but we'll deal with it, okay? | ||
I'm fine! | ||
So we're gonna dive right in and we'll talk about D-Day. | ||
And like I said, there's just so many takes about D-Day. | ||
Obviously, we're going to deal with this with a level of maturity and seriousness, because we're talking about sacrifice, which is an important thing. | ||
It's a sacred thing, I believe. | ||
But I will say, stepping outside that for a moment, that the way that D-Day, to me, is paraded around in political rhetoric and polemical works, it's a little much. | ||
Even people like Ben Shapiro. | ||
Right, I'm storming the beaches of Normandy a lot. | ||
You hear this a lot. | ||
And so I think, unfortunately, it has been sort of watered down, made to be a little bit trite because people do that. | ||
We look at D-Day, and to me, the most obvious thing, and of course, what is D-Day? | ||
June 6, 1944. | ||
It's the biggest amphibious assault in world history. | ||
Of course, this was the Allied invasion of France at the beaches of Normandy, and this turned the tide of the whole World War II. | ||
You know, Germany had taken over the continent, and this was a very bad thing. | ||
You know, this was a very bad thing that Nazi Germany was on the rise and was taking over Europe. | ||
Can't have that. | ||
You know, so the Allies went in, we secured a foothold in Europe, and that was able to allow us to expand and eventually win the war in Europe. | ||
Operation Overlord. | ||
Very big stuff. | ||
And of course, what is the story of D-Day, the defining virtues and principles, what people think of when they think of D-Day? | ||
Sacrifice, patriotism, heroism, and I'll say this much, what we have to do on this day to me is separate out in divorce the political consequences, the political commentary, and the virtues of the people that served. | ||
I think that is necessary because we have to at once acknowledge that the people that were actually at Normandy Beach The greatest generation in history, no doubt. | ||
And many of the points that are made, boomers, millennials, all kinds of people make this point that, you know, they were heroes and what are we doing now? | ||
What are millennials and Generation Z doing now? | ||
It's true. | ||
You know, to go into that situation, to go into, to run into gunfire and understand the mortality rate was sky high, you know, in that military situation, it takes something which is superhuman and, And so, I think we have to separate out in divorce the sacrifice, the heroism of the people that is eternal and never dies. | ||
And, you know, we thank obviously the troops that died there and the people that survived and everybody who served. | ||
I had family members who served in World War II, not in the European theater, but in the Pacific theater. | ||
So, And once we acknowledge that, and there's no match for American heroism, but the show is about politics, and I think a lot of people like to take that and use it to grandstand about politics. | ||
And so to me, I look at the World War II and what people make of it. | ||
The problem I have is when people take the heroism and they make it about, well, it's a testament to democracy, or it's a testament to liberalism. | ||
And what this was really about is not so much, you know, the human sacrifice and triumph, the courage, the bravery, these things, but it was also about this political context where we were making the world safe for democracy or something like that. | ||
And to me the most obvious take, the most obvious observation that one can make in 2019, 75 years later, is contrasting the level, the magnitude of the sacrifice that was made, the severity, the intensity of that situation, | ||
with the ultimate result 75 years later and you take a look at what was done this the the the places that people went to in order to win that war you know the stakes in that in that conflict and then see the inevitable result or maybe it wasn't inevitable but the ultimate result 75 years later and comparing those two things to me that's the most obvious observation people say they want to die for democracy they want to die | ||
To me, I see World War II in much simpler terms. | ||
It is two countries vying for geopolitical power. | ||
I don't see it as anything more complicated than that. | ||
I don't see it as a grand struggle. | ||
Between good and evil, as many see it, I see geopolitical actors. | ||
What was World War II about? | ||
It's the same thing that World War I was about. | ||
It's, in very simple international relations terms, a contest of power between Germany and the United Kingdom, very simply. | ||
And to explain it briefly, to do a short little summary of my position on the World War II scenario, what brought us there, what brought us to war as America into that conflict, very simple. | ||
You had the United Kingdom, which was the global hegemon since the end of the Napoleonic Wars. | ||
You know, for maybe the past 400 or so years, it was this conflict between the French Empire and the British Empire. | ||
And this has been going on for a long time. | ||
The Thirty Years' War, people said, was the first world war in the 18th century. | ||
And you had this conflict between continental European power and British power. | ||
We're not going to get too into detail on that. | ||
But basically, by the end of the Napoleonic Wars, after a couple of industrial revolutions, and Britain is the commercial power of the world and military power of the world, they, at the turn of the 20th century, are the number one power on the planet. | ||
It is the Pax Britannica You know this global peace maintained by the British Empire and what you have with the advent of an industrial Germany is a contest to Britain's global hegemony. | ||
What you see in World War I and World War II is a clashing of these two worlds. | ||
It's a challenge by Central Europe, by Germany, against this regional and global hegemony by the British Empire. | ||
So when I see, I hear all these takes about Normandy, about D-Day, and it's about democracy, and we color this whatever political party with some kind of partisan ideology, the left likes to say, Well, when we went in and we stormed the beaches, this was about defeating racism! | ||
It was about defeating the racist Nazi empire. | ||
So really, it's a story of anti-racism or, you know, the right side of history triumphing over evil, prejudice, and regressive totalitarianism. | ||
This sort of thing. | ||
Right-wing fascism. | ||
The right-wing says it is Americans triumphing over so- excuse me. | ||
That's that bug coming up, right? | ||
Both takes are basically wrong. | ||
Right wing, it is America, the free nation of the founding fathers triumphing over socialism. | ||
Both takes are basically wrong. | ||
And I think Patrick Casey said something to this effect this week, and he's right on the money. | ||
It's two countries or two aligned groups of countries fighting against each other for geopolitical primacy. | ||
Now, outside of that, to take an actual political perspective, aside from, you know, all this partisan stuff, to me, you look at why people fought and died in Normandy. | ||
It had nothing to do with democracy. | ||
I don't think people go onto Normandy Beach running into gunfire, running into artillery fire, running into, you know, planes bombing you, and all kinds of, you know, a horrible situation like that. | ||
They don't go into that for this abstract idea of democracy. | ||
And what even is democracy? | ||
Voting at the ballot box? | ||
You think people went to the beaches of Normandy, you know, this amphibious assault or parachuting down, and it's these intense wartime conditions? | ||
Some people never recover from the PTSD. | ||
You think people go into that? | ||
Well, they're drafted. | ||
But do you think people go into that even if they chose or they were eager because they wanted to defend the right to drop your paper into the ballot box? | ||
No, of course not. | ||
They didn't go to fight and die for liberal values, democratic values. | ||
They went to fight and die for their families. | ||
That's why people fight and die in war. | ||
And ostensibly, as much as you can say that liberalism And democracy facilitates the family and the prosperity of the family. | ||
They're defending democracy and liberalism. | ||
But what it's really about at the end of the day is this idea of posterity. | ||
Protecting a society that is worth living in. | ||
Protecting a civilization worth living in. | ||
So that your kids can live in it. | ||
And they can be safe in it. | ||
That's why people fight and die in a war. | ||
And when we look at the sacrifice made by the people that went into possibly the worst wartime scenario that we can see in modern history. | ||
Mostly brought on by the advent of modern wartime technology. | ||
But people go into this terrible situation. | ||
Why did they go in? | ||
For family? | ||
For posterity? | ||
And we look at the ultimate result 75 years later, we can see we have not done them proud. | ||
We have failed our ancestors. | ||
I think that's really the lesson of D-Day. | ||
People that fight and die not for democracy, not for liberalism, for the world, or for the foreign hordes, or for foreign countries, or, you know, other people that are coming into the country. | ||
No, they fought and died for the people, their children, their kin, their blood, their nation. | ||
That's what a nation is. | ||
And what are we doing now? | ||
Replacing those children. | ||
Or those genetic lines are stopping. | ||
Why? | ||
Because somebody decides to be a lesbian, you know. | ||
The genetic line stops because somebody wants to focus on their career. | ||
You know, they want to focus on selling insurance. | ||
Uh, and so either the genetic lines are stopping, or they're being bred out of existence by other people, or we're bringing in other people. | ||
And even the people that are descended from the greatest generation, even the people that the society was intended for, right? | ||
The sacrifices were intended for, pursuant to the creation and maintenance of the society for those children. | ||
What have they turned it into? | ||
And this is the take that I've heard From a lot of people, a society that is unrecognizable, that is not a moral society, that is not a good society, a society that I don't even think you could say is good-looking or beautiful or anything like that. | ||
We look around and what has been the show about for the last week? | ||
How the country is now just simply dirty. | ||
We looked at Los Angeles earlier this week. | ||
The great industrial cities that we fought, you know, to maintain and keep for posterity. | ||
We're now covered in garbage filled with rats, rodents, homeless people littering in the streets and also littering the streets and the sidewalks, typhus, typhoid, tuberculosis, medieval diseases being brought back, crime, murders, rapes, shootings. | ||
We see it in Chicago, Baltimore, Washington DC. | ||
We know the cause. | ||
Democrats, of course. | ||
And we see that ultimately, even if that were bad enough, Drag queen story times, drag kids, all that sort of stuff. | ||
Even if that weren't enough, we're giving it to other people anyway. | ||
So even if that was not bad enough, that the country has just been a big red line going down, a big thumbs down, frowny face for the past 70 years, 75 years, If that were not the worst case scenario, we're giving that, in the end, the land, the wealth, all the fruits of the sacrifice, not on the battlefield, not even on the battlefield, but also in the factories or the fields, anywhere else. | ||
We're just giving it away to other people. | ||
We're giving it away to foreigners. | ||
And so, I think we look back 75 years very solemnly. | ||
And we can at once acknowledge, again, the bravery, the courage, the sacrifice, and I think that is eternal. | ||
And that is relatable in all times. | ||
You know, I think a people is defined by its heroes in that way. | ||
But we have to divorce that out from, of course, the inevitable consequence, which whatever partisan side you take, whether Hitler was a racist or Hitler was a socialist, whatever, whatever you need the boogeyman to be, to me it is wholly irrelevant. | ||
We have to look inwardly. | ||
What have we done with the country that those people fought for? | ||
What have we done with it? | ||
Have we done a good thing with the country? | ||
I would say not. | ||
Now, I don't have too much accountability for that. | ||
I was born in 1998, okay? | ||
Who do we blame for it? | ||
The Baby Boomers. | ||
Those that came right after, right? | ||
And what did they do? | ||
Turn it upside down and gave it away. | ||
So, on D-Day, I would say we have to look back at those heroes and we have to channel that ourselves. | ||
What were they willing to do for their families? | ||
They were willing to storm Normandy Beach. | ||
And it wasn't exactly a choice for them. | ||
You know, they were drafted in many cases. | ||
I don't think that negates the heroism, right? | ||
But what were they willing to do for their families? | ||
What were they willing to do for their civilization and their society? | ||
Something that is ungodly in terms of the sacrifice, in terms of the bravery and courage necessary to do what they did. | ||
What are you willing to do to preserve the society, or to maintain it, or to renew it, whatever we want to call it? | ||
How do we turn our situation around and make a civilization worth living in for ourselves, our children, and for the general posterity? | ||
What are you willing to do? | ||
So I think that's, maybe that's a silver lining there. | ||
That we look back, we say, obviously past generations have failed They have failed in their stewardship of that civilization. | ||
At great cost it was fought for, delivered to them, and they dropped it. | ||
You know, they completely gave it away. | ||
And now we have to ask ourselves, what are we willing to do? | ||
And that doesn't necessarily mean fighting. | ||
That doesn't mean physical warfare is what I mean by that. | ||
Not necessarily. | ||
It could come to that. | ||
Who knows, right? | ||
But it means what are you willing to do day in and day out to make a country, to contribute to that vision? | ||
Because I think that's really what's lost. | ||
I think that's the missing ingredient, is the idea of the self-sacrifice. | ||
And I believe it was Fulton Sheen who said this. | ||
That you look at the East, you look at the Soviet Union, and that is Christianity without the Christ. | ||
It is the cross without the Christ. | ||
In other words, a sacrifice without the love. | ||
And in the West, we have the inverse of that. | ||
We have the Christ without the cross. | ||
We have the love in this hippy-dippy version of Jesus Christ without the sacrifice. | ||
And so what are we willing to do? | ||
What are we willing to put aside and sacrifice in order to make a country? | ||
Again, for posterity. | ||
So that's the lesson of D-Day, in my opinion. | ||
I hope that's a fresh take. | ||
I don't know, we've probably said something similar last year or the year before, but I think that's the only way to regard it. | ||
To regard this stark contrast in conditions in a country. | ||
You look back at the country in 1944 versus the country in 2019, and also looking at the At the integrity of the people the character of the people and I think that's really why you see the country was There are the reason why the country was the way it was back then and why it is the way it is today Right, so that's d-day. | ||
We're gonna move right along into our news here. | ||
Okay It's already it's already 740 Wow, we're gonna move on to our news. | ||
Usually we do our feature story towards the end, but that's alright I think it's fitting to do it that way We're moving right along into our other stories here. | ||
The first thing we're gonna talk about here In a more current events type frame is this new bill by Hawley the senator from Missouri who everybody is in love with and people have been hitting me up on Twitter and emailing me the link to his first speech since he got into Congress and everybody is very impressed by this. | ||
I was certainly very impressed by this. | ||
Very encouraging to see a senator who came in in 2018, so the latest class of senators, who is an improvement upon the outgoing senators. | ||
People like Corker and McCain and Flake and all the others. | ||
So it's encouraging to see that you have this new generation of Republicans coming in. | ||
Braun is another. | ||
And they're actually conservatives. | ||
They're actually people defending the interests of Americans, right? | ||
So he's been wowing the crowd. | ||
He continues to do so with this latest bill that he's introduced to the Senate. | ||
And I'll read you a little bit about it from Fox News. | ||
It says, quote, Senator Josh Hawley has announced legislation that would force video sharing websites such as YouTube to turn off their recommendation systems for videos featuring children. | ||
The bill follows a shocking New York Times report that YouTube's algorithm system curated and recommended videos of children helping spread the content among predators. | ||
So basically, to give you the reader's digest of the problem, what happens is with YouTube is... | ||
If you're watching a certain kind of content that features children, you know, and that could be a very harmless and innocuous thing. | ||
That's why the algorithms exist. | ||
It recommends content that's similar to the content you're watching. | ||
So if you're watching, for example, a home video that features a child or a minor is making content, a child or a teenager is making content, You can have people, pedophiles, predators, who will seek out that content, which should be innocuous and innocent, and because the algorithm works the way it does, it'll continue to recommend content featuring children to predators. | ||
So, obviously that has to be shut down. | ||
So that's what the bill addresses. | ||
It says that, you know, companies will have to stop that from happening. | ||
Josh Hawley said in a statement, quote, every parent in America should be appalled that YouTube is pushing videos of their children to pedophiles. | ||
It's equally outrageous that YouTube refuses to take the most effective step necessary to fix the issue. | ||
I'm proud to announce this legislation to force YouTube to do the right thing and place children's safety over profits and pedophiles. | ||
Which is such a tremendous statement. | ||
I mean, look, on the one hand... | ||
Obviously this is going on obviously YouTube enables it and I wouldn't rule out the possibility that They know what's happening and they allow it anyway, because you'll get pizza gate spirit cooking It's like now for the sake of YouTube terms of services. | ||
I don't believe in any of that, but you know People have talked about a pedophile type activity going on around the elites, so I wouldn't rule it out that maybe they're aware of it, maybe it goes on for a reason, and it's a good bill in substance in terms of it's going after a very big problem, which is obviously children's content being recommended to pedophiles. | ||
Sick and horrible thing. | ||
They're concerned with Vince James and James also, but they've got this pedophile problem, right? | ||
But on the other hand, You have to love rhetoric like this because this is what a fighting conservative looks like. | ||
Somebody that's going to say YouTube is putting profits or rather they're putting profits and pedophiles ahead of children which is beautiful rhetoric. | ||
I mean and that's why I say on the one hand The substance is totally there, so I don't want it to come off like I'm saying, well this is just good rhetoric to like bully or defame YouTube. | ||
This is a big problem and it's great that it's being addressed, but also you have to really admire the rhetoric of a politician that is really willing to go balls to the wall and fight these people with the vigor of somebody that actually wants to win. | ||
That's what Josh Hawley is to me. | ||
That's what this represents on one level. | ||
You know, because for so long, I get this impression from conservatives, from Republican politicians, they're always pulling their punches. | ||
It's always toothless. | ||
They'll go after YouTube and they'll talk about it in a very clinical way. | ||
Well, they don't go after YouTube, I guess, actually. | ||
They will go after whoever their opponent is, whoever their enemy is, in the most clinical, sterile, polite, and friendly terms. | ||
in the terms that, you know, a totally non-biased, objective person might have so as not to offend anybody in the middle or on the left. | ||
You know, I think maybe the conventional approach to YouTube would be like, this is highly concerning and we want to work with YouTube because, you know, this is a big problem and we can all agree that, you know, children should be safe. | ||
It would be something like that. | ||
So when I hear Josh Hawley get to the floor of the senator, he makes a statement to Fox News and says, YouTube has to do the right thing and put children's safety above prophets and pedophiles, I say, this is somebody who's serious about winning. | ||
Because it's true! | ||
Our enemies are doing that! | ||
And that's what the left is willing to say about us. | ||
They're willing to say that we're putting kids in cages and all this ridiculous stuff. | ||
So finally we have somebody who's willing to play hardball in the same way. | ||
On the other hand, I think this is great legislation. | ||
I'll read you a little bit about What the bill actually does. | ||
Fox News says, quote, the bill imposes criminal penalties and stiff fines for violations and would only apply to videos that primarily feature minors, not videos that simply have minors in the background. | ||
So the bill itself imposes these big penalties, big fines on the company. | ||
To me, this is good, not just because it solves an obviously bad and evil problem, but also because this is one of many ways to fight YouTube. | ||
I don't think it's a coincidence that he rolled this bill out The day after the demonetization scandal happened. | ||
The day after the Vox Adpocalypse. | ||
This is what Republicans must be doing. | ||
This is how the Democrats fight. | ||
YouTube is going to hurt conservatives. | ||
YouTube is going to hurt our political agenda. | ||
We're going to hurt YouTube. | ||
And we're not gonna find some like indirect arbitrary thing where it's like, well you're doing this Adpocalypse and we're gonna push back on the Adpocalypse. | ||
No, we're just gonna go all out on you. | ||
We're gonna hit you from every angle. | ||
Even though the YouTube child recommendation algorithm fiasco, even though it's unrelated to the Vox Adpocalypse, it doesn't matter. | ||
YouTube is our enemy. | ||
YouTube is fighting against conservatives. | ||
YouTube is censoring conservatives. | ||
YouTube is fighting against the interests of the Republican Party and the American people. | ||
And so we must do everything to fight them. | ||
Antitrust, big fines, regulations, whatever it is. | ||
And so after rolling this out the day after Crowder, I think maybe that was intentional, maybe it wasn't. | ||
Either way, I think that shows us what is possible. | ||
It shows us this is the way the Republican Party Must operate going forward. | ||
Because the conventional approach would be to totally ignore this. | ||
You know, maybe a step above the conventional approach, maybe, you know, the step above what has been the status quo for decades would be to do what Steven Crowder is doing and fight back against the adpocalypse. | ||
You know, again, a one-for-one thing. | ||
YouTube attacks Steven Crowder, Steven Crowder fights back what YouTube did to him. | ||
The Josh Hawley mindset, okay, and this is the future for Republicans, is somebody, an institution, an organization, a person is against us, against our interests, and YouTube is probably, there's no clearer case of a institution that meets that qualification. | ||
We're gonna destroy them. | ||
We're gonna bring them to their knees. | ||
And so I think it's really encouraging. | ||
I think it's a great thing that Josh Hawley is doing. | ||
And really a lesson to all other conservatives, Republicans, other people. | ||
It's something that's very white-pilling to see somebody in Congress who knows what they're doing at this level. | ||
Because to me that was the most black-pilling thing about maybe Trump falling off a little bit. | ||
We're gonna get into that. | ||
How much he's fallen off? | ||
Is this idea that once he goes, what's left? | ||
What's left in American politics for us to continue to salvage and fight the good fight? | ||
Nothing, right? | ||
I mean, you saw Donald Trump, and he was the best we could do in 2016. | ||
Who was the next best? | ||
Ted Cruz? | ||
He's alright. | ||
He was probably the best of the people that existed before Trump. | ||
He was probably the best of the GOP before we kicked off this whole revolution thing. | ||
But that's not saying much. | ||
That still was not really good enough. | ||
Trump was the best by far out of everybody. | ||
So then we have this new class of people moving in. | ||
People like Hawley, people like DeSantis, people like Kobach. | ||
Kobach didn't succeed in getting elected, but nevertheless, you've got talent that is not only they've got the right rhetoric, but also they're competent. | ||
Also, they know what they're doing. | ||
They're operating with a little bit of brains. | ||
It shows that there's strategic thinking going on in their staff. | ||
That, to me, is the most encouraging thing because Trump seemed to me to be all rhetoric, nothing else. | ||
Now you've got competent people who've got the right rhetoric. | ||
They're able to win elections. | ||
That's the money in the bank. | ||
That's the white pill. | ||
So very good stuff from Josh Hawley. | ||
I continue to be impressed by him. | ||
This YouTube bill is a step in the right direction. | ||
And you know, again, this by itself, is this going to take down YouTube completely? | ||
No. | ||
And is this, will it even get passed? | ||
Who knows? | ||
Is this the biggest story in the world? | ||
No. | ||
But this is a demonstration of what politics ought to look like for Republicans, which is no holds barred. | ||
We got to play the same game the left is playing, which is You know, we have to actually start to fight these people and call a spade a spade. | ||
So Josh Hawley's great. | ||
We're going to move right along into something that's not so great, this immigration situation here. | ||
And like I said, we're going to cover some of these latest numbers from Border Patrol and from Breitbart about what's happening at the border. | ||
And then we'll talk about the tariff situation. | ||
So we did this really throughout 2019 for the past three months or so in particular since the end of the government shutdown. | ||
We've been looking at all these different numbers that have been coming out. | ||
And it's just like every month it continues to get worse at the border in terms of illegal border crossing, in terms of trafficking drugs. | ||
I mean you name it It's couldn't be worse. | ||
It's never been worse. | ||
Maybe 25 years ago is a little bit worse, right? | ||
So we've got some new numbers here. | ||
This is according to Breitbart It says quote illegal immigration at the US-Mexico border for last month surpassed every month of May under the Bush and Obama administrations Taking the US back to a level of border crossings not seen since President Bill Clinton Bill Clinton More than 132,000 apprehensions were made in May alone by U.S. | ||
Border Patrol on the southern border. | ||
This is a two-decade record high for illegal immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border in the month of May. | ||
Not since May 2000 has the country seen this level of illegal immigration heading into the summer. | ||
In May 2000, more than 166,000 border apprehensions were made at the southern border, which is of course when Clinton was president. | ||
So, if that doesn't tell you, I mean, I don't know what else does, right? | ||
132,000 apprehensions in one month! | ||
In 31 days. | ||
So you do the math on that. | ||
What is that? | ||
40 or rather 4,000 people every day? | ||
About 4,000 apprehensions every single day across a 2,000 mile border? | ||
So what's that? | ||
Two people per mile? | ||
I mean like the math on that shouldn't be real. | ||
Particularly, you know, particularly the math is sort of interesting when we elected a president who said we were gonna Remove all illegal immigrants from the country. | ||
Stop all illegal immigration. | ||
And now it's the worst in 20 years. | ||
You know, that's kind of... I don't know. | ||
That's kind of pretty bad, right? | ||
I mean, that's... Talk about falling short of the promise. | ||
You know, and especially because we saw last month in May... | ||
We had a record month for border apprehensions, like I said at the top of the show, and that was only a 10-year record. | ||
That was a 12-year record. | ||
Excuse me, I think. | ||
The border crossings that we saw in the month of April. | ||
Now we have in May a 20-year record, obviously, which was the last month. | ||
We also have future projections based on these numbers. | ||
This month, Prince Policy Advisor researcher Stephen Kopitz projects that illegal immigration at the southern border will still cross over to more than 100,000 border apprehensions in June. | ||
COPETS projects that for calendar year 2019 more than 1 million border apprehensions will be conducted at the US-Mexico border, indicating that more than 1 million illegal aliens will be caught attempting to enter the country. | ||
This does not include the roughly 500,000 illegal aliens who are expected to successfully cross into the US this year undetected by Border Patrol. | ||
And that rate is the highest since 2006. | ||
So you're gonna have, get that, a million illegal immigrants crossing and apprehended. | ||
500,000 will cross in undetected. | ||
The beauty of that number is that they all get into the country. | ||
Isn't that amazing? | ||
Isn't that amazing about the number? | ||
Even in Breitbart, they say, well, 1,000 are apprehended, 500,000 get in. | ||
Now, that's pretty bad. | ||
But understand, because of the funding bill, because of catch-and-release, all these nefarious policies, yeah, you've got 500,000 that are undetected that get in. | ||
And I think a layperson would say, oh, so a million are caught and turned around, right? | ||
That's what apprehended should mean, right? | ||
No. | ||
500,000, they just never see a U.S. | ||
Border Patrol person. | ||
They get in no problems. | ||
A million people, they are apprehended and then released into the country like the 500,000 that were undetected by U.S. | ||
Border Patrol. | ||
So isn't that a beautiful thing? | ||
So really what we're looking at is a total of 1.5 million illegal immigrants coming to the country plus 1.5 million legal immigrants for a grand total of 3 million immigrants, 3 million new people. | ||
In other words, 1% of the country's population and that such has been the case for the past 50 years, right? | ||
1% every year for half a century. | ||
That's the kind of numbers we're looking at here. | ||
Needless to say, not a great situation. | ||
We also have some other numbers which are interesting. | ||
You might think a million people a year, a million and a half. | ||
What is the typical portrait? | ||
What is the profile of an illegal immigrant or an immigrant into the country? | ||
For 50 years it's been Hispanic. | ||
The numbers don't lie in this. | ||
I'm not stereotyping. | ||
You'll find that the vast, vast majority of illegal immigrants over the past 50 or so years are Hispanic, mostly Mexican. | ||
And the vast, vast majority of legal immigrants have also been Mexican. | ||
I think if you look even at the legal immigrant numbers, it's something like half are Hispanic and a quarter are Mexican. | ||
Of the, uh, not 75, I mean 50 are Hispanic and of that 50% that are Hispanic, half of those are Mexican, right? | ||
But we also have a little bit of a different problem. | ||
This is a very new problem. | ||
This is according to Breitbart. | ||
It says, Del Rio sector border patrol agents apprehended more than 500 migrants from the continent of Africa. | ||
Since May 30th. | ||
What's today? | ||
June 6th? | ||
So in one week they've apprehended 500 migrants from Africa at the southern border in one particular sector of it. | ||
It says the numbers jumped after large numbers of African migrants adopted a strategy of crossing in large numbers. | ||
On Wednesday, a group of 34 African migrants crossed the border illegally near Eagle Pass, Texas. | ||
And a press call on Wednesday afternoon, Brian Hastings, which is the U.S. | ||
Border Patrol Chief of Law Enforcement Operations, told reporters that this was the first large group ever recorded in Border Patrol history, solely from Central and South Africa. | ||
We've never seen that demographic in a large group of that size before. | ||
So now, isn't that remarkable? | ||
Now not only do you have illegal immigrants quite literally pouring in from Mexico and now increasingly from Central America from Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, now they're also coming from Africa. | ||
Now I understand these are small numbers but nevertheless I think that maybe shows you the extent of the problem. | ||
And it's hilarious to me because for years even like when I was in high school I would make this argument that you don't have a secure border and look maybe you think Many, many millions of people should come in every year, unskilled, unchecked, but the argument could persist anyway that at the very least you need to know who they are, right? | ||
Even if you think there's nothing wrong with millions of people coming to the country who are poor, uneducated, no skills, and all that, at the very least, the very minimum argument you can make for border security is that we have to know who's coming in. | ||
And the argument I always went is, if we don't know who's coming in, well, anybody could come in. | ||
Even people that want to do us harm. | ||
Even people that aren't from Mexico or Central America. | ||
Terrorists. | ||
People from totally different countries, like people from Africa. | ||
Not that there's anything particularly wrong with Africans, but it just goes to show, if somebody from East Africa could come in across Mexico, well, anybody could do it. | ||
If 500,000 people cross the border undetected, and you've got people from Africa being apprehended, you don't know who those people are! | ||
You don't know that they're just Salvadorians anymore. | ||
You don't know that they're just Mexicans anymore. | ||
That could be anybody. | ||
That could be ISIS. | ||
That could be Al Qaeda. | ||
Kind of an issue, right? | ||
And not to go neocon, not to go alarmism, but you kind of need to know who's coming into the country in the same way that you'd want to know who's coming in your house, or your backyard, or your neighborhood, or, you know, a building, a condo, right? | ||
So you have 300 Africans, largest group ever, and the numbers are out of control. | ||
And that's a small number, but it demonstrates a larger principle. | ||
You've got 1.5 million illegal immigrants, and this is nothing new. | ||
This has been going on since Trump got into office. | ||
Trump gets into office, and it seems like by every metric, immigration, both legal and illegal, is getting worse. | ||
No action. | ||
And I will say, though, things seem to be turning around a little bit. | ||
There are prospects for a change. | ||
To me, I see that the president is trying once again to solve this problem. | ||
It seems to me that way. | ||
And we'll move on here to the Mexico tariff deal. | ||
It's sort of a nice segue here. | ||
What is the president doing to solve this? | ||
For a long time, I said, I can't support the president anymore because he doesn't seem serious about border security. | ||
We shut down the government. | ||
He signed that horrible federal spending bill. | ||
He made it worse. | ||
He went to the State of the Union, said we need more immigrants than ever. | ||
And I said, he's given up. | ||
He's not serious about fixing immigration, both illegal or legal. | ||
I'm out. | ||
Then we saw the Kushner immigration deal turned out to be good. | ||
Turned out to actually have potential to limit the total amount of immigrants coming in per year legally. | ||
So I said, okay, you know, this deal's not bad. | ||
Clearly this talk about more immigrants than ever, either it never materialized into policy or he didn't actually mean it. | ||
You know, I don't know which one is true, but clearly the rhetoric does not match the policy that was ultimately created. | ||
And whether he can pass that is sort of besides the point. | ||
You know, Congress is not under his control. | ||
Now with illegal immigration, he's taken a new approach to it. | ||
You know, I've been disappointed so far. | ||
But it seems like the emergency funds are coming through. | ||
All these legal challenges that people warned about are not happening. | ||
They're failing. | ||
It happened earlier this week that a federal judge in Washington, D.C. | ||
shut down a legal challenge to President Trump's emergency declaration to reroute money from the DOD and DHS and other departments to the construction of a border wall. | ||
Now, again, the funding bill doesn't limit what kind of border wall you can get, but nevertheless, it seems like the wall is being constructed, albeit slowly, but, you know, as long as there's some effort being made. | ||
And now the latest gambit, indirect, is this tariff business. | ||
And I was very skeptical at first. | ||
It was announced last week via Twitter, Trump said if Mexico does not solve their immigration problem, we're just gonna put big tariffs on Mexico. | ||
Starting with a 5% tariff on June 10th, and then later was revealed that the tariff would increase to 25% by October 1st. | ||
And at first I was very skeptical. | ||
I said, you know, he's made this threat before. | ||
He actually made the exact same threat in April. | ||
And it went from, we're going to tariff your whole country at a high rate tomorrow, you know, virtually within the week, to we will tariff cars next year if drugs don't approve, you know? | ||
And so I said, this guy's not serious. | ||
It's another bluff. | ||
It's trying to show the electorate that he's serious about immigration without actually doing anything. | ||
But it seems like the tariffs are coming down. | ||
I'll read you a variety of statements from the White House today. | ||
It says from AP, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders said in a late Thursday afternoon statement that the U.S. position has not changed, and we are still moving forward with tariffs at this time. | ||
Mike Pence said, The President announced 5% tariffs would be imposed on Monday on all goods coming from Mexico. | ||
That's the policy of the United States. | ||
White House spokeswoman Mercedes Schlapp said in an interview that conversations were continuing, but it looks like we're moving toward this path of tariffs because what we've seen so far is that the Mexicans, what they're proposing is simply not enough. | ||
unidentified
|
enough. | |
So it seems to me like tariffs are gonna happen. | ||
They're coming down. | ||
The deadline is tomorrow. | ||
The deadline is Friday for President Trump to sign when he needs to sign to get an emergency declaration. | ||
I think that's a path they're gonna take for this to put a 5% tariff on Mexico by June 10th, which is next week. | ||
Now the prevailing wisdom is that A deal is in the works right now. | ||
You've got Mexicans negotiating in Washington with people in the White House and they're trying to put together a last-minute deal and they say that a deal will probably be made sometime between June 10th and the next deadline which is July 1st where the tariffs rise from 5% to 10%. | ||
So we could see a 5% tariff and then maybe we get a deal in the middle and that'll prevent a 10% tariff from coming down and ultimately that'll prove that it'll have been a success. | ||
The two things that Mexico has proposed doing as part of a deal would be number one to put 6,000 Mexican soldiers on their southern border, which the big problem with immigration right now It's not so much Mexicans, it's Central Americans. | ||
It's Salvadorians, Hondurans, Guatemalans coming through Mexico into America. | ||
So they'll put 6,000 troops on their southern border to stem that flow. | ||
And it's a much smaller border, of course, if you look at the geography than America's border with Mexico. | ||
So that would go a long way. | ||
And then on top of that, the other provision that they're talking about implementing a deal in a deal is a third safe country agreement, which basically says that what's happening right now, and we've talked about this at length, is it's really an asylum request, or rather an asylum crisis. | ||
Central Americans come through Mexico, they get to America, they claim asylum, and then because of American law, it says we cannot reject an asylum request. | ||
If you have this reasonable cause and all these other things, you have your legal ducks in a row basically, You say the right things and so on. | ||
We have to process your request. | ||
If we don't have the facilities to detain people while we process their requests, we release them into the country. | ||
And that's how you get basically illegal immigration, even though they're being apprehended, right? | ||
And that's predominantly, that's a big part of the latest surge in illegal immigration. | ||
So this rule, if implemented, would say, when it says third safe country, it means that if a Central American, as an example, crosses through a safe country like Mexico, only to get to America to apply for asylum, well, we can't honor their request because they would have to then apply for asylum in Mexico. we can't honor their request because they would have to Mexico's a safe country. | ||
Mexico's perfectly fine. | ||
If you go thousands of miles just to apply for asylum in America, Clearly it's not a legitimate asylum request because you're gonna have applied for it in Mexico. | ||
How just is your claim that you're fleeing persecution or something like that? | ||
You're an economic migrant. | ||
If you didn't stop in Mexico, it's clear you're coming to America because you want our stuff. | ||
So we would have a legal justification, if that rule went into place, to say, if you're seeking asylum, you come from one of these third countries, we can just deny you. | ||
We can keep you in Mexico. | ||
We can turn you away at the border, which would be huge. | ||
So those are the two provisions they've proposed, they've agreed to, they've accepted, and America says it's not good enough. | ||
So hopefully we'll see a little bit more, and we'll see it implemented fast, quickly, you know, very soon, and then maybe that'll do something to help stop these crazy numbers, because it's like never been worse with illegal immigration, not literally in 20 years and 20 years ago is a totally different ballgame right? | ||
So I think that ultimately the tariff gambit whether it eventually comes down whether we see the 5% tariff or you know 10% tariffs happen who knows we could go up to 25 we don't know how far we take this but it seems like if we're able to get something like that out of it a really good concrete deal And Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Trump and all the rest can fold their arms and say, you know, not good enough, not a good enough deal, and the Mexicans are scrambling to make us happy and solve immigration, then hey, I'm not going to turn my nose up at it. | ||
I was skeptical. | ||
I remain skeptical. | ||
I'm not 100% optimistic. | ||
You know, I still am. | ||
You know, we're watching. | ||
We'll see what happens, right? | ||
But if they're able to turn immigration around a little bit, if we see these numbers improve because of this tariff thing, then I'll say, you know, good on Trump. | ||
And God bless Trump, because if he's able to do that, it shows that he, I think, really does, at the end of the day, want to fix these numbers. | ||
And it seems like he's not able to do it with a lot of these other areas. | ||
He's getting a lot of opposition from Congress and other people. | ||
So I'll say, you know, I don't know if I'm totally back on the Trump train. | ||
I don't know if I'm gonna say, we're white billed again, it's 4D chess, something like that, but I will say, you know, good on him that he was able to do that. | ||
It was sort of a smart and indirect way to solve it, but, you know, good on him, right? | ||
So we'll see what happens. | ||
We'll watch. | ||
I'd like to see the tariffs go in anyway. | ||
I'd like to see 25% tariffs on Mexico and 25% tariffs on China. | ||
I want to see tariff man go all out and just crush these people. | ||
You know, I want to see that. | ||
But I understand that probably wouldn't be totally pragmatic. | ||
Maybe not the best way to go about it, but in any case, we'll keep an eye on it. | ||
If it helps stop illegal immigration, then hey, you know, I think it's worth it, right? | ||
We're gonna take a look at our Super Chats now because we're running out of time here. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying. | ||
Let's take a look. | ||
We've got... Hold up. | ||
Let me load these for a moment. | ||
Gotta load them. | ||
Mehdi says, what is the best way to keep faith in God? | ||
Well, that's sort of a heavy question to lead off with, huh? | ||
That's deep. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't really have a great answer for this question. | ||
I don't really have a very profound answer. | ||
I find myself questioning my faith from time to time, so... | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's tough. | ||
I guess I would say pray, go to church, but life is a tough thing. | ||
You know, I would say you look at people that keep their faith in spite of horrible things and that encourages faith. | ||
You know, I look at a lot of people that I know who just face just horrible tragedy in their lives. | ||
It's really Have a rough go at things and remain faithful, you know, keep their conviction. | ||
And I think to myself, you know, if somebody like that, if you could keep your faith in God in spite of horrible things happening, you know, and I know we all probably know people like that in our lives, then I think it makes it easier for us to do that. | ||
But in any case, it's a tough thing because, you know, there's that big degree of uncertainty. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I know some people, they're like, you know, unshakable faith. | ||
I've never really understood that. | ||
You know, I just, I've never had a religious experience. | ||
So it's a little bit more difficult for me. | ||
It's really more just based on common sense. | ||
It just seems like highly likely to me. | ||
It just seems like it makes the most sense that that's really how I came at it. | ||
I'll just be upfront and honest with you. | ||
I read, you know, about the philosophy of it and I experienced the world as it is. | ||
And I think, you know, "This just makes the most sense to me "that there is probably a creator, a designer, It seems to me like the Christian metaphysics is the most coherent, sensible. | ||
It's reason itself, you know? | ||
And so that's really my basis for faith, but I don't understand how people have this just like... | ||
You know, they will never be swayed, because I'll admit, you know, some days I think, well, what if, what if it's not double? | ||
What about this? | ||
You know, I entertain other possibilities, but at the end of the day, I think I always, deep down, I have this intuitive sense that there is something out there, you know, at the very least, at the very minimum. | ||
So, but I would say prayer, reading the Bible, going to church, I think those things all help for that. | ||
Well, let's see what else we have here. | ||
Nathan says, I'm Nick Fuentes, host of America First. | ||
I've been waiting for you all evening. | ||
I'm so glad you're finally here. | ||
I don't think I've ever said that, actually. | ||
I don't think I've ever said that before. | ||
I don't think I've ever said that before to many people. | ||
With the super chatters. | ||
I've been waiting for the super chatters. | ||
I'm so glad you're here. | ||
That doesn't sound like me. | ||
I'm not a very cheerful... Well, I would say I'm a little bit cheerful, but I don't know if I'm... | ||
Overly positive person, but maybe we should change it up. | ||
Maybe we should go in that direction, right? | ||
Maybe I should make you feel a little bit more appreciated as a viewer, right? | ||
JR says LDS birth rate is 3.4, Catholic 2.3. | ||
LDS divorce rate is half of Catholics, Utah equals highest birth rate, lowest alcoholism and STD rates, Mormon futurism. | ||
Yeah, I mean, definitely Mormons are living traditional lives, and yeah, the birth rate is commendable. | ||
It's good that they don't, you know, they tend to be, seem to be adhering to their faith a little bit more than Catholics, which is unfortunate, but you know, it's no substitute for having God on your side. | ||
Unfortunately, you know, Mormons, I love this, all different religious groups will say, well, check out this number. | ||
You know, Mormons are more based because we don't drink alcohol, we have a higher birth rate, or you look at the Amish, look at Amish have this high birth rate, or Eastern Orthodox is nationalist. | ||
Yeah, that's great, but you have God on your side. | ||
But do you have, but do you have God on your side? | ||
Because if you don't, it doesn't really matter, you know, and so Mormon Futurism! | ||
That'll be nice in this world. | ||
The only church, the only faith that has God on our side, I would have to say that trumps all of it. | ||
Mormon futurism! | ||
That'll be nice in this world. | ||
I'll admit, you guys are thriving in this world, but if you really want to get right in the next world, I would say I'm going to recommend you become Catholics. | ||
So, it's fine. | ||
Oh, that's very, wow, very cool. | ||
Wow, very cool statistics. | ||
Would you like to take them to the White House? | ||
Would you like to take them to the Eternal Kingdom of God? | ||
But sorry, I think the Catholics, there's no substitute for being right, you know, and that's, we've got a monopoly on that. | ||
But hey, Mormons are great. | ||
I don't want to fight Mormons. | ||
I don't want to fight Christians. | ||
I don't want to fight anybody except for atheists and, you know, perhaps other groups, right? | ||
Other groups that are working against the Word of God. | ||
NC Ritz says, did you get that carton of candles I sent? | ||
No, no, I didn't get those. | ||
Michael says apparently one of the missions in the new spongebob game where you play is one of the white elements dealing with the aftermath of a chemical weapons attack on the people of Bikini Bottom. | ||
Thoughts? | ||
I think it's very progressive. | ||
Finally, finally a video game where we can support the white elements, where we can defeat the gas-killing animal Assad in Bikini Bottom, right? | ||
I am excited though. | ||
That's the only... I'm excited about I'm excited about the Cyberpunk game, I'm excited about Avengers, and I'm excited about Battle for Bikini Bottom at E3. | ||
I can't tell you how... | ||
How pleased I was to hear that they're remastering Battle for Bikini Bottom, only because, like, in terms of games, I've just been burnt out. | ||
I can't game anymore, you know? | ||
It feels like right after high school, it's like I went away to college and I just didn't play games anymore. | ||
I don't know. | ||
It was like a totally natural thing. | ||
If I went back five years in time, or even like ten years in time, ten years, or even five years in time, and told my younger self, like, you're not gonna play video games when you're an adult, I'll be like, what? | ||
How? | ||
I love video games, you know, but it was just such a natural thing. | ||
I just like grew out of it, I guess. | ||
Cause I was a big time gamer for my whole, for most of my life. | ||
And then I guess like senior year of high school into college, I just like, I just doesn't really do it for him anymore. | ||
And I can still, don't get me wrong. | ||
If I find a game that I like get into, I I'll get into it for like a day or for a week or whatever. | ||
And I'm really into it. | ||
But, uh, aside from that, I cannot just, uh, I can't invest hours and hours every day like I once was. | ||
I just... I don't know why that is. | ||
Maybe I just am maturing? | ||
I don't know what that would be, but, uh... You know, so I've been really tired of the games and Bikini for... Battle for Bikini Bottom, if that comes back, I'm back in it. | ||
I'm back in the games, you know? | ||
I'll, uh, I'll binge it. | ||
I'll do it on stream. | ||
We'll play the whole playthrough just like we did with the first one on Twitch. | ||
But yeah, I guess it's sort of sad in some ways, you know, that you move on from those things, but, you know, I guess it has to happen. | ||
Robert Foy says, Desmond is amazing, has his liberty, thanks to D-Day! | ||
Yeah, amazing society that we fought for, right? | ||
Caesar King says, the D in D-Day stands for Desmond is amazing, yeah. | ||
Yeah, well that was the ultimate result, right? | ||
unidentified
|
So, I would say it was worth it. | |
Sebastian says, World War II is easy to understand. | ||
One day Germans just decided to be evil, and then the Allies started the good war based on goodism and bigism. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Well, that's what's so funny is that's most people's interpretation of World War II, right? | ||
I mean, most people's interpretation of World War II is all about the Holocaust, you know? | ||
Like, even I remember me as a youngster, I thought we... I remember distinctly being in, like, elementary school and saying, well, I know World War II was about the Holocaust. | ||
I know we went to war with Germany because of the Holocaust, but why did we go to war in World War I? | ||
I distinctly remember thinking that as a young person, you know? | ||
So I feel like most people's interpretation is, you know, Hitler... | ||
is the bad guy. | ||
Hitler's the boogeyman. | ||
He's just bad. | ||
Just, you know, bad. | ||
No cap. | ||
Stalin, you can have this nuanced, complicated view. | ||
Churchill, you could have. | ||
Everybody is nuanced in their own special way. | ||
Mussolini, even, to a lesser extent, but even still. | ||
But, you know, Hitler, mm-mm. | ||
He's just the bad man here. | ||
He's the devil and we went to the war against the devil We fought the good war against the bad guy. | ||
We won the day was saved and that's America's justification for existing You know, this is most people's interpretation and it's obviously, you know a little bit more complicated than that Maybe you want to maybe you want to examine your own prejudices your own presuppositions and also most people are totally ignorant, too You know I remember, I'll play devil's advocate, I'll say that much. | ||
I play devil's advocate with people all the time about this kind of stuff, not because, not for any other reason other than intellectual curiosity for the sake of intellectual exchange, about, you know, what people think about it. | ||
And most people are totally ignorant and uneducated about World War II. | ||
And not like I'm some genius, you know, not like I'm a World War II expert or anything, you know, nothing like that. | ||
Not like I know any of the critical facts and numbers or anything like that. | ||
But people who know nothing about it, they have such a strong opinion. | ||
It is this way. | ||
It is this. | ||
It is such a simple. | ||
There's this moral lens to it and shouldn't that tell you something? | ||
The level of brainwashing you really have to think long and hard about. | ||
World War II. | ||
Think about World War II. | ||
It's all there, everybody. | ||
It's all there, but you gotta think, but you gotta think. | ||
I can't do it for you anymore. | ||
I cannot do it for you anymore. | ||
You gotta find out for yourself. | ||
Think about it for yourself. | ||
You'll unlock all the secrets, but it's all there. | ||
Anyway before I get myself in trouble Seth Rich says Nick when are you going to lead the crusade to retake Constantinople for the glory of God? | ||
Stale meme department. | ||
I'm worried about retaking America first. | ||
I'm worried about retaking Chicago first before Constantinople Pro-truth says Poppy Gloria on Tuesday, June 6, 1944. | ||
America did an oopsie! | ||
No, I disagree. | ||
America saved the day from evil Nazis and we are forever in debt for America, paving the way for drag queens, gay marriage, abortion, Israel. | ||
You know, this is a result of World War II and you know what? | ||
That's a good thing, okay? | ||
And that's a good thing and unequivocally epic. | ||
J.R. | ||
says, Catholic pews graying and diversifying. | ||
LDS pews young and blonde. | ||
You look more like Joseph Smith than Jesus and more Mormon than Catholic. | ||
Fit right in. | ||
Yeah, see, the only problem is I want to go to heaven, you know? | ||
Sounds great, honestly. | ||
You know, an LDS church, well, I don't think it compares with the Latin mass. | ||
It simply doesn't. | ||
But, you know, they've got the right politics in a lot of cases, better than a lot of liberal Catholic churches and people and all that, you know. | ||
I don't know, it's a tough one. | ||
It seems attractive in some ways, but I also really want to go to heaven. | ||
I also really want to be in the church that Jesus Christ created, so I'm gonna have to stick with being Catholic. | ||
That's fine, you know, that's great. | ||
Blonde, you know, Mormon pews and all that, that sounds great. | ||
I hope it's worth it, you know, it sounds awesome, but, you know, I prefer to be, but I'm with God, you know, at the end of the day. | ||
And everything else can go to hell, alright? | ||
Uh, but that's fine. | ||
You know, that's the thing. | ||
Everybody's always like, oh, Nick, you're pushing your Catholicism on us. | ||
Nick, you're pushing your religion. | ||
You always talk about religion. | ||
And I get all these fucking people. | ||
Pardon the language, but seriously, every night it's like, you know, Mormon, Protestant, Orthodox. | ||
They've always got some, you know, issue trying to convert me. | ||
So, start your own show. | ||
Become the Mormon, Nick Fuentes, and you can promote your religion. | ||
And that's fine. | ||
Glenn C says, although Cringenat Hazoni is chairman of the National Conservatism Conference, is it still a step in the right direction, or will it be the same old thing? | ||
Same old thing. | ||
I'll say this, and I was talking to QAnon about this, actually, earlier today. | ||
My good friend QAnon, good friend QAnon, he's a real treasure, you know? | ||
But my old pal QAnon, He was saying something to the effect, and I think this is totally true, a little bit of a different perspective on this, because I didn't really know what to think. | ||
I've been talking to a few different people in DC, some very cool people, very high level people. | ||
Well, not necessarily high level, but high power level people, very, you know, top soldiers in the Aryan Revolution. | ||
That's a joke, by the way. | ||
But I was talking to some people about this, you know, surveying some different opinions, some very good friends of mine, and I've heard a lot of different takes on it. | ||
And the take that makes sense to me is basically this. | ||
We know what he's doing. | ||
Yoram Hazony, running the National Conservatism Conference, he intends to co-opt the nationalist movement, kick us out, and take it over. | ||
That's his intention. | ||
That's what he's trying to do. | ||
We see his intentions very clearly because the president of his organization is David Bragg. | ||
The head of Christians United for Israel. | ||
Do you know the head of Christians United for Israel isn't even Christian? | ||
Isn't that funny? | ||
You know, so we see who is in the organization. | ||
We see who's funding the organization. | ||
I'll get into that, I think, on the premium show this weekend, what that's all about. | ||
But basically we know what he's doing. | ||
Co-opting, subverting the nationalist movement. | ||
Having understood that, we can take him for a ride. | ||
He's getting bankrolled by somebody. | ||
Somebody's footing the bill for this conference. | ||
Look at the speakers that are going to be there. | ||
Tucker Carlson, John Bolton. | ||
John Bolton we don't like, but I mean I'm sure it's a big bill for somebody like that. | ||
It's a lot of high-level people. | ||
That costs a lot of money. | ||
And to rent out a conference room and, you know, put people up at hotels and subsidize the tickets and all that. | ||
Somebody's putting on the conference, you know? | ||
Why not use their resources? | ||
Why not go to the National Conservatism Conference and sort of, you know, draft off of their money, off of what they're doing, and get as much utility out of it as we can? | ||
I don't think it's the worst thing in the world. | ||
So, yeah, I'll be calling out Hassani for what he is and what that's about, but, you know, people should take advantage of the opportunity. | ||
Which is that it's probably better than Heritage, marginally better than Heritage, other type organizations, and let's just get the most out of it. | ||
You know, that's what we did with Donald Trump, frankly. | ||
Donald Trump obviously different in the sense that he's I think a sincere populist nationalist and all that but obviously not totally doesn't know all the relevant facts necessarily so we take as much as we can out of it you know Bismarck said the art of politics is the art of the pragmatic always what is the most useful at this time and that's the way I look at it so but anyway Josiah says we fought the wrong peepee poo-poo I don't know what you mean by that J.R. | ||
says Joseph Smith equals Chad, Pope equals Virgin. | ||
Okay, we're not going to read these anymore. | ||
We're not going to read any insults to the Pope, particularly from Joseph Smith, please. | ||
Michael says SuperChad or Teen illegally euthanized after Nick mercilessly bullies them, referring to them as gay and retarded, calling their SuperChads cringe. | ||
Yeah, flying all the way to the Netherlands so you could euthanize yourself. | ||
I just couldn't go on. | ||
I was too depressed. | ||
I could see that. | ||
Many such cases with the super chatters. | ||
NC says, Yo Nick, there's a guy with a mask wielding a chainsaw walking around outside my house. | ||
What should I do? | ||
Go outside, get killed. | ||
It doesn't count as suicide. | ||
It doesn't count as suicide if you just go out and, you know, it's an easy, easy out, right? | ||
I was thinking that, I was thinking that, I was thinking about that to myself the other day. | ||
I was like, you know, it's, it's sort of, that's sort of the way it works. | ||
You know, it's sort of the bummer about it is it's like, As bad as life gets. | ||
You just have to go on, you know? | ||
You just gotta keep going, you know? | ||
Because there's no alternative, right? | ||
Otherwise you go to hell. | ||
Not that I'm suicidal! | ||
Not that I'm suicidal, Masaad! | ||
not suicidal but i was just thinking you know hypothetically it's like it's like what you can't there's just you know you just have to just persist and go on and all that and uh and that's the way it works But yeah, maybe you just walk outside, just get a swift get-off-the-ride. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Is that the end of the world? | ||
Well, it is for you, but... And a clown world for you. | ||
No, jokes! | ||
But it's all jokes. | ||
We're only kidding. | ||
We're only kidding about that. | ||
Very serious subject. | ||
Don't kill yourself. | ||
I'm not suicidal, by the way. | ||
Mossad, if you're listening. | ||
Perfect mental health. | ||
I'm happy to be alive, healthy, all that. | ||
Josh says free super chat from YouTube shout out to gaba Z. Well, thanks, bro Pinky culture says Nick. | ||
Do you think immigration can sometimes be good? | ||
Like when Poland let in 2 million Ukrainians to help their economy. | ||
I still think we went to excuse me too far Yeah, immigration can be good. | ||
Well, here's the thing immigration to me is You bring in a small amount of people for various reasons, you know to help your country Maybe you bring in people Because they have skills. | ||
Maybe you bring in people because they're artists or, you know, they have something to contribute to the country in small numbers. | ||
You know, we pick people, we need people to work here, we need, you know, whatever, but it's got to be limited. | ||
That's really what's critical to me. | ||
Immigration, what distinguishes what we're doing from immigration is the volume. | ||
Because America has had immigration before, and it was of a certain variety. | ||
But I think a country can bring in culturally similar people, you know, in larger numbers, or they can bring in people with skills from foreign places, but it's got to be limited. | ||
That's what makes it immigration. | ||
What makes it invasion is when it's like 10 million people. | ||
Like, that's a little different, you know? | ||
You could say, like, somebody dropping into your house to borrow a cup of sugar. | ||
Well, that's your neighbor, you know, but like a thousand people kicking your door in to just take all your shit and loot your house Well, like that's not that's not a neighborly thing to do, you know, so that's kind of the way I think about it It really is just about the volume. | ||
I don't think there's anything, you know inherently intrinsically wrong about With immigration. | ||
With one person coming from another country to ours. | ||
For whatever reason. | ||
I don't think there's anything intrinsically wrong with that. | ||
Now, is it sometimes disruptive? | ||
Sure. | ||
But the problem of our time is not that you have people coming in to work and help the economy. | ||
It's that you've got 50 million people coming in in half a century. | ||
And they're not helping. | ||
They're not really necessary. | ||
So that's to me what differentiates it is the volume is what's critical there. | ||
NC says, did you see Styx got a Filipino mail-order bride? | ||
No, I didn't see that. | ||
But hey, congratulations. | ||
Thanks for the support. | ||
says, keep it up. | ||
Thanks for fighting the good fight. | ||
I'm a coward and a wage slave, so you can have my money for spreading the truth. | ||
Just know you have supporters out there. | ||
Well, thanks, big guy. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
That's all right. | ||
We need wage slaves out there. | ||
We need a variety of people, so don't feel bad. | ||
There's only room for so many podcasters, so don't feel bad about it, but thanks for the support, man. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
Nathan says, I already consumed America First Gavin and True News today, so I listened to Nick shout hello, tunnel department for my entire commute home. - No! | ||
unidentified
|
The Grand Theft Auto stream Too funny. | |
I love I love playing Grand Theft Auto That's the only game that I can come back and just play again and again because of its because of its realism You know what? | ||
I like about Grand Theft Auto is it I? | ||
unidentified
|
Can't even say this anymore because of you too. | |
Oh, I can't even say it anymore I'll say it on D live one of these days Well, it's sort of like about the Spider-Man games, you know, but it doesn't make you really feel like Spider-Man. | ||
When I'm playing Grand Theft Auto, I'll just say, you know, it brings a level of realism that you don't feel with other games. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
They gotta get right about the Spider-Man game, but it doesn't make you really feel like Spider-Man. | ||
Do you really feel like Spider-Man? | ||
And I'll just say, this principle, this principle carries over to Grand Theft Auto, but do you really feel like you're going around and, uh, you know, I love, I love the game. | ||
I love gaming. | ||
You know, I love completing the missions, making my own missions. | ||
It's so fun. | ||
So, uh, but that's funny. | ||
Funny that you say that. | ||
It makes me laugh. | ||
That's a good question. | ||
I'd probably go with Faith Goldie's Lips. | ||
No offense to anybody. | ||
No offense to the ladies. | ||
Laura Loomer's nose, Faith Goldie's lips, Lauren Southern's, I'll say dating history. | ||
Hmm, that's a good question. | ||
I'd probably go with Faith Goldie's lips, you know. | ||
No offense to anybody, no offense to the ladies. | ||
I don't know if that offends anybody, but that would probably be my selection. | ||
Just saying. | ||
Devin D says, quick take my money before somebody shuts us down. | ||
Yeah, okay, thanks, I'll take it. | ||
Bill says, hair's looking good, man. | ||
Thanks, yeah, right, I don't know, it just dried nicely tonight. | ||
This lady gave me such a bad haircut every time, and I can say it because she didn't even know what a podcast was. | ||
I can say this because I know she will not see this, because when I got my haircut from her, She was like, what do you do for a living? | ||
And I was like, well, I do, I do like a podcast. | ||
And she was like, what's a podcast? | ||
I've heard the term before. | ||
I'm like, okay, so you're like, you're like prehistoric mode. | ||
You're like dinosaur mode. | ||
Um, this lady, it's two people that work at the place I go to. | ||
It's this guy and a girl, the guys, it's his place. | ||
And he's there during the week. | ||
I always forget she's on the weekends. | ||
So I'll go, I'll drive there. | ||
I'll park, I'll get out of the car. | ||
I'll walk in. | ||
I see it's just her. | ||
And I'm like, what am I going to do? | ||
Turn around and leave? | ||
That would be rude. | ||
So I'm like, all right, I'll just I'll explain in detail what I want done. | ||
So I show her the picture. | ||
I tell her, you know, every time she messes it up. | ||
But it looks but it looks good today, you know, but we've been trying. | ||
It's been a struggle so far in this haircut period. | ||
Poo Poo King says invasion of Normandy was cringe and blue pill, TBH. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Good to hear from you, Poo Poo King. | ||
But I don't know what you're talking about. | ||
I think, you know, saving the world from Germans, from Nazi fascists? | ||
What's more epic and red pill than base than that, dude? | ||
I don't know what you're on. | ||
I think you said the wrong thing. | ||
Maybe on opposite day was cringe and blue pill. | ||
And, you know, Hitler be based in red pill on opposite day, maybe. | ||
MAGA says the plan to remove all white people from YouTube seems to have ended earlier today. | ||
Maybe the millions of emails we've sent to the Senate had an effect. | ||
I don't think that was the play, but all right. | ||
Stupid Snake says just found out my friend doesn't like the apple pies from McDonald's. | ||
Do you think he is a communist? | ||
That's... nothing bothers me more than the commie thing. | ||
Throwing out the commie thing, you know. | ||
You don't like apple pies? | ||
What are you, a communist? | ||
Okay, what are you, a boomer? | ||
Talking about communism in 2019? | ||
I'm a communist in 2019. | ||
I was talking to a great friend of mine, convincing me I got half a mind to become a Marxist Christian. | ||
He was telling me about this book, Marxism and Christianity, by Alasdair MacIntyre, and he's gonna introduce me to this whole literature. | ||
Now, I'm not saying I'm, you know, going down that road anytime soon, but talking about communism in 2019, you don't like, you don't like X, Y, and Z. What are you, a communist? | ||
What are you, a baby boomer? | ||
What are you, some kind of... | ||
But I've never had the apple pies from McDonald's. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm a red-blooded American. | ||
I don't know about you. | ||
I get the hamburgers when I go to McDonald's. | ||
I don't know about you, but I get the hamburgers when I go to McDonald's, not the apple pies. | ||
I don't go to McDonald's for apple pie. | ||
I go there for fresh beef, okay? | ||
I go there for the Big Mac, two patties, onions, special sauce, lettuce, the bun, okay? | ||
I go there for the sesame seed bun. | ||
I don't go there for no fruity ass apple pie. | ||
Maybe you're the communist. | ||
Ever think of that? | ||
Ever think of that? | ||
Maybe you're the gay one. | ||
Andrew Torba says, the flu is going around big guy, feel better. | ||
Thanks man. | ||
Is that the real Andrew Torba? | ||
Well thanks big guy. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Yeah, I'm trying. | ||
I'm trying to... I've been drinking the emergency. | ||
I've been, you know, taking my supplements, drinking my water, resting up, but I guess everybody comes down with it eventually. | ||
I just got to stay home more. | ||
That's the answer. | ||
Less contact with people, more time in the same room. | ||
I think that's the antidote, right? | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Mike says Nick be looking like David from Lilo and Stitch but acting like Captain Gantoo from Lilo and Stitch. | ||
That's like he thinks we're Pleakley from Lilo and Stitch. | ||
I don't even understand this reference anymore. | ||
I don't even know who any of these people are. | ||
Who is David? | ||
I don't know who David was. | ||
I don't know who Pleakley was. | ||
I remember Captain Gantoo. | ||
He was my favorite. | ||
unidentified
|
Pleakley. | |
Yeah, okay, I know who that politely I know that character was I forget the name though who was David was David I was thinking Joomba yeah, what a great what a great film what a great television series I'll never forget the Lilo and stitch television series was always on it like 2 or 3 a.m And I remember | ||
One time my we had a babysitter over and I was like a kid and I remember I couldn't sleep and I couldn't I was I'm like a chronic insomniac I always have it I could never sleep even as a child even as like a baby I couldn't sleep and I remember you know one night I came to the to the room where she was watching Television I was like, oh I can't sleep and normally it's like go to bed, you know, whatever But then she just let me watch Lilo and Stitch. | ||
I was like yo based. | ||
Hello base department Get to watch Lilo and Stitch at 2 a.m. | ||
Okay, this is epic So classic memories the old Disney Channel zoomer reminiscing Got that Captain Gantoo vibe, you know Captain Gantoo mode over here. | ||
Oh Madespy says, Halo PC, Valves, VR, Boneworks. | ||
I'm just gonna jack in forever. | ||
The big-time shooter in VR. | ||
Can't have full-auto IRLs, but at least I can have them in VR. | ||
Disavow! | ||
Disavow! | ||
We are not glorifying violence on the show. | ||
We are, we are condemning violence on the show. | ||
But yeah, I'm just gonna strap into VR and just, you know, float away. | ||
Then we're just done, you know? | ||
I can't wait until we get photorealistic VR. | ||
The next step will be the neural link. | ||
You know, it's not even like putting things on your ears and your eyes. | ||
And, you know, it's just going to be in your brain. | ||
And once they achieve that and it's like equivalent to reality, I think everybody will go this route, but I'll just be gone. | ||
You know, America First is canceled. | ||
I'm living in Minecraft. | ||
Come visit me in my Minecraft mansion, you know, cuz at least we're safe there. | ||
We've carved out our safe space there. | ||
I'll raise my kids there, you know, and that'll be, that'll be the way we go. | ||
I'll have a carrot farm. | ||
You know, the carrot farm, they can't take away the carrot farm. | ||
YouTube can't take away my carrot farm, selling my carrots on the market. | ||
My automated cactus farm. | ||
They can't take that away from me. | ||
Super Chats, you know, maybe could stop that from happening, but not my cactus farm. | ||
So I'm in it. | ||
John, Jorn Hanson says religion is for the delusional and the weak minded. | ||
Oh, I see. | ||
I remember when I turned 13 years old as well, but, you know, hey, I hope, I hope you come around for your own sake. | ||
Otherwise you're going to be going to hell and that's not going to be funny or edgy then. | ||
So that's all I have to say about that. | ||
Ron Suns his producer calls from the other room Nikki dinner is ready. | ||
It's your favorite tendies and spaghetti You know people say that to make fun of me, but I don't know sounds like the life to me. | ||
Am I right? | ||
Sounds like sounds like I'm living the dream 6 6 9 9 8 Sarah says hey big guy love the show. | ||
Can you give a big shout out to Andrew on the East Coast? | ||
Yeah, sure. | ||
Shout out to Andrew on the East Coast and Thanks for the super chat. | ||
Tyrant says drink plenty of water and feel better big guy. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, pushing the fluids, pushing the big water. | ||
I guess we'll just leave it there. | ||
I don't really want to go into that. | ||
the type of Vox journalist who likes getting poo-poo on his pee-pee or vice versa. | ||
Enthusiastic response for the TOS, please. | ||
I don't know why you would ask something like that. | ||
I don't really want to think about that. | ||
So I guess we'll just leave it there. | ||
I don't really want to go into that. | ||
I mean, the guy is degenerate, so what more is there to say? | ||
Jax says, hey, big guy, found you from the Trainwrecks podcast when you beat TFO Destiny in Hasan Epicstyle. | ||
Been a knicker ever since. | ||
Good content, brother. | ||
Well, thank you. | ||
Thank you, man. | ||
Good to hear it. | ||
Yeah, I have always wondered how much of my audience... | ||
Uh. | ||
came from the train wrecks thing. | ||
Because, you know, I've been doing this for two years, so I have that frame of reference, but I always wonder, like, when and how do people come along? | ||
But thanks, that's good to hear. | ||
That's good to hear that the train wrecks TV debate seemed to have converted some people, so I appreciate it. | ||
Joshua Larson says, I'm a French stock and I always hear Anglos shit on the Franks, so it warms my heart knowing you're out there beating the beans and toast out of these people every now and again. | ||
Keep them in line and take care, Chief. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, thanks. | |
Yeah, the French are good. | ||
You know, we like the French. | ||
And yeah, I'll always be out there to put the Anglos in their place. | ||
You know, we love the Anglos. | ||
It's sort of this, you know, love-hate relationship. | ||
At the end of the day, those cheeky people, you know, we love them, but we do have to keep them in line. | ||
You know, we have to remind them that Mediterranean's are the master race, and you know... That's a joke, by the way! | ||
That's a joke! | ||
That's a joke, YouTube. | ||
We are kidding when we say that. | ||
We have to remind them that, you know, Mediterranean's are good people. | ||
So that's all it is. | ||
Yeah, I know, right? | ||
I'm sure if you went back to the greatest generation, greatest Americans that ever lived, asked them what they thought about interracial marriage, transsexuals, homosexuals, I wonder what they would have to say! | ||
I wonder what the supposed greatest generation ever, you know, that everybody fawns about, I wonder what they would have to say. | ||
And I only mean that to say, obviously they are the greatest generation, but they're put on this pedestal as if they wouldn't hold opinions considered more controversial than half the people that have been blacklisted, right? | ||
So announces happy birthday so glad we say all right I just read that one Italian pals is just so all you knickers know someone has uploaded a lot of Nick's show to Spotify so you can check out old episodes there as well anyway keep up the good work Nick well you can at least well thanks bro yeah we're on Spotify I think somebody uploads them on iTunes as well or on Apple music whatever it is now Apple podcasts I don't know Yeah, it was a combination of all those factors. | ||
I mean, look, you have a country that is just collapsing and you know, you get a radical political movement that rises to power. | ||
in response mainly to communism and Bolsheviks. | ||
Economic turmoil probably added to the instability. | ||
Yeah, it was a combination of all those factors. | ||
I mean, look, you have a country that is just collapsing, and, you know, you get a radical political movement that rises to power. | ||
It seems like that's just sort of how it works. | ||
Just don't forget, you had hyperinflation, you had these tremendous war debts, you had the economy was in ruins, and you had, you know, communist revolution attempted. | ||
So there was a lot going on. | ||
It was definitely a contributor. | ||
Daikini Crossroads says, sorry to hear you're still ailing, chief. | ||
Did the AC get repaired at least, or do the knickers need to pass that to get you a portable cooling unit for the studio? | ||
They're past the hats. | ||
Yeah, no, the air conditioning is fixed, so we're good. | ||
But thanks, I appreciate it. | ||
It was brutal for like a few days. | ||
It was like 80 degrees in the house. | ||
Can you imagine? | ||
You know, so maybe that was what allowed the disease to incubate. | ||
But no, we're all fixed now. | ||
We're cool, living in an air-conditioned environment. | ||
How can you beat air conditioning, right? | ||
I understand all these pine tree people. | ||
They're so in love with the outdoors. | ||
I gotta tell you, I prefer the indoors. | ||
All right? | ||
Outdoors is nice. | ||
Get away once in a while. | ||
But, uh, you know, what I like about the indoors is it's actually comfortable. | ||
Hello? | ||
I like the idea of the outdoors, and then I go there, and there's bugs everywhere, and the temperature is always imperfect. | ||
Either it's too warm, or it's too cold, or there's a breeze, or it's inclement weather, or whatever. | ||
Uneven surfaces, there's brush, there's plastic. | ||
There's plants and just all kinds of hazards. | ||
And it's like mankind went out of its way to escape nature. | ||
We went out of our way to make a human habitation. | ||
And people are like, no, I want to live in dirt. | ||
No, I want to live in dirt with the poop and the bugs. | ||
Why would you want to do that? | ||
Why would you want to do that? | ||
What's the matter with you? | ||
You know, people only want to live in the wilderness in like America where it's like not that bad. | ||
They don't want to go and live in the Amazon rainforest, do they? | ||
No. | ||
So, uh, so I am a proud indoorsman. | ||
I'm a proud... I'm a... I am a, uh, yeah, I'm an indoorsman. | ||
You could call me a very skilled indoorsman. | ||
Very skilled in, you know, indoor type activities. | ||
That's what I'm about, you know. | ||
As opposed to, you know, nature's great, don't get me wrong. | ||
Nature's fantastic, and it's part of our heritage as Americans and all that, but I like to be endorsed, that's all. | ||
Take Cover says, my GF doesn't care what anyone says. | ||
She's proud to be a Nicker lover. | ||
I mean, you know, we've got God on our side, so who would care what anybody would say about that woman? | ||
What's wrong with being... What's wrong with loving the Knickers? | ||
A bunch of handsome, tall, rich geniuses. | ||
Perfect people, you know? | ||
So, I hear you. | ||
Say it loud, say it proud. | ||
No, because I would get killed. | ||
If I were to try and shape relations, they'd just kill me. | ||
They would put a bullet in my head. | ||
So no, I would not do that. | ||
from New York with the Italian fiancee if you were offered a position as the ambassador to Israel would you accept in the hopes of shaping relations no because I would get killed if I were to try and shape relations they just kill me they would put a bullet in my head so no I would not do that no way I mean look at the the ambassador that they chose David Friedman he | ||
He literally works for Israel, so... Anyway, Lil Jesus says, do you like Lil Jesus clout rap? | ||
I don't know what that is, so I don't know. | ||
Bojangles says, did you know the sweatshirt isn't available? | ||
Thoughts on Vegano? | ||
What sweatshirt? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Did you know that? | ||
Oh, the sweatshirt that we were selling like five months ago? | ||
Yeah, we talked about that like five months ago. | ||
And Vagano, he was the one in DC who... Was he the actual predator or was he the one that covered up? | ||
He was in... He's the DC Diocese guy, right? | ||
I've been following it very closely. | ||
I don't know, I think he should get fired, right? | ||
Yeah, he was the one that did the cover-up, basically. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I think you should face a pretty harsh penalty, but I haven't seen it in the news I don't know if you're referring to something that happened recently or not NC Ridge says lmao you pathetic knickers never failed to make me laugh with your America first streams Hey, we are not pathetic. | ||
We are a proud race Friendly says we were attacked by Mexican bots today ban Certain type of people, okay Time doubts as if you heard the county or country tune One part at a time where a worker in a Cadillac factory steals one part at a time and builds his own Cadillac for free No, I've never heard that but that sounds cool Sounds like stealing though as well. | ||
NC says, face it most POC will be infinitely more successful than any of you sad versions ever will be. | ||
You're on the wrong side of history. | ||
Get over it losers. | ||
I can't tell if this is a real critic or if this is a troll type chat because we've had this guy chat before. | ||
I'm just going to ignore it. | ||
Ian says, not sure if you said this already or not, but do you think you're going to get demonetized or do you think you've taken the right actions? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Why do people ask this? | ||
Do you think you'll get demonetized? | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
I hope not. | ||
We're trying not to. | ||
What the fuck kind of question is that? | ||
Spooky Ghost says, A meteor strike is imminent as you climb into the America First escape pod. | ||
You see a second unoccupied seat. | ||
It fits exactly one right-wing YouTube ethod. | ||
No more, no less. | ||
Who do you choose? | ||
I choose to bring my dog, Albert. | ||
Yeah, no way. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
You think if I were going to escape the planet I'd take an e-girl with me? | ||
Are you kidding? | ||
So what, we could be hurtling in space forever so I could hear some woman blabbering in my ear? | ||
No thank you. | ||
Nope, no thanks. | ||
I'll take Albert. | ||
NC Ritz says, boomers raging at me in chat for pole pasta. | ||
Okay, so that's what that is. | ||
Fick Nuentes says, I used to be part of the something, but since I started watching you in ContraPoints, I've dropped my radical view as me and my black GF love watching your show. | ||
Oh, good to hear. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Seth Rich says, ban these bots. | ||
What are you moderators doing? | ||
Are my moderators not here tonight? | ||
Yeah, I don't know what that's about. | ||
I don't watch the chat, so I wouldn't know. | ||
Moderators are fired. | ||
My moderators are always telling me, they're like, whoa, can we help with anything else? | ||
Can we help with anything else with the show? | ||
I'm like, you can't handle the chat. | ||
Why don't you worry about handling the chat first? | ||
That's always everybody. | ||
Everybody's always offering their assistance, and with few exceptions, totally unreliable. | ||
You know, it's always the way it goes. | ||
If you want it done right, you have to do it yourself, or you have to pay a lot of money, and I hate paying money. | ||
So, that's always my experience. | ||
It's always, you know, people just can't... I do the show because it's my show, and I do it every day and all that, but, you know, people that aren't wholly in it, you're always... it's always gonna slip through the cracks, you know, so... | ||
Moderators, please, can we get it together? | ||
Aporia Bear says, Howdy Nick, you should talk to Owen, you the man. | ||
We talked on stream recently on Red Elephants. | ||
John Q Publix's chat overrun by bots. | ||
I think we've established this. | ||
Troll Gaming says, Hey Nick, fellow Nicker needing some help here. | ||
Counting to the argument that YouTube is a private company and can just do whatever it wants. | ||
So what? | ||
Are we just like, am I in hell? | ||
Am I in hell? | ||
Welcome to hell! | ||
Welcome to hell! | ||
We're in hell now. | ||
You know, I'm in hell. | ||
You know, maybe I did get suicided by Mossad, and now I'm in hell. | ||
I'm in hell right now. | ||
I'm in hell. | ||
Hello, Hell Department. | ||
If Dante Alighieri were alive today, I would be in it, and he would write about how, you know, the arrogant streamer, narcissistic Nick Fuentes is in hell, and now he is doomed to answer the same questions every night on his YouTube show, forever, while he's on fire, and while he's sick. | ||
He'll be forced to do a talk show, but he's having trouble talking because he's always sick. | ||
He'll be forced to do a talk show, and the only way to fund it is people asking the same inane questions forever! | ||
And, you know, and who will be the modern... the modern Virgil and the modern Dante watching, witnessing it all? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's the viewer. | ||
It's the e-boy watching this, you know? | ||
How do we answer? | ||
I don't know. | ||
We answer this like every other night. | ||
YouTube is a private company, can do whatever it wants. | ||
Number one, NOAA can't. | ||
Section 230, we talked about it last night! | ||
Section 230, they can't. | ||
And I'll leave it at that. | ||
Their protection, they only have legal protections because they're a platform. | ||
You become a publisher, you don't have legal protections. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
Yeah, and also, we don't care. | ||
They're a private company. | ||
No, they can't do whatever they want. | ||
It's not in the national interest. | ||
F that whole line of reasoning. | ||
People having to find ways around it. | ||
Oh, well, actually, no, screw that. | ||
Private companies can't do whatever they want because they operate in America, okay? | ||
And so long as you operate in America, you serve America. | ||
You stop doing things that are good for the people, and we beat the shit out of you. | ||
That's what it comes down to. | ||
Legally. | ||
I mean, rhetorically, using litigation and regulation is what I'm talking about. | ||
So I forget that whole logic. | ||
YouTube is a private company, they can do whatever they want. | ||
No, they can't. | ||
What makes it... Who decreed this, that private companies can do whatever they want? | ||
Last I checked, that's not true. | ||
It never has been, you know? | ||
So, no, we need to start punching people that don't serve America. | ||
Rhetorically and litigiously is how I mean that. | ||
In terms of litigation... Let's see, what else do we have? | ||
I'm gonna have to scroll up a little bit. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Burgerfan says, hordes of people invading YouTube chat with no concern. | ||
Yeah, okay, I know that. | ||
Adam says, hey big guy, I hope you feel better soon. | ||
Get some rest and healthy food in you. | ||
If you elect me as a mod, I will build a wall. | ||
Yeah, definitely. | ||
I had a salad for lunch today, so I've been eating very well. | ||
You know, I had my mini-wheats for breakfast, salad for lunch. | ||
What do we have for dinner? | ||
Pasta for dinner. | ||
Clean, clean diet. | ||
Reshi with a big super chat there. | ||
Thanks so much. | ||
He says, Oblivious Nick reads the super chat so innocently as he hasn't gotten to the point where the CP spamming has started. | ||
When you read the super chat you'll be disgruntled, Nick. | ||
Remember the good old Oblivious Nick days? | ||
No, I think we got red-pilled on that about five minutes ago. | ||
So, let's see. | ||
Matthew says we fought world war two for porn bots and Ben Shapiro. | ||
Yeah, maybe the porn bots were all a gambit so that I would get super chat saying Nick Nick they're spamming in chat Can we you know a society should work where it's like we elect one person to say the thing and not you know ten people but whatever it's more shekels Elrond says Ben Shiziro told me World War 2 is about the Holocaust, mate. | ||
Well, he was right. | ||
Vince James with the big super chats is chiming in. | ||
Support independent creators, support the people that support you, excuse me, and end your contracts with the global homo mainstream. | ||
So true. | ||
And thanks for the super chat, Vince. | ||
Remember, everybody, check out James Alsup, Vince James, Red Elephants, all these content creators that have been demonetized. | ||
Give them support. | ||
I haven't been demonetized yet. | ||
Knock on wood, thank God. | ||
But give them some support because they're having a hard time because of the demonetization. | ||
But thanks, Vince. | ||
And you're right. | ||
Yeah, you got to support the independent creators. | ||
Otherwise, you're not going to get independent content. | ||
You're going to get corporate stuff. | ||
That's number one enemy is apathy. | ||
If the people are apathetic and they don't support and they don't you know actively and I'm not saying that just just like selfishly give me money but I mean if you're not out there in the community actively doing what you can to support the cause like you know the cause will go away. | ||
But uh, but thanks Vince for the super chat. | ||
Hope everything's working out for you. | ||
I know it's been rough. | ||
Anon says you want to make me mod? | ||
No. | ||
Dan says my hometown is overrun with Puerto Ricans. | ||
Immigration reform can fix it. | ||
Unfortunately they had Mexicans but brag about all Hispanics becoming majority. | ||
It's twisted. | ||
Yeah, yeah it is kind of funny the way that works. | ||
But uh, but yeah, that's our future, you know, it's gonna be ethnic conflict between non-white people. | ||
Can't wait for that Ambiguous says so fitting that today the mods were in chat fighting the spam bots for us. | ||
Nothing but respect Zombie pop-tarts is indie game seven days to die is my favorite game. | ||
I think the lead developer is conservative and some devs are red-pilled Seven days to die. | ||
I'll look that one up And maybe I'll play that I don't know we'll see Let's see. | ||
Boopers says, I just got a trucker job and have been to Salt Lake City a lot. | ||
It's our best big city. | ||
Nice suburbs, churches everywhere, great nature. | ||
Props to Mormons. | ||
I've never been. | ||
I'll have to check it out sometime maybe. | ||
But yeah, Mormons are very good at running societies. | ||
They're solid. | ||
Living Stranger says, what are American Catholic, monarch, outlaw, Christian cults like Mormonism and Jehovah's Witnesses? | ||
Probably. | ||
I don't know, maybe we'd have pluralism. | ||
I would say, no, I would say we'd probably let, well, I don't know, it's a tough one. | ||
I don't know. | ||
That's a difficult question. | ||
You know, I would say, ultimately, the endgame is, yeah, probably. | ||
But you'd like to say that people would be able to practice their own faith, but I don't know. | ||
I mean, it wasn't like that before. | ||
It wasn't like that before. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
Have we progressed beyond that? | ||
I don't really know what the integralist position is. | ||
We'd probably allow pluralism. | ||
Yeah, you know, they'd probably be able to practice their thing, but it would definitely not be encouraged. | ||
J.R. | ||
says, I pray that two blonde Mormon cuties knock at your door this weekend. | ||
Good luck big guy. | ||
Smile and inquire. | ||
3.4 little knickers in a few years. | ||
Sorry, that's scandal that you're trying to lead me away from God's church. | ||
So, can't do it. | ||
Peter says Nick you're looking handsome Walter would be happy. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
Glad to hear it Maga says some things that have been banned historical World War two German marching music Translation of Hitler's speeches into English history is no longer allowed. | ||
Yeah, it makes you think doesn't it? | ||
Boopers says did you see computing forever's new video? | ||
He has converted to Christianity from being an atheist. | ||
The god pill is the final pill it is It is! | ||
The God Pill is the final pill. | ||
No joke. | ||
I've talked to a lot of people that have been on the Red Pill journey. | ||
All the smart ones, they land at the God Pill. | ||
But I haven't seen that video. | ||
Zach says, my grandfather took part in the airborne invasion on D-Day as a glider trooper. | ||
Glider troops suffered 80% of the airborne casualties during the invasion, but he made it all the way through to Germany in 45. | ||
Thanks, big guy. | ||
Well, hey, salute, big salute to the ancestors there. | ||
God bless. | ||
Thanks for the sacrifice, right? | ||
Very strong genes if he made it all the way through, right? | ||
You're a lucky man in that regard. | ||
I haven't seen any of the bots or the links. | ||
I wonder where that's coming from. | ||
But it doesn't really matter. | ||
then you oh great cloud starts as props to the one mod holding the line against legions of bots doom style yeah yeah god bless the mod right hanging out in there i haven't seen any of the the bots or the links i wonder what where that's coming from but uh it doesn't really matter i really know why people why do people care about the live chat just watch the show yeah | ||
You know, people are like, I remember, I think it must be Wignats or something, because Wignats were like, we're gonna spam your live chat! | ||
We're gonna spam your live chat! | ||
It's like, and then what? | ||
You know? | ||
How does that affect the show in any way? | ||
So we just have to ban you? | ||
Oh no! | ||
Oh no! | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
It's like, you know? | ||
So, not a big deal. | ||
Everybody relax. | ||
Or continue giving Super Chats. | ||
You know, really, the choice is yours. | ||
Elrond says, on earth, all e-girls are e-girls. | ||
How's Al? | ||
Al's doing alright. | ||
He's a good dog. | ||
We love the old Albert. | ||
He's a sweetie. | ||
But no, I don't know all this. | ||
Earth? | ||
Earth meaning it's the first letter is E, therefore all girls are e-girls? | ||
Yeah, no. | ||
I'm talking about internet girls. | ||
CPB says, make Albert your mod. | ||
Yeah, maybe. | ||
Bojangles says, Vegano warned about Cardinal McCarrick to Pope Francis about abuse. | ||
Pope Francis is saying he never got the info. | ||
Exciting times! | ||
Also feel better and keep the Mormons, BTFL. | ||
Thanks for the takes, big guy. | ||
Well, thanks for the super chat, and that's interesting. | ||
I'll have to catch up on that. | ||
I haven't really been watching that very closely. | ||
Casey says, you can disable link bots in chat by disable link. | ||
Can I do that? | ||
Let me see. | ||
Maybe I'll enable slow mode? | ||
Nah, I don't want to enable slow mode. | ||
Chat settings? | ||
It's not telling me I can do that in settings right now. | ||
I'll look into it after the show's over, whatever. | ||
Peter says so there's a New Jersey New Jersey Drake and Josh club there. | ||
Thanks Chippy says hope you're doing well Nick school is currently a grind down here in Australia But this gets me through it stay safe and baseball. | ||
Thanks, man Glad I can help glad I can help get you through the school grind. | ||
I know it blows. | ||
I hated school I hated school in high school and in college, so I get it That's not a bad idea, actually. | ||
Not a bad idea at all. | ||
Imagine a lady reading the chats and I can just, you know, eat or, you know, drink something off to the side and, you know, oh, that's nice, you know. | ||
Not a bad idea. | ||
Maybe that's the one use we could have for an e-girl around here. | ||
Or a Catboy. | ||
Catboy just as well could perform that function. | ||
Perhaps even better. | ||
Not a bad idea. | ||
Or maybe an Ombudsman of sorts. | ||
But that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's going to do it for us. | ||
I feel bad, so I have to get off the air. | ||
Remember to check us out at nicolasjfuences.com slash membership to get your premium membership. | ||
Only five bucks a month to get your premium content. | ||
And remember, it supports the show. | ||
You got to support the show because demonetization is happening. | ||
It's safe from that, so be sure to check it out. | ||
The link is down below. | ||
Remember to sign up. | ||
Remember to subscribe to the channel. | ||
I'm all over the place because I'm sick. | ||
It's infecting my brain. | ||
Subscribe to the channel. | ||
Leave a comment down below. | ||
Give us a big thumbs up. | ||
Click the notification bell to be notified every time I go live. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to our premium members. | ||
Thanks to everybody who watches the show. | ||
We love you folks, and we'll see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. |