Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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Globalism will be our freedom. | |
Globalism will be our freedom. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
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No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
Guy, I've never heard of a big question. | ||
He's just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. Will be our freedom. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
The former generation. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl, you know the rule. | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of it. | |
I've never heard of him. | ||
What is that? | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
unidentified
|
What is that? | |
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The Boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
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Not even once. | |
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Globalism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | ||
He's just that. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
will be our freedom. | ||
Go! | ||
Oh. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We are credo. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America First! America First! America First! | ||
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 with you this evening. | ||
We're actually back from DLive. | ||
So if you're watching us over on DLive, welcome back. | ||
We are now on YouTube and we're going to give you some live commentary and analysis of the Democratic debates. | ||
And I think this process works pretty well. | ||
We're probably going to do this Tomorrow, because of course tomorrow will be the second Democratic debates. | ||
Tonight we covered the first Democratic presidential primary debates live on DLive. | ||
I gave him my live commentary and analysis as it happened. | ||
Now we're over here on YouTube for analysis and this is what we'll be discussing. | ||
Some very big news and I've got a lot of thoughts for you so it should be a pretty fun and exciting show. | ||
I think we'll go about the length of a usual show and then we'll do super chats and then we'll wrap it up. | ||
But it's been a pretty late night, I guess, getting started at 10 o'clock on America First. | ||
Usually, we're at 7 o'clock. | ||
But that's alright. | ||
It's a lot of fun. | ||
So, of course, this evening, the first primary debate was held. | ||
It was on NBC. | ||
Tonight, debating, we had Cory Booker, Julian Castro, Elizabeth Warren, Beto O'Rourke, Amy Klobuchar, Tim Ryan, Bill de Blasio, Delaney, Tulsi Gabbard, and Jay Inslee. | ||
And these were the candidates that debated tonight. | ||
Remember that the way that the debates works, the way that it's going to work this week, is that they had two qualifications to get into the debates. | ||
You either had to raise 65,000 individual donors, so it wasn't actually an amount of money, but you either had to have had 65,000 individual donators by a certain deadline, which I think was sometime in June, or you had to poll at least 1% in a national poll. | ||
And so I think over 20 candidates qualified. | ||
They took the top 20, they separated them into groups of 10 at random, and they had one team debate on Thursday in primetime, and another debate was today in primetime. | ||
And the reason they did this was to prevent the JV varsity situation that was in the Republican primary in 2016. | ||
If you remember there were 18 candidates running for the Republican nomination at 16 and they had I believe 10 at like 5 o'clock and this ended up getting no attention. | ||
None of those people are competitive with one exception being Carly Fiorina and then they had the prime time to debate with the top 10. | ||
I have to tell you honestly after watching this debate They should have done the JV and varsity. | ||
Why would they have some of the front runners like Warren, Beto, Booker, Klobuchar, arguably, or Castro arguing on one night and then the top tier candidates Biden and Sanders and most of the second tier the second night and just filling up time, taking up space, all these literally who's that nobody's ever heard of before? | ||
Why do we have to sit and listen through Delaney and Tim Ryan and Jay Inslee? | ||
People who nobody knows about, who everybody knows stands no chance of winning, and tomorrow it'll be the same thing. | ||
We'll have to listen to people like Marianne Williamson and God knows who else. | ||
I don't even know the rest of the people running tomorrow. | ||
So it's a big mistake in the first place to do this the way that they did it. | ||
They should have done it one night, have all the nobodies debating at one time, Maybe have a couple of standouts. | ||
People like Tulsi, maybe Andrew Yang. | ||
Rise to prominence out of the debate. | ||
And you have all the players in the second one. | ||
But as far as I'm concerned, half the debate was a big waste of time listening to these people. | ||
But in general, the debate, like I said, we talked about who was featured tonight. | ||
The topics that they covered were the economy, They covered health care, immigration, the situation with Iran in the Middle East right now. | ||
They talked about gun control, the Supreme Court, climate change, and various minority groups. | ||
And then they had a few topics which were smaller and sort of spread out among the different candidates. | ||
Not everybody took a stab at, for example, Right to Protect they brought up and a few other smaller ones. | ||
And then they gave closing statements. | ||
It was a two-hour debate. | ||
There were some technical difficulties. | ||
In the middle. | ||
Two hour debate separated into four different segments. | ||
It kind of botched the second half that they took about 10 minutes to figure out there's some kind of audio issue. | ||
So that I think took away a little bit of the time. | ||
It was moderated by Chuck Todd and Rachel Maddow. | ||
Then there were some other moderators which were pretty bad in the first half. | ||
Overall I have to tell you my general impressions from the debate was that it was just boring. | ||
It was just a big, stupid, boring debate. | ||
I don't know if you remember. | ||
I don't know if you're old enough to remember. | ||
Unfortunately, I am. | ||
The 2016 Republican primary, which actually, the first debate, which would be analogous to this one that was held for the Republicans, for the Republican nomination in 16 for president, their first debate was held in August. | ||
2015. | ||
So if we were to look at it on a comparable timeline, if this were the 2016 election, the first debate of the whole season did not happen until late August, would have been this year, right? | ||
If we were to transfer it four years ahead. | ||
So it's a very early debate, but if you remember the 2016 debate with Republicans, it was exciting, it was energetic, a lot of that was because you had Donald Trump, but if you remember right out of the gate, it was Rand Paul versus Trump, and then it was all these different people fighting with each other, it was crosstalk, it was name-calling, it was big, it was exciting, 27 million people watched it on Fox News, there were no technical difficulties, you know, so I'm watching this debate and my first big takeaway is | ||
Organizationally and logistically it was a disaster. | ||
Tech failures. | ||
It was a big mistake to have all the smaller guys in there. | ||
But in terms of the substance, it was just so boring. | ||
You had maybe four examples, four or five notable examples of real crosstalk or little... | ||
You know, banter most notably between Bill de Blasio and Beto O'Rourke. | ||
You also had an exchange between Beto O'Rourke and Julian Castro. | ||
You had an exchange between Tulsi Gabbard and Tim Ryan. | ||
These were the most notable exchanges and they are relatively muted and relatively inconsequential in the grand scheme of things. | ||
So my first takeaway is basically a big boring debate and the reason for that is because all the candidates are basically the same. | ||
If you actually sat through and listened to the two-hour debate as we did, and we go candidate by candidate, it's really sort of hard to pick out little moments or little things because just about every candidate said basically the same thing on every issue. | ||
You know, take like gun control as an example. | ||
There was virtually no disagreement. | ||
There are various policy preference, you know, one person For example, like Elizabeth Warren suggested that gun control be treated like a public health emergency. | ||
And, you know, Cory Booker just said bold action without specifying what that would look like. | ||
And on and on. | ||
But with that issue in particular, every answer was just a carbon copy of the one that came before. | ||
It was a sob story about a question that I had at a town hall. | ||
It was by a child who said, I want to be safe going to school. | ||
Another sob story was, well, I have children and I want to protect children. | ||
And so it was a sob story and then it was, we need bold action. | ||
So that's one example of one issue where every candidate was virtually indistinguishable, undifferentiated from all the other candidates. | ||
And this is really the source of why I was born. | ||
Add to that, The fact that the substance of all the answers, which were all the same, is total pause town. | ||
It's total pause town USA. | ||
You know, all the answers, it was each person trying to one-up, in some cases in the language, but also in the policy proposals of who could go bigger, crazier, more expensive, more unrealistic, more pie in the sky. | ||
You know, even the few exchanges that did break out, for example, the one between Bill de Blasio and Beto O'Rourke, it was, well, Beto O'Rourke says public option, and de Blasio says, well, that's not good enough. | ||
We need to make all private healthcare illegal. | ||
Or the exchange between Beto O'Rourke and Julian Castro on immigration. | ||
Beto O'Rourke says, well, we need to do comprehensive immigration reform, and we need to protect people, and we need to, you know, give a pathway to citizenship, and protect people from ICE. | ||
And Julian Castro says, well, hold up. | ||
That's not good enough. | ||
You need to make illegal immigration a civil offense, and basically make it so that it's not illegal at all. | ||
And so, even when there was differentiation, Even when there was distinguishing between different candidates and everybody was desperately trying to do that, it was who can one up in terms of who can go bigger, more extreme, more out there, and it's all completely unrealistic. | ||
So that was my my biggest takeaway from the debate is it's boring and beyond that the problem is that they're all racing to the left. | ||
This is going to be a big problem for the Democrats. | ||
It's going to be a big problem for a lot of the more centrist candidates, because judging by the audience's reactions, they were rewarding and celebrating the people that were racing to the left and punishing and being unenthused with people in the middle. | ||
You know, in my opinion, the most sensible candidates on the stage, the ones who made the most sense to me, and this is a very low bar, so take that with a grain of salt, I'm not saying I agree, but the ones that actually seem to have a little bit of nuance to their policy perspectives, you had Tim Ryan, you had Delaney, and you had Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
All three of these guys, none of them really received a very warm reception. | ||
The big applause lines came from for Warren, for Cory Booker, for Castro, for Bill de Blasio, talking about how we're going to put trans black people first, and how we're going to put illegal immigrants first, and all this kind of stuff. | ||
So to me, this is representative of a big problem the Democrats are having, which I noted way early in the race, really before the race even began, which is that what's happening in the Democratic Party right now is this major cleavage, major polarization and division between these two camps, which is progressives on the one side, Like Elizabeth Warren, like Bill de Blasio, like Cory Booker, and the pragmatists and the more establishmentarian types on the other side. | ||
People like Delaney and those other people who are willing to offer nuance, saying things like Tim Ryan, I think, had a very poignant moment of maybe a little bit too much honesty where he said, the perception of Democrats, and it was amazing to see this because it seemed like inadvertently he admitted what everybody knows to be true and that was a big no-no, He said the perception of Democrats is that we are elitist, coastal, Ivy League. | ||
We need to reorient the party back towards the Midwest and back towards working people. | ||
And he said, well, that's the perception. | ||
That's the perception of our party. | ||
It was a rare moment of honesty on the stage where I think you really got to see on display this naked hole, this naked, what would you call that, this void between these two segments of the party. | ||
People that are hardcore progressives, you know, like Delaney kept articulating, people that are offering impossible promises versus the people offering so-called real solutions, willing to work with establishment people, and moreover, trying to appeal to the middle and in some cases to the people that Donald Trump went over on the right. | ||
in Ohio, in the Midwest, in Pennsylvania, in these states. | ||
So to me this is going to be a big problem for them. | ||
It'll be interesting to see how this dynamic plays out tomorrow when you have Joe Biden who's of course the biggest establishment guy of all. | ||
So that was a pretty interesting takeaway. | ||
We're going to go over I guess we'll look at the issues then we'll look at winners and losers of the debate. | ||
So on the issues, like I said, they talked about economy, healthcare, immigration, they talked about Iran, guns, the Supreme Court, climate change and minorities. | ||
So on the economy, you know, this is actually an area where I think the Democrats are sort of They've been saying the same stuff for many years, which is, we need the economy to work for the people. | ||
This was the refrain. | ||
This was the boilerplate talking point that everybody used, no matter what they suggested, no matter what they sort of pivoted from. | ||
You know, the questions from the moderators came, well, would you be okay with a 70% top marginal tax rate? | ||
Or, you know, what are you going to do to balance out big corporations? | ||
They talked about consolidation of big corporations. | ||
So really, regardless of what the issue was specifically, the refrain always came, well, we need an economy to work for the people. | ||
Additionally, every candidate was trying to appeal towards working people. | ||
I think there was this acknowledgement across all the different candidates within the party that they've lost their clout. | ||
They've lost their credibility. | ||
They've basically lost the mandate of the working class. | ||
And so every candidate was trying their own angle, their own rhetorical angle on how can we recapture, how can we acknowledge this problem and win them back. | ||
Bill de Blasio I think made a very impassioned speech. | ||
Yes, the Republicans are winning the working class. | ||
Regionally, they're winning the Midwest. | ||
Jay Inslee said, we have to remember who brings back, or rather, we have to remember who brought us the five-day work week, which is the unions, and went out to bat for the unions. | ||
And so everybody, I think, acknowledges that, yes, the Republicans are winning the working class. | ||
Regionally, they're winning the Midwest, they're winning the Rust Belt. | ||
And so how do we get them back? | ||
And there are a lot of bold promises made on this matter. | ||
I think probably Cory Booker, Elizabeth Warren, Bill de Blasio had the strongest answers on the economy. | ||
Elizabeth Warren probably has the most clout on this issue because she does have the image. | ||
She is the caricature of this tirelessly fighting, populist, progressive, sort of a quirky character. | ||
You know, she has the reputation of having a plan for everything. | ||
She's sort of the schoolgirl nerd from Harvard, the professor who's got a plan, the Nozbo, fighting for the will of the people. | ||
So, to me, she had the most credibility. | ||
I think Bill de Blasio is probably the best public speaker. | ||
Gave a pretty good speech on this one. | ||
Cory Booker, I think, differentiated himself pretty nicely on this one, but it was all basically the same. | ||
The only problem is that all these people are fighting for the big corporations, right? | ||
I think there's only legitimately real populist candidate on the issue of economics, and that was Donald Trump. | ||
Only legitimately one populist candidate who's made it to the debate stages, maybe in the last so many elections, with the exception of Ron Paul, maybe a few notable others, but who could really say that they were against the interests of the big corporations. | ||
Because, you know, newsflash, most of the people on the stage there take contributions from big corporations. | ||
I mean, Maybe Elizabeth Warren is a slight exception. | ||
That's why she has some credibility. | ||
But for the most part, these are big money liberals, so they don't really have a lot of credibility. | ||
But we do have to watch out. | ||
I think there is a lot to be argued from the Democrats that this administration has failed to put working people first. | ||
You know, this question of economy is going to be a critical one in the election. | ||
Donald Trump, I think he believed the strategy would work, that if he'd put the corporate tax cuts in the first year of his term, this would save the economy and this would give him a big bump in 18 and 20. | ||
But you see that there are some very strong talking points on where the dividends for this tax cut or where the dividends for this economic growth are paying out. | ||
Certainly, if you look at the polling, although something like 90-some percent of taxpayers saw a tax cut from the tax cut bill that the president passed, something like 70% of taxpayers say that they haven't felt the benefits from the tax cut. | ||
So I think this will be a very contentious issue in 2020. | ||
It's one Republicans have to watch out for. | ||
I think a lot of people in the administration, people in the MAGO movement, they think, well, just look at the numbers. | ||
Look at how many people got a tax cut. | ||
Look at the economic growth. | ||
Look at the stock market records. | ||
And maybe they'll play it safe on the economy. | ||
Although Trump has been touting those numbers, maybe they think they sort of have that in the bag. | ||
But I think it will be a very strong appeal for Democrats to say, well, certainly you have economic growth. | ||
Certainly you have high GDP numbers. | ||
But where is the money going? | ||
It's going to rich corporations. | ||
It's going to rich people. | ||
And they have the help of the media to play that off and maybe nullify or mitigate The effects of the tax cut had positively for President Trump. | ||
So that's one to watch. | ||
On health care, this was sort of an interesting one. | ||
Everybody agreed basically for universal health care. | ||
It was pretty interesting. | ||
There was one notable moment when they asked everybody to raise their hands and that was on the issue of eliminating private health care. | ||
So at the outset of the beginning of the health care topic, one of the moderators said, you know, raise your hand if you would completely eliminate any private health care and the only people that raised their hands were elizabeth warren and bill de blasio this was a big moment for elizabeth warren because you know again when it comes down to this division between progressives and pragmatists i think health care is the most divisive maybe on one end of the spectrum you have elizabeth warren and bernie sanders and on the other end of the spectrum | ||
you have people like klobuchar delaney even buddha judge who have said well well we're in favor of universal health care but medicare for all is not politically feasible or it's not practical or something like this So to me, this was one of the more interesting issues. | ||
Right out of the gate, they asked Elizabeth Warren. | ||
She gave her answer about universal health care. | ||
And there's a very telling exchange then between Beto and Bill de Blasio, where Beto basically defended Universal health care in principle and maybe public option or a road towards universal, but not eliminating private health care. | ||
Bill de Blasio called them out on this and said, well, what are you doing here? | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
Why do you support private health care? | ||
It doesn't work and all this. | ||
It was a very telling exchange about where the Democratic electorate is at. | ||
And so it's interesting that on the one hand, you know, there are a lot of candidates polling well who don't support Medicare for all, but all the big applause lines are for people that are in favor of Medicare for all. | ||
So It's interesting how the rhetoric and a lot of the progressive ideological stuff, in my opinion, is going to run up against reality when these people have to actually vie in the primary for votes or when they go into the general election. | ||
They're trying to win over independents, conservatives. | ||
I think you might have a lot of damage that can be done by these pragmatists on the matter of something like Medicare for All. | ||
So that was pretty interesting. | ||
But other than that, I mean, they're all in favor. | ||
These are really minor differences. | ||
Even the people that were against Medicare for All, like Klobuchar and others, said, well, we are in favor of universal health care, we just think that Medicare for All is not the right way to get there, because Medicare for All will put hospitals out of business, or Medicare for All is not politically feasible, or something like this. | ||
And so, therefore, what we have to do is implement it gradually, but ultimately get to universal and nationalized health care anyway. | ||
So, the Democratic Party is for universal health care. | ||
So, that was interesting in that regard. | ||
They did a little bit of a pivot towards reproductive rights inside of the issue of health care. | ||
And it's sort of fascinating throughout the debate. | ||
They focused on it for a couple of minutes in the first segment. | ||
But throughout the debate, people could not help themselves. | ||
Like every other answer, trying to shoehorn in so-called reproductive rights. | ||
Every other answer within maybe the first 45 minutes, whatever the topic, they try to shoehorn in. | ||
Well, we support killing babies too. | ||
But also when you talk about health care, we have to talk about killing babies. | ||
Or also when we talk about the economy, we have to talk about killing babies. | ||
Or also when we talk about immigration, well, I affirm my rights for killing babies. | ||
And I believe they did a show of hands on this one as well. | ||
You know, who's in favor of reproductive rights? | ||
Everybody's in favor of reproductive so-called... I'm using their language for the sake of analyzing this debate, but everybody's in favor of abortion. | ||
Castro is probably the most striking person in the whole debate. | ||
Because he is, by far, the most extreme, the most radical, and he got the biggest applause lines. | ||
I think, by far and away, he, in terms of proportional to his polling numbers, did the best. | ||
Proportional to the polling numbers. | ||
And that was based on these radical stances, particularly on an issue like this, where he said, well, I wouldn't just say it's reproductive rights, I would say it's reproductive justice! | ||
Huge applause line. | ||
And not only that, but we need to protect the reproductive rights of trans people! | ||
unidentified
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What? | |
I mean it's like borderline politically damaging to be in favor of abortion at this point. | ||
In the Democratic primary it isn't, but if you look at the polling for young people, if you look at it for people just generally in registered voters or likely voters for the general election, abortion is rapidly losing currency in politics. | ||
For him to go as far to say that, well, actually abortion is justice, and I'm defending abortion for trans people, this should just go to show you how far the Democratic Party has moved to the left. | ||
I know that's sort of a Republican talking point, a Fox News talking point, but it's so true. | ||
That you've got this little goblino on the stage talking about how we need reproductive justice for trans people. | ||
Like, think how quickly things are moving. | ||
That's what's notable about the healthcare issue, but by far and away, they're all basically the same on that issue. | ||
Then they moved on to immigration. | ||
Very similar line. | ||
It's sort of interesting, the moderator that they chose for this one. | ||
What was striking about this issue is that the moderator, who I didn't catch his name, but they had some Hispanic moderator, and the way he framed it, it was like he was a partisan himself. | ||
He says, well, people are dying, and we all saw that picture. | ||
of the children that washed up on the shore of the Rio Grande. | ||
What a tragedy this is. | ||
And Castro takes this one right out of the gate to say that, well, not only should we give a pathway to citizenship, not only should we stop ICE and Customs and Border Patrol, but also we should decriminalize illegal immigration. | ||
He says that we should make illegal immigration a civil offense. | ||
In other words, that if you cross into the country illegally, it's like the same thing as a parking ticket or something like that. | ||
It's like a very low-level violation in terms of the government. | ||
So that we can't criminalize it, we can't really deport these people. | ||
And you understand what that means. | ||
That means open borders. | ||
If crossing illegally is simply one of these minor violations, like an administrative type thing, then that means that there's, in effect, no difference between America and Mexico. | ||
It's like the same thing of not having a proper sticker on your car, not going for emissions testing, you know, something like that. | ||
Really, if there's no penalty for it, then how is it against the law? | ||
It isn't. | ||
And then Castro used this as a bludgeon to, like, shame everybody else on the stage. | ||
He talked particularly about one provision in Section 1325 of the Immigration and Naturalization Act, which I guess is what he would use to get rid of this, to decriminalize illegal immigration. | ||
And there's a very telling exchange between him and Beta O'Rourke, which is maybe perhaps cosmic justice. | ||
There's a grand irony in this, you know, because Beta O'Rourke, his name is Robert O'Rourke, and he's 100% Irish. | ||
And all his political clout and capital comes from pretending to be Hispanic. | ||
And he's out there saying, well, you know, we need a pathway to citizenship, and we need to do this, that, and the other. | ||
And he got called out by Castro, who said, well, that's fine and well, but it's not good enough. | ||
Why don't you support turning back this section 1325 of the INA? | ||
Why did you speak out against that? | ||
And they had this little conflict. | ||
And it really comes full circle because it just goes to show the one that embarrasses this white man, this white Democrat on the stage, who maybe could stand a chance if he could rise up and become who he is and be charismatic and be Beto O'Rourke. | ||
But he chose to be muted and sort of passive in this debate because he doesn't want to show up any of the women or people of color. | ||
He got really battered for saying he was born to be in it, you know. | ||
So whereas Robert O'Rourke could be doing really well in the race, could respond to somebody like that. | ||
He's got to downplay it. | ||
He's got to be meek. | ||
He's got to take it from this three feet tall, you know, Puerto Rican guy calling him out for not wanting to decriminalize illegal immigration, which is like a poison pill for Democrats to embrace. | ||
It's sort of a grand irony. | ||
It really does all come full circle, right? | ||
That a fake Hispanic would get humiliated, embarrassed, maybe even pushed out of the race. | ||
By his racial better, you know, in terms of woke politics. | ||
By a real Hispanic who can go just a little bit further on this issue. | ||
But the big takeaway from illegal immigration is that the Democrats have completely gone off the reservation on this issue. | ||
Again, we go back to what we were talking about even yesterday about how it used to be mere rhetoric when we would say President Kushner. | ||
It used to be mere rhetoric when we would say the Democrats are in favor of open borders. | ||
Barack Obama was in a de facto way in favor of open borders. | ||
He gave amnesty to 3 million people. | ||
But if you listen to some of his speeches from 2009-2010, he would say things like, it's not acceptable for people to come in illegally, and you'll be deported, and you should not get comfortable because you'll get deported. | ||
Things like that. | ||
You know, so look at the transformation where, and I'll admit, you know, I'm not saying Obama was a strong borders guy, but he had better numbers than Trump in many months, he paid lip service to borders many times throughout his administration, and just in the past how many years? | ||
10 years we've gone from paying lip service and basically a minimal level of border control to most people on the stage saying, yeah, we should just make it not illegal for people to cross the border illegally. | ||
We should just completely decriminalize it. | ||
We should have open borders. | ||
Cory Booker agreed to this. | ||
He's a senator. | ||
He's a sitting U.S. | ||
senator and arguably a frontrunner for the nomination, polling relatively high in a 20-person race. | ||
So that was fascinating about immigration. | ||
They want to make all immigration legal in effect. | ||
Then they moved on to the situation with Iran. | ||
Nothing really notable there with Iran. | ||
They asked who would re-sign onto the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action or the Iran deal. | ||
I believe there were only a couple of people who said that they would not do that. | ||
I believe it was Amy Klobuchar. | ||
No, I'm sorry. | ||
I believe it was just Cory Booker who said that he would not sign back onto the deal. | ||
He gave a pretty weak answer on that. | ||
That really wasn't a strong issue for the Democrats. | ||
I found that throughout the debate, when they talked about foreign policy, whether it was Iran or whether it was Afghanistan or whether it was Beto O'Rourke being asked about right to protect towards the end, All of them basically just pivoted away. | ||
Every single time foreign policy was brought up, they didn't really answer with substance how they would conduct a foreign policy. | ||
And it was actually sort of interesting when they were asked, what's your number one geopolitical threat? | ||
A lot of them said nuclear proliferation, the situation in Iran, which is sort of like a subtle way of saying we're going to be hawkish towards rogue states like North Korea, Iran, others. | ||
And that should tell you something. | ||
It tells you that they are all interventionists, I believe. | ||
They're all getting money from certain hawkish lobbies, but they can't say that they are, right? | ||
So they're all sort of pivoting and playing it off and saying, well, the trouble with Iran is that Trump has blundered into another war. | ||
He's made us not safe and blah, blah, blah. | ||
But they didn't really offer any substance on what they would do for foreign policy. | ||
It was basically absent any real coherent foreign policy doctrine, with the exception of maybe Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
It was all pivoting towards, well, you know, Trump is doing bad, like it or not, he's doing bad, and we would make it better. | ||
You know? | ||
Klobuchar said, well, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action wasn't perfect, it was good for the time, but, you know, we can all agree Trump just did a bad job, and that was the answer. | ||
So, that's very telling. | ||
That's very telling, again, that both parties are in favor of war. | ||
There's literally one man who isn't, and that's Donald Trump. | ||
And even he, it can be argued, is slipping on that issue. | ||
So Iran, not a huge deal. | ||
A lot of pivoting, not a lot of substance. | ||
They talked about guns. | ||
This was another area where nothing really notable here. | ||
Totally indistinguishable one candidate from the other. | ||
It's all the usual stuff. | ||
Sob story and then a strong call for action. | ||
It was sort of interesting. | ||
I thought this was Elizabeth Warren's weakest moment in the whole debate. | ||
I thought she did relatively well overall, but in this issue she said she was the first up and the question was, what are you going to do about guns? | ||
And she said, well, I would make it a matter of public health. | ||
We need to research guns. | ||
And to me, I'm thinking gun control is going to be one of the most important issues. | ||
Four Democrats in 2020. | ||
One of the most. | ||
You know, we remember Parkland. | ||
That was a big rallying cry for Democrats in 2018. | ||
Ended up being very consequential for the 2018 midterms. | ||
I think it'll be a big issue in 2020, particularly on this partisan side. | ||
And so for her to be asked, what are you gonna do about it? | ||
It's like a softball throw and she's the first one up and she says, well, I'm gonna, we're gonna do more research. | ||
It struck me as sort of strange. | ||
Maybe That was tactically a smart thing to do because gun control is very divisive for independents and even for a lot of left-wing people, particularly in the Northeast where she's from. | ||
You know that Bernie Sanders is very, very controlled when it comes to the rhetoric on guns because in Vermont gun control is not very popular. | ||
I'm thinking maybe it's similar to Elizabeth Warren. | ||
She spent so much time in the Northeast that she knows that she can alienate a lot of white people, a lot of Democrats by going all out in favor of gun control. | ||
But it struck me as sort of an interesting moment where she had this big opportunity to say she would go big and go crazy on guns. | ||
And she said, and she made very, very good points. | ||
She was careful to say, well, we're not going to go after collectors who've owned their guns for 10 years. | ||
We're talking about weapons of war and it's a public health emergency. | ||
And that means more research. | ||
So maybe tactically smart, but certainly in terms of rhetoric, I don't think it went over very well among the audience. | ||
You didn't get a big applause line like some of the others did. | ||
That said, nobody was willing to give any straightforward answers on big, huge gun control policies. | ||
For all the talk there is about action and no more prayers, we need a policy. | ||
I didn't really hear any huge Stirring, solid, actionable things on gun control. | ||
You know, Cory Booker was asked about, you know, what they would do with buybacks or confiscating guns. | ||
He didn't really address that. | ||
I think some other people were asked about gun buybacks and they didn't really even address that. | ||
I think some person was asked, well, how would that be done? | ||
How would that go over? | ||
And it just was ignored and not addressed. | ||
So that was notable. | ||
Maybe there's some sense in the Democratic Party on this issue. | ||
They moved on then to the Supreme Court. | ||
Talking about Mitch McConnell. | ||
Nothing really interesting there. | ||
They talked about climate change. | ||
Again, nothing too interesting there. | ||
It was all the same stuff. | ||
You know, climate change is an existential threat and should be a priority. | ||
There was an interesting pivot among people like Elizabeth Warren and Jay Inslee talking about how, well, what we need to do is make green energy an economic issue, which I thought was an interesting pivot. | ||
So that maybe could bring in people who understand the climate is an issue but are worried about socialism or big government or something like that, that it's a big net negative on the economy. | ||
You know, you remember Solyndra and other investments like this. | ||
You can even look at a country like Spain. | ||
Ryan Gerdeski tweeted out some numbers there where countries that embrace the green stuff, it's a huge economic negative to do that. | ||
Either when the free market does it and it's subsidized or when the government invests in it, it usually is a failure. | ||
So I thought it was interesting that a lot of the candidates were saying, well, we're in favor of addressing climate change and that's a huge deal. | ||
And that was indistinguishable, undifferentiated. | ||
However, they were going to make it about the economy. | ||
And they said, well, there's another angle to look at it, which is jobs. | ||
Elizabeth Warren says, well, we should research the technology of the future and there's a 20-some trillion dollar, 40-some trillion dollar market for green technology and we should invest in it and then turn it around and export it and sell it because people need to clean up their air and water, which I thought was a strategic and a good take by her. | ||
I don't know if I agree with that analysis. | ||
I don't think that the green stuff in terms of green energy being a source of economic revitalization, I don't know if I buy that that's true, but I thought in either case, in any case, it was a smart rhetoric for her to pivot that way. | ||
Beyond that, I think a lot of the issues are pretty small. | ||
Not a whole lot of notable exchanges after that. | ||
Not a whole lot of notable statements. | ||
Maybe the one takeaway after those core issues was the debate about Afghanistan between Tim Ryan and Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
I thought that was pretty interesting. | ||
But aside from that, those were the big issues, and really, it's exactly what we expected. | ||
You know, everybody basically agrees, the parties move totally far to the left, and maybe where there is disagreement, it's really a matter of pragmatism, but the core goals remain the same, and this will be a source of division. | ||
I think those are the key takeaways on the issues. | ||
To me, the big winners and losers of the debate, we will look at our voting, rather our talking tallies here, just to give you a little quantitative data here, quantitative analysis. | ||
I tallied every time somebody talked, and this include also closing statements. | ||
It also included rebuttals, if they were substantive, if they were significant. | ||
So at the top of the list was Cory Booker, who talked 11 times. | ||
Castro talked 10 times. | ||
Elizabeth Warren talked 9 times. | ||
Beto was 9. | ||
Klobuchar had 8 times that she was talking. | ||
Ryan talked 7 times. | ||
De Blasio 6. | ||
Delaney 6. | ||
Gabbard 6 times. | ||
And Inslee 5 times. | ||
So, in terms of your top 5, it was Booker, Castro, Warren, Beto, and Klobuchar, which is your top 5 in polling, and your bottom 5 in polling was your bottom 5 in speaking. | ||
So, basically, what was expected there. | ||
To me, the biggest winners, I would say, would be Elizabeth Warren, Julian Castro, Amy Klobuchar, Cory Booker, and Tim Ryan. | ||
Tim Ryan's barely on this list. | ||
I just thought that... | ||
You know, Tim Ryan is pulling it like 0% nationally and in most of the swing states, but he did have some pretty good moments in there. | ||
I think out of all the candidates that were towards the bottom of the list, I would say that he was probably the only one who really had some good moments where maybe people might say he's slightly different. | ||
Tim Ryan is a representative from Ohio and he kept stressing the fact that the Democratic Party should try to appeal to people between the coasts, to try to appeal to working class people. | ||
I thought Elizabeth Warren did pretty well. | ||
She was obviously the favored winner in this debate. | ||
about the forgotten men and women, Industrial America. | ||
I thought that was critical. | ||
I thought Elizabeth Warren did pretty well. | ||
She was obviously the favored winner in this debate. | ||
She was polling the highest out of anybody in this particular debate. | ||
She's been surging in national polls across all the candidates recently, and she had a lot of good moments. | ||
I thought her message was pretty strong. | ||
Her message is that she is the progressive, and beyond that, that she is going to fight. | ||
And I think that's a very satisfying answer for critics or skeptics of the progressive wing. | ||
You know, if there is this cleavage and this battle between two factions, which is Progressives who can be seen as idealists and establishment people who can be seen as realists or on the other side maybe not idealist enough. | ||
A satisfying answer for critics of Elizabeth Warren when they say, well, you're too progressive, you're not realistic. | ||
You know when you get people like Delaney saying Medicare for all is good in theory and universal health care is good in principle but Medicare for all is not good policy, Elizabeth Warren will retort with this and this is the message of her campaign which is, well I'm fighting and that's the difference. | ||
I have all the progressive clout. | ||
I have credibility as a progressive. | ||
I've demonstrated I'm a progressive. | ||
So if you're looking for a far-left person, it's me. | ||
And to boot, I'm somebody who is competent and will fight. | ||
People say, well, I'm too idealistic. | ||
I'm the hardcore progressive and that's perhaps a bad thing. | ||
But her answer to that is, well, those people who say that just simply aren't going to get in the mud and fight the big corporations. | ||
And so I think that's a very, that's very effective messaging. | ||
That's a very effective way for her to differentiate in the sense that she's got, you know, the background as a progressive, which makes her credible ideologically. | ||
But then at the same time, she also has an answer for the establishment types who would say, well, we offer perhaps electability or pragmatism. | ||
So to me, she really fleshed out her message. | ||
She's a very, I hate to say it, she's likable. | ||
I didn't used to think she was likable. | ||
I used to see her as like the shrieking harpy, annoying sort of woman. | ||
But I think she really is likable. | ||
She has this sort of plucky character about her, this nerdy, plucky character. | ||
She really owns it. | ||
And particularly in the Democratic constituency, that's appealing to women, wine moms, suburban moms, white women, all these categories that you're going to need. | ||
So I think that that was a very good performance by her, very good rhetoric. | ||
The other winners, Castro, I think really did well. | ||
He's been polling pretty low nationally. | ||
And he really differentiated himself as a radical. | ||
I think that might be a problem for him, however. | ||
He had some very good applause lines. | ||
He differentiated himself on immigration, on some of these other issues, on health care, and a few others. | ||
And so he really has cemented himself as like the radical in the race, has all his ducks in a row being the wokest guy, was speaking Spanish a lot, he's got the latinx sort of thing, he owns that, but I think that might be a problem for him. | ||
He's gotten some attention, I think he was a notable performer in the debate, but I think that this radical sort of turn I think will be his downfall. | ||
I think that him being so far to the left gives room for people like Elizabeth Warren to say, I'm a little bit Practical I'm a little bit moderate right so I think that in the end somebody like Castro could do damage Because maybe he gets to the end of the race. | ||
Maybe he builds himself up He runs and does a good campaign in Iowa and he'll be able to challenge people like Warren and and say, "Well, you're not good enough. | ||
"You're not radical enough. | ||
"You're not using the right language." So I think people like him can be a real grenade in the Democratic primary, where people like Warren or others might be trying to find common ground or might find a competent way to articulate progressive goals. | ||
I think you'll always have people like him who are trying to win the woke Olympics and can do it 'cause they have very little to lose, and that'll cost, in terms of racial factions like Hispanics and also the ideological faction, which is total far-left progressives. | ||
I don't know if he'll do too much damage to Warren in particular, but certainly he can throw some bombs in there. | ||
But he had a pretty notable performance, got some good applause lines. | ||
Klobuchar I thought was a winner. | ||
Another one where she had some notable answers. | ||
She got a lot of speaking time in there. | ||
She was, like Castro, one of the higher tier candidates, but still polling very low and hasn't really been the beneficiary of a lot of attention. | ||
I think Klobuchar and Castro will get a lot more attention as a result of the debate. | ||
Outside of that, you know, again, not so much in the way of really like coherent messaging. | ||
I thought her closing statement was pretty good. | ||
She said she's basically a winner. | ||
She's electable. | ||
She's competent, she can pass legislation, and she's not establishment. | ||
I think those are three very strong selling points. | ||
Those are three things which Democrats are looking for. | ||
Not establishment, meaning maybe she's not the most progressive, but, you know, she is an outsider. | ||
Competent, meaning she can get legislation done. | ||
And electable, meaning that she can beat Donald Trump. | ||
These three things, I think, are the biggest priorities of Democrats. | ||
So I thought that was a very strong closing statement, a very good sort of pitch, a very good angle to go in on. | ||
Another person I think is eminently likable, you know, she has this reputation as somebody who is hard on her staff, you know, there's these stories, horror stories about how she abuses staffers and She ate a salad with a comb one time and you know, she does this goofy stuff. | ||
But I think that again, women are a core constituency in the Democratic Party. | ||
She having this pitch as a Midwestern relatable woman who's doing these idioms about beer, you know, it's all foam and no beer and You know, Old Dick, my uncle, or Old Dick, my... I forget what exactly the family member was, but Old Dick always used to go hunting and shooting, and we have to be mindful of that. | ||
I think she does have that charm, this Midwestern woman charm, which will appeal to a certain constituency in the Democratic Party, so I thought that was good for her. | ||
And then the last winner was Booker. | ||
He's another one. | ||
I think Castro, Klobuchar, and Booker, they were sort of in the same league in the sense that they were all sort of in the middle of being secondary and tertiary candidates in the sense that they are, in the case of Klobuchar and Booker, they're senators, but they're not polling really well. | ||
but they're not polling really well. | ||
They had big announcements, but never really materialized, didn't have a lot of grassroots support or a lot of attention. | ||
They had big announcements, but never really materialized, didn't have a lot of grassroots support or a lot of attention. | ||
So I think Klobuchar and Booker both really were able to get heard. | ||
So I think Klobuchar and Booker both really were able to get heard. | ||
They both had a lot of talking time, got some good applause lines. | ||
They both had a lot of talking time, got some good applause lines. | ||
You know, they had the right takes on the right issues. | ||
They had the right takes on the right issues. | ||
The only thing about Booker is that he didn't really have a very strong closing statement. | ||
The only thing about Booker is that he didn't really have a very strong closing statement. | ||
A lot of the rhetoric boiled down to just boilerplate stuff, you know, boiled down to boilerplate. | ||
A lot of the rhetoric wasn't really substantive. | ||
It was a lot of, well, we need to fight for our values, and it's a referendum on who we are. | ||
And to me, this is a big reason why Clinton lost. | ||
The message wasn't there. | ||
The message was stronger together and unity and we're great because we're good and this kind of stuff. | ||
And I think that is a big weakness of Booker. | ||
So on the one hand, he did offer some good policies. | ||
He did seem a little bit more likable and relatable than I've seen him before. | ||
Usually I see him as sort of awkward, sort of weird, maybe a little queer, you know, in certain ways. | ||
Queer meaning weird, not gay. | ||
Definitely not gay, right? | ||
But Cory Booker, he had a strong performance in that sense that he had a lot of talking time and maybe was seen as more likable and he got his face out there. | ||
But on the other hand, this is a weakness. | ||
He's got to have a pitch. | ||
He's got to have a message. | ||
How am I different? | ||
What's my vision? | ||
Elizabeth Warren has it. | ||
You know, she's a progressive and a fighter. | ||
Klobuchar has it. | ||
She's a winner and she's competent, but she's not establishment. | ||
And Castro had it. | ||
I'm a radical. | ||
I'm Solonsky. | ||
I'm a crazy radical. | ||
Tim Ryan had it. | ||
I'm the industrialist from the Midwest. | ||
And that stuff, Cory Booker, I don't really feel like I have a message, you know, from him. | ||
It's a lot of good stuff, but does not really have a message. | ||
And that way, a little bit reminds me of Marco Rubio, where a lot of people said maybe he could go a long way. | ||
He's well-spoken. | ||
He's got that minority component and that thing going, but never really had that coherent vision. | ||
So I think he'll suffer from that. | ||
The big losers of the debate The biggest loser, by far, was Beto O'Rourke. | ||
Biggest loser out of them all. | ||
His performance was so bad, arguably he should leave the race. | ||
I don't know what was going on there. | ||
What I think, and my postulate about this, is that he has gotten so much backlash for a variety of things. | ||
Number one, there's rumors that he's like on drugs or there's something wrong with him because you look at him in his rallies and he's sort of bouncing off the walls. | ||
Even Democrats will concede this. | ||
He's a little much. | ||
He comes off as a little bit too much. | ||
I think that was a big sentiment during the election and even after the midterms when he did that San Antonio counter rally to President Trump's rally. | ||
Was it San Antonio? | ||
I believe it was. | ||
And so he's sort of seen as coked up, crazy, and so maybe he was trying to be more muted, he was trying to be more professional, trying to be more, uh, what would you say? | ||
What is the term that Donald Trump uses? | ||
More presidential or something like that by having a more muted and passive performance? | ||
On the other hand, it could be that he got beaten over the head by the progressives so hard for the white privilege stuff. | ||
You know, if you remember, he had this botched announcement for his campaign where he was on the cover of Vogue or one of the magazines, and he said, I'm born to be in the race, and he had his wife next to him during one of his videos or something, and he said something to the effect that, well, she Well, she's at home, so I can be out here. | ||
And he had a number of gaffes like that, which weren't really gaffes at all, but you know how crazy the left is, where he's this white guy. | ||
He's too loud. | ||
He's too much. | ||
He's too privileged. | ||
So maybe, and you've seen this in the race so far, he's tried to dial it in a little bit, be more muted, be more passive and inconsequential. | ||
And that's his downfall. | ||
He should have gone into this debate where, to me, there weren't really any clear leaders in the debate. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, with a couple of notable exceptions like Elizabeth Warren and Bill de Blasio, there weren't really any candidates that were willing to be bold and be out there and challenge other people and be in your face and be a personality, like I said, with a couple of exceptions. | ||
And so if he was Beto O'Rourke, and he was animated and inspirational and passionate and a little bit radical, I think that would have done him a lot of favors. | ||
I think he would have pulled really high. | ||
But he bought into the Tumblr stuff. | ||
He bought into the however many Democrats that actually got offended by what he was saying. | ||
And he said, well, in order to appease those people, I'm going to back down. | ||
I'm going to let the women and the blacks and the Hispanics talk, and I'll just be kind of over here, and I'll give my takes. | ||
It was a disaster for him. | ||
He should have been, he should be a second tier candidate. | ||
He was polling as one when he announced. | ||
Now he's been falling fast, people are forgetting him, and this debate did him no favors. | ||
Big loss for him. | ||
He's a huge loser. | ||
He's, as far as I'm concerned, a tertiary candidate at this point in time. | ||
Maybe he'll recapture that in the next one. | ||
He'll learn from this. | ||
But at this point in time, and there's a lot of race left, but at this point in time, that was just abysmal. | ||
The other big loser, the other notable loser, I'm sorry to say, is Mommy Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
I'm sorry to say, she really did not blow away the competition. | ||
And she didn't have that many opportunities to talk. | ||
I think they really sort of pushed out a lot of the smaller candidates, people like Tim Ryan, Delaney, Tulsi. | ||
They did not get a lot of questions that were pushed their way explicitly, so they had to kind of compete for talking time. | ||
Maybe that was why they didn't do so hot, but even when she did talk I felt like Tulsi Gabbard really wasn't focused on Her message. | ||
Or maybe she was, but it wasn't very strong. | ||
Her angle, whereas everybody's angle is a little bit different, you know, Elizabeth Warren is, I'm the fighter, or Tim Ryan, I'm the industrial Midwest guy, or whatever, Jay Inslee, I'm the climate change guy, and so on. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard's angle is, she's the foreign policy girl. | ||
She was a soldier, she's on the Foreign Relations Committee, or the Foreign Affairs Committee, and she's gonna take us out of the wars. | ||
She didn't really sell that in a very strong way, I don't believe. | ||
Her delivery wasn't very strong, Her arguments weren't as strong as they could have been. | ||
She should have been out there naming the neocons and saying neocons are bringing us to wars and so on. | ||
And maybe you could argue that Trump has done such a good job, arguably, of keeping us out of new wars that it's not as relevant. | ||
And I mean in the sense that in 2008, war was the big topic. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard would have gone far in 2008 when That's a tail end of the Bush administration. | ||
We're knee deep. | ||
We're like elbow deep in two huge ground wars in the Middle East. | ||
It was highly relevant at the time. | ||
In 2020, it seemed to me the focus is a lot more on climate change, gun control, Health care, the economy, and foreign policy is really off to the side, mostly because with the president, things have gotten better as opposed to worse. | ||
I'm not saying, you know, we, you know how I feel about President Trump's performance on foreign policy. | ||
It leaves a lot to be desired. | ||
But you know, we've scaled down a lot of interventions. | ||
We have this detente with North Korea, and things have only recently flared up with Iran, so maybe it's circumstantial. | ||
That the foreign policy stuff just isn't as relevant as the other talking points, you know? | ||
Jay Inslee making climate change his thing is maybe a lot smarter, given what is important to Democrats, than Tulsi Gabbard making foreign policy her thing. | ||
But all of that notwithstanding, she should have come into this and been the outsider. | ||
She is a true, like, Democrat in terms of non-interventionist and on some of these other issues. | ||
She really had a lot of selling points. | ||
I didn't feel like she really sold herself in a way that was very strong or convincing. | ||
And she was really kind of absent from the debate. | ||
She only talked six times and, you know, Castro talked ten times and Booker talked eleven times. | ||
And so just to give you an idea of the numbers, she felt like notably absent from a lot of these exchanges. | ||
I think that cost her big. | ||
Also, she said in her closing statement, her closing statement she said that she wanted a new century. | ||
And I don't know man, that really rubbed me the wrong way. | ||
Maybe I'm like, maybe I'm paranoid, maybe I've just been doing this for too long, but she said it twice. | ||
She said my pitch, and I was trying to pay attention to all the closing statements to what's the phrase, what's the phrase that sums up the message, the angle, the pitch. | ||
And she said, well, we need a new century of peace and prosperity, a new century that's liberty and justice for all. | ||
I said, isn't that what Marco Rubio ran on? | ||
Did Marco Rubio talk about a new American century? | ||
Wasn't that his slogan? | ||
And what, you know, what else is the new American century? | ||
Does anybody, does that ring a bell for anybody? | ||
Any sort of lobbying groups or, you know, things about Israel, the Israel lobby, something like that, you know? | ||
So that was a little bit troubling, which she may be signaling, hinting at. | ||
Well, I'm against foreign wars, but I'm not that against foreign wars. | ||
I don't know what that was all about, but sort of a notable thing. | ||
The other losers, I would say, would be Inslee and Delaney. | ||
And, you know, I don't know if they were really losers. | ||
They came into it not really expecting to gain much, and I think they didn't gain much, so it's really hard to say that everybody else was a loser. | ||
I feel like everybody else was a contestant. | ||
They tried, they knew it was a long shot, and they failed. | ||
You know, I don't feel like de Blasio did particularly well. | ||
He had a couple of good moments, but a couple of bad moments, and I don't feel like he really did himself many favors. | ||
Hensley didn't have, I mean, he had some good lines. | ||
The climate change stuff was good. | ||
But, you know, him trying to tout his record in Washington, it felt like nobody was really going hard on their credentials. | ||
You know, there was a little bit of that. | ||
Cory Booker talking about criminal justice reform. | ||
De Blasio talking about the NYPD and things like that. | ||
But it didn't feel like this was a very strong argument to make in this race. | ||
I feel like in 16 it was a lot more about, well, back when I was a senator, when I was a governor, Donald Trump doesn't have the experience. | ||
Maybe because Trump was the frontrunner and he had no experience it was more relevant, but in this debate it didn't feel like that was a very strong selling point. | ||
And so a lot of those guys I think made failing arguments that didn't really compel people, didn't really push people in one direction or the other. | ||
So I don't know if they were losers so much as they just weren't competitive to begin with. | ||
So I think those are the winners. | ||
Those are the losers. | ||
I think that's gonna wrap it up for the debate analysis. | ||
Those are really all my thoughts on that. | ||
So with that we're gonna move into our Super chats, but before we do that's really our first debate. | ||
We're gonna be moving on remember tomorrow tomorrow. | ||
I'll be covering and we're not going anywhere I'm gonna do super chats, but I just do want to say before we completely move on that this was debate number one So this was like one half of the Democratic field. | ||
We've got ten more candidates debating tomorrow to me That'll be way more interesting than this one. | ||
This one was boring for a reason so Tomorrow you've got Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Kamala Harris. | ||
You've got some of the heavy hitters. | ||
Andrew Yang is going to be in that one. | ||
So tomorrow to me is really the one to watch. | ||
We'll be doing the same deal. | ||
We'll be watching it on DLive, live at 8 o'clock central, and then coming here for analysis at around 10, 10, 15. | ||
You know, give me a little time to take a potty break and all that, and then get live on YouTube. | ||
So we'll do basically the same thing. | ||
But to me, if you thought this debate was boring, if you thought this one sucked, tomorrow's going to be a lot more fun. | ||
It's going to be a lot more interesting, a lot more notable candidates. | ||
So I think this system worked pretty well tonight, so we'll try it again tomorrow. | ||
But overall, you know, my takeaway is it's a boring debate. | ||
They're way far to the left. | ||
They can't differentiate from each other and the person that's gonna win is the one who can differentiate, distinguish the most. | ||
And that's not really so much different than prior races. | ||
You know, I think 16 was about that in a lot of ways, but to me the big winner is Number one was Warren. | ||
I think she really is rising fast. | ||
I think she'll grow in the polls because of this. | ||
She'll represent a real challenge to perhaps Biden and Sanders. | ||
Everybody else just put themselves as competitive. | ||
I think Castro, Klobuchar, Booker made themselves competitive. | ||
Ryan maybe rose up a little bit, you know, people now know who he is to some extent. | ||
So those are the winners. | ||
I think Beto is basically out as a result of this. | ||
Gabbard I think is not, you know, she's not going to come close to competing. | ||
So those are my general takeaways, but With that, we're going to take a look at our Super Chats and we'll see what you guys are saying, we'll see what you guys feel about all this, where you're at. | ||
I feel like it's going to be a lot of people commenting on the general paused nature of the debate. | ||
To me, I couldn't stand the Spanish. | ||
What was all that about, right? | ||
You know, I think that who started it off, it was Beta O'Rourke. | ||
Was he the first one to do Spanish? | ||
Yeah, he started out, his first message of the whole debate was completely entirely in Spanish. | ||
And I just thought, that's just a sign of the times, you know? | ||
So, I don't think that was particularly effective. | ||
I think it was maybe more effective in the middle when he had a little bit of it by Booker and Castro. | ||
As myself, I thought it was obnoxious, but maybe to Democrats that's a big wow factor, but it just goes to show you could say goodbye to our country. | ||
It's over, you know, if that's what you see going on. | ||
But in any case, we'll take a look at these super chats. | ||
We've got really good comics who says, imagine a Beto O'Rourke seeking bullet flying across the stage. | ||
Imagina un Beto O'Rourke buscando una bala volando por el escenario. | ||
A little English and Spanish joke there. | ||
Well, I disavow. | ||
We don't want any bullets flying. | ||
Maybe you mean rhetorical bullets coming from Bill de Blasio, certainly, but no real bullets. | ||
I disavow the message of violence, but yeah, pretty interesting, the English and Spanish going on. | ||
We've got Cain Jeeper who says, Eggman vs. Mommy 2020. | ||
Well, certainly the Eggman to me was the most nuanced, the most sensible to me, and he'll lose for that. | ||
Also, he'll lose for being ugly, but yeah. | ||
Delaney and Mommy battling it out. | ||
They were pretty effective. | ||
Ron Suns is trying to keep an egga down. | ||
You can never keep an egga down, an Eggman. | ||
Yeah, big ups to Eggman. | ||
Eggman was a real winner of the debate. | ||
I think he'll go all the way even if he runs as an independent, right? | ||
The new egg century. | ||
Fiesta says, when Lester Holt was about to read out a question from the audience, I half expected it to be a pee pee poo poo super chat. | ||
Yeah, I know you would think that because you're so used to getting bad questions. | ||
We're so used on this show to bad audience questions that you just defaulted that it was like a given that a bad question would be asked by the audience. | ||
No surprise why you would say that. | ||
Major League Swag Out says Julian Castro has the deadest eyes I've ever seen. | ||
That's because he doesn't have, you know, green or blue eyes, doesn't have Aryan eyes. | ||
Unsurprising. | ||
The guy's a perfect picture of what they want America to look like. | ||
America First says Aryan Egghead will stop speaking when he likes. | ||
That's right, he couldn't be stopped. | ||
They tried to rein him in, but our Aryan super soldier, the Eggman, he will tell you when he's done talking and not a moment sooner, right? | ||
Theo says what I have found most important is to listen. | ||
Everything else just melts away. | ||
By the way, I support Warren Oran, Amy Klobuchar. | ||
Yeah, that was some pretty weird choice of language there. | ||
I agree on the Iran issue. | ||
She said, it's so important to listen, which is what I did when I passed X, Y, and Z. Everything else melts away. | ||
That was such a weird thing to say, right? | ||
I'm glad I'm not the only one that caught that, but yeah, she's a Jewish warmonger. | ||
A big surprise. | ||
That's very, that's so interesting and surprising, right? | ||
Jared says, Mommy Tulsi is truly just a one-trick pony and doesn't stand out amongst the other candidates. | ||
Sad. | ||
Yep, that's what I've been saying for a long time. | ||
You know, on Mike Cernovich, all these other nitwits were saying, Whoa, Tulsi Galbraith is one to watch. | ||
Mark my words. | ||
She announced to no fanfare. | ||
She pulled it nothing. | ||
And then she had a terrible performance in the debate, which is what I've been saying forever. | ||
So, you know, all these, uh, I predicted it, Mike. | ||
I predicted it. | ||
Cernovich, wrong. | ||
Not the Dark Horse. | ||
Not one to watch. | ||
And what can you expect? | ||
Look, there's kind of a notable thing about Tulsi Gabbard, which is one of my objections to her, and that's, I think, what it is at the end of the day. | ||
Jimbo says new intro is whack, but have a good night, big guy. | ||
Well, boomer detected, but have a good night. | ||
Marshall says, is Tulsi mommy or mommy? | ||
Which is M-A-M-I. | ||
Definitely mommy. | ||
Definitely the Aryan mommy. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard is mom in a very Midwestern way. | ||
Ma! | ||
Ma, can you protect me from these neocons? | ||
unidentified
|
Mom! | |
Protect me from these neocons, please! | ||
You know, Mom, can you please put Tim Ryan in his place? | ||
He thinks Taliban did 9-11. | ||
Mom, can you put this guy in his place? | ||
Mom, put him in a time out, you know? | ||
So I think it's a very Midwestern, Aryan, Anglo sort of vibe. | ||
But she's Mommy. | ||
Mommy Milky. | ||
We love old Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
Beautiful, smart, just can't win an election. | ||
That's okay. | ||
She can bake us cookies. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't think it's ever too late. | ||
We gotta check his papers, right? | ||
Couldn't get Barack Obama, but we've learned our lesson. | ||
We gotta get Trump to get on that first. | ||
He's our highest priority deportation. | ||
FF says, do you foresee there being any viable opportunities in the future for you to transition into a more prominent role on an established media platform? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know anything about the future. | ||
Nobody knows. | ||
So maybe. | ||
We'll see. | ||
That's what we're trying to do, but I don't think it'll happen anytime soon. | ||
I think as long as you challenge power, as long as you're a real dissident, you're gonna have a hard time. | ||
So probably not. | ||
Marshall says, new intro music is great. | ||
Keep it up, big guy. | ||
Well, thanks, man. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
I'm glad somebody likes it. | ||
Generation Z detected. | ||
Stefan Molly Meme says, hola, Nick. | ||
Vista a Kyle. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
So in Spanish this time. | ||
Very on brand for tonight. | ||
Tyler says, Mommy, with a heart eyes emoji. | ||
That's how I feel. | ||
I didn't realize she was that beautiful. | ||
I guess I never looked at her that closely, but she's a stunner, man. | ||
She's welcome to come on America First any day of the week. | ||
And she's not an e-girl, so you know what that means. | ||
Maxie Stoneman says, can we get some applause for Miami being 70% Latino? | ||
It's a new century after all. | ||
Yeah, I thought that was sort of kind of slip by the goalie. | ||
As a 70% city, you know, that's what they want every city to look like. | ||
So take note. | ||
Luke Grizz says, Nick, burning the midnight oil. | ||
Thanks big guy. | ||
I don't know what that means, but yeah, man, for sure. | ||
Sherwood Baker with a big super chat. | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Sherwood says, First stage, I was like WTF. | ||
I like Democrats now. | ||
Republicans have to take the breakup monopolistic corporation stance. | ||
Spanish pandering was cringe though. | ||
Yeah, there were some good, like, Nos Bowl moments where they said, you know, break up monopolies and target the 1% and go after corporations. | ||
I thought that was very based in Red Pill, but the Spanish stuff, the paused up stuff, very problematic. | ||
Pretty notable, though, that the winners, with a couple of exceptions, were all against identity politics. | ||
Elizabeth Warren didn't have a very charged racial message. | ||
Her message was purely ideological, which I thought was interesting and a selling point for her. | ||
Honk Honk says, hey big guy, it's your favorite US Army soldier again. | ||
I have top-secret classified information that the mean scary black man Mexican O'Rourke egghead and gay co-hosts are conspiring to bully mommy Yeah, I saw that. | ||
Well, we can't have it. | ||
We can't have any bullying of mommy. | ||
We have to protect mommy at all costs Your Tuscan Raider noises in the background sand people noises in the background. | ||
We have to protect mommy from them, right? | ||
But yeah, thanks. | ||
Many such cases. | ||
I've heard that from James Alsup. | ||
He's in the Washington area. | ||
Yeah, all these... Well, that's... I think that's why they don't mention their records. | ||
Seattle's going to hell and cop killings are out of control. | ||
Yeah, many such cases. | ||
I've heard that from James Alsup. | ||
He's in the Washington area. | ||
Yeah, all these. | ||
Well, I think that's why they don't mention their records. | ||
All their records are bad. | ||
You know, you look at Cory Booker. | ||
He's a total failure. | ||
New Jersey's a failure. | ||
You look at Bill de Blasio, New York City's a failure. | ||
You look at Washington, is a failure. | ||
So, I think a lot of these people don't really tout their record because their record sucks in most cases. | ||
Yeah, Libertarians are like that. | ||
Yeah, libertarians are like that. | ||
They can't really grasp the issues because they're so tied up in all this abstract BS. | ||
But the slippery slope is real. | ||
I don't know why people call that a fallacy. | ||
It's totally what's happened, right? | ||
YoungLung says 6,000 viewers on DLive. | ||
Sheesh, I don't know where all that came from, but I'm appreciative of it. | ||
I think that's our highest total ever. | ||
65 or 6,600 at its highest we had at the peak viewership. | ||
So pretty substantial. | ||
Nicker Nation is rising. | ||
We're doing very well. | ||
So that's great to see. | ||
Let's see. | ||
FroYos says toy boat, toy boat, toy boat. | ||
I don't know if that's trying to get me to say something. | ||
I don't know if that's supposed to be some kind of tongue twister. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
But I guess I'll be hearing about it on Zoomerclips, you know, if that was something I'm not aware of. | ||
Josh Sayers says, you were at the top of DLive's front page, Nick. | ||
Nice! | ||
Anyway, I love the Spanish being spoken. | ||
I love Tranny, abortion rights, gun confiscation, and Tim Ryan looking like a hostage. | ||
Great job, though, bud. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Those are some pretty great moments in the debate. | ||
And yeah, thanks, we did make it to the top. | ||
Not very hard to make it to the top, though. | ||
I mean, I'm one of the biggest guys on DLive. | ||
They should be rolling out the red carpet for me! | ||
No, they're pretty nice to me. | ||
But yeah, that was pretty good, and those were some great moments. | ||
The Spanish, the trans... How do you even have trans abortion rights? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
How can they even have abortions? | ||
They can't even have babies. | ||
In any case, because it's either you're a biological man, or you're a biological woman who takes tests. | ||
So how do you have a baby if you're on T? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I guess I'm not woke enough for that one, right? | ||
But yeah, the gun confiscation. | ||
Tim Ryan, the pinhead. | ||
Yeah, all great moments. | ||
All standout moments. | ||
Loveislove says, Nick, why are mugs made in China? | ||
Because that's the way trade works right now. | ||
We all know that. | ||
Wyatt says, RIP Patrick Little. | ||
unidentified
|
1985 to 2019. | |
Did he die? | ||
1985 to 2019. | ||
Did he die? | ||
I wonder if that's actually true. | ||
There's nothing on Google about it, but big if true. | ||
I don't know if I would say RIP, but whatever. | ||
Your mother says the whole debate sounded like a Sam Hyde bit. | ||
2020 paradigm shift? | ||
Yeah, not far off, right? | ||
10. Benison says the best part of the debate was when Comrade Stalin machine gunned everybody in the room and declared himself generalissimo. | ||
I wish that would happen, honestly. | ||
I don't know. | ||
People are all against Stalinism, Nazbol, that kind of thing, the top left. | ||
I'm in favor of that. | ||
I think that'd be preferable at this point. | ||
Not the violence, but generally Simoes Stalin, I think we could use that. | ||
Simon Skoulis is the Virgin Dante versus the Chad Baron. | ||
Yeah, that was pretty funny. | ||
Bill de Blasio, I have a black son named Dante. | ||
Oh, you're bragging about that? | ||
Congrats, dude. | ||
And then even better, Cory Booker said, well, you know, as a black man myself, Which it's like, you totally got cucked twice. | ||
You know, you said, hi, everybody, I got cucked. | ||
And then somebody's like, well, I'm actually black. | ||
So you didn't even win on that point. | ||
So a major cuckery going on. | ||
Angry Inch says, Ribbit, cute. | ||
I'm not cute. | ||
I mean, my parents call me cute, but honestly, I've never heard it from someone else before. | ||
Thanks, I guess. | ||
Okay, well, thanks for that super chat. | ||
That's really great. | ||
Level Best says, was it just me or did half those candidates look MKUltra'd? | ||
Yeah, they definitely looked a little bit, uh, off, right? | ||
I think, uh, what's his name? | ||
Tim Ryan looked weird, Delaney looked weird, um... | ||
Inslee looked weird. | ||
They all had a weird look in their eye. | ||
There's definitely something up there. | ||
Prussian Monarchist says, Hey Nick, thoughts on nuclear energy would have spiced up the convo and actually has the power to do something rather than just pander to white girls crying over dead fish. | ||
Keep up the good work, big guy. | ||
Yeah, you're right. | ||
If you're talking about nuclear, rather if you're talking about fossil fuels, clean energy, literally the only viable alternative that exists right now is nuclear. | ||
Wind power is not viable. | ||
Solar power is not viable. | ||
None of the green energies are viable. | ||
And maybe they will be in the future. | ||
That's not to say they'll never be viable. | ||
But the technology just isn't there. | ||
If it was, people would use it. | ||
You know? | ||
Like, why does fracking exist? | ||
Fracking existed because it was very expensive for a long time, and it wasn't viable for a long time. | ||
But when oil prices went over $100 a barrel, suddenly it became viable. | ||
And as a result of big capital investments and big infrastructure investments, you were able to bring those costs down. | ||
As a result, oil prices go down, and it's a viable way to produce oil. | ||
You know, and so maybe if the same thing happened with green energy, you'd have green energy, but it isn't viable. | ||
Nobody's investing in it because it's not viable. | ||
You can't get a lot of energy out of solar or wind, and if you do, well then it's intermittent or it's dependent on location. | ||
I mean there's a lot of variables in there. | ||
So the only way to look at green energy is nuclear. | ||
That's the only way so far discovered to have clean, relatively clean, efficient energy that is, I guess, basically renewable in the way that you can sort of like harvest the rods that are used. | ||
And I'm not a scientist, but, you know, it is probably the most viable option. | ||
So it's interesting that nobody brought it up and they didn't bring it up because nobody wants nuclear power plants all over the country because, you know, you have terrorism and it's not exactly safe. | ||
For whatever reason, we fear that, but if you are going to propose that, that's the only viable way, so... I'd be interested in hearing a proposal about nuclear, but I didn't hear any of that. | ||
I heard a lot of gay, solar, wind, stuff that doesn't work, but anyway, thanks. | ||
Sherwood Baker with a huge super chat. | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Wow, the new George Soros, the Sheldon Adelson of the show. | ||
Sherwood Baker, thank you so much, man. | ||
He says, men's access to firearms in all stages of assembly is a human right. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Agreed. | ||
And that's what Booker said. | ||
Booker said, well, it should be just like getting a license to drive. | ||
Yeah, the only difference is we have a right to bear arms, and we don't have a right to drive. | ||
So, I agree. | ||
You should be able to have a firearm at all stages of production, and definitely have up to and including the things that the government has, with a few notable exceptions. | ||
But I definitely agree on that one. | ||
And it's disqualifying, I think, for a lot of people that Democrats are in favor of gun control, which is good for us. | ||
Yeet Daddy says Egghead won. | ||
Brosif says Egghead on a roll. | ||
Yeah, definitely a good performance by the Eggman. | ||
I think he really... he was sensible. | ||
Has a bad look and maybe unlikable at certain moments, but I think he differentiated himself in a good way. | ||
He's nuanced, sensible, moderate, which I liked. | ||
Justin Turner says, I downloaded DLive for the first time. | ||
It opened with you as the number one trending streamer front and center of the front page. | ||
We dominate with no censorship. | ||
It's true. | ||
It's true. | ||
When we're allowed to do our own thing, we thrive. | ||
And, you know, take a look at this show. | ||
Relatively knock on wood haven't had any censorship problems, and I've been doing very well on the show You know we've gone from like having a hundred viewers per night to having like 2,000 viewers per night per night You know tonight. | ||
We had like 2,800 on YouTube on D live 66 66 6700 so it's very true. | ||
We do thrive because it's good content people like the content so But yeah, but thanks man. | ||
Thanks for downloading and supporting the show. | ||
Ace of Winds says the debate was pretty cringe, but how about that Tulsi Gabbard? | ||
Hello MILF department! | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
Major MILF. | ||
She said she was a major. | ||
Major MILF. | ||
Major MILF Department reporting for duty. | ||
Yeah, she's a total smoke show. | ||
She really did differentiate in the way that she is MILF big time. | ||
You know, she was the only good-looking one on the stage. | ||
I'm a big fan in that way. | ||
Cane Jeepers says, hey Nick, vote for me. | ||
I have a black son. | ||
Yeah, like that's a pitch, right? | ||
My black son Dante Whatever sentence starts off in that way, you know it's gonna be good. | ||
Yeah, whenever a sentence starts off in that way, you know it's going to be good. | ||
Jedder says, tons of talk about authority of the church, but I don't hear much about the love and blood of Jesus. | ||
How is your relationship with our Savior? | ||
So it looks like in the mix of all this debate talk, we have some goofy Protestant who has waddled in here with some stupid talking point. | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
I interpret the Bible that, you know, the things that your relationship with Jesus means is not what I think it means. | ||
So what are you going to do about that? | ||
Are we both going to go to hell? | ||
Am I going to go to hell and you're going to go to heaven or vice versa? | ||
If only there was a way that we knew how to interpret things. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, how's your relationship with Jesus Christ? | |
Well, I can tell you as a bank robber and a murderer, based on my interpretation of the Bible, I'm gonna get off scot-free. | ||
Yeah, good luck with that. | ||
Dopey Protestant. | ||
Dopey Protestant argument easily blown out. | ||
And you see, I didn't antagonize dopey people. | ||
Come on this show, they say, I know you're a Catholic, I know you're this, and you're talking about something totally unrelated, but I'm going to attack your religion. | ||
That's okay. | ||
I'll be praying for your salvation. | ||
I hope you don't go to hell, but honestly, I don't know man You're not you're not maximizing your potential Peter says mommy milky's. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Hell. | ||
Yeah, not massage says hi I'm Oscar Alberto Martinez Ramirez. | ||
Welcome to jackass jumps into the Rio Grande Yeah, you gotta love the pronunciation to Oscar. | ||
That's our new country. | ||
It's no longer Oscar. | ||
I Oscar and, you know, all these others. | ||
It's Oscar. | ||
Oscar. | ||
That's how you pronounce it. | ||
Totally clown country, right? | ||
But what are you gonna do? | ||
Scheister says major cleavage in the Democratic Party? | ||
More like major milkies in the Brittany Venti party. | ||
More like major cleavage in the Tulsi Gabbard party, am I right? | ||
That's where we gotta be looking. | ||
You know what a cleavage is. | ||
Major disagreement, but you know, you also got some pretty substantial cleavage. | ||
You'd like to see some mommy, some mommy cleavage, right? | ||
Maybe the next one. | ||
Maybe that's how she'll differentiate in the next one. | ||
She doesn't even have to have very good policies, but just gotta bring, gotta bring that Democratic cleavage, as we say. | ||
Mehdi says completely dead air for any attempt at nuance. | ||
Dangerous arena the left has set up for itself. | ||
Let the games begin. | ||
Yeah, it's true. | ||
Anybody that wanted to like step out and moderate a little bit, they just got no applause. | ||
So it's very perverse incentives. | ||
I agree. | ||
Fosimo says that gun victim that Booker mentioned, Shahad Smith, had a face tattoo and died on Martin Luther King Boulevard. | ||
Very fitting, right? | ||
Isn't that a perfect picture of what's happening in America? | ||
That's how it goes, right? | ||
Yeah, Cory Booker from New Jersey. | ||
Well, I had a black guy who died on my street corner. | ||
And it's the gun's fault, definitely. | ||
I wouldn't go as far to say that. | ||
I thought he came off much stronger than Jeb. | ||
I would say the Jeb of tonight was maybe Delaney because he looked weak. | ||
But Tim Ryan, he had a weak look in his eyes, but he came off pretty strongly on a lot of the issues. | ||
A lot more passionate. | ||
I don't think anybody was as weak as Jeb, maybe except for Delaney. | ||
Broseph says, Mommy made a big mistake by not going harder on neocons. | ||
Yep, big true. | ||
Big and true. | ||
Elizabeth Warren's family station wagon says, de Blasio has five sons all named Dante. | ||
Yeah, big if true. | ||
Well, the funny thing is it was far less effective for Beto doing it for like 30 seconds and at the beginning than it was for Castro and Booker to do it for a much shorter amount of time in the middle. | ||
So, yeah, I think it's a lot of funny parts there. | ||
Salty says, my black son. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Goof Troop says, get the other nine goons off the stage and make way for the Hawaiian hottie. | ||
She can say whatever she wants because God knows I'm not listening. | ||
Hashtag MAGA Mommy. | ||
Yeah, all the sunglass boomers taking a picture in their car. | ||
You know, make way for the MAGA MILF, right? | ||
Tulsi Gabbard is a MAGA MILF confirmed. | ||
I agree. | ||
Crankfastra says, I can't wait to hear the words a thousand a month on the debate stage tomorrow night. | ||
Yeah, that's gonna be epic. | ||
I can't wait for Yang to bring a little bit of intergenerational or rather generational humor. | ||
Reddit humor. | ||
It's gonna be great. | ||
Tomorrow's the real fun one. | ||
I can't wait for that. | ||
We'll have real competitors, real performers. | ||
It'll be good. | ||
It'll be a great show. | ||
Salty says, do you think the literal Spanish will stoke immigration anxiety? | ||
Not really, because they did Spanish even in the Republican debate. | ||
You know, Ted Cruz spoke Spanish, Marco Rubio spoke Spanish, and Trump put a quash on that pretty quickly. | ||
He quashed that by saying, this is America, we speak English. | ||
That was in the second debate. | ||
But I don't think that'll really cause too many problems with the Democrats. | ||
I think that's a good thing for them. | ||
Maxie Stoneman says, not gonna lie Nick, I heard a lot of anti-semitic dog whistles in that debate. | ||
What do they mean by rich and powerful? | ||
Yeah, rich and powerful, consolidated corporations, chicken hawks, there are a lot of big anti-semitic expressions in there, a lot of anti-semitic tropes. | ||
So I think they'll have to apologize for that. | ||
Poopoo King, my man, says, hashtag Assad gang 2020. | ||
Anti-Ziocon, anti-ISIS, anti-Boomer. | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
Assad gang rising up, led by Mommy Tulsi. | ||
And Poopoo King, I hope I see you on July 4th. | ||
I'll be back in town. | ||
But yeah, definitely. | ||
Assad gang rising up. | ||
Naj says, first time a west coast knicker has caught you live after the family goes to bed. | ||
Love everything you do. | ||
God bless. | ||
Well, thanks, man. | ||
Glad you could catch the show live, finally. | ||
And thanks for the super chat. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
J-E-L says, reproductive justice by aborting abortionists in Minecraft Earth VR because abortionists aren't radical enough. | ||
I think that's the best way you could say that, definitely. | ||
I don't support her for president. | ||
I support her president of my kitchen. | ||
I support her president of being my mommy. | ||
I support her president of the dinner table and the bedroom. | ||
No, just kidding. | ||
I'm the president of the bedroom and Mommy Tulsi's vice president. | ||
Mommy Tulsi's my secretary of that ass. | ||
What is happening to this show? | ||
I disavow. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
I disavow. | ||
What a disaster. | ||
We're a little bit off the rails. | ||
I've been talking so much oxygen has been cut off to my brain and I'm going all loopy mode on you, but it's so true. | ||
I'm the president of the bedroom and Tulsi Gabbard can be secretary of the milk department. | ||
She could be agriculture secretary, secretary of dairy in the Nick administration, but you know she could be president of other things, right? | ||
That's fine. | ||
Let's see no good says look at Google Trends on Twitter Tulsi one huge I don't think that's true, but I'll double-check that Dan D says you're in the zone tonight big guy killing it. | ||
Thanks for the content. | ||
unidentified
|
Well. | |
Thank you, man Well, it's something happens when something happens. | ||
I'm energized. | ||
I'm excited when it's boring When it's, you know, the same stuff every day, but now things are happening. | ||
Things are good. | ||
I'm high energy. | ||
I'm in the zone. | ||
I drank my sugar water. | ||
I slept until 4 o'clock. | ||
I slept until 3 o'clock. | ||
So I'm energized. | ||
I'm ready to go. | ||
Josiah says, new century of the egg. | ||
Egg nationalism. | ||
Egg pill. | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
A new egg century. | ||
And we're going to put egg first. | ||
It's going to be only egg first. | ||
Frey Wire says, a lot of great content tonight. | ||
Great text. | ||
Well, thanks man. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Ann Marie says, you're cool. | ||
True. | ||
Totally true. | ||
Dan D says, a few big lefties on my Facebook were even weirded out and annoyed by the Español. | ||
Hopefully moments like that wake people up. | ||
Hello Backfire Department. | ||
Yeah, I think there will be a little bit of that effect, but honestly, I think it'll be basically negligible. | ||
The woke stuff is what appeals. | ||
I think a lot of Democrats just sort of take it as par for the course, but I think you will see a little alienation. | ||
Creasive says, Julian Castro looks like a wood elf from Oblivion. | ||
I never played Oblivion, but he does look like an elf. | ||
Shemp says Eggman ain't no Humpty Dumpty. | ||
Hell yeah, Eggman. | ||
He's more like Eggman in that song about killing people. | ||
He's much more like our Eggman, right? | ||
Gregory says, what Democratic candidate do you see would pose the greatest threat to Trump in the primary? | ||
Interesting question. | ||
Probably Biden or Sanders. | ||
Just based on the polling, I would say Biden or Sanders. | ||
Elizabeth Warren is also a threat. | ||
But I'd probably say number one is Biden, just purely on the polling. | ||
And also based on the appeal. | ||
I think Biden has relatively a competitive appeal when it comes to getting like a Midwest, blue collar, working class person. | ||
Because Biden was on the ticket when Barack Obama won states like Ohio, Iowa, Indiana, North Carolina. | ||
That goes a long way. | ||
So I think Biden probably. | ||
Sharton Martz says my GF wants me to give her head. | ||
What do I do? | ||
Say no, and if she isn't down for that, break up. | ||
Disavow. | ||
Very un-Catholic and unmanly. | ||
And it's a vulgar and crude question, but a critical one, so I do answer that. | ||
HawkLivesMatter says after the dollar collapses. | ||
So I apologize for the vulgarity, but you know, it's a very critical issue. | ||
I'm surprised that one didn't make its way into the debate. | ||
Hulkwise matters is after the dollar collapses. | ||
Least we can look forward to the Chinese rolling in here and throwing these Dems and Aztec invaders into woodchippers. | ||
Alright, disavow. | ||
Hardcore disavow on violence. | ||
Josiah says as long as it's milk and cookies. | ||
Thanks mommy. | ||
Could you imagine Tulsi Gabbard with an apron on? | ||
And you know, she brings you a plate, she's like, Hi hun! | ||
Hi hun, I made you some cookies! | ||
Warm, and a fresh ice cold glass of milk, and she patted you on the head. | ||
The feel when Tulsi Gabbard will never bring you a warm plate of cookies on a paper plate in an ice cold, in a glass plate in an ice cold glass of milk and she pats you on your head and she calls you hun? | ||
Why even live? | ||
Why even live? | ||
My mom doesn't make cookies for me anymore. | ||
You know what she does? | ||
She makes cookies for her work. | ||
Can you believe this? | ||
I like the oatmeal chocolate chip cookies and every time she makes plain chocolate chips, the ones I don't like, she has a special recipe, And every time, she's making cookies like every other week, and every time she makes the ones I don't like, and I go to eat one, and she's like, no, those are for my work. | ||
Mom never makes me cookies anymore. | ||
It's like that episode of Spongebob, when Patrick gets the plate of cookies, and Spongebob's grandma just gives him paperwork and pencils. | ||
I got you some office supplies. | ||
That's what it feels like with me and my mom. | ||
You know, she's like, here, I got you some office supplies. | ||
I got you some books. | ||
I got you some coral. | ||
I got you some hard coral. | ||
And you know, and I don't get cookies anymore. | ||
Mommy Tulsi needs to make cookies for me. | ||
She needs to make cookies and milk for me. | ||
But anyway, maybe we took that a little too far, but it's totally true. | ||
Temple Drake says, Tulsi baby wants to know if you want chicken parm or a stuffed pepper for dinner tonight. | ||
Also, thanks for making this debate far more entertaining than it otherwise would have been. | ||
Well, hey, you're welcome. | ||
And yeah, if only, if only Tulsi would, then it wouldn't be weird. | ||
You know, then I could say, oh, You know? | ||
But yeah, I would say no, Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
I want milk for dinner. | ||
That's what I would say. | ||
I would say, screw that! | ||
I'd knock the plate over. | ||
It smashes all over the floor. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
I can't say what I would do. | ||
That would not be wholesome. | ||
This is a wholesome show. | ||
Send me Ninjet on DLive to hear what I do to Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
No, I'm kidding! | ||
I'm kidding! | ||
No, don't do that. | ||
Send a Ninjet. | ||
But don't ask me what I do. | ||
I'm not gonna say. | ||
I'd be very crude and vulgar. | ||
We have to be wholesome. | ||
But yeah, I wish. | ||
I wish that was happening. | ||
No offense, Mom. | ||
We love Mom, but it's Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
We've got a MILF in the house, right? | ||
Well, that would be news to me. | ||
I didn't think she did very well, but if she's surging in the polls, if she's surging on the search trends, then I don't know. | ||
Maybe we'd have to see. | ||
But let's just do for fun. | ||
Why don't we take a look at the Google Trends and we'll just see what's going on there. | ||
I'll put a couple of names. | ||
The polls I don't really trust because it's all online and I think you do have a... What do you have? | ||
You have a disproportionate effect for certain people online based on, you know, what they say. | ||
But let's see. | ||
We'll do Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
And we'll compare her to... I don't know what you're talking about with search trends. | ||
So this is until the 29th. | ||
It looks like her, well at least, I don't know if this is covering like everything that's happened today. | ||
Maybe I'll shorten the window of time. | ||
Past day. | ||
So it's a big spike for her today, but it's not, compared to when she announced, it doesn't come close. | ||
But let me compare it with somebody else. | ||
Let me compare it with Elizabeth Warren. | ||
And we'll see. | ||
Elizabeth Warren, U.S. | ||
Senator. | ||
Okay, no, compared to Elizabeth Warren, she did slightly better. | ||
Let's compare her to Julian Castro and we'll see. | ||
Okay, no, you're right. | ||
In terms of search trends, she did do very well. | ||
Wow, I'm a little surprised by that. | ||
I didn't think she had a very good showing. | ||
Maybe that's because the audience didn't react very strongly to her. | ||
Maybe it's the effect of the audience not giving a very strong endorsement. | ||
But, hey man, if the search trends prove true, then I'll say, you know what, maybe she did very well. | ||
Maybe I'll have to go back and eat my words tomorrow. | ||
You might be right. | ||
I may be wrong on this issue. | ||
Cause just looking at these search trends, she killed Julian Castro. | ||
She killed, well she didn't kill, but she did a lot better than Elizabeth Warren. | ||
Just for the fun of it, let's do Amy Klobuchar just to see. | ||
Whoops, I did klid. | ||
Klobuchar. | ||
I'll let you see for the fun of it. | ||
Yeah, looks like in terms of search trends, she killed it. | ||
So you know what? | ||
Maybe she did better than I previously thought. | ||
But in any case, Elizabeth Warren did pretty well also. | ||
So, who knows? | ||
Maybe she's in it then. | ||
Maybe she'll be more aggressive in the next one then. | ||
But let's see. | ||
Anon says, Anon is a cool guy. | ||
Wow, Nick. | ||
Thanks for saying that. | ||
Well, I didn't say that. | ||
You said that. | ||
But thanks. | ||
Wyatt says Patrick Little reportedly died in a car accident on his way home in Albany, California. | ||
Really? | ||
I don't... I don't... I think people are memeing on me, but I don't know. | ||
I'll check afterwards. | ||
Billy Mays says, if you think that was bad, just imagine how many times he practiced that little monologue about having a black sun in the mirror last night. | ||
And you know he did that, too, which is pretty funny. | ||
Nitro Man says, wouldn't it be funny if we took a dump in the Large Hadron Collider and the Hadrons spread poo all over the tube? | ||
LOL, what a mess. | ||
Yeah, that would be really funny. | ||
Thanks. | ||
So something in Italian. | ||
I can't read Italian. | ||
I think that's Italian, but I can't read Italian. | ||
I want to touch it. | ||
Fox says, Tulsi is hot like a muscle car. | ||
I want to touch it. | ||
Hey, relax. | ||
Call some Christian show. | ||
Anon says, not maximizing your experience. | ||
Not potential, Nick. | ||
What are you talking about? | ||
Oh, not maximizing your getting into heaven experience. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
ASDF says, did you hear Beto mention making the country in our image? | ||
Sounds like an evil perversion of God's creation of man. | ||
We are created in God's image. | ||
I don't know if that's really a notable point of contention, but if you want to go there, sure. | ||
AmTheWebs says, what faction do you think would Tulsi be in Fallout New Vegas? | ||
Hmm, that's a good question. | ||
I would probably say Brotherhood of Steel because she's a little bit out there esoteric, but she's not down with neocons. | ||
She's also not down with like reactionaries. | ||
So I'd probably say she would be Brotherhood of Steel in my in my humble opinion. | ||
Or maybe who are the other factions? | ||
You've got the Kings, you've got the Legion, you've got the NCR, you've got the Brotherhood, and who else is there? | ||
There's some smaller factions maybe? | ||
Like the Boomers? | ||
Would she be a Boomer perhaps? | ||
No, she's not a boomer. | ||
I'd probably say Brotherhood of Steel. | ||
Yeah, we're gonna need that stat. | ||
It says, Major MILF, this is private parts for reporting for duty. | ||
Requesting satellite photographs on possible feet in the region. | ||
Yeah, we're going to need that stat. | ||
We're going to need those satellite images stat. | ||
And we're going to need to send them over to America First headquarters for analysis. | ||
Major MILF and private parts. | ||
That's very funny, Broseph. | ||
That's the funniest super chat we've gotten all night. | ||
So much appreciated. | ||
Let's see. | ||
We've got a lot more, but I am hungry. | ||
So we're gonna get through these very quickly. | ||
Kayanon says, which Aryans have the least best history? | ||
Probably the Slavs, unfortunately. | ||
Look, don't get me wrong. | ||
I love all my Aryan brothers and sisters, but let's be real. | ||
Let's just look at the history. | ||
Spain conquered the world, right? | ||
Conquered North America. | ||
The Portuguese conquered parts of North America. | ||
The Germans had some things happening. | ||
The Habsburg Empire, another empire that happened. | ||
The British, the Angloid, you know, had a great empire. | ||
The French had a great empire. | ||
You had the Napoleon, you had Louis XIV. | ||
The Italians, I mean, do we even need to begin? | ||
I mean, we could go on for days about the Italians. | ||
And the Slavs... | ||
Soviet Union? | ||
Bad. | ||
Russian Empire? | ||
Dominion over Siberia? | ||
Russian Empire, which is one of the biggest empires in history. | ||
I think the biggest contiguous empire in history, which is notable. | ||
But, you know, over what? | ||
They had dominion over Siberia? | ||
I mean, really? | ||
So, don't get me wrong, you had some good Russians, Peter the Great, but they'd never been, like, at the forefront, really. | ||
So, uh, I would say it's probably... I would say we're to be objective about things, but don't get me wrong, I love Slavs. | ||
Some of my best friends are Slavs. | ||
Some of my best friends are Russians and Polish. | ||
I love the Polish people. | ||
I love the Russian people. | ||
Let's just say the Balkans, then, okay? | ||
unidentified
|
Just to be fair. | |
Let's just say it's Yugoslavia, just to be fair. | ||
No, but these are all jokes. | ||
I love everybody equally. | ||
Remember, total equality now. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
Yeah, that's actually a very... that's a very good comparison. | ||
Very true. | ||
Defeat the globalists. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
I stan. | ||
Oh, whoa. | ||
Shemp says Beto performance was like Scott Walkers. | ||
Yeah, that's actually a very good comparison. | ||
Very true. | ||
Ace of Wind says lots of viewership on DLive tonight. | ||
Any ideas on how to bring over some of that exposure from being the king of DLive on YouTube? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe we'll do the show on DLive because we get so much viewership there. | ||
But that was pretty substantial, right? | ||
I don't know what that was all about, where everybody came from. | ||
Goof Troop says she can be my undersecretary, if you know what I mean. | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
I agree. | ||
Michael Aitken says, just checked out Gabbard. | ||
Wow, Aussies miss out. | ||
She'd win exactly 0% of the female vote. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
I think it's a worthy sacrifice, right? | ||
Saccharacteries. | ||
Sacrificing yourself on the altar of a MILF as opposed to the altar of globalism? | ||
I think that's a fair trade, right? | ||
That's a good trade deal. | ||
Video Game Snakes' Mommy Tulsi was most searched candidate during the debate on Google. | ||
Cory Booker second and Warren third. | ||
Tulsi will nationalize Brown GFs. | ||
Starting to see the appeal. | ||
Frankly, I'm starting to change my mind on this issue. | ||
You know, it's like Steven Crowder changed my mind. | ||
And then it's the and then it's that other meme. | ||
He will never change his mind on race mixing. | ||
Picture of Tulsi Gabbard. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
You know, spitting out the proverbial soup or cereal. | ||
That's a little meme talk. | ||
I think memetic zoomers will understand this one. | ||
Zoomerclips, put up the memes with that one and put that on Twitter. | ||
Doc says, the black sun is always bad optics whether it's Democrats or Wignats. | ||
Very true. | ||
Whether it's Ronnie Cameron or Bill de Blasio. | ||
Highly true. | ||
Jimbo says, bro, when you called me a boomer, that hurt. | ||
I'm younger than you. | ||
Well, you don't sound like it, man. | ||
If you don't like the intro music, what do you listen to? | ||
Country? | ||
You a boomer? | ||
Well, you one of these southern boomers that listens to country music? | ||
I know a lot of people in high school that were like southern LARPers. | ||
They listen to country and it's like, bro, you just posted cringe. | ||
Clifton says, can girls who are promiscuous in the past change? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
Statistically, the numbers are against you. | ||
Statistically, there always are people that change. | ||
There can, in theory, be people that change, but the numbers are against you. | ||
It's like you get to, I think you get past four premarital sexual partners, and it's like you flip a coin, and they'll cheat on you when you're married, or they won't. | ||
So, if you're okay with those odds, then, you know, by all means, but those are the odds. | ||
Those are not good odds, I don't believe. | ||
Stay six is take my money before it expires deal. | ||
I will take it James Russell says axios and drudge say so so check him if I'm wrong. | ||
No, it looks like you're right It looks like you're right, which I'm very shocked at because I don't know if you watch the debate But in my in my opinion, I saw that debate maybe Democrats maybe it's merely because Democrats hadn't heard of her before and I had heard of her so I heard her pitch and it was like To me, it seemed like it wasn't really there. | ||
But you know what? | ||
Maybe I'm wrong. | ||
Maybe Democrats watching that got a different impression. | ||
Or you know what? | ||
Conversely, maybe Independents watching it hadn't heard of her, are tired of the wars. | ||
So you know what? | ||
I was wrong about Tulsi Gabbard, clearly. | ||
But in my opinion, I saw their performance. | ||
I really wasn't blown away, but maybe I just had these presumptions. | ||
Maybe I came into it with prejudice. | ||
Big Mike says, I put Tulsi through three Face Raiders. | ||
She averaged nine out of ten. | ||
Mommy confirmed. | ||
Don't look at her campaign website. | ||
There definitely aren't pics of her surfing. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh-oh. | |
Definitely won't be looking at that. | ||
Honk Honk says, Mommy Tulsi and Brittany Venti are gonna have a Roman-style gladiator match for who gets to give you cookie plates and heat pads, or head pads, he says. | ||
Yeah, hey, I'm for it. | ||
I'm for it. | ||
You know, mommies scantily clad in gladiator costumes fighting out for the right to prepare the cookies. | ||
I'm all for it. | ||
I'm with it. | ||
This is the kind of e-girl nationalism that we need. | ||
Are ye aware, says Booker looking like Vin Diesel if he was dropped on his head as a baby. | ||
That's pretty funny, yeah, because his eyes are scattered. | ||
He's a crazed, crazed man! | ||
Let me think about that. | ||
I don't know if Brittany Venti is Asuka, because she's not really mean to me. | ||
She doesn't really bully me like Asuka bullies Shinji. | ||
I don't know who Ray and Asuka would be. | ||
accurate uh ray being uh lauren rose yeah i don't know if that's totally accurate also i mean she doesn't strike me as totally passive and submissive like some of the other e-girls they're like like ray is in the show so i don't know who ray and asuka would be maybe the uh the mean one would be tara mccarthy unfortunately i'm Although she's not pretty, so maybe that doesn't really work. | ||
Who is, like, an Aryan German mean e-girl? | ||
I don't think there are any mean e-girls, unfortunately. | ||
And I don't think there's any Ray e-girls, because they're not all, like... Although they're not mean, they're also not very meek. | ||
They all, like, want to do their own thing, to some extent. | ||
So I don't know if there's a Rey. | ||
I don't know any Reys. | ||
But Faith G is Misato. | ||
Now that's accurate. | ||
Now that's accurate. | ||
Faith Goldie is Misato. | ||
Although I would say that, you know, Misato's a little bit of a degenerate. | ||
So I don't know if it's totally accurate. | ||
Faith is married, you know, so she is... In some ways it's not totally perfect, but I think there's definitely a comparison. | ||
Now the real question is who is Kaworu? | ||
There's big competition. | ||
Who will be Kaworu? | ||
Is it Paul Towne? | ||
I think everybody knows. | ||
Is it Paul Towne? | ||
Who else? | ||
Who else would be in the running for that one? | ||
Is it Stempai? | ||
I couldn't tell you. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I wouldn't know anything about that. | ||
But certainly, I think those are basically on the money. | ||
Maybe Venti is Asuka. | ||
I guess she's the closest, I would say. | ||
And maybe Lauren Rose is the closest to Rei, but it's not perfect. | ||
I think the best comparison is Misato. | ||
Anyway, Video Game Snakes says thanks for the great coverage tonight, Nick. | ||
You're welcome, man. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Big Dick Ricks says... | ||
Great. | ||
Patrick Little is crushed by Tulsi's milkers. | ||
Fortune that I do not envy, right? | ||
I mean, that is definitely a terrible thing. | ||
Terrible fate. | ||
Shemp says Beto is crying about media treatment right now. | ||
R.I.P. | ||
Okay, well I'm not watching it come in because I'm stuck with you guys. | ||
Rando number nine says my black son Dante is going to vote for Tulsi. | ||
Hell yeah. | ||
Well, he's red-pilled. | ||
ASDF, and this is our last one, says pregnant Alabama woman initiated fight, got shot, and her unborn baby died. | ||
She's being indicted for its death and not protecting it as a mother should. | ||
Well, doesn't that tell you what goes on, right? | ||
The life of the child is a life no matter what, right? | ||
But that's good that she's being indicted. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chats. | ||
That's going to do it for us tonight on our coverage. | ||
We've been streaming for almost four hours, if you can believe it. | ||
Four hours with a 10-minute break. | ||
And nobody else talking. | ||
It's just me. | ||
So that's going to do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Remember, we are streaming and doing the same deal tomorrow, so subscribe. | ||
It's dlive.com. | ||
Rather, I'm sorry, it's dlive.tv, I think it is. | ||
Let me double-check that. | ||
Well, we're here. | ||
That's DLive.tv slash Nick J. Fuentes. | ||
We'll be covering the second debate tomorrow starting at 8 o'clock. | ||
We'll cover it on DLive. | ||
That'll be two hours. | ||
We'll be back here at about 10 o'clock like we were tonight for the same thing. | ||
Coverage, analysis, reaction, all that. | ||
So tune in DLive.tv slash Nick J. Fuentes tomorrow at 8. | ||
And then YouTube at 10 o'clock. | ||
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I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
As always, thank you guys for watching our live coverage of the Democratic presidential primary, the first debate. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters, our Linopoint Donators, our DLive viewers, and thanks to our premium members. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches our show, and we will see you tomorrow on DLive. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. |