Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
Freedom! 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
|
Not even once. | |
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
He's just that. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
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 race. | ||
Not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
Not interesting. | ||
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. | |
Guy, I've never heard of him make fun. | ||
He's just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Not interested. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany 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
|
Not even once. | |
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
Who's that? | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
Yeah, I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
You're not interested. | ||
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 a big one. | ||
Why did you use that? | ||
I've never heard of a big one. | ||
I've never heard of a big one. | ||
I've never heard of a big one. | ||
unidentified
|
Who is that? | |
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
unidentified
|
You know the rule. | |
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
unidentified
|
No e-girls. | |
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not populism, will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
Who is that? | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human world. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human world. | ||
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
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | ||
He's just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | ||
Who's that? | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
You're not interested. | ||
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
|
Not even once. | |
Guy, I've never heard of Nick. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
An older generation. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. will be our credo. | ||
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 it. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Putz. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. - Not interested, will be our freedom. - Not interested, I'm - Not interested, I'm not I'm not | ||
You're not interested. | ||
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
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of him think, what is that? | ||
Americanism, not populism. not populism. | ||
Americanism will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot's. | ||
Who's that? | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human. | ||
You're not interested. | ||
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
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of him. | ||
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our credo. | ||
It's... | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day forward, it's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
We're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Monday for another great week of America First. | ||
And it really is a great week. | ||
It is good to be back doing the show, but not just good to be back doing the show because it's Monday. | ||
But also because we are back on YouTube this week. | ||
So I'm going to try to fill everybody in on what's been going on for the past couple of weeks in case anybody did not follow us to DLive last week. | ||
I know a lot of people have been in the YouTube comments on my previous videos from two weeks ago saying, does Nick do this show on YouTube anymore? | ||
Where did Nick go? | ||
Is he ever gonna do the show again? | ||
So, I'm sure maybe most people that watch this show know what's been happening with YouTube, but maybe some don't. | ||
So, just a quick refresher. | ||
Not last Friday, but the Friday before last, I got my first Community Guidelines strike on my YouTube channel, which means that I was not able to livestream, upload videos, or even post written posts on my channel for a whole week. | ||
So until this previous Friday, three days ago, I was not able in any way to communicate with my subscribers on YouTube. | ||
As you may know, we migrated the show onto DLive for all of last week. | ||
So the show went on Monday through Friday exclusively on DLive last week while I was penalized on YouTube. | ||
Today we are back. | ||
It's Monday. | ||
The week penalty has expired, so I can now post, upload, and stream on my YouTube channel again. | ||
So we are now streaming on both DLive and on YouTube, and this is how it's going to be on the show, probably for the foreseeable future. | ||
We're going to try it for this week, and we'll see how it goes. | ||
If it goes well, if a lot of people watch the show on both platforms, then I'll keep streaming the show on both YouTube and DLive. | ||
If for whatever reason it doesn't work out and we'll see what happens then maybe I'll go back to YouTube or I'll stick to DLive. | ||
But the reason I think it's prudent to stream on both for now is obviously the bigger following is on YouTube. | ||
I have something like 75,000 subscribers on YouTube. | ||
And interestingly enough, we actually gained hundreds of subscribers even while I wasn't uploading, streaming, posting, anything like that. | ||
In the last week, even though I was technically temporarily banned from using my channel, I still gained I think like 400 subscribers. | ||
But, so in any case, it makes sense to stream on YouTube because I have the most subscribers there, but it also makes sense to stream on DLive because, clearly, Clearly, my time on YouTube is limited. | ||
It won't be long before... I'm sure it won't be long before I'm completely, permanently banned from YouTube forever and the whole channel gets scrapped. | ||
So, that's why I'd like to build up my following on DLive in the event that that happens. | ||
So, make sure that you're subscribed on DLive. | ||
Make sure you follow me on my DLive channel. | ||
It's dlive.tv slash NickJFuentes. | ||
And for now, you know, just watch on whichever one you prefer. | ||
I would say I prefer DLive. | ||
I don't prefer that you watch on DLive. | ||
I really don't have a preference. | ||
You know, watch on whichever one you like better. | ||
I happen to like DLive a little bit better. | ||
They're a lot nicer to me, obviously, than YouTube. | ||
But it also wouldn't hurt if you opened up the stream on both websites on two different tabs if you're watching them. | ||
You don't have to have the sound on in both tabs, but it does help the viewer count. | ||
If you're watching the show on YouTube and you open up a new tab and you go on to DLive and you mute the stream and you watch it there as well, that way it looks like millions of people are watching the show. | ||
So anyway, that's what's been going on with YouTube. | ||
Like I said, we did the whole show last week on DLive, and actually, I think it was probably one of the better weeks I've literally ever had doing this show on DLive last week. | ||
So it's very funny. | ||
A lot of people after I got My first strike on YouTube, and I posted about it on Twitter, a lot of left-wing people were celebrating and they were saying, after, I think Jared Holt tweeted this, he said, after three years of inaction, YouTube finally issues a Community Guidelines strike to Nick Fuentes, and all these left-wing people are celebrating. | ||
And actually, I think it was the biggest, it was like the most viewed week of America First, maybe ever. | ||
We had more than 10,000 live viewers on Monday. | ||
We had more than 10,000 live viewers on Tuesday, I think we had 8,000 on Wednesday, and then I think 7,000 and 6,000 on Thursday and Friday. | ||
And by the way, it's very normal for it to go down as the week goes on. | ||
So, we started out with 10, went down to 6. | ||
I mean, these are very strong numbers. | ||
And also, if you looked at the lemon count, if you looked at the super chat count, I think it was also one of the best weeks we've ever had in America First in terms of the tips. | ||
On DLive, instead of super chats, you give through a system called lemons. | ||
You give lemons instead of money, which I explained last week. | ||
But in any case, it's funny to me that they tried to censor me on YouTube, and actually we just had one of the best weeks of the show ever moving over to DLive, which I was actually I was surprised about that. | ||
So in the meantime, between now and probably getting banned on YouTube, I'll be streaming on both, and we'll kind of play it by ear and see what happens. | ||
One other thing I want to mention before we get into the show, before we get into the more substantive things, not only did I get a Community Guidelines strike on YouTube, I also got completely demonetized. | ||
So demonetized means no ad revenue, no super chats, I can't make any money through my YouTube channel. | ||
So, Super Chats are officially dead. | ||
We're sort of colloquially calling the lemons that I get on DLive Super Chats. | ||
You can throw a tip at me on DLive. | ||
You make a donation and then you can write a comment. | ||
It's very much like Super Chats. | ||
They just have a little bit of a different system on DLive. | ||
So, we still do read those. | ||
We've been reading those last week. | ||
But for all intents and purposes, the official Super Chat is gone. | ||
It's no more. | ||
They told me that I can reapply to be a YouTube partner, which means I get monetization in 30 days. | ||
And that was a little over a week ago, so I can reapply I think in like February. | ||
But I don't think they're going to give it back to me. | ||
So Super Chats are probably dead. | ||
What we're going to use moving forward is if you want to give me a Super Chat or anything like that, we're still going to be reading the messages at the end of the show. | ||
We'll be reading them from DLive. | ||
So if you send me a diamond or above, a diamond, a Ninjagini, or an Injet, I'll read it at the end of the show. | ||
And also we are trying out a new system called Entropy. | ||
I might have mentioned this before on the show, I'm not sure. | ||
But Entropy, I believe, is basically run through Google. | ||
I will share with you the link. | ||
In the live chat of the show right now so you can click on it and see for yourself I'll also just tell you what it is in case you miss it cuz I think the live chat moves kind of quickly So I will post the link here in the live chat and if you click on that You can pull up a page where it displays the show the live chat and also it will allow you to do Donations through the live chat. | ||
It's it's kind of difficult to explain but if you click on it, you can see the layout You can see the user interface and you can kind of get an idea of what the service is. | ||
Entropy is sort of like a third-party, like, YouTube streaming, like, viewing platform where you can watch my stream come in and also the live chat come in, but instead of using YouTube to do the tips and donations, Entropy does Google Pay. | ||
So it's like, it's hard to explain. | ||
It's sort of like the same thing. | ||
It's like a portal where you can watch the show, but through a third-party filter. | ||
And the same is true with the live chat, and you could do donations through the live chat, but they use Google Pay instead of YouTube. | ||
So we're gonna try that out tonight. | ||
We'll see how it goes. | ||
If it goes well, we'll keep using it. | ||
If it doesn't, then we'll just stick with DLive or we'll try something else. | ||
I've got a few other ideas. | ||
So we'll see how that goes. | ||
I posted the link in the live chat. | ||
I'll also tell you what it is. | ||
The link is uh, entropy, which is E N T R O P Y stream entropy stream dot live slash app slash America first. So it's entropy stream dot live slash app slash America first. | ||
So if you want to click on that, see what it's all about, maybe give it a shot. | ||
We'll see how it goes for this show. | ||
And like I said, if everything... We're having to try a lot of different things now. | ||
The show has to adapt to these changes. | ||
Wish it didn't have to be this way, but we always knew for about as long as I've been on YouTube that eventually they would start giving me a hard time, and we are sort of in the beginning of the end here. | ||
You know, we're in the endgame now. | ||
So to speak. | ||
It's America First Endgame. | ||
So we're gonna have to adapt, we're gonna have to try some new things, and it's very much informal. | ||
You know, I do the stream 7 o'clock every night, and I can tell you where to find it on Twitter and Telegram, and we'll just kind of keep A-B testing until we see what works. | ||
Is that A-B testing? | ||
I think it's just testing. | ||
We'll just keep experimenting until we figure out a way that works and, you know, we'll just sort of play it by ear. | ||
But I was very much encouraged by the fact that everybody was able to find the show on DLive last week. | ||
And actually more people than ever were able to find the show on DLive last week, so that tells me that we'll probably be okay. | ||
You know, if we get banned from YouTube, that's not something that'll be good, that won't be ideal, I don't want that to happen, but it seemed to me like that was inevitable from the start, and it looks to me like Now we are headed towards there probably sooner rather than later. | ||
So be sure to sign up for DLive in the event that that happens and also remember the email list. | ||
I'm gonna plug it on the beginning of the show just so you guys know the only way that you can follow my stuff in the event that I get banned from everything is the email list. | ||
So, go to NicholasJFuentes.com, put your email in. | ||
I've been plugging that at the end of all my shows lately because I've been getting very anxious. | ||
You know, if I get banned from everything, really the only thing that is ban proof or censorship proof is the email list. | ||
Because that's just an Excel spreadsheet. | ||
And then I can just send out emails and, you know, tell you where to find me, what link, what website, whatever. | ||
So, you know, our days are numbered on YouTube. | ||
And who knows, maybe soon our numbers, our days will be numbered on Twitter and Instagram and DLive and maybe even Telegram, everything else. | ||
So that's the only thing that's safe. | ||
So be sure to check that out. | ||
You got all that? | ||
I know that's a lot of information to throw at you. | ||
But that's what's going on with the show. | ||
I am excited to be back. | ||
We will dive into the news. | ||
Tonight, of course, the major story we're talking about is the Virginia Second Amendment protest. | ||
Which took place in Richmond this morning and afternoon. | ||
I have to say, I'm very relieved, I'm very happy that nothing happened. | ||
Somebody was asking me last week, we talked a little bit about the Virginia rally, I think on Wednesday of last week, and somebody said, on a scale of 1 to 10, what do you think the odds are that this Virginia rally goes south? | ||
You know, that it turns bad, it goes sour, whatever. | ||
And I said, you know, it's possible that something could go wrong? | ||
I said, but nothing ever happens. | ||
You know, it's that poll meme, nothing ever happens, it's not happening. | ||
You know, a gun control rally just flew over my house, nothing ever happens. | ||
India, Pakistan, US and Iran, Israel and Syria, Russia, nothing ever happens no matter what. | ||
It just seems like things no longer can happen anymore. | ||
So, I told the Super Chatter last Wednesday, it's probably a 1. | ||
It's probably a 1 on a scale of 1 to 10 that something would happen. | ||
And I was right, nothing happened. | ||
I did put out a tweet yesterday warning people to stay away, which I stand by, by the way. | ||
But it turned out to be very peaceful. | ||
There was only actually one arrest in the whole rally. | ||
And I'll give some more background in this in a moment. | ||
But this little incident has been bubbling for a long time in Virginia, where the Democratic state government has been really aggressive on gun control. | ||
And Virginia is a very conservative state outside of the major cities, outside of, I guess, northern Virginia, where D.C. is, and outside of the state capital and some of the major cities. | ||
It's obviously a southern state. | ||
This was the capital of the Confederacy. | ||
So, the people in Virginia don't really like all this gun control stuff. | ||
So, they converged today on Monday. | ||
It was a lot of different Second Amendment groups, I think, that brought in protesters from all over to protest a lot of these gun control laws. | ||
It was something like 25,000 people that showed up this afternoon. | ||
Lots of them carrying rifles, handguns. | ||
You know, all different kinds of guns, carrying flags, in tactical gear, and so on. | ||
And there was so much fear-mongering in the buildup to the rally from the government, from the media. | ||
Governor Ralph Northam said that there was a state of emergency and they said there were terrorist threats from white nationalists directed at the state capitol for this rally. | ||
And the media was talking about how militias and other groups were going to take advantage of this, that it was going to be very dangerous. | ||
And I think that was maybe somewhat reasonable. | ||
I pushed some of this stuff because I thought probably the government would make it this way. | ||
I compared it to Charlottesville. | ||
You know, this rally was taking place in Virginia, like Charlottesville, under Governor Ralph Northam, like Charlottesville. | ||
They were comparing it to Charlottesville. | ||
Similar people that went to Charlottesville were threatening to show up, and I imagine that just like Charlottesville, the police, the government, and the media would conspire to create chaos, violence, fights between protesters and counter-protesters, because that's what happened two years ago. | ||
The people that showed up were very peaceful, but it was the police that caused a lot of the problems. | ||
It was their system of sort of coordinating. | ||
It could have turned into some kind of false flag, and they would have used the boomer Second Amendment people basically as a patsy or something. | ||
But it went off really without a hitch. | ||
It was totally peaceful. | ||
I think there was an idea we were supposed to have about this rally that the media created. | ||
It was totally bogus, totally wrong. | ||
They wanted you to think that, I don't know, Neo-Nazis were coming to overthrow the government and it turned out to be a totally peaceful Second Amendment protest, which was great. | ||
Which was great. | ||
Love that. | ||
Civil War didn't start in Virginia? | ||
Awesome! | ||
That's amazing for the show! | ||
Now I get to do a 60-minute show about how the Second Amendment's great, and, you know, not about how the Civil War just started, and it's on, and the power's about to go out, and I love that, and that's a good thing. | ||
I'm glad everybody's safe and sound. | ||
So, we're gonna be talking about the rally and everything that happened there. | ||
I'll give you sort of my take on that. | ||
That'll be our main story tonight. | ||
I'll also be talking about Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day. | ||
Of course, favorite holiday of the year, favorite federal holiday. | ||
There's a lot of jokes that I want to tell about this holiday, but I just simply can't. | ||
I don't think it would be a good idea. | ||
I don't think it'd be very good optics. | ||
I will. | ||
I'll tell you one. | ||
My friend Millennial Matt posted a joke on Twitter, and I thought it was very offensive and very insensitive, but also a little bit funny. | ||
And this is his joke and not mine. | ||
He said something to the effect of, yeah, you had a dream. | ||
You were sleeping because you don't have to go into work because it's Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
unidentified
|
Day. | |
I'm probably butchering it, but it was something to that effect. | ||
And it's always my favorite holiday. | ||
But, you know, sadly, because I'm not in school and because I don't have a job, I actually don't get to celebrate. | ||
You know, for everybody else, for all the other white people and black people and everybody else, all the wagees... See, this is the difference. | ||
A lot of wagees give me a hard time. | ||
They say, you don't have a real job, and we have a much harder than you, and so on. | ||
But I don't get the federal holidays off! | ||
I don't get to call up the YouTube channel. | ||
I don't get to call up DLive and say, I'm not coming in today because it's a federal holiday. | ||
I can't put a post on Twitter and say, oh, no episode of America First Day because it's Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day. | ||
If I did, everybody would be in the comment section saying, oh, he's got that Mediterranean work ethic. | ||
Oh, nice work ethic, Nick. | ||
Oh, you're lazy. | ||
F you. | ||
Whatever. | ||
So I, unlike you, have to go to work today. | ||
I, unlike you, I don't get a winter break. | ||
College students get four weeks off for winter break. | ||
I didn't get four weeks off for winter break. | ||
I took one week off. | ||
I don't get a summer break. | ||
I don't get three months off. | ||
Okay, I took a one-week vacation over the summer. | ||
So that's the difference between me and you. | ||
That's the difference between the wagees who have it very easy and me, a small business owner, content creator, YouTuber, So keep that in mind. | ||
But happy Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day, everybody. | ||
Hope it was a good one. | ||
I hope everybody was really reflecting on racial equality. | ||
I hope everybody took a moment to do some inward reflection, some introspection about what are we doing to promote racial diversity? | ||
What are we ourselves doing to promote racial equality in America? | ||
What are we doing to fulfill Martin Luther King Jr's dream about everybody not caring about skin color and all of that? | ||
I know I spent a lot of the day in deep reflection, which is why I didn't wake up until 4 o'clock today. | ||
So we're gonna talk a little bit about that in Virginia. | ||
It should be a pretty good show. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
I went out to see Joker again this weekend. | ||
I know I was talking about that a lot last week. | ||
I didn't get a chance to see it on Friday, but I finally did get to see it on Saturday. | ||
And it was probably my favorite viewing of the movie so far, because I snuck in a bag of McDonald's on the way in. | ||
You know, I woke up pretty late, and I was scrambling, I had procrastinated, you know, getting prepared to see the movie, getting dressed and everything, putting on my Joker makeup and my Joker costume, and I realized I hadn't eaten anything all day, so I drove through McDonald's on the way there. | ||
I got two McDoubles, order of fries, snuck it in the coat. | ||
Fortunately, it was very cold that day, so I snuck it in the coat, had it under my coat there, under the arm, And I was watching for the 8th time Joker in theaters while I was snacking on two McDoubles, and it was probably one of my favorite viewings so far. | ||
You know, not like any of the other viewings were bad, you know, maybe my favorite was seeing it for the first time, but it was probably the coziest one. | ||
The first time I was eating during it, McDonald's, no less. | ||
And it really felt like I was seeing it with fresh eyes because when I saw it the first seven times, I saw it in rapid succession, you know, sometimes two days in a row, you know, almost all of them a week in a row. | ||
You know, I think I saw it seven weeks in a row. | ||
And so this time, having seen it in theaters after maybe about a month of not having seen it in theaters, it really was fresh. | ||
You know, I got to look at it with maybe a slightly different perspective, and I had the McDoubles as well. | ||
So, it was a very good weekend for me, but... | ||
We're gonna dive in. | ||
We're gonna dive into the substance of the show tonight. | ||
We're gonna talk a little bit about Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day. | ||
You know, it's funny. | ||
I've been doing the show for three years, and I a little bit resent the holidays now. | ||
When I first started doing the show, I loved the holidays, and I would decorate, and I got a new background, and we'd do a holiday special, and for Christmas I had the nativity scene, and Christmas graphics, and everything. | ||
And you know, three years later, it's like, okay, it's, what more can you really say? | ||
Like the third year, when you celebrate Columbus Day, it's like, you say the same, it's the same show. | ||
You know, and the third year that you do 9-11, well, you do the same thing about 9-11. | ||
And three years after, whatever else, Fourth of July, Constitution Day, International Men's Day, Thanksgiving, Halloween, it's all the fucking same. | ||
Sorry for the language, but, you know, three years, it means I've done three shows about the same holiday. | ||
So, all this is to say, Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day, what more really can be said that we have not already said on the show about this holiday? | ||
You know, every year, everybody throws out their hot takes. | ||
Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
was a scumbag, we all know this. | ||
Degenerate, borderline rapist, sick, sexual pervert, communist, plagiarist, subversive, racial actor. | ||
You know, we don't like him. | ||
I don't like Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Not racist. | ||
I just don't like him. | ||
And I hate this holiday. | ||
And I hate that people celebrate it. | ||
And I hate it because this was not a good guy. | ||
And certainly this is not a guy who we should universally hold up as an American hero In the same echelon, on the same status, on par with George Washington and Abraham Lincoln and everybody else, because he was none of those things. | ||
This guy was a radical, he was an agitator, and on a personal level he was a bad person. | ||
So why do we celebrate him? | ||
We celebrate him because we have new values in this country. | ||
And I think I've done this before. | ||
I think we did a show actually this summer. | ||
I think it was the 50th anniversary of the I Had a Dream speech, and I went over a lot of this. | ||
But just to refresh, Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
represents racial grievance against white people. | ||
He represents radical egalitarianism, a radical transformation of what the American idea. | ||
If America is a propositional nation, he represents a fundamental change to that proposition. | ||
And if America is a creedal nation, he represents a fundamental change to that American creed. | ||
Whereas the founding ideals and the founding creed of America was about self-reliance and independence and things like that. | ||
Obviously it was a more liberal revolution, our revolution, but nevertheless it was built on Western values. | ||
It was built on ideas promulgated throughout Western civilization. | ||
Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
took a lot of that and manipulated it into really something alien to this country, really something that's not Western at all. | ||
It is this radical idea of equality, radical idea of tolerance and inclusion. | ||
Something that is more communist, Marxist, whatever you want to call it. | ||
Something that is alien to this country. | ||
And I'll actually read you, there's a very good essay about the Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
holiday in particular that was written by Sam Francis shortly after this became a federal holiday in the mid-1980s. | ||
Because, you know, I'm 21 years old, and for my whole life, Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day was, like, a thing. | ||
You know, obviously it was a holiday, but also it was a big deal. | ||
And while I was growing up, it was all over in schools, it was all over in media. | ||
I mean, this kind of stuff was shoved down our throats from the time I was 5 years old. | ||
But, it's actually a somewhat recent holiday. | ||
It's only about 40 years old. | ||
And I'll read you. | ||
This is a short excerpt from Sam Francis's article. | ||
This is about the Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
holiday when it passed through the Senate. | ||
I think this was around 1985 or 1986. | ||
Francis writes, quote, the country already observed no fewer than nine legal public holidays. | ||
New Year's Day, President's Day, as it is officially known, or Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Veterans Day, Columbus Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas. | ||
With the exception of Washington's Birthday and Christmas, not one of these holidays celebrates a single individual. | ||
So you've got nine federal holidays before MLK Junior Day, In the 1980s, and only two of them, Washington's birthday and the birth of Jesus Christ celebrate a single person. | ||
He says, as Senator East argued, to establish a special holiday just for King was to, quote, elevate him to the same level as the father of our country and above the many other Americans whose achievements approach Washington's. | ||
Whatever King's own accomplishments, few would go so far as to claim that they equaled or exceeded those of many other major statesmen, soldiers, and creative minds of American history, which is actually a very interesting way to think about it. | ||
A lot of people don't think about it this way, but you've got two federal holidays that celebrate one person. | ||
It's Christ, it's the Son of God, and it's the Father of our country. | ||
We don't have a federal holiday for You know, the Wright Brothers, for the astronauts, inventors, other presidents, other statesmen, anybody else. | ||
These are the only two. | ||
The father of our country, Jesus Christ, and now Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
This radical agitator, this social revolutionary, a communist and a pervert, Who fought for what? | ||
Ostensibly legal rights for blacks, but also a lot of other things. | ||
But also for big government, also for some other very foreign, radical ideas. | ||
And the question is, is that legitimate? | ||
Does that make a lot of sense? | ||
Are we okay with elevating him to the same level in the minds of the collective consciousness as Jesus Christ and George Washington for our nation? | ||
I don't think so. | ||
The article goes on, this is a little bit later on, Francis writes, quote, by placing King and therefore his own radical ideology of social transformation and reconstruction into the central pantheon of American history, the King holiday provides a green light by which the revolutionary process of transformation and reconstruction can charge full speed ahead. | ||
Moreover, by placing King at the center of the American national pantheon, the holiday also serves to undermine any argument against the revolutionary political agenda that it has come to symbolize. | ||
Having promoted or accepted the symbol of the new dogma as a defining, perhaps THE defining icon of the American political order, those who oppose the revolutionary agenda the symbol represents have little ground to resist that agenda. | ||
So in other words, Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
represents progressivism. | ||
He represents leftism. | ||
You know, everything that was fulfilled in Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
by Barack Obama, by, to a much lesser extent, people like Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders or whoever else, Maybe to a greater extent. | ||
All of this is built on top of this holiday, the deification, the elevation of Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
to that level. | ||
They are the fulfillment of Martin Luther King Jr.' 's agenda. | ||
And the question is, once you have put Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
on that level, and it might seem like a small thing, it's a lot like the Charlottesville statues or the Confederate monuments or whatever, you know, a lot of people might think it's a trivial thing to talk about federal holidays and to talk about statues and Flags and ornamentation and things like that, but it's not trivial at all. | ||
It's not just decorations. | ||
It's not just a day that you take off work. | ||
When you make somebody the center of a federal holiday or you erect a statue of somebody, then there's that ridiculous statue of Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
in Washington DC. | ||
What that communicates is they represent a fundamental part of that country or its values. | ||
That's something that obviously casts a long shadow over the nation It's politics, it's politicians, it's policies, it's culture, it's customs, schools in the minds of school children. | ||
It's a very important thing. | ||
And so when you put Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
on that level, you have thus enshrined all that he represents. | ||
All these toxic, evil ideas which have created terrible things in the last century. | ||
You know, a lot of people were on board with Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
when he said, oh, we should all eat at the same lunch counter and so on. | ||
But the fulfillment of these ideas ends in the drag queen shows and drag queen story times and, you know, a lot of the anti-white resentment that you see in the media and the kneeling for the national anthem and all the other racial grievance and animus. | ||
That all comes from Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
And we have enshrined that within the, as Sam Francis calls it, the American pantheon of heroes. | ||
He is one of the, or perhaps the defining figures of our entire country. | ||
What ground do you stand on in opposing these things if Martin Luther King Jr. has become synonymous with America? | ||
Perhaps more so than the founding fathers, or even, I would say to this day, Jesus Christ. | ||
And you look at the mainstream media, and I think you would probably have an easier time saying nasty things about Jesus Christ, I KNOW you'd have an easier time saying nasty things about George Washington, than you would about Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
And what does that tell you? | ||
You know, so that's, I think, a lot of food for thought about this holiday. | ||
It really is something to reflect on. | ||
And in a broader sense, it's something to think about when we talk about holidays, statues, all these other things, that these things really do matter. | ||
And particularly if the elites and the globalists are trying to tell us that our nation is simply a collection of ideas, that America is a culture, and a very superficial and cosmetic culture at that, That America is the state, or what the state chooses to promote. | ||
If that's supposed to be our conception of America, then these things actually matter a lot more than, right? | ||
If we're supposed to believe that America is simply this creedal identity, or maybe a cultural identity, that you could put on like clothes, that you could put on like a hat, or a mask, or a coat, or something like that, that anybody can come here and adopt it, well we should make damn sure that it's the good culture, a right culture, right? | ||
That these things, we treat them with a little bit more import than I think a lot of people do. | ||
So that's Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day. | ||
Sucks! | ||
I will not celebrate this holiday. | ||
Fuck Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
He was a disgusting pervert. | ||
This guy was okay with rape. | ||
Do you guys read all the FBI papers that came out about him last summer? | ||
I'll read just very briefly. | ||
This is from Politico. | ||
It says, David Garrow, who was a biographer of King, reported in the conservative British magazine Standpoint on explosive material he found in recently published FBI documents. | ||
The most shocking claim is that King was present in a hotel room when a friend of his, Baltimore pastor Logan Kearse, raped a woman who resisted participating in unspecified sexual acts. | ||
The FBI agent who surveilled the room asserted that King looked on, laughed, and offered advice. | ||
Other allegations included that King's philandering, long known to be extensive, was even more rampant than historians knew, that King took part in group sex, that King may have fathered a child with one of his mistresses, and less pururently, that King continued taking money from his one-time ally Stanley Levison, a Communist Party member, even after he was supposed to have broken off ties. | ||
So, this guy was a disgusting, degenerate, radical loser who should not have a holiday, who should not have a monument, who people should not look up to in any way, shape, or form. | ||
Certainly not to the extent that we do now. | ||
I will not be participating in the celebration. | ||
I will not be participating in this. | ||
That's why I'm not taking a day off! | ||
Instead, I think we should all choose to celebrate Robert E. Lee Day every January 19th. | ||
It's supposed to be Robert E. Lee Day. | ||
I would, any year, take that holiday over this one. | ||
This guy was a loser. | ||
So, that's MLK Day. | ||
I hope you guys feel similarly. | ||
I would be careful, but I would be careful. | ||
Probably not prudent to bring that up at work. | ||
Probably not prudent to bring that up in school. | ||
I was responding to an email written to me by a young person recently where they were saying, you know, should I should I red pill my teachers? | ||
Should I red pill my students? | ||
Something like this definitely something you're not gonna want to bring up tomorrow if you're going back to school or going back to work on Tuesday and you walk through the door. | ||
Oh, hey, how was your three-day weekend? | ||
Well, I'll tell you something. | ||
I hate this guy. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Not a good idea. | ||
So, Anyway, that's Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day. | ||
Every year we kind of have the same thing. | ||
Every year it's the same. | ||
But I'll keep saying it until we don't have this federal holiday anymore. | ||
Because I'm sick of it. | ||
I'm sick of hearing about this guy. | ||
And I was never on board with it, even when I was a kid. | ||
I was always like, really? | ||
This guy, he's on that level? | ||
He gave a speech. | ||
He participated in some protests. | ||
He's better than Patton. | ||
He's better than Eisenhower. | ||
He's better than... | ||
Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin. | ||
He's better than all these other people. | ||
Philosophers, inventors, writers, composers. | ||
What did this guy do? | ||
Civil rights? | ||
Seriously? | ||
How did that work out anyway? | ||
So that's Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
I spit. | ||
I spit on this holiday. | ||
No good. | ||
Not okay. | ||
And you know what? | ||
I feel like now that I've gotten my first Community Guidelines strike on YouTube, I'm unchained. | ||
I'm totally unloosed. | ||
I'm like Joker. | ||
I got nothing left to lose. | ||
My life is nothing but a comedy. | ||
So, bring it on! | ||
Fuck your holiday! | ||
Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
is gay, and a degenerate, and a rapist, and a communist. | ||
I will not celebrate. | ||
And I will not respect him. | ||
I have no respect for him. | ||
So, that's the holiday, but moving right along... moving right along... | ||
We're gonna talk about this Virginia gun rally. | ||
You know, like I said, I was, you know, somewhat have mixed feelings about the outcome of this. | ||
On the one hand, my position on this rally was there was a strong possibility, I thought, for there to be like a false flag, for this to go south, for the feds to do some weird stuff today. | ||
But on the other hand, I also had this intuition that, you know, nothing ever really happens. | ||
For all that we've seen tensions rise anywhere, domestically, internationally, throughout the world for the past three years, nothing really has gone off. | ||
Nobody really goes off. | ||
So, on the one hand, I thought, you know, there's probably a strong possibility that something could happen, and it's better to be safe than sorry to stay away from an event like this. | ||
But, on the other hand, probably nothing's gonna come of it. | ||
Nothing ever really comes of these things. | ||
Except for when I was there. | ||
You know, when I was at Charlottesville, well, somebody dies. | ||
When I'm not in India, when I'm not in Iran, when I'm not in Richmond, well, all of a sudden everything's okay, right? | ||
So, we've been going over this for kind of a long time on this show, this situation in Virginia. | ||
We talked a lot about this in December, we talked about it last week, and it sort of set the stage for you. | ||
I'm not going to spell out the whole thing again, because we've done a few shows on this situation, but basically the backdrop is for about a year, the Virginia state government has been pushing very aggressively for gun control. | ||
They've been pushing for a semi-automatic weapons ban in particular which has actually been passed in a lot of states but it's been meeting a lot of resistance in Virginia because Virginia is actually a pretty conservative state even though they've brought in a lot of immigrants and there are a lot of like internal immigrants from like DC and the northern Virginia area and so on. | ||
There's a lot of like yuppie types that are coming in. | ||
In spite of a lot of the demographic change that's been happening within Virginia, it still is a very conservative, red, traditional Southern state. | ||
And as such, a lot of those people love the Second Amendment, and they love guns. | ||
And it's actually, you'll find this in a lot of states, by the way. | ||
It's not just Virginia. | ||
Vermont is very much like this. | ||
Oregon, Washington, where you have maybe a big city or a few big cities that cause a state to go blue. | ||
This happens in all the aforementioned states, but the rest of the state is rural, culturally conservative, white, so on. | ||
So it's actually more common than you might think. | ||
So Governor Ralph Northam has been pushing very hard for semi-auto weapons ban, high capacity magazine ban, and he's been a lot different than other governors or other state legislatures have He has suggested a semi-automatic weapons ban. | ||
Recently in November, he gained control of the Senate, of the House of Delegates, in the Virginia state government, and he was ready to push full speed ahead for the semi-auto weapons ban. | ||
And a lot of sheriffs and municipal governments in Virginia in Virginia said that they would resist the laws. | ||
They said that if Governor Ralph Northam signs a semi-auto weapons ban, the sheriffs, the police, the municipal governments in different counties would not enforce the laws because they see those laws as unconstitutional, not just at the federal level, but also even at the state level for the Virginia state constitution. | ||
In response to that, Governor Ralph Northam said, well, if the police don't enforce these laws, the National Guard will. | ||
The National Guard will arrest the police and arrest the sheriffs and they'll go door-to-door taking guns. | ||
And this, I think, is what created this current situation. | ||
I think this is why tensions are much higher in Virginia and why this has turned into such a scandal in Virginia in particular than in other states because the semi-auto weapons ban has already happened. | ||
In like dozens of states. | ||
You can see many cities, many states. | ||
It's nothing new to have these kinds of vast, far-reaching, you could say overreaching gun control laws being passed in the major cities and liberal states. | ||
But it's really only popped off, it's really only become a huge wedge issue in Virginia. | ||
And not like it's not a wedge issue in other places, but you don't see the kind of popular resistance and even resistance from sheriffs and police and municipal governments, because I don't think you see a lot of the same rhetoric, which is pretty explicit from Ralph Northam and very militant and aggressive. | ||
You know, using the National Guard to undercut the authority of local governments. | ||
I don't think I've heard that from a lot of other governors or state legislatures or even, you know, national democratic politicians. | ||
You know, politicians at the national level. | ||
So I think that's why it's gotten so bad. | ||
So in response to this push for gun control, there was a huge rally on Monday today, this morning, in the state capitol in Richmond. | ||
And I'll read you an article about the rally. | ||
A lot of people expected it to turn violent. | ||
Governor Ralph Northam declared a state of emergency and he came up with all this nonsense. | ||
He said he'd received intelligence that, like, white supremacist militias were gonna Use the event to siege the government and go after politicians and other bad actors, white supremacists, neo-Nazis, white nationalists. | ||
We're going to converge on the Capitol and I don't know, they'd be killing people or something. | ||
And that's that's literally what he said he received intelligence that there are these threats being made so he declared a state of emergency and the media ate this up and they ran with the story for the past week that people are terrified and people are fleeing Richmond and there was one socialist politician in the House of Delegates. | ||
He's actually like a part of the Socialist Party. | ||
Democratic Socialist, I think, who said he was going to flee the Capitol and carry out his functions as a delegate or a state senator in an undisclosed location because he had received threats against his life, you know? | ||
So the media ran with this and made it out like It's Civil War time. | ||
It's revolution. | ||
There's all kinds of AstroTurf content I saw online about this kind of thing, and it did not turn out like that at all. | ||
25,000 people showed up, roughly about that number, showed up at the state capitol to protest, and there was one single arrest, and it wasn't even like a big deal or anything. | ||
The rally came, it went without incident. | ||
They even picked up their garbage. | ||
There were videos I saw on social media of a lot of the organizers and rally-goers passing around garbage bags and people picking stuff up off the streets. | ||
Reporters on the ground said that after the rally ended, the streets were spotless, which, if you've ever been to, like, any kind of rally, you know is not the case. | ||
Any rally. | ||
Left-wing, right-wing, peaceful, violent. | ||
You know, I've gone to Trump rallies. | ||
I've gone to, you know, different events outside. | ||
And invariably, always, if you have lots of people, there's shit everywhere. | ||
Everybody knows that. | ||
And I guess this one, despite having 25,000 armed people, there wasn't even any garbage. | ||
There wasn't any stuff on the streets. | ||
And there was one arrest, which is incredible. | ||
You know, you might say miraculous. | ||
So, I'll read you a little report about this from Fox News. | ||
It's a gun rights rally in Richmond that brought thousands of people from across the country to protest a push by Virginia Democrats for comprehensive gun control, ended peacefully and without any major incidents. | ||
Threats of violence had escalated in the days leading up to Monday's demonstration, following reports that white supremacists, armed militia, and other extremist groups were planning to attend. | ||
Which, it's amazing, by the way, how everybody got that intelligence, but I guess none of that materialized. | ||
It's interesting how that works. | ||
It reminds me a lot of Joker, actually. | ||
Remember when the Joker movie came out and the media ran with the story about terrorist threats and incel violence and so on, and it turned out all that intelligence was, like, just a lie? | ||
Seems to be a pattern of that with a lot of different things, a lot of different areas. | ||
Anyway. | ||
It says, Governor Ralph Northam had declared a state of emergency late last week and beefed up security around the Capitol. | ||
In a statement on Monday, he said, quote, thousands of people came to Richmond to make their voices heard. | ||
Today showed that when people disagree, they can do so peacefully. | ||
The issues before us evoke strong emotions and progress is often difficult. | ||
I will continue to listen to the voices of Virginians and I will continue to do everything in my power to keep our Commonwealth safe. | ||
Which is a really big departure from what he was saying over the weekend, which is about militias and white nationalists and violence and terrorist threats. | ||
And now he's saying, well, everybody came together peacefully. | ||
Yeah, that's fascinating. | ||
No thanks to you. | ||
The Joint Information Center made up of representatives from the Capitol, Richmond, and Virginia State Police estimated that 6,000 people were allowed into a fenced-in area of Capitol Square. | ||
and they estimated that another 16,000 were outside the gates. | ||
The event organizers said many more had turned out. | ||
Many of those outside the barrier carried long firearms and wore bright orange stickers that read, Guns Save Lives. | ||
Capitol Police said a 21-year-old woman had been arrested and charged with one felony count of wearing a mask in public. | ||
Law enforcement said they warned the woman twice to remove a bandana covering her face, but she had refused. | ||
And of course it is a femoid who sort of ruined it. | ||
We could have said about this rally that there was no arrests, there was no police activity, but of course we had one 21-year-old girl who didn't want to take off her mask, we have to say. | ||
Well, there was only one arrest, but it wasn't a big deal. | ||
So really, I mean virtually no arrests, nothing significant. | ||
It's not like anyone was arrested for violence or anyone was arrested for fighting or anything like that. | ||
It was really a minor thing. | ||
It says, last week, three gun control-related bills advanced in Virginia's General Assembly, setting the stage for a contentious showdown between gun rights advocates and the Democratic lawmakers who campaigned on bringing changes to the state following last year's mass shooting at a Virginia Beach municipal complex. | ||
In a symbolic sign of defiance, more than 100 municipalities in Virginia have designated themselves as a safe haven or sanctuary for the Second Amendment law. | ||
Lawmakers and authorities in those areas have said they will refuse to enforce new gun control laws. | ||
The Virginia legislature passes. | ||
So, that's the rally today. | ||
You know, again, it's great. | ||
I'm very happy that nobody got hurt. | ||
I put out a tweet last night and I told people that I had a very bad feeling about the rally today. | ||
You know, I said that it's shaping up to look a lot like Charlottesville. | ||
It could turn into a setup or something like that, or it could turn violent. | ||
And you know, by the way, I stand by that. | ||
I think it's very interesting that the rally turned out very peacefully, but a lot of the components that would have otherwise been in place, which would have made it turn bad, were not there for some reason. | ||
You know, for example, I heard that this group called the B.A.S.E. | ||
was supposed to be there. | ||
The B.A.S.E. | ||
is like some Atomwaffen offshoot who apparently a couple of people got arrested in Virginia last week for planning something for this rally, so I guess they were not present. | ||
You know, in other words, none of the costumed neo-Nazi feds were there. | ||
I saw one video of a guy saying we should start killing people and he immediately was like pointed out and shamed and People told him to get the hell out of here. | ||
But so none of the costumed freaks were there. | ||
None of the feds were there. | ||
You know, I remember I was at Charlottesville and I didn't see a single like Nazi flag or anything like that. | ||
But of course, we all seen the picture of the one guy who was, you know, the Fed that nobody could identify, who had the folded up, you know, crinkled, creased Nazi slastica flag that everybody saw, right? | ||
And so none of that element was there. | ||
There were no radical extreme groups, no Feds, nothing like that. | ||
I also heard that Antifa did not show up. | ||
They had said they were coming. | ||
They had said all throughout last week that Richmond Antifa and Virginia Antifa were showing up to protest actually gun control, that they were going to show up and protest alongside the Trump supporters and the Second Amendment people, whatever, you know, whoever the group was that organized this, they were going to come and protest gun control against the whoever the group was that organized this, they were going to They didn't show up. | ||
I saw some other posts that were a little bit more threatening from Antifa. | ||
They were called back, I guess. | ||
They didn't come. | ||
Right? | ||
And also people like Spencer didn't show up. | ||
I think Richard Spencer said he was going to show up. | ||
You know, I guess that goes along with costumed people and feds and so on. | ||
So a lot of the elements that I was expecting to be in place and that I think a lot of people were led to believe would be in place for this rally, for some reason, suspiciously, were not there. | ||
And the only people that were there were a lot of like boomers and QAnon types and Trump supporters and even like libertarians and so on. | ||
So because a lot of these elements were not there I think for that reason it was peaceful and also was good optics. | ||
So I think overall the rally was a big success. | ||
Now that said I think generally speaking when it comes to these rallies it's better to be safe than sorry. | ||
I'm very happy that nobody got hurt today and it turned out good and you know it was a good look and it was peaceful because this is a huge blow to a lot of left-wing narratives about guns and gun violence and right-wingers and so on. | ||
But that's not always the case. | ||
I think things like this are actually the exception and not the norm. | ||
You know generally speaking when I hear about a huge rally Thousands and thousands of people showing up with firearms to protest gun control. | ||
To me, a red flag goes off in my head that says, well, that seems like a very great opportunity for some kind of controlled opposition, some kind of, you know, patsy, somebody like that, a federal agent, an extremist, whoever, to take advantage of the situation. | ||
And, you know, then it's not good. | ||
Then it's not such a relief. | ||
So I would say generally it's better to be safe than sorry at these kinds of open air public events like this, particularly when it involves firearms. | ||
But with this one, it was a big success. | ||
I think they pulled it off well. | ||
They planned it well. | ||
The few actors that might have been off or bad or whoever, that one guy who I mentioned earlier, you know, they bullied him right out of there. | ||
So I think it went very well. | ||
I'll say that it is interesting to see 25,000 people show up with firearms to protest gun control and nobody gets hurt. | ||
Which is a huge blow to the narrative which surrounds the gun control push from the Democrats, which is that more guns equals violence. | ||
That you would feel the idea that they want you to have is that if a bunch of white, right-wing Republicans carrying guns, thousands of them, show up to a place, well you should be afraid. | ||
That's supposedly the threat. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
Whenever it's a mass shooting, whenever it's something like that, they want you to believe that what you should be afraid of when you go to a public place, or if you're walking around late at night and you see somebody, a silhouette, what you should be afraid of is a white Trump supporter, a white gun owner, a white male, something like that. | ||
Well here today I'm told that there was basically nothing but white Republican men with firearms and yet there was no violence. | ||
And that's a rarity for really like any mass event like that. | ||
Any event where you have thousands of people, a concert, a sports game, a sports contest, anything like that, usually you have some kind of an incident, some kind of a fight or an arrest or something like that. | ||
And political events more than anything, especially in this day and age, in this climate, you would expect there would be counter-protests and clashes between protesters. | ||
You see what happens in Portland, Oregon like every other week. | ||
And yet there was nothing. | ||
I don't even think there were any counter-protesters. | ||
And you want to know why that is? | ||
Because guns actually make people safe. | ||
And moreover, guns in the hands of the right people make things safe. | ||
You know, I think it's an interesting thought experiment. | ||
I was thinking about this today. | ||
If I went to this Richmond event, and excluding a lot of the political things going on, if you told me that there was supposed to be an event where there were thousands of white Republicans carrying firearms, and there was like not a threat of subversion or infiltration, I would feel very safe. | ||
I think anybody who watches this show would. | ||
Excluding the possibility of some kind of weird false flag thing, I think anybody would feel safe around white gun owners. | ||
For example, at a gun show or a rally like this or anything like that. | ||
Well, what if they weren't white? | ||
You know, then I think to myself, well, what if they weren't white? | ||
You know, for example, a lot of people will say, well, actually guns make people safer. | ||
That's part, that's part of the story. | ||
That is part of the equation. | ||
But it's not the whole story. | ||
It's not the whole story. | ||
You might feel safer because people have firearms and that means nobody's going to try anything. | ||
So you might feel safe going to an anti-gun control rally, 25,000 people armed to the teeth. | ||
And you would feel fine because of the demographic that showed up today. | ||
But what if you drove out to, oh I don't know, Inglewood in Chicago. | ||
Or what if you drove out to Ferguson, Missouri or Baltimore, Maryland and you had 20,000 urban youth with handguns in the air and bandanas and you know things like that. | ||
Would you feel safe there? | ||
Would you feel safe there? | ||
Would you have that same comforting, reassuring feeling of, you know, we were bashing the left-wing narrative about the relationship between guns and violence, that I feel safe, you know, there's going to be a very fatherly, you know, old man with a beard and a MAGA hat on protecting me. | ||
I mean, are you gonna feel the same way that you do with that if you drove down to Ferguson and you had, let's say, even 10,000 people with handguns as opposed to 20,000 people with rifles? | ||
And they were all open carrying, in their hands, in the air, pants around, pants a little bit around their waist. | ||
Would you feel safe there? | ||
I don't, I don't know if I would. | ||
I don't know if I would. | ||
If somebody gave me an offer and said, you know, do you want to go to Richmond? | ||
Well, I'd say, I think we should be very careful. | ||
I think we should be alert and aware, but we'll probably be fine. | ||
We don't have to worry about the protesters. | ||
We might have to worry about counter protesters or police or false flag, but, you know, the MAGA people that are showing up are going to be fine. | ||
Now, if somebody offered me a chance to go down to Ferguson, Missouri, I would say, no! | ||
No! | ||
No thank you! | ||
Bad idea! | ||
You know, I would immediately reach for my pockets. | ||
If I had my phone, I would grip it tighter. | ||
I'd be like, no! | ||
No thank you! | ||
Gonna take a pass on that one. | ||
You know, Baltimore, Chicago, it's all the same story. | ||
The Bronx, I would say, no thank you. | ||
I would feel a lot less safe. | ||
I would feel less safe in Baltimore than I would if I was in Iraq, by the way. | ||
I would sooner take a trip to Kabul, Afghanistan. | ||
I would take my chances than go to a similar situation that you had in Richmond, but if it took place in Ferguson. | ||
Right? | ||
I mean, does anybody feel similarly? | ||
So, all of that is to say, there's a lot more to the story than firearms. | ||
Because a lot of people I see are peddling that narrative They're saying, well look, this just goes to show that we have a lot of guns here and a lot of white men and, you know, that proves that guns don't equal violence. | ||
And that's true, but it's also part of the equation. | ||
What it's really more about is, as always, demographics. | ||
It's really, as everything is, about demographics. | ||
You know, the reason that there was no violence today is, you know, not because... I mean, maybe partially because there were firearms and that means that it was secure and if anybody tried any funny business, I mean, they probably wouldn't last long. | ||
That's part of it. | ||
But it's also because the people that showed up were not there to do violence. | ||
And if agitated or anything like that, they would not become violent. | ||
You know, they went, they followed the rules, they were orderly, they were respectful, they did not come there with ill will, and if they were antagonized, they didn't lash out, if provoked, you know, they exercised impulse control and things like that. | ||
You know, that is why their rally went off without a hitch. | ||
So all of this is to say I'm not against the Second Amendment. | ||
I do think guns make people safer and everything else. | ||
But I also think it's very important. | ||
Let's not forget that it's a very specific and particular rally that you had today. | ||
It wasn't just about guns. | ||
It was a cultural expression. | ||
And more on this in a moment, but the people that showed up for Virginia, guns is a part of our American culture, obviously. | ||
It's part of the Constitution. | ||
It's part of, you know, the idea of having a right to defend your property, a right to defend your life, maybe even to defend yourself against the government, ultimately. | ||
That is very much a culturally thing. | ||
It's a very much culturally white, rural, conservative idea. | ||
The rally was basically an expression of that culture, in a way. | ||
Now, I will say some of the flaws of this rally. | ||
You know, this is my other conclusion. | ||
Conclusion number one is like, yeah, it's a relief. | ||
Nobody got hurt. | ||
Yeah, left-wing narrative about guns blown out and all of that. | ||
But, you know, here's where I say we have to think really long and hard about a rally like this. | ||
People came out today and they protested gun control. | ||
And they brought their guns and they said you're not going to take our guns. | ||
But I also saw a lot of signs at this rally. | ||
Signs that said things like, I want to use my AR-15 to protect my gay wedding and my marijuana farm. | ||
And I saw a lot of signs about how guns are needed to protect minorities, and guns are needed to protect homosexuals, and guns are needed to protect Democrats, and all this kind of stuff. | ||
And I'm sure maybe you've seen the same thing. | ||
A lot of Libertarians and whatever else, a lot of people invoked the name of Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
today, and so on. | ||
And the question to me is, why do we have the Second Amendment? | ||
Why do we care about the government taking our guns away? | ||
Because it seems to me like the people that showed up at this rally today, the guns are an end in themselves for them. | ||
Why do they need firearms? | ||
To keep the government from taking their firearms. | ||
But it really doesn't seem to go much further beyond that. | ||
And this is something I've said about the gun rights movement for a long time. | ||
It's a criticism. | ||
Which is to say that for a long time the idea was that the guns would protect our way of life. | ||
The guns would guarantee that we got to live a life that we wanted to live. | ||
That we'd have a safe, virtuous, prosperous society where we had self-ownership. | ||
And now it seems like the guns have become the ends in themselves, and it's really not about protecting our way of life, and it's really not about protecting anything other than the guns themselves, and at that point it's basically a tautology, because while all kinds of things have changed over the last 50 years, people have kept their guns. | ||
You know, our schools have changed, colleges have changed, the media has changed, our way of life has changed, the culture has changed, people don't speak English anymore, our communities have transformed, the economy has transformed, and so on. | ||
The guns have remained. | ||
So then what end, what really is the purpose of the guns if all of these things are being stripped away and taken and pillaged and plundered, but the guns remain? | ||
What exactly are they protecting? | ||
To me, that's the big question. | ||
You know, when I see signs from these libertarians that say, well, we're going to use our guns to protect our marijuana farms, and we're going to use our guns to protect our gay marriage, and we're going to use our guns to protect our guns, I'm thinking, well, isn't that kind of missing the point? | ||
Isn't that kind of completely missing the point for why we have firearms? | ||
And it's sort of like a subtle nuance. | ||
I'm not saying that gun rights are not important. | ||
I'm very much in favor of gun rights and I'm very much in favor of the Second Amendment. | ||
And I don't think rallies like this are useless. | ||
But there has been a very subtle but significant change. | ||
I saw this on Twitter today. | ||
It's a very good take. | ||
I forget who posted it. | ||
I have to give credit. | ||
I forget who posted it. | ||
But the gun rights idea has gone from we need guns to protect our way of life from the government or from hostile forces or whoever, to guns should be used for self-defense. | ||
That's a very subtle difference. | ||
And I'll tell you what I mean by this. | ||
Our way of life has already been transformed. | ||
I don't need to tell you this. | ||
The guns did not protect us because people did not use them. | ||
You know, the government was allowed, and other hostile actors, you know, non-government or higher than government, the lobbyists, the media, so on, were able to peacefully walk through the institutions and change them according to their values. | ||
You know, immigrants, illegal immigrants, demographic changes were allowed to take place peacefully, without any resistance. | ||
Nobody put up a fight. | ||
Or if they did, it was peaceful, it was, you know, impotent, so to speak. | ||
So that fight is basically over. | ||
The guns did not protect our way of life. | ||
But as our way of life continues to change over the next generation, over the next couple of decades, pretty soon our property and our people will be under attack. | ||
And I've talked about this before, the anti-white rhetoric that you hear in media, the anti-white rhetoric that you see in the curriculum in our schools, anti-white racial grievance politics by different minority voting groups, which Pretty soon it'll become the majority. | ||
Eventually that will turn into anti-white policies. | ||
And anti-white policies will turn into anti-white action. | ||
You know, re-appropriating anti-white property, re-appropriating anti-white land, farms, taking away white people's rights, things like this. | ||
You'll see intimidation, harassment. | ||
Firearms will become essential to protecting us when we become a minority. | ||
I'm a firm believer in this. | ||
It doesn't take a great imagination to see where all that anti-white stuff, all these ideas are headed, where the trajectory is going. | ||
Right now, it's very much something that you can overlook, or you might have the luxury of ignoring it. | ||
When these people are in the minority. | ||
But when all these people are in the majority and they've got a majority control over the government indefinitely, well then pretty soon it'll become much more serious and it'll become a much more imminent threat to you personally in your daily life. | ||
And at that point we will have to defend our person from being attacked. | ||
We'll have to defend our property from being taken. | ||
And that is where the gun rights will come in handy. | ||
But I think it's a very important point to make that You know, the guns are not going to protect us from a lot of these things. | ||
Guns are not all they're cracked up to be. | ||
They are the last line of defense. | ||
And people don't realize what that means. | ||
It means that it's a last resort, like when we're about to all get our heads chopped off, like in 50 or 100 years, when some kind of, you know, the equivalent of like whatever party is running South Africa comes into power in the United States, And they say, okay, we're rounding up all the white people today. | ||
You know, whoever it is, you'll have some ridiculous, I don't know, maybe it'll be a Jewish president or a black president or a Chinese president or something. | ||
Whoever it is, we'll come on the airwaves, we'll come on the state-run media, and we'll say, okay, today we're rounding up all the white people, today we're, you know, taking all their land and they're all going to go to jail. | ||
Well then that will be our last line of defense. | ||
That is when probably everybody will be totally comfortable making the cost-benefit judgment to use firearms against the state or against other organized political actors or something like that. | ||
But up until that point, we need other tools! | ||
Up until that point, there must be resistance. | ||
We don't want to get to the last line of defense. | ||
So yeah, I mean, keeping your guns is useful for when that day comes, but we don't want that day to come! | ||
How can we prevent that day from coming? | ||
Well, we could get more involved. | ||
We could get more active, become more aware of what's happening, harden ourselves in terms of our moral conviction, in terms of our political will to resist these changes as they come in local government and national government. | ||
But it's such an important point to make that all this, you know, you'll have to pry it from my cold dead hands. | ||
Well, they will! | ||
They're going to! | ||
That's probably when all these boomers will get comfortable using the guns is when it's too late. | ||
That's the point. | ||
So I see this rally and it's great. | ||
Don't get me wrong. | ||
It's great. | ||
It's good optics. | ||
It proves that, you know, right-wing, white, armed people are not the problem in the country. | ||
They're just not. | ||
They're not the problem with crime. | ||
They're not the problem with terrorism. | ||
They're not the problem, really, with anything else, you know? | ||
So that was great. | ||
It also is a message to Governor Ralph Northam and gun control people that we are going to rise up if they try to take our firearms. | ||
It says that we will defend our right to use our firearms. | ||
But also, we have to remember about this conversation, the Second Amendment is not an end in itself. | ||
It is important, it is essential, it is necessary. | ||
Because it could end up, we could end up as a people in a situation where we will have to use that kind of kinetic force to defend our families and to defend our lives from whatever. | ||
From gangs, from other militias, from the government, you know, whatever it might be. | ||
Our property, But we also have to keep in mind that that should be the last line of defense. | ||
And, you know, intrinsic in that name is, if that's the last line of defense, there should be other lines of defense that come before that. | ||
And that means that other things that come down, which are far more pernicious, far more evil and impactful than gun control, should be resisted just as vigorously as gun control. | ||
You know, whenever they talk about gun control, everybody's out there calling the representatives and the NRA is mobilizing. | ||
Do we see that when they change the curriculum in the schools? | ||
Do we see that when the media does a lot of what they do? | ||
Do we see that when all kinds of other policies come down from the government? | ||
Environmental regulations, when they're putting things in the water. | ||
Do we see that when they're putting things in the food, in the air? | ||
Do we see that with immigration? | ||
unidentified
|
Hello? | |
Do we see anything like that when we've got millions of people pouring into the country illegally, legally, expired visas, or even, you know, legitimate visas? | ||
Do we see anything like that with the demographic transformation of the country? | ||
No? | ||
Shouldn't that happen? | ||
So that's my big question, is boomers invariably will line up to defend the gun rights, but what really is the end game there? | ||
What really are you trying to achieve other than to collect guns? | ||
I'm sorry, but if for the next 100 years all we as a people do is collect guns, well our children become trans and our communities are destroyed and The factories and manufacturing plants are ripped out of the heartland of the country, and our workplaces, schools, and neighborhoods are invaded, and our children are taken from us in just about every way. | ||
If all of that happens while we're collecting guns, that's a failure! | ||
That's a big failure! | ||
And, you know, maybe we'll have our last stand, but that'll be it. | ||
Maybe we'll have our last stand when they come for the old white guy and they finally disarm the white man because that's, like, the last thing they need to do before they have complete and total and ubiquitous control, totalitarian control over the Earth, the global government, whatever. | ||
But it'll be too late at that point. | ||
So I see this rally today. | ||
It's good. | ||
It's a start. | ||
It's great. | ||
It's necessary. | ||
It's necessary to have the firearms, ultimately. | ||
But let's have a little bit of this enthusiasm when it comes to other issues. | ||
Let's have all this same enthusiasm and more when it comes to immigration, when it comes to foreign wars, when it comes to free trade, because all that stuff doesn't really seem to get people out of the house. | ||
And all that stuff, people don't even want to think the wrong thing or say the wrong thing because they'll be called racist. | ||
Seriously? | ||
So we have to take that same will, same enthusiasm, the funding, the organization, and let's apply it to some of these other means of defense. | ||
Some of these other red lines have to start being drawn. | ||
If the only red line is, you'll have to take our guns, you'll have to kill us to take our guns, well, that is our future. | ||
It will become a self-fulfilling prophecy. | ||
So that's Richmond, that's Virginia. | ||
We're gonna move on though. | ||
We're gonna move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying on DLive and through Entropy. | ||
We'll see how the Entropy system is working and, you know, if people are having trouble with that, then we'll read what's going on on DLive too. | ||
But yeah, those are my feelings about Virginia. | ||
Every time I see the gun control stuff, I just like shake my head. | ||
I'm like, no! | ||
The boomers, they do, they cling to their firearms, but they do not cling to their children! | ||
But they do not cling to their own children in the same way! | ||
You know, daughters going off to get lesbian married, that's fine as long as I got my firearm. | ||
Children are going away to school and they're learning about all kinds of other, you know, insane historical Wrong. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Historical wrongs. | ||
You know what I'm talking about. | ||
Historical inaccuracies, fallacies, corrupt, radical ideology, heresy. | ||
They're leaving the church. | ||
They're leaving God. | ||
They're learning sexual perversion. | ||
They're becoming addicted to substances. | ||
Nobody's clinging to that! | ||
Clinging to the firearms. | ||
Communities destroyed, hollowed out. | ||
Economic opportunities going away. | ||
Community centers evaporating. | ||
Nobody's organized. | ||
Nobody speaks the same language. | ||
And nobody's clinging to that! | ||
Even things like the church, abortion, all these other issues, nobody seems to cling to anything. | ||
At least this older generation who will remain unnamed. | ||
They cling to nothing except for the guns. | ||
But why even have them? | ||
But why ultimately then even have them? | ||
I think you get the picture. | ||
It's just sort of insanity that that is the way people think about this. | ||
And I think that maybe is part of the whole equation. | ||
Honestly, you know, if we keep people in a state of complacency, Maybe the guns provide a false sense of security. | ||
Well, as long as I have my firearms, I'm okay. | ||
Well, you can feel that way, but slowly but surely, all around you, enemy forces are consolidating. | ||
You know, it's that World War Z analogy I used last week. | ||
You might be in your little ranch with your firearms, and you might be... Oh, you've got it all. | ||
Ammunition and guns and... | ||
Tactical gear and so on. | ||
And slowly but surely, all around your property, all around your ranch, and maybe increasingly inside your own ranch, you've got the government, you've got immigration, you've got demographic change, you've got all these pernicious changes changing your world. | ||
And even from a tactical perspective, they're growing stronger. | ||
They are growing stronger at your expense. | ||
So anyway, we're gonna move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
It's a very important point to make. | ||
We need these boomers, you know, they get it done, but we need to get it done on other things. | ||
Let's do a rally about immigration. | ||
Let's all go to Texas, let's bring our guns, and let's do a 20,000 people rally against illegal immigration. | ||
Let's go to Silicon Valley and have a 30,000 people rally with firearms against Silicon Valley and tech giants and all that. | ||
Let's go to... I don't know where you would go for this, but maybe everybody goes in their major cities and they protest demographic change in general, legal immigration, replacement of native workers, but they won't do that. | ||
So let's let's but anyway but let's take a look at our super chats as promised i will uh start with the uh let's see i'll start with d live and then i'll see we have on entropy Excuse me, excuse me for sniffling, but the allergy's got me still. | ||
Let's see, I'll start off with our DLive lemons. | ||
We've got A Toilet who says, thoughts on Joe Rogan getting on the show could help. | ||
Getting on a show could help. | ||
Well, that's a very, that's a good idea. | ||
I never thought of that. | ||
Get on, let me get my notebook. | ||
Where's my notebook? | ||
Get on Joe Rogan. | ||
That's a nice thinking. | ||
I didn't think of that before. | ||
You think I should get on Tucker Carlson too or you think that's too much? | ||
You think I should talk to the president? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe I'll schedule that in. | ||
I don't think I'm ready for that. | ||
Maybe in a few months I'll give him a call. | ||
Tell him I'm ready. | ||
Have you ever heard of Joe Rogan? | ||
You might want to get on his show. | ||
Joe Rogan? | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
Yeah, maybe I'll get in touch. | ||
Joe. | ||
Hey, Joe! | ||
Joe, I heard about your show. | ||
I gotta get on. | ||
I think it'd be great for me. | ||
I think it'd be great for us. | ||
I'll tell him. | ||
Ninja says, America first. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Peanut Arbuckle says, I'm leaving the toilet seat up until women get their act together. | ||
Yeah, damn right. | ||
Me too. | ||
Artichokes says, Gun Valley is all white people. | ||
Coincidence? | ||
March for Life is all white people. | ||
Coincidence? | ||
Free speech advocates all white. | ||
Gun control and pro-choice marches aren't diverse. | ||
Why do non-whites not love our Constitution? | ||
unidentified
|
Wow, these are some really great points. | |
Bro, you're like breaking the conditioning. | ||
I never thought of it that way. | ||
Wow! | ||
Wow, you really broke it down for us. | ||
Thank you for the lesson. | ||
Yeah, no, but it's no secret. | ||
If you look at any of the matches, wow. | ||
Happy Monday. | ||
Happy Monday, everybody. | ||
Happy Martin Luther King Jr. | ||
Day, everybody. | ||
Well, it's true. | ||
It's no secret that if you look at any of the polling on this stuff, or the rallies, which are much more practical, like practical knowledge, non-whites do not support anything in the Constitution. | ||
Free speech, gun control, or rather gun rights, anything. | ||
Limited government, states' rights, they don't support any of it. | ||
That's because it's not of them. | ||
All of this stuff is of our people. | ||
The Constitution comes from our people. | ||
Only white people created the Constitution. | ||
Let's just put it that way. | ||
Constitution could not have been created by Arabs. | ||
It could not have been created by Blacks. | ||
Could not have been created by Chinese. | ||
Only, and more specifically, I think, probably only English people could have written the Constitution. | ||
It's that simple. | ||
And beyond that, you know, I think only I think liberalism is something that is European. | ||
Do we see liberalism anywhere else? | ||
And I'm talking like classical liberalism, but really I mean the Enlightenment, rationalism, empiricism, all these things. | ||
Do you see that like really anywhere else? | ||
Do you have liberalism in China? | ||
Individualism? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Do you have that in the Middle East? | ||
Not really. | ||
unidentified
|
Africa? | |
Well, you don't really even have civilization there. | ||
Latin America? | ||
No. | ||
You know, it's something to think about. | ||
That our culture, the so-called creedal identity, cultural identity of the country, it flows from, it proceeds from our people. | ||
And that's not to say that other people can't participate in it to an extent, and maybe can't adapt to it or inherit it to an extent, but it does mean that it says something that, you know, to an extent, a lot of what constitutes the culture | ||
Are things that are determined from like biology or things that are determined from genetics from ancestry from heritage You know, it's it is not a you know, that's that's a sort of the way you phrased it is is kind of cringe But it is true. | ||
It is not a coincidence that All the different countries are the way they are, and they tend to cluster around each other in a racial way and in a cultural way. | ||
Do you know what I mean by that? | ||
Like the Europe, America, Australia, Canada, they all tend to cluster around each other. | ||
They're very similar in their culture, customs, laws, and so on, and they also tend to be that way in terms of biology, too, in terms of genetics. | ||
And the same is true with all the other continents, really. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Bang says, this song gives me hope even on the darkest days. | ||
The America First theme music? | ||
Yeah, I can relate. | ||
Cool Blues says, my favorite. | ||
FTM, Nicole Fuentes is back on YouTube. | ||
That's right. | ||
They can't ban me if I'm trans. | ||
Look, if I say I'm trans, they can't ban me. | ||
So, Cool Blues' thoughts on McDonald's fudge. | ||
Sundaes, pretty good in my opinion. | ||
I love them. | ||
Yeah, McDonald's ice cream, not bad. | ||
Although, I watched that movie The Founder with Michael Keaton. | ||
In the movie, they use, what is it, the ice cream powder to make their milkshakes? | ||
And after that, I was like, I don't know if I want to eat this McDonald's ice cream anymore, if it's from a bag, if it's from a bag of powder. | ||
In the movie, the McDonald's franchisees were losing money because they spent so much money on refrigerating ice cream. | ||
And then Michael P. Keaton, who plays the founder of McDonald's, says, well, we'll just have a powdered, powdered ice cream, like solvent. | ||
Or whatever. | ||
I'm not a chemist. | ||
Do you need a powdered milkshake recipe? | ||
And then we don't have to refrigerate the ice cream. | ||
We'll save money. | ||
But I guess they went back to like frozen. | ||
I guess they went back to real ice cream at some point. | ||
So that makes me feel less bad. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Bank says they didn't write it or read it or read anything. | ||
What, the Constitution? | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Esoteric fiddlers says literally only feds celebrate MLK Day. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Do wagees not celebrate it? | ||
I wouldn't know. | ||
I'm not a wagee, but school children do, okay? | ||
But students do, college students, school children, and you know, so the point still stands. | ||
I didn't know that. | ||
I thought everybody. | ||
How would I know? | ||
How would I know? | ||
I'm not a wagee, so I don't know. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Adam says, you're the best. | ||
Your boss should give you a raise. | ||
I know, right? | ||
Tell me about it. | ||
I am the best. | ||
My boss is pretty great, though. | ||
He takes good care of me. | ||
Leftist Cock and my boss being Beardson. | ||
Leftist Cock says, why is Ben Shapiro so short? | ||
I don't know. | ||
That's a good question. | ||
Probably short parents. | ||
Yak says, wow, nothing happened again. | ||
This is a good thing. | ||
I know. | ||
I'm so glad. | ||
I'm so glad there wasn't, like, all-out Civil War in Virginia today. | ||
That would mean, like, hours and hours of content and coverage from me. | ||
That would mean a whole week of Civil War watch and, you know, thousands of people glued to their screen watching the show and throwing up lemons and super chats. | ||
Good thing nobody got hurt, though. | ||
Nah, that is a joke! | ||
That is a joke, by the way. | ||
I'm kidding when I say that. | ||
Oh, let's see. | ||
Big money ways you throw in some diamonds. | ||
Wow, that's a lot of diamonds, but no message. | ||
But no message, okay. | ||
Big money wage with a Nijigini. | ||
No message. | ||
Thanks bang Nijigini. | ||
No message. | ||
Thank you Boo Radley says imagine watching on YouTube in 2020. | ||
Yeah, I don't know I mean, I think people should watch on both, but I don't really it's up to your preference Gail says eyes and chat for Irish knickers. | ||
Yeah, can we get some eyes and chat for the Irish? | ||
I'm Irish I'm a quarter Irish, but you know really the Irish isn't like a strong Presence, I don't feel in my like or at least it wasn't in my upbringing I almost feel like I'm sort of like incidentally Irish take that for what you will but You know, I feel like yeah, I just feel like that's the case. | ||
I don't know why but But I am but I am a quarter Irish So I guess that's why my my beard is a little bit red if you ever see me in real life my facial hair is sort of light I think for that reason MinnesotaGroper says, seeing Alex Jones ride around Richmond in the armored car was pretty epic. | ||
Yeah, that armored car is very epic. | ||
I want to get one of those for America First, but that's probably way out in the future. | ||
I'm probably not on that level yet. | ||
America First Jews says, happy MLK Day to my favorite Afro-Latino. | ||
Well, thank you, buddy. | ||
That means a lot for my people. | ||
Gail says we out here gifting subs. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Thanks for the gifted subs Bang says New York Times won the Guinness record for biggest fedora tip Chad deep state politics versus virgin Bernie. | ||
Ah Yes, because they yeah, the New York Times endorsed what Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar this weekend Which is pretty funny I don't really know what to make of that. | ||
I guess it just goes to show that those two candidates are, they are the candidates of the establishment. | ||
They are the, ironically, they are the candidates of Wall Street, of the system. | ||
I would probably say Pete Buttigieg is probably more of like a vanguard of the system and Joe Biden too, but Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar, how can they really claim? | ||
I guess Klobuchar doesn't, but how can Warren claim to be like a progressive champion of the people if she's getting The endorsement from the New York Times. | ||
I mean, this is, like, the most controlled publication in America, so... Yeah, Bernie Sanders, he's probably the only, like, authentic, like... Or maybe the most authentic candidate, but... That really doesn't... You know, that and a dollar will buy you a cup of coffee, right? | ||
Base dollar says, dope suit, King. | ||
You get a new one? | ||
No, same suit. | ||
One of the same suits. | ||
Gail says, imagine watching on YouTube when there is DLive. | ||
Yeah, well, I don't know. | ||
I mean, I want people to watch on both. | ||
I want you to watch on both for now. | ||
Charlie Kirk says, double window. | ||
Double window? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Oh, to, you know, you got the double window. | ||
You're watching on YouTube and DLive. | ||
Got it. | ||
Gail says double tab gang. | ||
Yeah, get the double tab going leftist Cox's I'll match a sub for every sub given Wow. | ||
Well, thank you very much Zoomer Crusader says yes, babe. | ||
unidentified
|
Haha. | |
I figured you'd say that so I came prepared No, silly. | ||
I rigged this room with explosives premarital sex is a sin. | ||
Have fun. | ||
Have fun rotting in hell bath Yeah, haha. | ||
I saw that video too. | ||
Thanks for the ninja genies. | ||
I Don't really like that video. | ||
I gotta be honest. | ||
It's like I There's something about a lot of this content where it's almost... It's hard to explain. | ||
It's like it's not challenging. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
Like... Oh, haha. | ||
It's almost like so deliberately silly and it's so deliberately out there that it becomes not funny. | ||
It's like try hard. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
In a way, it almost defeats, if you've seen the video that I'm talking about, I don't know where it comes from, but there's some PSA against premarital sex where there's this girl and this guy, and he handcuffs her in the closet, and he's like, I'm going to kill you because premarital sex is a sin. | ||
And he blows her up, and it says, what does it say, virginity is cool or something. | ||
And to me, it almost undercuts the message of the video by making it a parody, because it's not a joke. | ||
Premarital sex is not cool. | ||
Being a virgin is cool, at least until marriage. | ||
And so in doing it in this hyperbolic and very silly way, it almost makes a big joke out of it, and not in a way that is tasteful and gets the message across. | ||
Because there are other memes about sexual morality which are much more cutting and actually promote the underlying point about premarital sex. | ||
So I don't know if I'm doing a good job of explaining this, but things like that, it just doesn't really do it for me. | ||
It's like, oh wow, congratulations, that was very silly. | ||
Oh wow, that was very funny. | ||
What if a guy was being funny, though, and he... | ||
He killed a girl for having premarital sex. | ||
That would be so funny. | ||
It's almost like inoffensive, which is the problem with it. | ||
It's inoffensive. | ||
Anybody could watch that and laugh at it either as a joke or maybe even if they take it seriously, they can laugh at it. | ||
And it's just like an easy, cheap, very cheap laugh. | ||
And I don't like that. | ||
I saw a lot of people posting that video and they were posting it at me because the guy in the video's name is Nick. | ||
And he's against premarital sex, as I am. | ||
And he was like patrolling a thought. | ||
Like Nick patrols thoughts. | ||
unidentified
|
Ha ha. | |
Nick says no e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Ha ha. | |
He said the line. | ||
Yeah, not funny. | ||
Didn't laugh. | ||
Sucks, man. | ||
It just sucks. | ||
unidentified
|
Just stop. | |
So much content is so cringe. | ||
I don't think I've seen like any good content so far in 2020 except for like Panther Den and Jeff and like Baked Alaska and a few other people. | ||
And like that's about it. | ||
And me. | ||
But so much content. | ||
I don't think I've seen a single good meme, new meme in this decade yet. | ||
So much of it is just like stale bullshit or stuff like this. | ||
And I'm sick of it. | ||
I just can't. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
Banging says n-word pass still intact though. | ||
Yeah, I still got it Armenian groper says friendly reminder to buy lemons on desktop for a better rate never buy through the mobile app. | ||
Yes Thank you for the reminder there Base dollars has dropped YouTube like a hot beat D live for the win. | ||
Yeah, I mean, it's probably Not wise to totally dispatch with YouTube yet I'm gonna make them ban, you know, if they ban me then moon will be off there, but I It behooves me to use all the platforms, for now. | ||
Bangin' says, double reminder, crypto is cheaper than card. | ||
By Lil? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Volenko says, Argentina knickers in the house. | ||
Okay. | ||
Argentina's pretty based. | ||
Applehoney says, no matter what, all guns are always based. | ||
Great work, King. | ||
Yeah, totally agree. | ||
Snoozgod says, capital of the confederacy was Montgomery, Alabama. | ||
Are you sure about that? | ||
are you sure about that let me double check I was Okay, so Montgomery, it was until 1861, but then it was Richmond until 1865. | ||
Okay, so yeah, it was throughout the Civil War, the capital of the Confederacy was Richmond, but it was in Alabama until 1861, which I'm pretty sure is like a year after it started. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, actually, the capital's Montgomery, Alabama. | |
Yeah, for like a minute, ya idiot. | ||
Dumb idiot. | ||
Yeah, you're wrong. | ||
Uh, let's see. | ||
Bangin' says, you do get to read Pee Pee Poo Poo. | ||
Yeah, great. | ||
Esoteric says, we should all aspire to be like Dr. King. | ||
Psych! | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Uh, Gale says, freeloading med. | ||
Complaints about working 10 hour a week. | ||
Yeah, see? | ||
I can't, I just can't win with these people. | ||
Uh, Levi, er, Levy says, when was the last time you saw the sun? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, Friday, okay? | |
Look, it's been cold over here, alright? | ||
It was six degrees last night. | ||
I'm not going outside when it's six degrees, but I went out. | ||
I went out on, no, I'm sorry, I went out on Saturday. | ||
Quit busting my balls over here, sheesh! | ||
When was the last time you saw the sun? | ||
What are you, my mom? | ||
What are you, mom and dad, saying, you need to go outside and get some fresh air? | ||
Mom, I'm playing Rust, okay? | ||
Mom, dad, playing Rust, kind of busy, my bass is deteriorating, and I'm getting raided, so I'll be out in a minute. | ||
When's the last time you saw the one? | ||
Oh, finally, he got out of his cave! | ||
Isn't that what they say, you know, when you come? | ||
That's how it used to be when you go downstairs at the family function or come upstairs, whatever, you leave your room. | ||
Wow, look who decided to come out of his cave! | ||
Look who decided to leave his room! | ||
Oh, yeah, well, look who should shut the fuck up right now! | ||
I need to game, so that's, uh, that's what I have to say to that. | ||
Sorry for the language out of control tonight. | ||
Sheesh, time to calm down a little bit. | ||
It's this mustache. | ||
It's all this high test, high test, high energy, alpha hormones going on because of the mustache. | ||
Yeah, when's the last time you saw the sun? | ||
On Saturday, thank you very much. | ||
Anthony says, I'm a Christian, but I struggle with porn. | ||
Any help? | ||
Yes, stop watching porn. | ||
Autism Unstoppable says, go out and see the anime movie Weathering With You. | ||
Okay. | ||
Bangin says he also stole Martin Luther's legacy. | ||
What a prick. | ||
Is that true? | ||
I don't think that's true. | ||
Esoteric says the brothers are introspective. | ||
They practice n-word reflection. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Autism says the main character eats a Big Mac with praise. | ||
Oh, in the anime movie? | ||
Okay. | ||
Ninjas' equality is worldly and women will never equal men. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
Snooze Gods is actually January 20th. | ||
It's Robert E. Lee's birthday. | ||
I don't believe that. | ||
Robert E. Lee Day is on the 19th. | ||
Robert E. Lee Day, January 19th. | ||
This guy is the worst. | ||
this guy is the worst it's the same guy oh actually the capital of the confederacy is montgomery yeah no it isn't actually robert e lee's birthday is january 20th yeah no it's not so what a dumb retard Yeah, funny. | ||
That's funny because I like McDonald's. | ||
Okay, yeah. | ||
way now how about njf day everything's closed but mcdonald's haha yeah funny that's funny because i like mcdonald's wow yeah here's your dopamine uh sure get says only u.s gun owners should surround a capitol building and do literally nothing worship cops too much okay yeah disavow granite says mlk and harvey milk are the same people polish americans as turks bashing the refugee boat the horror yeah pretty funny | ||
roberts's president's day was made for washington but was changed to include lincoln before mlk day became law yeah true tennessee | ||
tdubbs says repentance for jaden stream on friday my bad big guy i don't know what you're talking about galaxy brain says mlk would encourage rape in chat on ironically yeah martin luther king jr if martin luther king jr were alive today he would be in my live chat spamming rape uh in the comments he's a sicko like that he's a sick bastard like that Esoteric Fiddler says Apple's technocratic sissy boys censoring telegram. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Is Apple censoring telegram? | ||
I haven't seen that. | ||
Nick the Bricker says love the content king. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yo Yasserian says stache game strong. | ||
Keep it up. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Yeah, I disengaged the beard a little bit. | ||
I trimmed it down a little closer so the mustache would stand out more. | ||
General Pinochet says smash European style socialist scum. | ||
unidentified
|
Haha. | |
Armenian griper says in-n-out or Chick-fil-a in-n-out for sure Chick-fil-a cucked and betrayed us and they don't even serve hamburgers, so King size griper says thank you bang for the sub King. | ||
Okay Salton says what tips do you have for making arguments optical? | ||
What tips do I have for making arguments optical? | ||
Ah, dude, I don't know. | ||
Just use your head. | ||
Just use common sense. | ||
Just argue... I don't... I don't... What does that even mean? | ||
How to make an argument optical? | ||
Do you know what optics means? | ||
It means seeing with your eyes. | ||
unidentified
|
Optical. | |
Optical argument. | ||
Argument being made verbally. | ||
I just... I can't. | ||
Do you mean, like, persuasive? | ||
Do you mean, like, palatable? | ||
Or... I'm not sure what you're getting at there. | ||
Charlie says Virgin equals America, saying we are going to handle it. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Mango says Alex Jones went megaphone mode. | ||
Yeah. | ||
KD says truth, freedom, Big Macs. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, it's hilarious. | |
He said, he said Big Mac. | ||
Bang says the internet has made the Constitution flexible AF. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Esoteric Fiddler says there's a reason why the Chinese buy our neighborhoods. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Jaded says, yeah, I agree. | ||
Jaded says Red State may release nasty photos of Adam Schiff. | ||
Okay, Polish-Americans, the F is in entropy. | ||
Okay, thank you. | ||
With that attitude, you're only insulting yourself. | ||
Push says, how do we harness the power of the boomer masses? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Don't think it can be done. | ||
Save the West says, the Groypers are more deserving of a holiday. | ||
Yeah, that is so true. | ||
We Live in the Matrix says, too many rally signs were cringed libertarian takes. | ||
I agree. | ||
Mango says, new Mount Rushmore featuring the question askers. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Yeah, that would be good. | ||
What if holiday but it's us? | ||
unidentified
|
What if Mount Rushmore but it's us instead? | |
That would be cool. | ||
Yeah guys, great. | ||
Great job everybody. | ||
Awesome Super Chats today. | ||
Brian says next time pull a no-show and let Antifa fight itself. | ||
Another amazing idea. | ||
America floats says 22,000 people said nah, run that shit back. | ||
Hashtag 2A. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Jaji says Trump tweeting about low black unemployment on MLK. | ||
Based? | ||
Yeah, so based. | ||
I love that. | ||
Boopers says great rants on gun nuts. | ||
They often miss the point. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
Sharpen says love your merch. | ||
Any new designs in the works? | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
We'll see about that. | ||
Molly says can't wait. | ||
There's supposed to be new designs like last month. | ||
I'll just say that. | ||
Molly says can't wait to buy these boomers guns when they die. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Great... what does it say? | ||
Greatest Story says, just bought the shirt waiting for the bike lock living in downtown San Francisco. | ||
Okay, don't know what the bike lock thing means, but okay. | ||
Polish American says, durr, Nick won civil war. | ||
Agitator Nick, durr. | ||
Apple Honey says, remember US history. | ||
I just don't, I just can't. | ||
These are so bad today. | ||
unidentified
|
These are the worst super chats I think I've ever read ever in my whole life. | |
I got, I don't know, it's just, I, they're not even bad, they're not even good, they're just not good. | ||
Some of them are so bad that they're funny, or some of them are so bad that I can react to them, but so many of these are just like, Meh? | ||
That's just like, what am I even doing this? | ||
Uh, anyway. | ||
Warren says, Rally didn't pop off because Nick did the show. | ||
That's right. | ||
That's right. | ||
If I did not do the show, if I was away on vacation, things would have went down. | ||
Apple Honey says, remember US History 300? | ||
In high school, total propaganda. | ||
I didn't take that. | ||
US History 300? | ||
We didn't do the hundreds series in high school. | ||
We just did like, uh, I took AP U.S. | ||
History, so we didn't organize it that way. | ||
That's kind of a big question, okay? | ||
make arguments persuasive? | ||
That's kind of a big question. | ||
Okay. | ||
How do you make an argument persuasive? | ||
Well, you have to argue with the other person in mind. | ||
Okay. | ||
That, That's the most important thing. | ||
You have to stop thinking about what you value and what is persuasive to you and think about what is persuasive to the other person. | ||
So, you know, a lot of arguments just simply won't work on people because they don't value the same things, you know? | ||
For example, a lot of people talk about race with other people and they forget that many people are not on board yet with valuing their race. | ||
They don't care about their heritage. | ||
They don't care about their identity so using arguments that appeal to Identitarian values don't work for people that don't value their identity. | ||
Does that make sense? | ||
You know, so... | ||
Like with a lot of boomers. | ||
When I did that speech at, where was it, in Davenport in Iowa in December, my audience was all boomers. | ||
I didn't go up there and do America First. | ||
I went up there and I said, you guys don't like socialism, right? | ||
Well, what do you think you're going to get with mass immigration? | ||
You're going to get socialism. | ||
And by the way, why is that? | ||
It's because immigrants vote Democrat. | ||
Why do they vote Democrat? | ||
They're not white. | ||
Why do non-white people vote Democrat? | ||
Well, that's something to think about. | ||
That's something to consider, that non-white people vote Democrat. | ||
Why is that? | ||
Well, it's because they don't share our values. | ||
They're not like us. | ||
You know, do you see how you can sort of build an argument based on something that other people value? | ||
And it's also persuasive. | ||
Almost all of it is in the tone. | ||
You know, that you should be sort of inquisitive and observational rather than argumentative and combative. | ||
That's very important. | ||
A lot of people like to do a screed or a monologue at somebody. | ||
Hey, listen, you're wrong and I'm right and I know all this stuff and you're an idiot. | ||
Maybe people don't say that explicitly, but that's the tone. | ||
People say, well, you know, you just don't get it. | ||
Here's what you don't know. | ||
Blah, blah, blah. | ||
And nobody likes to lose an argument. | ||
Nobody will respond to you being combative and, you know, nasty and know-it-all-y and condescending and so on by saying, well, maybe I am just a big dumb idiot and I don't know what I'm talking... I'm an ignorant person. | ||
Nobody will ever concede that. | ||
So it always has to be inquisitive, observational, conversational, things like that, rather than combative, argumentative, etc. | ||
And you have to appeal to their values. | ||
That's the best I could do for you in a very general way. | ||
You know, like the socialism thing to me is like so perfect. | ||
Because once you, and you have to, it also has to be gradually. | ||
You can't, like, hit people, you can't just drop a bomb on people and be like, okay, well, everything you care about is bullshit, everything I care about matters. | ||
Like, that's, you have to get people to start to care about these things. | ||
And how do you do that? | ||
Well, you illustrate the ways in which what we're talking about is going to affect them. | ||
You know, socialism is perfect for boomers. | ||
Okay, well, maybe it doesn't matter to you that the country's becoming non-white, but it will become socialist first, right? | ||
Or will ultimately become socialist as a consequence of this, and you can maybe work your way back. | ||
As in, that's one example. | ||
So, those are my tips for you. | ||
Uh, let's see. | ||
Uh, Bangin says, I think it's the bad attitude. | ||
What's the bad attitude? | ||
Uh, Lep Tayloris, Lep Tayloris? | ||
Lep Tayloris? | ||
Groiper, uh, just is screaming. | ||
Okay, thanks. | ||
Scorch Titan says, another rough night with the Super Chats. | ||
Yeah, had another rough night. | ||
Greatest Story says, Kami, bike lock to the head, retard. | ||
Okay, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Greatest Story never told username and I'm the retard. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Why don't you just stop watching the show? | ||
And by the way, disavow. | ||
Oh, I need a bike lock to hit people over the head. | ||
Oh, thank you for that. | ||
Esoteric Fiddler says, Nick, how do I make an argument? | ||
Please help. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Fangin says, Nick, King, how do I make a good grilled cheese? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't, I don't know. | ||
I don't make grilled cheese. | ||
I don't really like grilled cheese. | ||
I had one yesterday and it was not good. | ||
There's this local place where their specialty is grilled cheese. | ||
They do all kinds of specialty grilled cheese sandwiches. | ||
Yesterday I wanted to order Uber Eats. | ||
I was very hungry. | ||
It was late at night. | ||
And I didn't want to go out because it was so cold. | ||
And when it's cold like that, my car doesn't start. | ||
My windows freeze. | ||
Like, my car, for whatever reason, the window has to go slightly down to close. | ||
For whatever reason. | ||
I think it's because it's this convertible top. | ||
It has to go down slightly when you open and close it. | ||
And when it's too cold, the window freezes. | ||
So I have to pour hot water on it to unfreeze the window so it could do that. | ||
Otherwise, the door doesn't close and doesn't seal. | ||
And that causes problems. | ||
So it's a big ordeal to drive my car when it's like this. | ||
I have to heat it up, defrost the windshield, unfreeze the windows, and so on, heat up the engine, whatever. | ||
So I'm like, I'm not gonna go through all that just to pick up a Big Mac through the drive-thru. | ||
I'll order Uber Eats. | ||
Didn't really need to explain all that, but here we are. | ||
So I ordered this grilled cheese sandwich, and it's like... | ||
Mac and cheese, Merck's cheddar and American cheese on Texas toast. | ||
It sounded very good. | ||
It's mac and cheese, the special cheddar, American cheese on Texas toast. | ||
I said, that looks great. | ||
That looks amazing. | ||
And I ordered it and it sucked. | ||
I don't know why, but it just sucked. | ||
I didn't like eating it. | ||
It was sort of messy and I don't like the taste of American cheese, honestly. | ||
And the Texas toast was salty and kind of soggy. | ||
So I don't really like mac and cheese. | ||
I don't like that it tastes almost like salty. | ||
I can't really explain it. | ||
But I've never been a mac and cheese, a grilled cheese. | ||
I've never been a grilled cheese guy. | ||
And so I've never made a grilled cheese for that reason. | ||
Sure get says just let Nick do all the arguing not that hard. | ||
Yeah, very true KTK says King. | ||
Yeah French says don't you and a Mongo says her dirt joke Nick Fuentes reference laugh. | ||
Yeah Nick the brick says does anybody need an arc Noah guy? | ||
Oh, that's good. | ||
I know that one. | ||
I like that super chat. | ||
I actually liked I Okay, let's take a look. | ||
So that's everything on DLive. | ||
Let me take a look through our entropy super chats, I guess we'll call them. | ||
We've got Bing who says in South Africa you can go to an ordinary white suburb and while standing in one spot you could see posters for six different armed response private security companies because of the gun control there. | ||
That's pretty incredible and you know that's where we're headed basically. | ||
Alcibiades says MLK culturally appropriated the microphone, the television, the printing press, the business suit, communism, etc. | ||
Yeah, that's a really good point about Squint's cultural appropriation. | ||
Yeah. | ||
The left be like, stop culturally appropriating my dreadlocks. | ||
I'd be like, uh, you're culturally appropriating television. | ||
Do you need a safe space, liberal? | ||
Are you melting like a snowflake, liberal? | ||
You really got him with that one. | ||
That's a pretty sick burn. | ||
Phillip says, Wignats and Feds be like, nothing happened at the Richmond Rally. | ||
Meanwhile, me and America Firsts, nothing happened at the Richmond Rally. | ||
So, frowny face for this first one, smiley face for the second one. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
We're happy that nothing happened. | ||
Alcibiades says, your emotional, simp-ish DLive mods muted me. | ||
They cost you three Ninjaginis. | ||
Show some solidarity for Turning Point USA. | ||
Alcibiades be a good boy. | ||
I didn't do nothing. | ||
Oh man! | ||
Oh man, maybe... I feel like Luke Skywalker. | ||
Maybe it's time for the Jedi to go extinct, right? | ||
Maybe it's time for Americaverse to just get banned from everything. | ||
Holy shit, dude. | ||
I'd be a good boy. | ||
I'd do nothing. | ||
unidentified
|
Stop. | |
Stop torturing me, please. | ||
The PSYOP has returned! | ||
unidentified
|
Now that I'm back on YouTube, I'm being PSYOP'd again. | |
By Charlie Kirk. | ||
Okay, yeah, thank you for that. | ||
Maxi Stoneman says, YouTube, DLive, and Entropy are all running at once on my computer. | ||
The fan is going crazy. | ||
Well, you can pause them all. | ||
You don't have to actually run the video playback. | ||
You just have the screen open and pause it, I think. | ||
That's what I'm doing right now. | ||
CoolGuys is testing. | ||
Wow, you get more for less. | ||
Welcome back to YouTube. | ||
Not everyone even gets to survive this long. | ||
Legit surprise, something didn't happen today and somewhat relieved. | ||
Yeah, I hear ya. | ||
I'm surprised I made it as long as I have and I'm surprised I came back. | ||
I assumed that I probably would have just been banned altogether in the week that I was disallowed from streaming, so... | ||
Yeah, lots of good surprises. | ||
Maxie Stoneman says, Entropy check. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Phillips says, Wow, can you believe it? | ||
Your first Super Chat through Entropy will be pee-pee poo-poo. | ||
In all seriousness, keep up the good work. | ||
Well, thanks, buddy. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Yeah, who would have guessed? | ||
Who could have possibly believed that my first Entropy Super Chat would be pee-pee poo-poo? | ||
Okay, let's see. | ||
Do we get anything more on DLive? | ||
And we've got a few more here. | ||
Base Guitar says do you own any guns? | ||
Have you ever been hunting? | ||
I've never been hunting and on the question of guns no comments. | ||
I don't want the feds to know I don't I don't want anybody to know for that matter what my arsenal is like so I'm just gonna say no comments. | ||
Bangin says can someone repost the entropy link? | ||
Bangin says no you need to have it on with low volume 360p. | ||
Well, you could just mute them all except for one and have the rest on 360p or 144p. | ||
Better yet, Esoterix's PPPooPoo. | ||
Yeah, thanks for that. | ||
Okay, well looks like that's our last one. | ||
I think that's our last one on entropy. | ||
So that's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Sheesh! | ||
Man, some of these Super Chats, we gotta work a little harder, okay? | ||
I'm working hard. | ||
I'm working my tail off to make good shows. | ||
We have to have the Super Chats. | ||
Super Chatters gotta meet me halfway. | ||
Gotta do your part. | ||
I'll cut you some slack because it's a holiday, because it's a federal holiday. | ||
But in the future, in the future, let's try a little harder to be funny. | ||
Let's try a little harder to be edgy, to have some fresh content in there. | ||
But that's going to do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Remember to subscribe to my channel on YouTube, also on DLive. | ||
Subscribe to my DLive channel, dlive.tv slash nickschafuentes, but also subscribe to my YouTube channel. | ||
Click the like button, leave a comment down below, click the notification bell to get notified every time I go live. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks so much to our super chatters, I guess in general, Entropy people, DLive, Lemon people, everybody that's donated, especially, we'll also read off our top contributors from DLive, especially Bang in your mom, leftist cuck, and Armenian Groyper, our top contributors for tonight. | ||
Thanks especially to those guys. | ||
But thanks to everybody that threw a tip my way. | ||
Super chat. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
And I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
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Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America first! |