Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
...have been a disaster for the human race. | |
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard of Nick. | |
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
Who's that? | ||
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. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of a big question. | |
Just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
The older generation. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human. | ||
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. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Budge. | |
Who's that? | ||
I've never heard of Nick Budge. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Budge. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Budge. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
Who's that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
The boomer generation. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human world. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human world. | ||
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. | ||
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? | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
I've never heard of him. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
unidentified
|
Who is that? | |
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. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, 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 Fudge. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
Who's that? | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
...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 interested, are you? | ||
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 McQuadden. | ||
I've never heard of McFly. | ||
What is that? | ||
I've never heard of McFly. | ||
I've never heard of McFly. | ||
I've never heard of McFly. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
I've never heard of McFly. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
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. | ||
What is that? | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
I've never heard of Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
What is that? | |
Thank you. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the generation. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will 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. | |
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
It'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. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will 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. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's got the clip? | |
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard of it. | |
What is that? | ||
I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fletcher. | ||
unidentified
|
Who's that? | |
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo in will be our credo in the future. | ||
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. | ||
. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Tuesday. | ||
And we are now on day two of multi-streaming the show. | ||
I have to tell you, I haven't really quite come to a conclusion yet about how this is going. | ||
We've got the show now streaming on DLive as well as YouTube at the same time. | ||
As I said, it's our second night doing this. | ||
We started out doing it yesterday. | ||
The show has moved on to other platforms. | ||
So it's been somewhat interesting. | ||
It's kind of hard to keep track of. | ||
You know, I start the show tonight and I've got like seven tabs open. | ||
I've got YouTube Studio, YouTube Playback, DLive Studio, DLive Playback, Entropy. | ||
D-Live Lemon plug-in so I can keep track of the donations from D-Live. | ||
So it's a little hectic. | ||
It's a little chaotic. | ||
It's a little different here. | ||
But I'm getting used to it. | ||
But I'm adapting. | ||
And we do have a good show. | ||
There's lots to discuss tonight. | ||
Imminent pandemic. | ||
Global deadly pandemic. | ||
Incoming question mark. | ||
Tonight, our featured story, what we're going to be talking about is this new so-called coronavirus, which, you know, I'm not a doctor, I'm not a scientist, but I'm going to do my best to explain what's happening. | ||
We've got an outbreak of a deadly virus in China, which has now spread to the United States and a number of other countries, and we're going to talk a little bit about that tonight. | ||
What is the disease? | ||
Where is it? | ||
Where is it going? | ||
What are the symptoms? | ||
What could happen? | ||
Could it infect everyone on Earth? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I hope so. | ||
That would mean more content for the show, you know? | ||
I feel like for a long time I would do the show and, you know, there would be some sort of facade of something terrible is happening in the world and now it's just outright, like, begging. | ||
Now it's just sort of outright pleading and begging with Fate with God, whoever it is, maybe something else, for a disaster, for catastrophe, because it will fuel the show, because it will fuel content, it will fuel memes online, so, you know, if we couldn't get, War with Iran. | ||
unidentified
|
Excuse me. | |
If we couldn't get war with Iran, if we couldn't get civil war in Virginia, if we couldn't get some kind of civil unrest brought on by gun control, you know, some kind of mass casualty event in Virginia, well, I don't know, maybe we could put all our chips on global pandemic from China. | ||
You never know. | ||
You never know. | ||
It's the thing that you least expect, right? | ||
It's not the things that you're worried about that you should really be worried about. | ||
It's the things that you don't think about. | ||
So... | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe we'll see something big. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Maybe this is the beginning of the end and maybe the beginning of the ascent for America First with the spread of a virus, a global virus. | ||
So, that'll be our featured story. | ||
I have to say, there's obviously a political angle to this. | ||
You know, it's sort of weird. | ||
With a lot of news updates like this, you know, natural disasters, Viruses, diseases, things like this. | ||
You know, science related things. | ||
There's not always like a clear political angle. | ||
It's really more just like, well here's what's happening and I'm explaining it to you and of course it's bad. | ||
But with this in particular, there is an obvious political angle. | ||
You know, I think you'd be really hard-pressed to figure out a better way of stopping diseases from coming to America. | ||
Then stopping people from coming to America, of course. | ||
You know, I see this and this is only the latest infectious disease which has come to America after a long line of like medieval diseases which have been reintroduced into the American ecosystem. | ||
Things like tuberculosis, typhoid, even in some cases black plague. | ||
Because of people that are coming from Mexico. | ||
So, you know, I see this recent development and you might be thinking to yourself, well, What could possibly be the take besides it's bad to have a global pandemic? | ||
Well, maybe one of the ways we could put a stop to things like this is shutting down the borders. | ||
So, yet another argument for that. | ||
So, that'll be our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking tonight about an article from Axios, which I saw this week. | ||
Which do you guys read Axios? | ||
It's a relatively new news publication. | ||
I think it came around right after the 2016 election. | ||
Pretty sure it's from NBC. | ||
I think Axios is like a subsidiary of NBC News. | ||
And like the gimmick of this news brand is they're supposed to give you like these very bite-sized articles. | ||
It's actually kind of a sad thing. | ||
It kind of just goes to show that we're entering into the low IQ phase of Our civilization, of our people, you know, of the human race, maybe generally, that their whole gimmick, it's sort of like Vice. | ||
You know, Vice came around and their shtick is that they're the news explainers. | ||
They come out with videos and articles and, you know, we're gonna spoon-feed you and baby-talk your way through the news because most people are, you know, pea-brain, mush-brain, coon-brain consumers, and Axios is very much along the same lines. | ||
They came around in 2016 and they said, We're gonna spoon-feed you these little bite-sized pieces of information. | ||
Now that said, they came out with a very good article this week, which I think is worth reading, talking about how this administration is doing on immigration. | ||
This is something which we've been talking about a lot on the show lately. | ||
And this has been an evolving conversation on the show since my show started for years, which is how does this administration, specifically how does the president, stack up on his promises with immigration? | ||
And there's actually a lot of stuff that's going well with immigration. | ||
We talk a lot on the show about the wall, which has not been built. | ||
I think the most recent number I saw from the Oons Review, which Ann Coulter cited, pegs the number at two miles of new border barrier that had been constructed since Trump got elected. | ||
So I don't know the number for replacement barrier. | ||
It's something close to like 100 miles, I think, of replacement barrier. | ||
I think it's like 75 miles of replacement wall. | ||
But in terms of new barrier, we're at like two miles, something completely negligible. | ||
And like I said, we talk about that a lot on the show, the lack of a huge, imposing, tangible structure on the border, keeping people out. | ||
But, aside from that, there are a lot of things that are surprisingly going well when it comes to asylum seekers, illegals, even some areas with legal immigration, things are going well. | ||
So there's this great article in Axios this week spelling out, you know, it says Trump has basically already built a wall, it's just not a physical barrier. | ||
Now there's obviously a problem with that line of argument, which we've talked about on the show before and I'll get into that in a little bit, which is that, you know, you do need a physical wall, but I think it is important to kind of go through where we are at this point in the game. | ||
A little bit less than a year out from the election, where we are with regard to immigration, because I feel like people either have a completely over-inflated idea of what's being done, you know, you're either a trust- like an unironic trust-a-plan QAnon boomer who believes that, you know, I remember I got a super chat on the show a couple of weeks ago, somebody said, You just don't get it, Nick. | ||
We're gonna start building the wall in the second term, you know? | ||
So you're either one of these people who has this over-inflated idea, you're holding up unironically these signs that say, finish the wall, complete the wall that has already been started, trust me, right? | ||
So you're either on that side, or there's this tendency to cluster on the opposite side, which is, That Trump has done nothing, and he's cocked on everything, and he's worse than the Democrats, he's worse than anybody else, you know, and maybe we can find sort of a happy medium where we can say, well, here's what we're doing right, and maybe here's what we still need to improve on. | ||
So, we're gonna take a look at that article, we'll get into what's happening in China. | ||
And those will be our two main stories for tonight. | ||
Some kind of like moderately exciting news, I guess. | ||
What's so funny to me is that the impeachment trial started today and literally nobody cares. | ||
Has anybody else noticed this? | ||
The impeachment trial started today. | ||
The trial! | ||
Which it's like, I mean, that's supposed to be a big deal. | ||
I mean, I don't need to tell you. | ||
I don't need to tell you after so many months of going over the investigation and the inquiry and the House debate and everything, but... | ||
You know, I woke up today and I'm going through the news, I'm going through all my usual sources, BBC, Fox News, 4chan, the Daily Wire, Twitter, and I'm seeing like next to nothing about the fact that an impeachment trial is currently underway. | ||
Virtually nobody's talking about it. | ||
A friend of mine put online, I think Jew Groyper posted a picture, a screenshot of the live stream from C-SPAN or whoever, showing the impeachment trial live stream, I think on YouTube, and it had something like 30,000 live concurrent viewers, which, you know, even if you compare it to this show, I was pulling 10,000 live viewers watching the Democratic debate on DLive last Tuesday. | ||
So I had one-third the viewers of the impeachment trial on my reaction stream to the Democratic debate, not even on YouTube, on a smaller platform like DLive. | ||
You could even look at somebody not me. | ||
By the way, sorry for my allergies, they're particularly bad today, so if I have to sniffle a couple times, I hope you'll forgive me. | ||
Even if you look at somebody that's not me, somebody like Destiny, somebody like that Trainwrecks guy who I went on his debate last April, I think Trainwrecks gets like 25,000 people, or at least he did when we were doing our debate last year. | ||
Just to give you an idea of the scale of like who's watching this debate or rather who's watching this impeachment trial compared to, you know, things that are going on in the dissident right internet streaming space. | ||
It's comparable. | ||
Which goes to show that nobody cares. | ||
So I find that to be very funny that, you know, throughout the past few weeks I've been like desperately trying to find, okay, what's happening? | ||
What's going on? | ||
All the while, all throughout, you've got this impeachment which is supposed to be such an important big deal, the Constitution is involved, and it's like nobody gives a shit. | ||
Not even just me, not even just us, because obviously, and I've been saying this, we know how it's going to play out from start to finish, but with anybody, with the boomers, with millennials, young people, It seems like probably the only people watching this stuff is like the 30,000 journalists in the country, right? | ||
You can imagine that probably if you tallied up maybe all the journalists in the United States who are tuning in to watch this impeachment so they could write up their pieces, you know, maybe that accounts for like half or 75% of all the people watching the coverage. | ||
And you know, by the way, I, you know, Probably there are a lot of, uh, resistance boomers and, you know, Trump boomers glued to their screens on cable news watching this stuff, but I just find it very funny that if you tune into the live streams for, like, the Kavanaugh hearing or, uh, State of the Union, I mean, like, other comparable big events, I mean, they have decent audience sizes and this, it's like, People couldn't care less. | ||
And, you know, that's, I think, you know, this is not anything fresh or new here, but it is just a testament to the fact that it is just now a naked puppet show. | ||
It is now not like, you know, puppeteers being naked, but you know what I mean? | ||
It's like overtly, explicitly, they're not even hiding it anymore, that it's all a game. | ||
And I think that gives a lot of credence to the idea that we really are in like this weird post-ironic, so-called post-truth area when it comes to politics that, you know, where do we go from here where like nobody's buying it anymore? | ||
Because even like five years ago, even like a few years ago, five years ago, ten years ago, this kind of stuff, people would eat it up. | ||
People take it seriously, earnestly. | ||
They would sincerely be watching this stuff. | ||
It would be their civic duty to watch and be informed and so on. | ||
And now it's like most of the population says the news is fake, politics is fake, everything's a show, everything's a game. | ||
Like where do you go from there? | ||
You know, that's a big question mark for this election and what comes after. | ||
So anyway, just thought I'd throw that out there. | ||
If you didn't catch it anywhere else, impeachment did start today, but not like anybody's really interested. | ||
Before we dive into our current events, I do just want to remind you about the Super Chat System. | ||
So we're streaming, you know, again, we're streaming on DLive in YouTube. | ||
On DLive, you can do Super Chats through DLive. | ||
You just buy lemons and if you, excuse me, if you donate a diamond, a Ninjagini, or a Ninjet, I'll read your message at the end. | ||
Remember on YouTube, I am demonetized completely. | ||
So that means no Super Chats on YouTube. | ||
We tried this yesterday and it worked pretty well. | ||
We're trying this new software called Entropy. | ||
Which, you know, we did it yesterday. | ||
It was very intuitive, straightforward. | ||
I set it up in like 10 minutes and it seemed to be working great. | ||
So, Entropy, I have posted the link in the live chat. | ||
I'll post it again right now for you if you missed it and I will also tell you what it is. | ||
Whoops. | ||
That's not the right link. | ||
That is... I just copied and pasted something from my notes in Google Docs. | ||
So give me a moment here. | ||
Let me pull up the link and I will post it in the live chat so you can join onto there. | ||
But basically, Entropy is a software where it's a super chat substitute. | ||
So you click on the link. | ||
It's very straightforward. | ||
You go into the chat box, you click on the dollar sign, just like you would in a super chat, and you're able to do it. | ||
We've already got a few, so just so you're aware of that. | ||
I put it in chat just now, and remember the link is entropystream.live slash app slash America First. | ||
I have like a hair in my face. | ||
A lot of problems tonight. | ||
A lot of like technical... A lot of like technical things. | ||
It's still there. | ||
Where is it coming from? | ||
Okay. | ||
So be sure to check out Entropy. | ||
You'll be reading those at the end of the show. | ||
And then one more thing before we dive into our current events. | ||
That was really bothering me. | ||
It just kept getting into my field of vision. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Is it coming from my head? | ||
Is it like on my eyebrow? | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
It's the best part of the show. | ||
But one more thing before we dive into our current events. | ||
Big announcement. | ||
This is big. | ||
Planned trusting time. | ||
If you saw this on Twitter, I put it all over my timeline and all over Telegram. | ||
You may remember that during the Groyper Wars, we saw a number of turning point chapters disband. | ||
There was one in Kansas State. | ||
I think there was one in Fresno. | ||
Maybe one other. | ||
I kind of forget. | ||
It's been a few months. | ||
One of the popular trends during the the Griper Wars was a lot of nationalist, real conservative minded students who were involved with Turning Point USA, or involved in the leadership, started to dissolve their organizations. | ||
And there was a big question a few months ago about, you know, what really are the alternatives for Turning Point USA? | ||
Do you go to College Republicans? | ||
Do you infiltrate Turning Point and kind of keep your politics close to the chest? | ||
Do you join Young Americans for Liberty, you know, some other club? | ||
I heard from a lot of different people that they were going to start different clubs. | ||
And finally, we've got an answer on that. | ||
As I said, one of the turning point chapters that disbanded during the Groyper Wars, I think it was in November, was the Kansas State University turning point chapter. | ||
The president of that chapter, Jade McNeil, he released this big press release at the time and said, you know, we don't really agree with the direction things are going in. | ||
We didn't like how Charlie Kirk bailed on the Covington kids. | ||
We didn't like the diaper protest. | ||
And we don't like what's going on with the treatment of people like Michelle Malkin and Nick Fuentes. | ||
So they disbanded the chapter. | ||
The same person, Jade McNeil, the former president of the turning point chapter at Kansas State, has announced the very first America First students organization on his campus. | ||
Very big, very exciting. | ||
Just announced this afternoon. | ||
And I'll read to you, they put out a statement, sort of like a press release, and I'll read it to you so you can kind of get an idea of what they are about. | ||
Jaden writes, After months of planning, I am proud to finally announce the launch of America First Students. | ||
AFS is a campus conservative organization defined by our support for closed borders, traditional families, the American worker, and Christian values. | ||
In a political climate filled with campus organizations that put America last, I want to bring a new vision to our campus. | ||
One that puts the American people first and emphasizes the importance of God and family above all else. | ||
Increasingly, the interests of Americans are overlooked by our globalist ruling class, which is more concerned with looting the country than governing justly. | ||
To make things worse, Conservatism Inc. | ||
has brainwashed many students into believing that globalist policies, particularly free trade and mass immigration, The purpose of America First Students is thus to create a space on campus to advocate for traditional American values and ideals with the broader goal of defending America against globalism, affirming the vision laid out by President Trump in his inaugural address. | ||
If you have any questions or would like to get involved, the best way to contact us is through Twitter DM. | ||
So, I read that statement today, I read this statement this morning, and I was just blown away how refreshing this is to see. | ||
I talked to Jaden, you know, we are friends, we do sort of communicate, but this is his thing on Kansas State, and I guess the plan with how they're going to move forward with America First Students is they're basically going to see how it works on Kansas State, and I think basically there's unlimited potential for something like this. | ||
You know, a college activist organization is something which I think everybody thought was a good idea for a long time, particularly during the Group Wars. | ||
People saw how Turning Point was a failure, and really, when you look as far as conservative campus groups go, there's not really a great home for people that are nationalists. | ||
You know, there's a place for libertarians, there's a place for pro-life people, Second Amendment people, free market idiots, you know, neocons. | ||
There's no shortage of like Zionist Jewish clubs if you're like a neocon, right? | ||
And there really was nothing in this campus space, in terms of infrastructure, organizational capacity, for people that believe in America First. | ||
Finally, it seems like somebody is doing something about this. | ||
So, it's very exciting. | ||
I wish Jayden lots of luck. | ||
You know, we will be there to cheer him on from the sidelines and give him whatever kind of support that we can. | ||
I encourage people, if you're on Kansas State, to get involved. | ||
Reach out to Jayden and see what's up. | ||
For everybody else, I guess you'll have to sit tight. | ||
You know, who knows? | ||
I think there's a lot, I'll just say this, there's lots of potential for this as a concept, and I think the direction that it's headed in as far as where Jaden is at, and sort of where others are in the America First movement, I think is that, you know, depending on whether this goes well or not, you know, maybe they'll expand it to other places, and, you know, who knows? | ||
I really do think the sky's the limit, because there's a real appetite out there for something like this. | ||
The Groyper Wars proved that. | ||
It proved that, you know, for a long time people used to say that people that held our views were fringe and on the margins and did not number a lot of people. | ||
It was a very small amount of people that believed this stuff. | ||
And the Groyper Wars proved that Charlie Kirk could go on literally any campus in America, in any state, in any city, and he would encounter dozens of people. | ||
You know, not one or two, not like one guy in one campus, but he could go anywhere. | ||
California, Arizona, Iowa, New Hampshire, Colorado, Florida, North Carolina, he could go anywhere and there would be dozens of students who would show up and not only show up to protest or show up to voice dissent in the audience, but to show up and ask questions. | ||
I mean that just goes to show that there's a presence on campuses of people that believe in this stuff that want this kind of change and people want to get involved. | ||
So I really do believe that this as a proof of concept is huge and depending on how well this goes you know maybe we could see this roll out on the national level and it could be the next big thing. | ||
It's very exciting and understand what this represents on a much more fundamental level is institutionalization, which is so critical. | ||
When we talk about Trump, and we're going to talk about Trump on immigration in a moment, the great failure of this administration, in my opinion, was to institutionalize all the changes that he brought to conservatism, to the Republican Party, to American politics, broadly speaking. | ||
Once he got elected in November, immediately this began the process of the transition. | ||
The transition from the Obama administration to the Trump administration. | ||
And that involved the president bringing on a chief of staff and a team, a transition team. | ||
And the transition team hired everybody that was going to be in the White House, started considering cabinet appointees and so on. | ||
And this was like the moment when the MAGA movement died. | ||
It was that moment, right after the election, that space between the election and the inauguration, when America First, MAGA, all this stuff, at least at the time, was sort of dead on arrival. | ||
Because although Trump won the election, and he won the hearts and minds of the people, and he won the votes, and he won the electoral votes, and everything else, He did not convert all of that momentum and energy and that victory into any kind of lasting infrastructure that will survive beyond this administration. | ||
All the people that were hired in the White House were picked out of the Rubio campaign, or the Cruz campaign, or the Republican National Committee, whatever it is, you know, the Republican Party. | ||
Again, sorry for the allergies. | ||
Or the Bush administration. | ||
They were plucked from the think tanks everywhere else except for the Trump campaign. | ||
Everywhere else except for where all the American nationalists and MAGA people rallied. | ||
What is the consequence? | ||
Well, the White House is basically like, as far as the cadre of bureaucrats and everybody else goes, Hardly different than the Bush White House. | ||
Hardly different than what Rubio would look like. | ||
We're getting a little bit of good direction from the top, from the White House, but there's only so much that one single man can do in this insane, leviathan, bureaucratic machine that is the executive branch. | ||
You know, while Trump can sort of make these big decisions, and if he's really committed, and if he's got people in the cabinet that are really committed to something, I mean, they can push things in the right direction. | ||
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Generally speaking, all the appointees and all the hires have been from the wrong people. | |
And so, what happened during 2016 was not institutionalized. | ||
All those ideas, all those hard-fought rhetorical victories, that did not translate into new organizations, new donor networks, new think tanks. | ||
It didn't transfer into any kind of political experience through appointees and things like that. | ||
And that's why I'm terrified for what comes next, whether it's, you know, Joe Biden in 2020 or whatever comes after Trump if he wins a second term, you know, afterwards in 2024. | ||
What terrifies me is the thought that Trump will have come into the White House and not only will things not be different in terms of governance, | ||
In other words, not only am I afraid that Trump will come to the White House and leave the White House, and if a Democrat comes in, there'll be no evidence that Trump ever occupied the White House because all the changes he's made can be overdone by Democrats, but scarier even than that is the idea that Trump could have taken over the Republican Party, not just the White House, but could have taken over the Republican Party. | ||
And because he did not institutionalize The transformation, the changes that he made, there will be no evidence that he was ever the head, ever had 90% approval rating, defeated 16 other candidates and so on once he's no longer the president because Nikki Haley and Mike Pence and all these other people come in and sweep it all away and make it business as usual status quo. | ||
So my point being, things like America First Students are the future. | ||
Institutionalization, creating infrastructure, creating organizations that are independent and separate and distinct from what exists, is critical. | ||
You know, we have tried infiltration, we have tried all kinds of different things, and to me what has the most potential for succeeding, for building something that is lasting, that will survive this like generational conflict, because it'll go on for a long time, that will survive the ups and downs, the fickle masses with their passions every so many years, Is to build these sort of, you know, medium temperature, room temperature, mild optical infrastructure type organizations. | ||
I think that is where we're headed because, you know, we've tried on the one hand infiltrating and subverting the big stuff and that doesn't work. | ||
You know, they purge us, they fire us, they find us out. | ||
It's like, you know, you have an undercut. | ||
You have the wrong haircut, that means you're alt-right and you're fired. | ||
Pack up your shit and go home. | ||
You must be anti-semitic. | ||
So that's out. | ||
And we've also tried on the other extreme, these organizations that are fringe and maybe they don't have the right look or they have baggage for a long time. | ||
They just don't seem able or competent to make the change that is required. | ||
They are unable to adapt to the times. | ||
So to me, and it's not like it's a guaranteed thing, it's not like... | ||
It's a surefire thing, but perhaps the best path forward is to get somewhere in the middle of creating our own stuff, but really learning from a lot of the lessons of the past, things that have not worked out, things that are not effective, things that are not, you know, practical in this day and age. | ||
And I look at America First students and I say, this, this is maybe the hope. | ||
This is maybe the shining, you know, light. | ||
This is the proverbial candle in a sea of darkness. | ||
You know, the only America First nationalist organization out of all the others that maybe has a clear path forward. | ||
So, it's exciting stuff and we'll see where it goes. | ||
So, I wish Jaden a lot of luck in managing this. | ||
He's gonna have a lot on his shoulders here. | ||
I know the media is gonna be vicious. | ||
It's gonna be tough, I imagine, to try and to make this work, but the next month will be critical for them. | ||
The next semester will be critical, sort of establishing themselves on campus, but hopefully the start of something very big. | ||
So, just want to give that a little bit of a shout out. | ||
It's very good. | ||
Congrats, Jaden. | ||
Let's get some C's in chat for congratulations for our boy Jaden. | ||
Let's get the letter C in chat. | ||
Let them all know that we're behind them, that we stand. | ||
The Groyper Army, the America First The Knicker Nation stands behind him. | ||
We support him completely. | ||
And again, if you're on Kansas State, make sure you reach out to him. | ||
And, you know, who knows? | ||
Maybe we'll be soliciting other campuses. | ||
You know, we'll see perhaps if it could work other places as well. | ||
So just be on the lookout maybe for more things from them. | ||
But that's America First, students. | ||
We're going to move on into the news. | ||
A very nice white pill for everybody. | ||
Hopefully things like that can save Trump and this movement from itself. | ||
Save the boomers from themselves. | ||
Up to the Zoomers, as always. | ||
So we're going to dive into our... | ||
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Excuse me. | |
We're going to dive into... | ||
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Burp? | |
We're going to dive into our news here. | ||
We're gonna start out with this. | ||
I had a lot of Italian sausage and chicken and all that before I came out, so I'm a little bit gaseous. | ||
Is that flatulence when you're burping? | ||
I think that's only farting, but so excuse me for that. | ||
We're having a lot of biological problems here. | ||
We're gonna dive into this article from Axios. | ||
Like I said at the top of the show, I don't like love Axios. | ||
I think This is like the end stage for humanity. | ||
This mass media that's sort of spoon-feeding you, babying you, you know. | ||
Here comes the train! | ||
Here's your very digestible, three-bullet-point article for all these mush-brained yuppies that read this kind of stuff. | ||
But in any case, they came out with a great article about the Trump administration on immigration. | ||
And they sort of lay out, point by point, all the different things that are being done to completely secure the border. | ||
And honestly, and I'll talk about this in a moment, there's an obvious bias from Axios. | ||
Like, obviously there's a reason why it benefits the media, which is in favor of open borders, to give us a false sense of security, to make us complacent. | ||
You know, in other words, if they write an article that says, Hey, you've already secured the border. | ||
I guess you guys won on immigration. | ||
Well, then we're not going to keep pushing, right? | ||
Then the pressure won't be on to build a wall and do all the rest if the media gaslights us into believing, oh, well, guess you guys won. | ||
You did it. | ||
You secured the border. | ||
Guess it's time to pack it up and go home because you won, right? | ||
So on the one hand we can see the bias there, but on the other hand I was a little bit surprised. | ||
Even as somebody that follows this stuff pretty closely on a day-to-day basis, all that is being done on the border, there really has been a lot of progress made. | ||
So I'll read this article to you and we'll talk about it a little bit. | ||
It says, quote, President Trump has successfully built an immigration wall that has proven impenetrable for tens of thousands of migrants. | ||
It's just not the physical one he and others obsess about. | ||
The number of attempted border crossings is falling and denial rates are climbing. | ||
The very nations most migrants flee from are now the nations where asylum seekers are being sent to. | ||
Over the last few months the Trump administration has begun implementing its asylum agreements with Central American nations which could help keep asylum seekers out of the U.S. | ||
And it goes point by point here in a bulleted list laying out everything that's being done It says they're sending Hondurans to Guatemala, the origin nation for the highest number of migrants who reached the U.S. | ||
border last year. | ||
Officials could begin kicking Mexican, Central American, and South American asylum seekers to Honduras or El Salvador as well, even if they are not from there, once the details of those agreements are worked out and put in motion. | ||
The final details of the Honduras Agreement will be implemented soon, DHS Acting Secretary Chad Wolf said last Thursday. | ||
The Honduran Foreign Relations Minister has said the country agreed to accept migrants from Mexico, Brazil, Nicaragua, Guatemala and El Salvador. | ||
According to a source called Prensa. | ||
So in other words, they're taking all these asylum seekers and not only are they not letting them into America They're sending them back to like just random countries. | ||
They're sending them back to Guatemala and Increasingly they might be able to send them also to Honduras and El Salvador even if they're not from those countries So, you know in this list they lay out all these different countries even if they come from Brazil If they come from Mexico, if they come from other countries, and they come to our border, we can take them and send them to El Salvador. | ||
We can take Mexican immigrants or Brazilian immigrants and ship them to El Salvador, or ship them to Guatemala, whoever will take them. | ||
It says the administration planned to begin removing Mexican asylum seekers to Guatemala, although the plan is temporarily on hold after broad backlash. | ||
More than 50,000 Central American asylum seekers have already been forced to wait out their legal cases in Mexico under the Migrant Protection Protocols. | ||
Remain in Mexico is the name of it, which we went over last week. | ||
The program is expected to expand. | ||
So far, just 117 people impacted by MPP, the Migrant Protection Protocols, since January of last year have been granted asylum by an immigration judge, according to data collected by Syracuse University's Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. | ||
So only 117 people, in terms of asylum seekers that are under the jurisdiction of this MPP, have been granted asylum by a judge. | ||
It's as Trump continues his slow campaign for a physical wall. | ||
The Washington Post reports that he's, quote, preparing to divert an additional $7.2 billion in Pentagon funding for border wall construction this year, five times what Congress has authorized. | ||
So he got $1.6 billion from Congress last year. | ||
He got, I think, $1.2 billion or $1.6 billion this year. | ||
So that is what? | ||
$3.2 billion from Congress. | ||
He diverted something like $5 to $7 billion in the last round of Appropriations from DHS and from the Treasury Forfeiture Fund and other various sources. | ||
There's going to be another $7 billion this year. | ||
And look, if you do the math on this, if he got three from Congress, if he got five to seven from Appropriations last year, if he got 7.2 in 2020, that's $17 billion. | ||
The wall costs $17 billion. | ||
Now, I'm not trying to tell everybody that we're out of the woods on immigration and Trust the plan. | ||
Everything's okay. | ||
Everything's white-pilled. | ||
Obviously, there's much that needs to be done, but I will say we are a lot better off on the border than we were at the beginning of 2019. | ||
We're a lot better off than we were over the summer. | ||
It really does look like, in a very comprehensive way, we are buttoning up the border, at least with regard to illegal immigration. | ||
You know, sadly the president is still peddling this stuff about we need to bring in more high-skilled workers from Asia because the corporations need them. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
We bring in 1.1 million legal immigrants per year. | ||
We bring in hundreds of thousands of additional people on temporary work visas and so on, but yet we need more. | ||
We need more illegal immigrants. | ||
So, you know, I guess that's a separate problem. | ||
But as far as illegal immigration goes, It's really not so much a separate problem, but as far as illegal immigration goes, it really does look like the crisis, the insanity that prevailed just six, seven, eight months ago. | ||
You know, if you go back to May or June of 2019, it looks like that's basically over. | ||
As far as the current enforcement protocols and provisions and so on goes, It looks like it's a dramatic improvement from where we used to be and we were at rock bottom but it looks like things are rapidly becoming better and even with regard to the wall you know obviously that's the biggest that's the biggest failure of this administration so far. | ||
As good as everything else is going, and maybe this is the most important thing I can say on this show, which I've been saying for a long time, which is, if you don't have the wall, the rest doesn't matter. | ||
You know, as far as I'm concerned, all of this is great, but the minute another president gets into office, it's over. | ||
You know, the migrant protection protocols, deporting people to other countries, forcing them to wait on the other side of the border, All of it. | ||
It all ends, day one, when another president comes into office. | ||
And, by the way, even if another president wins an election, if Trump suffers a defeat in the courts with regards to some of these things, like wall funding or whatever, you're gonna get another dramatic surge of immigrants, the same way you did when he talked about making DACA legal and all that, expanding temporary protected status, everything. | ||
You know, so all this stuff basically is temporary. | ||
All these different measures, the protection protocols, sending them back, whatever, is very fragile. | ||
As good as it is, as much as it is an improvement, as much as we are building this sort of comprehensive legal framework to start enforcing border laws, it's all very precarious. | ||
It is all very fragile. | ||
Another president gets in, it's over. | ||
If Trump talks about legalizing DACA, you'll get a surge of immigrants just like you did last year, and all that will go out the window, you know? | ||
And a lot of this stuff still might be challenged and defeated in court. | ||
So I'll say that all of this is really nothing if you don't build up the wall. | ||
The benefit of the wall is none of that has the same effect as it does with these other policies, right? | ||
You know, a surge with the result of DACA, another president getting into office, whatever, The border wall will have the same effect of keeping asylum seekers on the other side. | ||
It'll have the same effect of keeping border crossers from coming in. | ||
It'll have the same effect of just shipping them back to other countries. | ||
But the difference is, is once it's built, it's there. | ||
Once it's in place, it doesn't go away. | ||
Unlike all these protocols, unlike all these provisions, which exist on paperwork. | ||
You know, paperwork can be ripped up and crossed out and, you know, paperwork can be written on top of it. | ||
But all of that can't happen with a wall. | ||
So I'm not trying to tell you that, like the media might be trying to do, that everything is well, immigration is solved, Trump has won, and therefore we should be complacent. | ||
But I am saying that, you know, things are starting to look good. | ||
Things are starting to improve, particularly with the wall finding. | ||
It's very exciting to see that they found a way. | ||
It looks like, you know, we saw that big victory in the appeals court a couple of weeks ago with the initial wall funding that was greenlit, I think back in like March or February of 2019, that that's working its way up the process. | ||
If that is a model that can be replicated with other sources of funding and we can appropriate funds from other places and once it's greenlit by the courts, if we have no problem getting that money to the contractors, then that means that probably we could start seriously building new wall in 2020. | ||
And then it all is a question of what we run on. | ||
You know, to me that is the other big problem with this immigration agenda, is not only do we not have a wall and everything else, but the things that we have achieved, we're not really running on that. | ||
You know, so there are sort of caveats to all these different things, like it's great that we have the migrant protection protocols, but it means nothing without a wall. | ||
And even as far as the wall goes, it's great that we've greenlit the funding and that's working its way through the process, And it's even great that we have the migrant protection protocols and all of that behind it. | ||
But none of it matters if you don't even run on it! | ||
And to me, that's like the biggest alarm bell about the current state of this administration, is the fact that we are now in an election year. | ||
And I hear all these different rallies and speeches and everything else, and what do you hear from the president when he's campaigning? | ||
Do you hear a lot about immigration anymore? | ||
Because I don't. | ||
I don't hear about the wall. | ||
I don't hear about the migrant protection. | ||
I don't hear about any of this stuff. | ||
What I hear about is the economy. | ||
You know, the one thing that I keep hearing about, and I don't just repeat this because, you know, it has this meme value and it's become sort of a punchline and a joke, but all I hear from this guy is black unemployment. | ||
That's like the one thing that sticks out to me from what he's campaigning on, from his campaign rhetoric, the rallies, the speeches, even during these like press scrums outside the White House, the one big takeaway that we're supposed to get for this guy who's running in 2020, the pitch is supposed to be the economy is so good the pitch is supposed to be the economy is so good and it's working for black Like that's what he's running on. | ||
And if that's what he's running on, we're all gonna lose. | ||
Okay? | ||
Like, I just don't understand what the point is. | ||
Why do you run in 2016 on make America great again, build a wall on the southern border, all that, and then even start to work towards that, and then in 2020 you're gonna run on what? | ||
The fact that the GDP is up? | ||
That unemployment is low? | ||
I mean, all of that's great. | ||
I mean, that's good that the economy's doing okay. | ||
I would question some of the core metrics there. | ||
I mean, yeah, okay. | ||
Stock market's at an all-time high, but What does that mean for families? | ||
What does that mean for families in the middle class? | ||
What does that mean for families in the Rust Belt? | ||
What does that mean for working class people? | ||
Does that mean a whole lot? | ||
I think that's dubious. | ||
But in any case, regardless of whether the economy is good or not so good or whatever, why are you running on the economy? | ||
And this even goes back a little bit to the institutionalization question. | ||
It scares me. | ||
It terrifies me that we have come so far in terms of expanding the Overton window. | ||
And I don't love that term, but it's useful. | ||
That we've changed the conversation. | ||
We have changed the paradigm in terms of what is allowed as far as being conservative goes. | ||
For years, to be a conservative could only mean that you're pro-business and you're in favor of a pro-business tax policy. | ||
And like that was it. | ||
You're supposed to be embarrassed about being a traditional conservative. | ||
You're supposed to be a neocon when it comes to foreign policy. | ||
And, you know, just about everything else you can't really talk about because the left is one on that. | ||
You're supposed to be pro-business and that's it. | ||
And it terrifies me that we have come so far in opening up what it means to be a conservative, to be opposed to globalism, to be a nationalist, to defend identity. | ||
I mean that's huge that identity, cultural, national, and otherwise, implicit, racial, is now part of the conversation. | ||
And to go back to GDP and unemployment and pandering to minorities is like, it's hard to overstate what a huge mistake that is. | ||
On every level from electoral politics to, you know, the broader intergenerational struggle to liberate ourselves from this occupying ruling elite. | ||
You can't get worse than what is going on with this rhetoric. | ||
So when it comes to the immigration conversation, I read through this article and I'm like surprised how good things are going. | ||
Things are going well here in spite of all the challenges from inside, from outside, self-inflicted, external. | ||
No, we've gotten pushback from the courts. | ||
We got pushback from our majority in Congress, from Paul Ryan. | ||
We're getting pushback from our own DHS, from the bureaucrats. | ||
Who don't enforce these things? | ||
We get pushback from the media. | ||
So, in spite of all of that, after three years, we have constructed something that is tenuous, is fragile, precarious, but it works. | ||
You know, these deals have been worked out with Mexico, the deals that have been worked out with the Central American, Northern Triangle countries, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, the migrant protection protocols. | ||
the funding that's coming from all these different departments for the wall, these four different things represent like a very serious effort to secure the border, which is awesome. | ||
I'm actually almost a little bit surprised when I see it all together in one place, how much progress we're making. | ||
That has to continue, and we have to run on it. | ||
That's the bottom line. | ||
Everything that's happening, we have to double down. | ||
We have to expand it. | ||
We have to now press the advantage. | ||
But again, none of that matters if we don't run on it. | ||
That has to happen, and then we also have to spread the word and tell people we kept the promises, we secured the border, and that matters more than, like, the GDP. | ||
Because when you look at all these different numbers when it comes to this election, Where we're losing the most ground, what should be the scariest to this administration, is if you look at white, non-college educated voters There are significant losses as far as support for Trump goes, and the same is true with white people in general. | ||
And even if you look at the polling in the battleground states that Trump needs to win, in places like Arizona, Pennsylvania, it's like neck and neck with Joe Biden and even with some of the other candidates. | ||
So I fear that if we don't consolidate the base right before the election, if we don't have that same Outsider appeal. | ||
That same, you know, paradigm shift or what would you call that? | ||
Political realignment that happened in 2016. | ||
If we don't have that same appeal in 2020, this is going to be Mitt Romney. | ||
This is going to be John McCain. | ||
It will be almost indistinguishable from a messaging standpoint and even some extent from a strategic standpoint when you look at how we're playing the map. | ||
So... | ||
It's good. | ||
We're doing good. | ||
We can do better, and we gotta run on it. | ||
So that's the bottom line on immigration, and that's from Axios. | ||
But we'll keep an eye on it. | ||
We'll see what happens, of course. | ||
We're always watching the immigration conversation and the developments as they come in, with the border wall, with these agreements and everything else. | ||
I think we have to give the guy a lot of credit. | ||
You know, I'm not trying to say that everything's perfect and everything's great. | ||
It's not perfect. | ||
It's not great. | ||
And you know what? | ||
It's probably too late, even if it was perfect. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, even if it was everything we wanted it to be, it'd probably already be too late. | ||
And could it be everything we wanted it to be? | ||
Probably not. | ||
And are we even optimal for this administration? | ||
You know, probably not. | ||
But, politics is a messy thing, in spite of so many challenges, this is a respectable effort. | ||
And I'll leave it at that. | ||
So let's be a little bit White Pill tonight. | ||
We're gonna move on, we're gonna talk about the situation in China. | ||
Which you may have heard, there is an imminent global pandemic. | ||
Yeah, I basically heard that there's this deadly virus spreading all across the globe rapidly and will soon consume the entire planet. | ||
We've got about a month before everybody goes down like in that movie Contagion. | ||
I wish it was that way. | ||
No, just kidding. | ||
From a content perspective maybe, but from a personal standpoint, we don't want that to happen. | ||
We're going to move on to talk about what's happening in China with this coronavirus. | ||
You might have seen this. | ||
It's all over the news. | ||
It looks to be not like a huge deal, although they don't really know. | ||
They really have no idea what's going on with this. | ||
But I'll read you a brief report here from Fox News about what's happening with this, and what the disease is, and where it's going, and how many people are afflicted right now. | ||
Health officials around the world are keeping an eye on the outbreak of a new pneumonia-like virus that has killed at least 6 people and sickened some 300 others since it was first reported in China at the end of 2019. | ||
Which, I will say, when it comes to numbers from China, you can never trust them. | ||
They lie about everything, okay? | ||
They lie about GDP, they lie about debt, they lie about, you know, their currency, and I know they're lying about this. | ||
You know, all the major reports are saying these numbers are suppressed, they're trying to minimize the problem. | ||
So when they say 300 people are sick, I've heard estimates that say that something like 2,500 people could be sick, or 3,000 people could be sick. | ||
So you can't really trust the numbers that are coming from the Chinese government. | ||
Anyway, it says officials with the Centers for Disease Control Prevention and the U.S. | ||
Customs and Border Protection announced enhanced health screenings at several major U.S. | ||
airports for passengers arriving from or traveling through China's Wuhan province, which is where the disease originated. | ||
It says hundreds of people have been infected by the virus. | ||
The first case of coronavirus in the U.S. | ||
was confirmed Tuesday in Seattle after a man arrived home last week before the airport health screenings were announced. | ||
Coronaviruses are a family of viruses named after their appearance, which is a crown, said Dr. Mark Rupp, who is an infectious disease expert at the University of Nebraska. | ||
There are many types and few are known to infect humans. | ||
Some cause colds and respiratory illnesses, while others have evolved into illnesses such as severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, and Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS, which you might remember. | ||
I think SARS was like 20 years ago. | ||
MERS was 2012. | ||
So it's in the same family as these illnesses. | ||
And the thing is, they don't really know anything about it, which is why it's hard for me to trust really anything that's being said from the CDC, from China, from whoever else. | ||
You know, when you read all these different reports, what they can tell you is how SARS was, and they could tell you how MERS was. | ||
But they can't tell you what this is. | ||
They can't tell you what the mortality rate is. | ||
They're not even really sure about transmission. | ||
They say that it was formerly animal to human transmission, that the coronavirus went from animals in a live animal market in Wuhan, like livestock, it went from maybe a pig or something like that, to a human, I don't know if it was a pig, but from an animal like that, from some livestock I don't know if it was a pig, but from an animal like that, from some And now I guess it is spreading between humans. | ||
And if you get secretions on your person from an infected person, whether that be they sneeze on you or they shake your hand or something like that, then you can become afflicted with it. | ||
But they don't know what the mortality rate is. | ||
They don't really know much about this disease or the vector for this. | ||
Like how it's being spread, where it will end up, how many people could be infected, things like this. | ||
And so it's really hard for me to trust what they're saying. | ||
You know, we'll keep an eye on it. | ||
We'll see what they're saying. | ||
We're learning more about it. | ||
That's what they say. | ||
And we'll hear more about it. | ||
But I have to tell you, the obvious angle to me is like, how do you let something like this happen? | ||
To me, it's like so obvious. | ||
When you look at what they do in China, or you look at what they do in Africa, or you look at what they do in Mexico, Why are we letting these people into our countries? | ||
I mean, really. | ||
When you think about the fact that people can just buy a plane ticket and come to this country and come through these airports. | ||
And yeah, they have to get a visa and they have to go through a process and a screening and everything else. | ||
But the idea that all you need is like a plane ticket and you can be inside our country. | ||
And you look at where they're coming from. | ||
You look at like what's happening in West Africa, how the Ebola outbreak happened. | ||
You look at like the conditions, the sanitary or rather unsanitary conditions when it comes to like how they prepare their food. | ||
When it comes to how they interact with animals and things like that. | ||
It's like it's a miracle that something has not happened already with regard to, you know, some kind of devastating, catastrophic pandemic. | ||
Because you look at some of these markets for like bushmeat in West Africa where they're chopping up these monkeys in these like disgusting huts in like dens. | ||
They're eating raw meat. | ||
They're eating meat that is like mosquitoes are biting these things and there's rats running around and it's just like... | ||
This is an incubator. | ||
This is like a petri dish for bacteria, viruses, parasites. | ||
And you see the way these people are, the way they're eating it, and they don't wash their hands. | ||
I don't even think they own soap. | ||
I don't even think they wipe their butts with toilet paper, you know? | ||
And these are people that are shaking hands with business people from all over the world, and they're coming through international airports, they're coming here, they're shipping products to our country. | ||
This is what happens in West Africa. | ||
It's not dissimilar from what happens in China, not dissimilar from what happens in the Middle East, in Latin America, in Central America, and people are just like pouring right across. | ||
And it's like you already see it happening in California, it's happening in San Francisco, in Los Angeles, I know they've reported already on the rise of typhus, typhoid, tuberculosis, all these diseases which by the way we had eradicated, like did not exist, could not exist in America because everybody had been inoculated, everybody had been vaccinated. | ||
And therefore, if everybody's vaccinated, if everybody's immune, and everybody who has it, like, dies off, basically, well, that means that it can't spread. | ||
You cannot have it in this country. | ||
But it came back, because we got new people that were not vaccinated, that were not inoculated. | ||
They don't wash their hands. | ||
They don't wash their hands after they use the bathroom. | ||
They don't wash their hands before they prepare food, and so on. | ||
And we get millions and millions of them pouring into a city and they're living in, you know, multi-family homes. | ||
Well, they're living in single-family residences with multiple families. | ||
You know, they've got Abuela and Abuelo and Tia and Tio and everybody in the extended family, right? | ||
And it's no wonder these things are coming back, and it's no wonder, you know, when they're on the streets and they're homeless and using hypodermic needles and so on, that this stuff is like a new epidemic. | ||
How long do you think it's gonna be before something like this really pops off? | ||
Because I put on, as a headline for my show, and I always, I'm literally like laughing out loud at myself as I type this, GLOBAL PANDEMIC IMMINENT, in all capital letters, three question marks. | ||
To indicate the urgency, the severity of this. | ||
But seriously, how long do you think it'll be before something like this really pops off? | ||
When you consider all the transmissions that are possible, when you consider all the contact, all the different people in a place like an airport, you know, in a hub like that, or in a naval port, or something like that, and you think about all the trade, All the goods that are coming and going from all different countries, people that are traveling from all different countries, and you think about just like on a basic level like they don't wash their hands. | ||
Like they don't wash their hands. | ||
Come on. | ||
I mean that seems like such a simple thing, but in so many countries they don't have that and that's like the most basic thing for how you have a clean and you know non-plague society. | ||
It's just by cleaning the hands before you prepare food, after you go to the bathroom, you know basic things like that. | ||
When you go home after you're in a public place, you think about all these different disease vectors that are coming in and out on a daily basis. | ||
You think about, like, the scale, the volume of people that are coming in and out of these ports on a daily basis, and you would be shocked that something has not already happened. | ||
The answer is simple. | ||
Shut it down! | ||
Shut it down! | ||
Shut down the border, shut down the ports, shut down the airports. | ||
Shut it all down. | ||
If you're sneezing, if you're coughing, sniffling, if you look tired, if you have red eyes, if you're sweating, you can't get on a plane, you can't come here. | ||
That might sound like extreme or something, but what is it really going to take? | ||
Because here's the problem. | ||
I don't talk about this a lot on my show, but this like biological stuff we should be very, very concerned about. | ||
You know, we talk a lot on the show about chemicals in the water, chemicals in the food. | ||
It's a big problem. | ||
You know, diseases that might affect agriculture. | ||
When you look at a lot of this farming that happens with like Monsanto, I forget, what do they call this? | ||
Genetically modified foods, genetically modified organisms. | ||
All it takes is like one disease and all the crops are gone, right? | ||
On like an agricultural level. | ||
All it takes is one carcinogen in a certain product in a plastic or whatever to turn the whole population gay, right? | ||
Or to turn the whole population into having cancer or something like that. | ||
And then it comes to diseases. | ||
How long before you get an antibiotic-resistant virus that spreads, it's got a very easy transmission, and you have like a long time before symptoms present? | ||
I mean, how long are you going to wait before something like that happens, before you take these kinds of security measures seriously? | ||
These are the kinds of big questions people have to be asking. | ||
I think I'm a lot less worried. | ||
For example, the Davos summit commenced today, I'm a lot less worried about climate change in the event that there's going to be a global pandemic that does wipe everybody out in our lifetime, in our generation. | ||
Because that is what is on the menu when you see all these different sort of incubators and petri dishes for Diseases to grow, to be resistant to vaccinations, and the speed at which, and all you have to do is have one mutation, all you have to do is have one, like, nightmare bug, nightmare scenario, where it transmits easily, resistant to antibiotics, doesn't present, and so on, before the whole population is down with something. | ||
And we don't have the infrastructure in place, once that happens, to roll it back. | ||
You know? | ||
So it's like, either you prevent it, or you lose. | ||
You either prevent that from happening at all before everybody gets it and it starts to snowball, or it happens and you're just out of luck. | ||
You just gotta hope that enough people survive, that they can carry on civilization, they know how to build bridges, they know how to repair the bridges, they know how to, you know, still make things once most of the population goes away. | ||
It might sound crazy for me to tell you that right now, but mark my words, if it goes down in the next so many years, you'll come back on the show and you'll say, wow, this guy sounded crazy at the time, but he was right. | ||
Because to me, and I'm a little bit of a germaphobe, I'm one of these people where, you know, I go to a public, you know, restroom and I wash my hands for like three minutes and then I, you know, take the, uh... | ||
I'll take the paper towels from the dispenser and use that to turn the faucet off, use that to open the door, because just thinking about all these different things, it makes me insane, it makes me paranoid. | ||
And then to think about all that is happening in a, like a airport in California, or an airport in China, or an airport in New York City, or something like that. | ||
All these people coming through, and what they do, there are cultural practices in their home countries, touching livestock, touching fecal matter, Preparing food things like that and it's like it really messes with my autism. | ||
How does nobody else think about this stuff? | ||
So, you know yet another reason if you were wondering, you know Are there other reasons to oppose immigration besides the fact that they're bringing drug crimes rapists? | ||
They're replacing us. | ||
They're taking our culture. | ||
They don't speak the language and so on Well, you know, here's yet another reason. | ||
If you don't want to have a massive pandemic, you're probably going to want to try to shut some things down because if what's happening in California is any indicator of what we'll see in the future, it is that your kid is going to go to school and you're going to have some dark Indian kid from Honduras going to be, you know, rubbing his nose and rubbing his eyes. | ||
And your kid's gonna borrow a pencil from him! | ||
Or probably, you know, he'll be loaning a pencil to the other kid if, you know, we're being consistent here. | ||
And then it's all over! | ||
Then your kid comes home, he's dead, your wife's dead, you're dead, you know, and then you have a graveyard in your backyard with three headstones and it's game over. | ||
That might sound like crazy, but it's already underway. | ||
It's already happening in San Francisco. | ||
It's already happening in Los Angeles. | ||
It's even happening in Chicago. | ||
Measles outbreaks, tuberculosis, it's here, it's everywhere. | ||
So, you know, yet another, yet another reminder. | ||
You know, if you needed something else to be kept awake at night about, a pandemic should be somewhere on that list. | ||
So, that's what's happening in China. | ||
We'll have to see how this develops. | ||
As always, You know, me being the catastrophe monger, the disaster monger, I will be waiting in the wings, rubbing my hands together, waiting for a global pandemic to strike. | ||
You know, I will be watching the World Health Organization giddily. | ||
I will be watching with a smile on my face, grinning. | ||
Oh no, I don't think they'll catch this one in time. | ||
Uh-oh, they're saying that it's antibiotic resistant? | ||
There's no vaccine? | ||
Mortality rate 50%? | ||
That's not gonna be good. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
That is a joke, of course. | ||
I'm completely kidding. | ||
Don't want that to happen. | ||
That'd be very bad. | ||
That'd be a very tragic thing, a huge human toll, and we don't want that to happen. | ||
But from a content perspective, it might be interesting to see something happen for once in a while, so... | ||
So that's China. | ||
We'll keep an eye on that. | ||
I'll let you know. | ||
You have to trust me as your correspondent. | ||
If this turns into a thing, maybe I'll have to get, like, a white doctor's coat. | ||
Wouldn't that be funny? | ||
Every time I talk about the China situation, you can trust me as, like, you're, like, the Surgeon General. | ||
America first. | ||
Surgeon General. | ||
Top doctor. | ||
Top doctor. | ||
Nick Fletcher, supporting for duty. | ||
I've got one of those things on my head. | ||
What is that with the medal? | ||
Circle on top it is like an old stethoscope or whatever. | ||
I've got the you know the thing that you put in your ears Okay, dr. Nick logging on we've got the latest from the World Health Organization Everybody's going to get it so you know so maybe we'll have to do that if this turns into a Big thing if this turns into a big story But for now, we don't really know much. | ||
So that's what's happening in China. | ||
Another reason, keep them out. | ||
Keep them all out. | ||
I don't care where they come from. | ||
We don't want them here. | ||
They don't wash their hands. | ||
I don't want them in my neighborhood, right? | ||
That should be the new meme. | ||
If you don't wash your hands, get the fuck out of here, okay? | ||
And they don't wash their hands, so... | ||
Anyway, sorry for the language, but we're gonna move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
I hope you wash your hands before you send Super Chats my way. | ||
I will not be touching your lemons. | ||
I will not be touching your DLive or Entropy money if it has germs on it. | ||
So I hope everybody is staying clean. | ||
Wash your hands. | ||
We're gonna take a look at DLive first. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying on there. | ||
Let's take a look here. | ||
We've got, uh, America Floats who says, no e-girls never. | ||
Well, thank you for the Ninjagini. | ||
Yes, that is, uh, very true. | ||
Yeah, no e-girls. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
I sort of like, there was a great, um, there was a clip of, I think it was Hassan Rouhani, or maybe it was the Ayatollah in Iran. | ||
It was a very old clip where, uh, and it was in subtitles, but they're all chanting, death to America, and he goes, yes, yes, death to America, of course. | ||
That always stuck with me. | ||
It was from like years ago, but the Ayatollah, he came on, it was this televised thing, and they're all chanting, death to America, and he goes, yes, yes, death to America, of course, death to America. | ||
I feel the same way about no e-girls. | ||
It's like, yes, yes, no e-girls. | ||
You know, I come on the show in the live chat, no e-girls, no e-girls. | ||
Ah, yes, yes, no e-girls, of course, yes. | ||
No e-girls, death to e-girls, yes. | ||
Death to e-girls, of course. | ||
Yes, no e-girls. | ||
But, you know, as much as people say it, It's not a joke, folks. | ||
Not a joke! | ||
I can't say this enough. | ||
It has turned into a punchline. | ||
I am humorous when I say it, but I'm not kidding. | ||
It's not a joke. | ||
Don't talk to e-girls. | ||
Don't talk to them. | ||
Don't pay attention to them. | ||
They are a dumpster fire of bad content, bad opinions, worthless opinions. | ||
You know, they're just generally something you want to stay away from. | ||
Oftentimes they're subversive. | ||
You know, it's so funny to me. | ||
I hear countless stories of there's a prominent Wignatt account that's like being doxxed by his e-girlfriend. | ||
I hear these stories like every day, the regularity, the frequency with which this happens. | ||
You would think people would learn, but they don't. | ||
But they don't because they're not thinking with their head. | ||
They are thinking with their Penis frankly, you know to be frank. | ||
They're thinking with their penis. | ||
Do not be thinking like that Think with your brain be a galaxy brain Don't be a coon brain. | ||
That's how you end up a doctor in jail or dead Big Globe says Rogan clip made me want to get behind the TRS paywall. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
We watched that on stream yesterday. | ||
Pretty hardcore, that Bari Weiss. | ||
Very based, very based in Redfield. | ||
Her take on demographic change. | ||
Polish American says don't let them upgrade the air transmission. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Polish says love the titles global pandemic imminent, Chad and epic. | ||
Thanks, glad you enjoy. | ||
Polish Americans is what happened to the new intro. | ||
Bring it back, please. | ||
Well, I'm back on YouTube, so I'm doing the YouTube intro. | ||
Shmeet Johnson says, had oral surgery. | ||
I'd like you... Okay, thanks a lot for that. | ||
Fok says, check out music video for America First by Merle Haggard. | ||
YouTube algorithm sent Nicker Nation there. | ||
America First by Merle Haggard. | ||
Yeah, okay, I'll take a look at that. | ||
After the show, Salty Gabel says, uh, why don't meds like blowjobs? | ||
They don't like any jobs. | ||
Okay, disavow. | ||
Gross and vulgar. | ||
We don't like that because that'll land you in hell. | ||
So, uh, congratulations, Angloid. | ||
You played yourself. | ||
unidentified
|
Why do meds, uh, why don't meds like blowjobs? | |
Because we're not gonna be burning in hell forever like all you Protestant Angloids. | ||
Like all you degenerate Angloids. | ||
Uh, Salty says, open chest please. | ||
Yeah, I'll open it tonight. | ||
Also, thanks for mentioning conservative nature of Washington State outside major cities. | ||
Very true. | ||
Yeah, well, you're welcome. | ||
I feel like people don't really know that about a lot of these states like Oregon, Washington, Vermont, even California. | ||
People don't know this, but California is very conservative in certain places. | ||
You know, we think of California as SoCal, you know, LA, San Francisco. | ||
Well, San Francisco, SoCal, or is that I think that's like in the middle. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I've never been to San Francisco, but you know what I'm saying. | ||
They think about the coastal cities, they think about the very liberal LA County, and they think about surrounding areas. | ||
But California, I'm pretty sure, has more Republicans than any state because of the sheer size of the state. | ||
So you've got a lot of conservatives in certain parts and that's true in a lot of places. | ||
You've got like one city that drags the whole state the other way. | ||
Illinois is kind of like this. | ||
Wisconsin is very right-wing. | ||
Michigan's very right-wing. | ||
Michigan's very rural outside of like Detroit and a few other major cities. | ||
There's a lot of people that you'd be surprised, you know, and the elites don't know that because they don't go to these places. | ||
A lot of these coastal people, they have no idea what is between. | ||
Which is kind of a you know a bit trite at this point, but it's so true Cool blue squares is what's your favorite color probably red? | ||
Red or blue. | ||
Base$ says, hey Nick, I'm traveling to India for work. | ||
I'm terrified I'll catch something. | ||
The place is filthy. | ||
It is. | ||
And you should be careful, man. | ||
The place is filthy. | ||
I was talking to Faith Goldie about it and she was telling me how bad the air smelled. | ||
Faith Goldie was telling me that she would smoke cigarettes constantly because smelling like cigarettes all the time was better than the smell that was everywhere all the time, everywhere else. | ||
She said it smelled like some combination of like garbage, poo, burning tires, like just like the worst smell. | ||
And of course they do open defecation. | ||
People think that's like offensive or something but it's just true. | ||
Something like half or more than half of the population defecates in the streets. | ||
There was a program where people went into India and built toilets there and they destroyed the toilets and just shit on the floor anyway. | ||
I mean that's what happens there. | ||
I'm not making that up. | ||
That is not a racist lie. | ||
That is not like some... I didn't get that from William Luther Pierce or, you know, something like... I didn't read that in Mein Kampf. | ||
That's from, like, the United Nations. | ||
They collect data on this. | ||
They do programs. | ||
They put out educational material that tells people, hey, stop shitting in the street! | ||
But it's such a big cultural thing where actually what they do, I guess, somebody told me this recently, they destroyed the toilets because a big part of their culture is like going out and taking a dump and like talking to their neighbor. | ||
I don't know how true that is. | ||
A friend of mine told me this, just a story I heard, where I guess they wouldn't go in the toilet because it was such a big part of their culture that, you know, like we, like Tony Soprano goes out and collects his morning paper in the driveway, they will go out and like shit in their street beside their neighbor. | ||
And catch up, I guess. | ||
I don't know if that's true. | ||
I just heard that. | ||
I think it's funny. | ||
And they do do that. | ||
They will stop. | ||
Do do. | ||
No pun intended. | ||
They will stop in the middle of the highway, get out, and shit in the median. | ||
unidentified
|
And it's like... What are you supposed to do with that? | |
What am I supposed to do with that? | ||
What are we, as the human race, supposed to do with this? | ||
You know, we're asking people to like... | ||
Come here and get along and they're supposed to land on the moon? | ||
It's like you can't shit in the toilet. | ||
You're supposed to land on the moon? | ||
What's going on? | ||
What does that tell you, by the way? | ||
What does that tell you? | ||
The things we're asking of other people to do and it's like, you know, like use the toilet? | ||
Really? | ||
It's kind of like potty training's like 101 here. | ||
It's like you turn three years old. | ||
It's like, okay, time to be a big boy and you know, go use this toilet. | ||
We'll teach you how to use this toilet. | ||
And it's like, they're not even, What are you supposed to do with this? | ||
I don't know what else you need to see at that point. | ||
All these people. | ||
Some people in my family. | ||
Well, the problem is the entitlement mentality. | ||
The problem is welfare. | ||
Where's the entitlement mentality there? | ||
Where's the entitlement mentality when they're okay with living like that? | ||
You see what we're up against? | ||
Anyway, let's see. | ||
Cool, so good luck out there, wash your hands, use a breathing mask, you know, gloves. | ||
If you offend people, it's worth not dying, right? | ||
Coolbluesquare says, how does Morse make, how, or I'm sorry, not Morse. | ||
How does Moses make his tea? | ||
He brews it. | ||
Oh, thank you for that. | ||
That's really good. | ||
Shineice has caught the schmood stream last night. | ||
And it was amazing. | ||
When's the next karaoke stream, King? | ||
Well, I'm glad you enjoyed that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
One of these days. | ||
Maybe tonight. | ||
Maybe tomorrow. | ||
Maybe the weekend. | ||
I wasn't really karaoke streaming. | ||
I was only singing a couple of songs, okay? | ||
Unfortunately, I couldn't sing them as, you know, much as I'd like to because there's some N-words. | ||
And I, you know... A couple of them slipped, alright? | ||
I had to let a couple of them fly. | ||
A couple of soft Ns had to fly singing along to the song. | ||
I was singing the song, so that doesn't really count. | ||
But, um... | ||
Yeah, so I can't... When I'm in my car, I'm blasting, okay? | ||
I'm blasting ends, I'm blasting all the words, okay? | ||
But when I'm on stream, I have to sort of watch. | ||
We have to moderate, can let a couple slip past the goalie, and they got to be soft. | ||
But, you know, I can't really go as hard as I'd like to. | ||
Can't hit them all, can't hit them all in a percussive fashion, giving them the emphasis they deserve on a stream, you know, that anybody could be watching, so... | ||
300 Spartans says PJW made a video about simps, had some clips of you. | ||
Really? | ||
PJW made a video with clips of me in it? | ||
It's not like I had dozens of people mentioning me on Twitter or tagging me on Twitter. | ||
unidentified
|
Nick, did you see the PJW video? | |
You're in it like three times. | ||
Look, Nick, look! | ||
Got it. | ||
I saw it. | ||
Saw it. | ||
Which I appreciate. | ||
I like PJW a lot. | ||
I think he's coming around on a lot of the issues. | ||
He's becoming based. | ||
Based in Redfield. | ||
A very honest, fair guy when it comes to us and what we're doing. | ||
So yeah, so I did see it. | ||
No offense California groper says r.i.p. | ||
Kathy's you did she die? | ||
That's very tragic T-based says love you Nick. | ||
Keep killing it. | ||
Thanks, buddy. | ||
Thanks for the ninja genie California groper says how do you think we can reverse the IQ decline? | ||
Not gonna happen man, it's not gonna happen How do we reverse? | ||
The IQ declines the E word. | ||
It starts with the letter E. But we can't do that. | ||
But we can't. | ||
We can't do that. | ||
Look, sooner or later, people have to realize maybe the biggest problem in the world is that too many people are being born and staying alive. | ||
For a long time, there was sort of this natural process by which people are being selected based on survivability, based on certain traits. | ||
And if you weren't like, if you weren't up to snuff, you would just die. | ||
You know, you just die and the gene pool would stop with you. | ||
But now it's like everybody's alive. | ||
Everybody's living. | ||
Everybody who's born gets to live. | ||
And what happens? | ||
Well, like the gene pool is just like polluted with, you know, with bad, bad things. | ||
And at a certain point, it's like you're going to get a lot more like unexceptional, like dysgenic people than you are going to get people that are, you know, going to make things good. | ||
So I don't really know a good answer. | ||
I'm Catholic. | ||
So we can't really support. | ||
You know, policies that correct this, that sort of rectify the situation, but it's something to think about. | ||
Forces that used to exist to sort of limit what was happening, and now there are not those. | ||
I'm not in favor of, like, you know, anything. | ||
I'm not saying anything more than I am here. | ||
All I'm saying is it's something to consider about the explosion of people that are being born and people that are like being alive and having kids. | ||
It's never happened before. | ||
It's never happened before. | ||
The extent of Western medicine and what has been allowed by these kinds of modern procedures. | ||
The rate at which people are surviving and being born and so on. | ||
And yeah, so how do you stop the IQ decline? | ||
I don't think you can. | ||
I don't think you can. | ||
I think it's got to just like burn itself out through, you know, a very natural way. | ||
In a catastrophic way, but an organic way nonetheless. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
Jeff says wagwan. | ||
Okay, I don't know what that means. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Oh, that's hilarious, dude. | ||
What's the pre-show? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Does that mean, like, the live chat? | ||
unidentified
|
Amen. | |
I don't know what that means. | ||
Leftist Cuck says, Destiny is more Cuck than me, and Cuck is my name. | ||
Oh, that's hilarious, dude. | ||
TBased says, You're a rock star to us, bro. | ||
You should see the pre-show. | ||
What's the pre-show? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Does that mean like the live chat, or is there like a show that starts before my show? | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
That's very, very kind words. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
I appreciate that. | ||
You guys are rock stars to me. | ||
You guys are the real rock stars out there. | ||
Cool Blue says, who did you watch on YouTube as a kid? | ||
Gamers? | ||
Who did I watch on YouTube? | ||
I watched... I watched Epic Meal Time, Bacon Strips, and Bacon Strips. | ||
Hello, Bacon Strip Check? | ||
and sauce and uh you know all that i used to watch that i used to watch a friend of mine turned me on to that friend of mine from china actually turned me on to that my chinese handler turned me on to uh epic meal time you guys remember that i used to watch uh danebo was that was called like annoying orange and all those uh that family of videos danebo i think it was called charlie the unicorn talking llamas | ||
I used to watch that badger song and all those videos the badger song the narwhal song Pork song, you know things like that I watched Fred when I was very very young Fred videos I Was very much a normie if you can't already tell it's basically a normie. | ||
What else would I watch? | ||
unidentified
|
I would watch I I'm trying to think. | |
Dunkey, I was a big fan of for a time. | ||
I would also in high school and middle school watch the political content I used to watch. | ||
I'd watch a lot of Thomas Sowell, Milton Friedman, Walter Williams, Charles Krauthammer, a lot of stuff from Fox News, you know, Mark Levin, things like that. | ||
One back. | ||
Those were, that was like my, once I was in high school, it's like kind of everything I watched was politics and political, but I also watched a lot of that silly stuff when I was in middle school. | ||
Annoying orange. | ||
Hello, annoying orange check. | ||
Hey apple, hey apple, Israel. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey apple, hey apple, knife. | |
Oh, man. | ||
Classic stuff. | ||
I missed those days. | ||
It was a completely different era of YouTube. | ||
It was completely different. | ||
Comrade Stump, of course, in 2016. | ||
I used to watch some gaming stuff, certainly. | ||
But mostly... I don't know. | ||
It's sort of hard to remember what I used to watch. | ||
But yeah, it was a lot of things like that. | ||
I like Albert. | ||
He was being very nice to me today. | ||
Nick the Bricks says, America first, yeah. | ||
Kala Saru says, have you decided if you like AI? | ||
Or is that Al, my dog? | ||
Do you mean artificial intelligence or Al, my dog? | ||
I like Albert. | ||
He was being very nice to me today. | ||
I don't know why. | ||
He was being very nice. | ||
I let him outside, and I was running around with him outside for a little bit. | ||
I was unloading my car. | ||
I had to unload some stuff in the house, and so I was outside. | ||
I was coming in and out. | ||
Normally, I don't like play with him outside, so he was like twirling around in circles and jumping up, and he was very excited, so I was like, you know, you're kind of cool, actually. | ||
You're not bad after all. | ||
Big John Town says, you really believe in American identity and America First students, or is that just a convenient way to red pill people? | ||
What a stupid question that is. | ||
Uh, but thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Oh, what a stupid question. | ||
Uh, Jar Jar Binks says, Jesus. | ||
Okay, I'm not reading that. | ||
It's blasphemous. | ||
T-Based says, Nick number one. | ||
Wow! | ||
Well, thanks so much for the Ninjet, big guy. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
Thanks for the huge donation. | ||
Ninjet, I am a Ninjet respecter. | ||
Anybody who posts that immediately, you get my respect. | ||
Uh, Dresden says, each soul has a race and each race Each soul has a race, and each race has a soul. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
I read that in Evola. | ||
We talked about that a little bit on my stream last night after the show, and I initially read about this in Evola, which is true. | ||
Jar Jar says, Stire 2020. | ||
Yeah, disagree. | ||
This is a password says thoughts on transhumanism. | ||
I think it's satanic Aquatic based nibba says what's your opinion on vanilla or strawberry flavored milk? | ||
Can they compete with chocolate milk? | ||
vanilla flavored milk That doesn't really make a lot of sense. | ||
I don't really believe in like these flavored milks I think you've got regular milk and chocolate milk and that's about as far as I'll go But I've never had the others so I don't really know vanilla milk sounds kind of good actually sounds like it would taste like ice cream Or something. | ||
So maybe I'll have to give that a go. | ||
But I don't really drink milk. | ||
I don't like milk. | ||
I would never just fill up a glass of milk and drink it. | ||
You know, I was a kid. | ||
I, when I was a kid, I used to go to, joker check, I would go to all these, uh, I would go to all my different friends, all my, I had so many friends. | ||
I would go to my friend's house and they would eat a meal and drink a glass of milk with it. | ||
You know, they'd be like, what do you want to drink? | ||
And I'd be like, Oh, like, do you got pop? | ||
Do you got like Coke or whatever? | ||
Juice? | ||
Gatorade? | ||
And they would drink milk. | ||
They would, you know, we'd be eating chicken nuggets and, uh, whoops, I just spilled a little bit of water there. | ||
They'd be eating chicken nuggets and mac and cheese or whatever and they'd fill up a glass of milk straight up and I'd be like, what is wrong with you? | ||
Are you a sociopath? | ||
Drinking milk? | ||
Some people drink milk with the weirdest things. | ||
They'll be eating like spaghetti or something like that. | ||
Drinking a glass of milk. | ||
What does it matter with you? | ||
You know, drink water, drink, I don't know. | ||
Drink a, uh, soft drink, something like that, but milk? | ||
No, I would never, I would never, I have never in my life, you know, gone to the refrigerator and filled up a glass of cold milk. | ||
Mmm, milk. | ||
Yeah, gross. | ||
I hate milk. | ||
I'll drink chocolate milk, that stuff is okay, but it's kind of pushing it. | ||
I just don't like it in general. | ||
Just don't like the stuff, okay? | ||
Just don't like it. | ||
Not lactose intolerant, just don't like it. | ||
And I don't get people, I really always was bothered by people that do. | ||
Just, I'll have a glass of milk to drink, really? | ||
I guess it's a maybe it's like a white thing. | ||
I wouldn't get it. | ||
I'm afro-latino. | ||
We don't really do that Let's see based dollar says will Jaden's America first Organization look for donations. | ||
I throw a few shackles their way. | ||
Um, I think they're getting that set up I talked to him this afternoon about you know, some things he might do things He should do, you know, just giving a little bit of advice and I think they're getting that set up Penis, okay says I'm not gonna read the second part of the username He says are you secretly wearing sweatpants during your streams? | ||
I've never seen you stand up. | ||
I'm wearing jeans right now I'm wearing jeans I'm like Sean Hannity. | ||
Have you ever watched Sean Hannity? | ||
He's always wearing jeans. | ||
He throws around a football around the studio. | ||
Very chad. | ||
Very cool. | ||
Masculine. | ||
During the commercial breaks, he'll take a football and throw it to a producer. | ||
And that shows that he's just like us. | ||
Even if he makes millions and millions and millions of dollars saying the same things over and over and over again. | ||
He wears blue jeans. | ||
He throws a football around the studio. | ||
He's a man's man. | ||
He's just like us. | ||
He's a black belt. | ||
He's a tough badass, okay? | ||
I don't want to mess with Sean Handy. | ||
He would beat me up, for sure. | ||
He probably would, actually. | ||
But that's serious, alright? | ||
That's serious business. | ||
He's like a black belt. | ||
He talks about that a lot on the show. | ||
My Fox News respecters will know what I'm talking about. | ||
He talks about this frequently, about how tough he is. | ||
Oh, I'm a tough guy. | ||
I'm a black belt. | ||
He probably does have that, like, old man strength, though, that, like, boomer strength that should be respected at a distance and feared. | ||
But, you know, it goes on and on. | ||
I'm a black belt. | ||
I'm a black belt. | ||
Throwing the football around, it's like, okay, bro, for sure. | ||
Yeah, you're really cool. | ||
But no, I wear jeans. | ||
I used to wear, like, gym shorts, but that just looked ridiculous, so I had to switch it out. | ||
Dresden says rhetoric, homophile, Europhobe, Jewish apologist. | ||
no that just doesn't that just simply will not do uh zx says phase two absorb the enemy established dominance yeah uh minnesota groper says a haley rubio 2024 ticket is my worst nightmare yeah me too buddy dr taylor marshall says should i tell my wife and kids that i'm nauseable okay well i don't think this is the real taylor marshall but uh yeah yeah maybe you should maybe you should alert them try and red pill uh your wife and kids on the revolution right I don't really know what to do with that. | ||
Kind of a weak super chat. | ||
Serial Noticer with a lot of diamonds. | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
Thank you, Serial Noticer. | ||
It's always great to see a fellow Noticer logging online. | ||
Serial Noticer logging online. | ||
The goyim are waking up. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, my fellow Noticer. | |
Are you starting to see it yet? | ||
Starting to get it yet? | ||
Are you paying attention yet? | ||
Are you noticing? | ||
unidentified
|
Coincidence? | |
Really makes me think. | ||
Let that sink in. | ||
unidentified
|
Let that sink in. | |
OpticsRespector says my high school is 70% white when I went. | ||
Now 43%. | ||
Yeah, story. | ||
A tale often told across the country. | ||
Yeah, yeah, I hear you. | ||
Henry Yates with some diamonds. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
T-Based with another ninjette. | ||
Wow, holy smokes. | ||
Two ninjettes in one night that is like a squadron of three ninjets from the same guy we've got a personal uh air force here personal ninja air force escort and you've got america first one america first air force One AF AF one Escorted by a legion a I don't know what you call it in the air squadron of ninjets T-base as we love you more than President Trump yet. | ||
I believe that because I'm cooler I'm more red pill than based. | ||
I will name that President Trump will never name them. | ||
I will Will always stand by you. | ||
Well, hey, thank you so much for the ninjets. | ||
That is incredible Thanks a lot for that very generous donations tonight really appreciate that D with a ninja guinea. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Gene says legend. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, they say you are what you eat, but I don't remember eating a legend Salty says any plans for a sidekick maybe half retard by the way, that's a Jacob Sartorius quote. | ||
That's my favorite Jacob Sartorius tweeted that out a couple of years ago. | ||
I'll never get over how epic that is Jacob Sartorius tweets they say you are what you eat, but I don't ever remember eating a legend facts such a king Uh, any plans for a sidekick? | ||
I've been thinking about that actually, like an ombudsman. | ||
Sort of like how Jimmy Fallon has that Higgins guy, and Jimmy Kimmel has that Mexican guy, and Conan has the, what is it, Andy, whatever. | ||
I need sort of like an ombudsman, maybe a producer, maybe somebody who sits on the couch if I get a couch eventually, you know, I don't know. | ||
But I think that would be a good addition to the show to have somebody just kind of there to like bounce things off of. | ||
Might be fun. | ||
So, that's an idea I have thought about in the past. | ||
Who knows? | ||
It might happen this year. | ||
We'll have to see. | ||
KD says, great white pills these last two days. | ||
God bless. | ||
Yeah, thanks buddy. | ||
Boopers says, the disease is spread by pee pee poo poo. | ||
Yeah, unironically. | ||
ArminianGroperz has got to go out to dinner. | ||
Catch you later. | ||
Shout out to all the Kings donating, especially T-Based. | ||
Yeah, hey, thanks so much. | ||
And thanks so much, ArminianGroperz. | ||
He's been a super donor this week. | ||
Super lemon guy. | ||
Super, super chatter. | ||
BoomerDestroyer says, AFS is great news for our country's academic future. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
T-Based with a Ninjagini. | ||
Wow, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
JudeClimber says, anime weathering with you equals global warming is BS. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Nick says, mandatory hand washing station in every airport. | ||
Yeah, seriously, why go to these airports and they have these Purell dispensers? | ||
I'm sorry, but that doesn't cut it. | ||
I don't trust that. | ||
Purell. | ||
You know and uh the other day I was walking through O'Hare and I was like had a bag of McDonald's in my under my arm and I had my bag and my other bag and I'm like trying to wash it in while I'm holding like a you know one of these uh cups of coke in my arm with my bag trying not to spill anything. | ||
Big disaster. | ||
Big mess. | ||
I literally every time I go to the airport whenever I land I immediately go to the airport and wash my hands. | ||
It's the first thing I do. | ||
Uh, let's see. | ||
Serial Noticers says, Google needs trusted flaggers. | ||
Pandemic be damned. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Uh, Fart Smeller says, uh, Hey King, have you heard of Charles Chaplin? | ||
He's a funny guy. | ||
He doesn't even say a word. | ||
Haha. | ||
Okay. | ||
I have a feeling this might be really good comics, but I'm not sure. | ||
So thanks for that. | ||
Uh, T-Based with a few more Ninjaginis. | ||
Wow. | ||
This guy's dropping a lot of lemons tonight. | ||
Some serious dough. | ||
It's probably one of the Chinese handlers coming through. | ||
It's probably my... probably my briefcase from Israel for, you know, all that neocon shilling I did during the Iran tension. | ||
You know, finally the check has cleared and now I am getting the funds from Beijing and from Tehran. | ||
Yes, thank you. | ||
thank you to my handler esoteric so it's trying to be like health departments are for chumps yeah good one serial noticer says beware the indo-honduran threat well i'm talking about like indios you know i'm not talking about indian like you know indians like you know american indians you know what i mean like uh amerindian that That's what I'm saying. | ||
I'm talking about these like dark like Indiana Jones people. | ||
Autism Unstoppable says diversity is a disease literally. | ||
Yeah, seriously. | ||
Serial Noticers says hi, Dr. Nick. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi. | |
300 Spartan says all this pandemic talk reminds me of Plague Inc. | ||
Yeah, it reminds me of that movie Contagion, which was actually filmed near my neighborhood, actually. | ||
Kind of funny. | ||
At least one scene was. | ||
So that's one of my favorites. | ||
Matt Damon. | ||
I think he came out in what, 2010 or something? | ||
Lawrence Fishbourne. | ||
And I think it was Elizabeth... What's her name? | ||
What's her name? | ||
What's the girl's name? | ||
I don't know. | ||
But yeah, it's one of my favorites. | ||
That's a good one. | ||
T-Base with a couple more Ninja Genies. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Thank you so much. | ||
Four more Ninja Genies. | ||
Sheesh! | ||
Jimbo with just a smiley emoticon. | ||
Thank you, Jimbo. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
My closest ally in Rust. | ||
Boopers says I'm a trucker trust me. | ||
They don't wash their hands. | ||
Yeah, believe me. | ||
I trust you Save the West says Colombian co-worker sneezed up. | ||
Excuse me sneezed on me. | ||
It's all over. | ||
Yeah, you better Get your affairs in order write your will and all that Try to stay away from other people. | ||
Okay, the only time I'm gonna put on my lab coat is to say wash your hands. | ||
That's the most important thing. | ||
I'm going to put on my lab coat is to say wash your hands. | ||
That's the most important thing. | ||
Serial notice versus Indian bloated cadavers in their Holy River. | ||
Cringe, yeah. | ||
Trustease is getting my yay thread merch tomorrow. | ||
Super excited. | ||
Also going to convert from Protestant to Catholic. | ||
Any tips? | ||
Well that's great to hear on both counts. | ||
Congrats on the Kanye merch and congratulations on the conversion. | ||
You just got to go through the proper process. | ||
You got to go to your church and I think schedule an appointment with like a priest or one of these advisors and they help you through the catechumen process and you take classes and all that I've never converted. | ||
I was born Catholic, so I don't really know exactly the process. | ||
But you go, I think, through the priest, you join the parish and everything, and I think they will show you how to do it. | ||
But it's not like one of these things where it's like, oh, I'm Catholic. | ||
Like, you have to go through the process. | ||
You gotta get baptized, confirmed, all that. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Serial noticer says, what's running Google? | ||
What is this? | ||
Okay, so this is just like incomprehensible. | ||
Roberts says, are you associated with America First Students? | ||
Not in any official capacity, but I'm advising Jade in a little bit. | ||
You know, giving him advice and things. | ||
Chief Bulging Snake says, call her an e-girl. | ||
You will be astonished at how she recoils. | ||
How injured she is. | ||
I've been found out. | ||
Yeah, okay, I've never heard that one before. | ||
Wow, just insert meme here. | ||
Call her X. You'll be astonished at how they recoil. | ||
Wow, yeah, I've never heard that before. | ||
Congratulations, you did it! | ||
You took the meme format and you put something else in. | ||
You did a good job. | ||
Everyone is, yes, so much yes. | ||
Have this Reddit upvote, please. | ||
Please have this reddit gold. | ||
Edit, thank you so much. | ||
Okay, stop. | ||
Please, please, no more of this. | ||
T-Base with some more Ninjaginis and another Ninjet! | ||
Holy shit, he says XD. | ||
Wow, XD indeed. | ||
XD indeed. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Salty says, much love, King. | ||
Yeah, love you too. | ||
Jeff says, ASDF movie is peak zoomer history. | ||
I didn't really watch those very much. | ||
I, even then, I thought they were a little bit cringe, honestly. | ||
I watched Shoes. | ||
Do you remember that video? | ||
Shoes. | ||
I forget who makes that, but it's like a song. | ||
My parents would not let me watch that because they were swearing in it. | ||
I remember my parents wouldn't let me watch Fred because he would say something sucks. | ||
Like, this sucks. | ||
My parents wouldn't let me say that. | ||
So, uh, yeah, I couldn't watch Shoes, couldn't watch, uh, you know, Family Guy clips, couldn't watch, uh, Fred. | ||
I did anyway, but, you know, they officially disallowed me from watching that. | ||
I had to watch Annoying Orange. | ||
Uh, Salty says, uh, sadly... Oh, he's telling me how to pronounce it. | ||
Salt... Taxon Salt. | ||
It's Gabel. | ||
Salty Gabel. | ||
Taxon Salt. | ||
Okay, thank you for that. | ||
Thank you for clarifying your username. | ||
Yeah, I don't think I'll be taking anything from the audience, but thanks a lot. | ||
BaseDollar says, send in your ombudsman applications. | ||
Yeah, I don't think I'll be taking anything from the audience, but thanks a lot. | ||
NitroDub says, love the idea of you having a minor sidekick. | ||
Well, I'm glad you like that. | ||
BaseDollar says, for ombudsman, please pick Asian that knows speak English. | ||
Yeah, good idea. | ||
Autism Unstoppable says the movie Weathering With You has anti-global warming, is anti-global warming, and pro-prayer. | ||
Okay. | ||
Have you seen Eminem's new music video, Darkness? | ||
Dresden says dummy. | ||
Put the Entropy link in the description. | ||
sender eminem i'm like what have you seen eminem's new music video darkness i have not dresden says dummy put the entropy link in the description don't call me a dummy i'm smarter than you are uh French Fag says, what are the best arguments to disprove man-made climate change? | ||
Also, who can replace Donald Trump as President of the United States? | ||
I don't... I'm not a climate scientist. | ||
It's just a... I don't care if it's happening or not. | ||
Globalists are trying to take over the world. | ||
That's the argument that needs to be had through climate change as a pretext. | ||
Who can replace Donald Trump? | ||
Nobody right now. | ||
Base Dollar says, T-Based, I've been looking for my wallet. | ||
Have you seen it? | ||
Oh, funny. | ||
Dimitri says he thinks he's the Vegas shooter. | ||
I don't know who you're talking about. | ||
Fart Smeller says, what does it take to play Halo with Sean and Stempi? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You should ask him. | ||
Saxon says, is dopamine cringe? | ||
No. | ||
Nullis says, two quarter pounders with cheese for dinner and America First Life is good. | ||
Yeah, I wish I was eating right now, but instead I'm reading bad super chats. | ||
No, I'm kidding. | ||
A lot of these are good. | ||
A lot of these are really good, guys. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Cameron says, how do lemons convert to money for you? | ||
One lemon is a cent and a quarter, right? | ||
It's 1.25 cents. | ||
Cents per lemon? | ||
That's the conversion rate. | ||
Jake's is a true martyr. | ||
Just got a 99% on the ASVAB. | ||
I don't know what that means at all, but thank you for that. | ||
T-Based has can, who can replace Nick? | ||
No one. | ||
So true. | ||
Thanks for the ninja. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
That's just like a crazy, crazy amount of lemons being thrown at me tonight. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
I'm serious. | ||
Watch it. | ||
I seriously will watch it. | ||
The minute I stop this show, I will watch Eminem's new music video. | ||
I can't imagine what is in it. | ||
It's probably so amazing and important. | ||
Salty Gabel says, why don't you send in Jeannine's for the head ninja? | ||
Yeah, so true. | ||
Send him in. | ||
Chief Bulging Snakes says, T-Base, does Nick's mom change my mind? | ||
My mom won't give me that kind of money. | ||
My mom won't even give me the money she owes me. | ||
I had to change where I put my money because my mom would go, I used to keep my money in my nightstand in my room and my mom would go in and like borrow money and then because I count my money, I'm kind of Jewish when it comes to money, I would go through and count it and make sure everything's there, and I'd find, oh, there's a $100 bill missing. | ||
And I'd be like, hey, does anybody know why I had this much money, and now I only have this much money in this envelope? | ||
This was like years ago. | ||
My mom would be like, well, about that, I borrowed it, and I was going to put it back. | ||
I have it right now. | ||
It's gonna put it back It's like well, that's really not the point women don't understand this. | ||
She's like well, but I was gonna give it back Okay, but that's not the point. | ||
You can't go into the stash and take money without telling me even if you're gonna put it back you just can't do that it violates a certain level of trust and and You know, messing with a man's money, you just can't do that. | ||
Well, I was gonna put it back anyway. | ||
It's like, can I just take things from you and, well, I'll give them back eventually. | ||
It's not how it works. | ||
If you need to borrow money, if it's my own mother, I'll say, of course, you can borrow money, of course. | ||
Just shoot me a text. | ||
I'm on my phone all the time. | ||
Just say, hey, I need to borrow this for whatever. | ||
You know, I'm going out to dinner. | ||
I need cash. | ||
Okay, fine. | ||
Borrow the money, but you need to give it back, okay? | ||
But you go in and be borrowing money and making change and all this. | ||
It's like, this is not an ATM. | ||
This is not a cash station. | ||
This is my money, okay? | ||
And so I had to relocate it. | ||
So you're saying, oh, this guy that's donating all this money is your mom. | ||
My mom doesn't give me the money. | ||
She owes me money right now. | ||
She'll be borrowing money. | ||
She won't give it back. | ||
So. | ||
And the best part is she owes me, so she told me that she would reimburse some of my costs for school because I didn't want to go to school. | ||
And she said, well, I'll help you pay for school. | ||
I said, OK, if you help me pay for school, I'll go to school. | ||
And so some of these costs, some of them are significant. | ||
She still hasn't reimbursed me. | ||
She'll be bothering me. | ||
She'll seriously be bothering me. | ||
I'll like, you know, borrow 20 bucks from her or something because I need cash or whatever, you know, or for Christmas for example. | ||
I told her, I said, what should I get dad for Christmas? | ||
And she says, well, I have a few things. | ||
Do you want to just give me the money for it and you can give him something I bought? | ||
I said, yeah sure. | ||
So she'll be shaking me down for like $20. | ||
You know, then the next day she'd be like, you owe me that $20, you still didn't give me that $20. | ||
I'm like, you owe me like a lot of money for school that you said you would reimburse me for and you're shaking me down for $20? | ||
How about you, you know... Anyway, so I don't want to get into the family finances, but no, I can guarantee that's definitely not her. | ||
Not that she doesn't support the show, but she just doesn't support it in these like monetary ways. | ||
So, uh, so no, that's very funny. | ||
That's very funny. | ||
You know, a lot of this, a lot of Angloids will not understand, you know, a lot of Angloids hear the way I talk about my mom and they're like, oh, that's so impolite. | ||
But this is just how, this is just very, you know, this is what it's like to be in an ethnic household, American ethnic household, Irish, Italian, Mexican. | ||
This is how it goes. | ||
Angloids, you know, they're very polite. | ||
They're very like, have manners and everything but it's all tongue-in-cheek it's all it's all fun you know you understand this uh let's see base dollars is a hundred thousand lemons are we up to a hundred thousand today what how do we get to a that's insane a hundred thousand that's crazy thank you so much to uh T-based for getting us up to a hundred thousand damn that is a big number for today Roberts has got to fill up the chest. | ||
Yeah, I guess you got to spend lemons to make lemons back to the chest Salty says Marco dump your GF. | ||
She got five kids Okay, Cameron, excuse me says best game of all time Best game of all time. | ||
Do you mean like video game best video game of all time? | ||
probably I don't know. | ||
Maybe Grand Theft Auto V would be in the running. | ||
Battlefront 2 is definitely up there in terms of my favorites. | ||
Star Wars Battlefront 2, Modern Warfare 2, Grand Theft Auto V. Trying to think what else. | ||
Those are probably my favorites. | ||
Daxon says, LOL, you collecting debts on your mom? | ||
Well, I mean, look, I don't give her a hard time about it, but she gives me, she's shaking me down. | ||
She'd be like, you owe me that $20 or whatever for this or that. | ||
I mean, I hardly borrow money from my mom ever, from my parents. | ||
And if it is, it's like I need cash. | ||
It's like I need cash and I'm going to a cash only restaurant or whatever, or it's like one of these things like a Christmas gift or whatever. | ||
And she'd be like, you know, you owe me $25. | ||
Well, you never gave me my $50. | ||
It's like, well, let's... You want to bring up the scoreboard? | ||
You really want to do that? | ||
You know, so... So, no, I... Look, I've given her a lot of leniency. | ||
It's been a long time. | ||
But, uh... It's gotta... The money's got to start coming in, you know? | ||
Let's see chef big dogs is a hundred thousand lemon stream. | ||
Congrats big guy. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot Jaded says Nick the central banker of the household, huh? | ||
Just kidding. | ||
I kind of look when it comes to money. | ||
I am a little bit frugal. | ||
When it comes to money, I'm very frugal, which is a good quality to have. | ||
I'm very frugal. | ||
I don't spend very much money. | ||
I save almost everything. | ||
And I'm very cognizant of all the money that I have. | ||
Nobody's going to get one over on me. | ||
No penny is unaccounted for. | ||
And that is a good quality to have. | ||
Now, that said, I think I'm a pretty generous guy. | ||
As far as money goes, I don't spend very much money. | ||
But I am generous with my money, I would say. | ||
I'm not tight with my money where it's offensive or insulting. | ||
But I don't, I don't spend very much. | ||
El Conquistadors, and I keep track of, you know, debts and things like that. | ||
It's important. | ||
El Conquistadors says a diamond just because you're ethnic. | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
Thank you for the diamond. | ||
Thank you for the diamond. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
Let's see. | ||
I'm doing this washing my hands. | ||
It's a neurotic, you know, hand washing pantomime. | ||
Nothing else there. | ||
Nothing to read into that. | ||
Let's take a look at our super chats on entropy here. | ||
We've got Vito who says, well actually that's the last one. | ||
I guess I'll start with the, is that the last one? | ||
No, okay. | ||
I'll start with the first one here. | ||
Vidos is on the use of irony in modern politics. | ||
It's a strategy of power based on keeping any opposition there may be constantly confused. | ||
A ceaseless shape-shifting that is unstoppable because it is undefinable. | ||
Do you ever feel that the rise of criticism directed at you for certain associations is coming from your audience who take public unpopular moral stance feeling like you are embarrassing them? | ||
No, I don't think so. | ||
Everything that I've seen is from concerted bad faith actors You're very much correct about irony. | ||
The one in question was from a month ago. | ||
And it didn't become a thing until I went on vacation and it came from Vouch. | ||
So I question that. | ||
But you're very much correct about irony. | ||
Being formless, being undefinable, to a certain extent, being subversive and tactical with rhetoric is a very important trait. | ||
Which, you know, with irony, it's like you either get it or you don't. | ||
I mean, these things are kind of hard to explain, and not everybody's gonna wrap their head around it, and not everybody needs to. | ||
Honestly, people just kind of need to, uh, you know, trust the plan. | ||
As always, when it comes to irony, when it comes to optics, you know, these are things that have been working for years. | ||
So, uh, Peter Scully says, Hey Nick, I was wondering if you wanted to make an appearance on my live show, Daisy's Destruction. | ||
Please let me know. | ||
Um, probably not, but if you send me an email, I will check it out. | ||
I watch his stream and the guy's just like, physically, I'm like, what's going on with this? | ||
You know, what is wrong with his ear? | ||
What is wrong with his ear? | ||
What is wrong with his ear? | ||
Okay, anybody notice his ear? | ||
There's like some kind of growth on there. | ||
and the guy's just like physically. | ||
I'm like, what's going on with this? | ||
What is wrong with his ear? | ||
Anybody notice his ear? | ||
There's like some kind of growth on there. | ||
What's going on? | ||
And if you look at his eyes, you can tell he has Asperger's. | ||
It's in the eyes. | ||
I know people that have Asperger's and they have the same... I can't, like, pinpoint exactly what it is, but it's a look in their eyes where you can tell, like, Asperger's, LO, autism department. | ||
I mean, yeah, I'll debate him. | ||
He keeps saying I won't debate him. | ||
I've said, like, a thousand times I will debate him, you know? | ||
I said on the Ralphert Tour that I would debate him. | ||
I said on my show I would debate him. | ||
But I said I would debate him with a moderator, because he has Asperger's, and I don't want to go on... He's like, oh, well, he should just come on my stream. | ||
Well, I saw his debate with Sargon, and even when there was a moderator, the guy's a total asshole, talking over, interrupting. | ||
Debates like that are not fun. | ||
I've done a debate like that with Destiny, I think, three times, and it's not fun for anybody. | ||
So, if we get a moderator, and look, it doesn't matter who the moderator is. | ||
It could be Ralph, it could be drunken peasants, it could be a lot of people, you know? | ||
But he is yet to come to me with a moderator. | ||
And as the person with the smaller following, he should come up with it. | ||
He made the challenge, and he's a smaller streamer, so if he finds a moderator, if he finds somebody who wants to host it, I'd be happy to do it. | ||
I would do it on the Ralph Retort. | ||
Ralph has said he would do it on the Ralph Retort. | ||
Ralph invited Vaush to do it on the Ralph Retort. | ||
So I've said I will debate, and I even have a platform who has invited him to do it on. | ||
But he doesn't want to do it on Ralph or Torton. | ||
He's saying, well, I don't want to do it on Ralph, so that means Nick is running for me. | ||
Well, how does that work? | ||
Come up with a moderator. | ||
Come up with a stream that we could do it on, and I'll do it. | ||
I'm in. | ||
But this guy has a long history of running from debates. | ||
He's supposed to debate all type, but he won't debate him. | ||
All type who's very smart. | ||
You know, and even with me, you know, he does this gamut where he's like, oh, Nick won't debate me on my stream, so he won't debate me. | ||
I've said I'll debate him wherever, but it has to be some kind of a moderator, because I'm not going to subject myself to some fat retard, you know, screaming in my ear like a banshee. | ||
That's what, that's what it was with Destiny, you know. | ||
If you saw the debate with Sargon, it was, like, painful to watch, because they just got into, like, this retarded minutiae, like, what does it mean to be right-wing? | ||
Everything is subjective, blah, blah, blah. | ||
Like, the debate just got nowhere because this guy just, like, I mean, literally, as someone with autism, just gets hung up on these small things and, like, can't get over it. | ||
And he's also said in the past, he actually has said in the past that he wouldn't debate me. | ||
He in the past said he refused to debate me because he said that giving a platform to like neo-nazis is no good. | ||
And then he said he would only do debates after the Sargon debate. | ||
He said he would only do debates basically where he could talk over the opponent. | ||
He said the only reason that I would do a debate with a neo-nazi is to debunk them. | ||
So I would only do a debate where I can like talk over them and I can interrupt them whenever I want and whatever. | ||
It's like well I am not going to subject myself to some like fat retard. | ||
Like, correcting me and interrupting me? | ||
Well, actually, whatever! | ||
You know, because then that's just, uh, you know, how does that benefit me? | ||
That's not even a conversation. | ||
That's not even a debate. | ||
That's just like me going on there and being fodder for his content, you know? | ||
If he wants to just correct me, he can watch my streams on his stream, you know? | ||
He can react to my streams when he streams, but a debate is supposed to be fair, playing field equal, equal time, symmetrical, all of that. | ||
He's like, I will not do a debate unless I can talk over the other person. | ||
The problem with the Sargon debate is I wasn't able to correct everything they said. | ||
Well, that's the point of the debate is both sides get to say their piece and the audience decides. | ||
So this, I have to control everything. | ||
I have Asperger's and I have to control everything. | ||
I have autism and he's saying something I don't like. | ||
He's saying something I don't like. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, that's what it is, right? | |
That's what it was in Destiny. | ||
That's what it is with this guy. | ||
No, you can't say that! | ||
You can't say that! | ||
I'm having a moment, mom! | ||
Get the medication! | ||
That's literally what Destiny does. | ||
Have you ever seen those videos where Destiny literally starts to like... He literally starts to like contort himself and like... | ||
Like jerk and jerk his body around when he doesn't like what he's hearing I mean that and that's what I'm trying to avoid so I'll do a debate But I just don't want it to be some kind of like sverg meltdown that that will not be enjoyable for Definitely not me, but also probably not the audience Okay, so that's Vouch. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Faticotti says, cringe super chatters, ha ha ha, dead meme, rant nation, please give me dopamine, please, Nick, please. | ||
Yeah, it's kind of, look, I mean, we just got to do better, okay? | ||
We just got to try hard, try to be novel, and you know, all of that. | ||
Let's try to be funny, come up with some new stuff, okay? | ||
Mark says, what is your view on the March for Life? | ||
Is it a good cause or is it cringe? | ||
You know, on the one hand, I obviously support pro-life. | ||
I'm against abortion in any case. | ||
Completely against abortion. | ||
Should be illegal, should be jail time for the mother and for the doctor. | ||
But, you know, March for Life, let's not forget, somebody reminded me of this today, March for Life condemned the Covington kids. | ||
Right out of the gate. | ||
If you remember the Covington thing, March for Life, along with Shapiro and Kirk and all those guys condemned the kids. | ||
March for Life and pro-life in general is one of these movements that will throw us under the bus like the second they get a chance. | ||
And that is something to keep in mind. | ||
So I like March for Life. | ||
I think they do great work. | ||
I think it's a great cause. | ||
And all of that But they're, I mean, are they really based? | ||
Like, I don't know. | ||
Because they do throw people under the bus. | ||
It's like, if you're not, if you're not 100% like mainstream media friendly, they kind of do have a tendency to throw you under the bus. | ||
And I noticed that with the Covington kids. | ||
So that's something to think about. | ||
But I generally do like them and it is a good cause. | ||
And you know, you should go to the March for Life and march with them and throw money their way and everything. | ||
But it's just something to think about. | ||
John says, AFS is a great idea. | ||
It targets the youth and it's stationary. | ||
It's an organization. | ||
And not like the MAGA crowds, we can expect it to stick around. | ||
The seed has been planted. | ||
How can we support your boy? | ||
Well, I think there'll be more later this week about how you can support monetarily and otherwise, but yeah. | ||
I mean, that's exactly it. | ||
It's institutional. | ||
So, the people can come and go, the election can happen, but the organization will remain. | ||
And that is essential for the movement to endure throughout this intergenerational struggle here. | ||
Peter says thoughts on cringe atheists who think godlessness has no effect on the US because places like Haiti, Africa, South America are Christian but are still bad places. | ||
Well, it's obviously wrong because you know when we're talking about Christianity in particular nobody has ever said we don't preach this like prosperity gospel that if you believe in God like that will you know make your country rich. | ||
You know, I don't know where people get this idea that like, oh, Christian countries are rich. | ||
I don't think anybody's ever said that. | ||
I don't think anybody's ever said, oh, if you become Christian, you become rich. | ||
There's a lot of poor Christian people, you know, and that's been the case forever. | ||
The original Christians were persecuted by the Roman Empire, you know? | ||
Would people be around then saying, well, how about these Christians? | ||
They're all getting crucified right now, so how could they be the real religion? | ||
You know, fast forward 2,000 years later, and it's the number one world religion and all that. | ||
So, you know, I think it's just basically a non sequitur. | ||
It's like, well, this country's Christian and they're not rich. | ||
Well, okay, what does that really mean, though? | ||
Wealth does not really correlate with your religious belief. | ||
In some capacity, being Christ-like and having virtues, that does facilitate wealth building and things like that, but there are other variables. | ||
Race, culture, genetics, environment, history, all kinds of things affect how some countries are wealthy and how some countries are not. | ||
I don't think anybody ever said that Christianity was the single or the only or the determining factor that makes an individual or a country rich. | ||
So I just think that's like a silly, oh, well, because people do say that. | ||
Oh, well, Haiti is poor. | ||
How is Christianity true? | ||
Well, what does that have to do with anything, you know? | ||
If Christ died on the cross and rose from the dead, then Christianity is true. | ||
And like everything else kind of doesn't matter. | ||
For the most part. | ||
So, and a lot of Christians are ascetics. | ||
How do you pronounce that? | ||
A-S-C. | ||
Ascetics, I think is how you pronounce it. | ||
You know, they choose to live a life of poverty or something like that. | ||
They give up material, you know, so people are trying to use like materialist success to judge a spiritual, you know, something spiritual, something religious. | ||
Well, how come it doesn't result in material gains? | ||
Well, it's not, you know, it's really not about the material. | ||
Anyway, and besides that, a lot of these places aren't even really Christian. | ||
Haiti, in South America, they have a lot of pagan stuff going on, sacrifice, so... | ||
Ulfric says, are you ready to take the red pill or are you just another milk-drinking imperial? | ||
Okay, funny, funny, funny time. | ||
Faticati says, me making popcorn while watching to see if I die from some random disease that should not exist in my country. | ||
Yeah, relating. | ||
Bob Sacamato says, sadly even the conservative parts of California, like Orange County where Nixon came from, have become extremely paused in the past decade or so. | ||
Demographics have ruined the only remaining good parts. | ||
Well, I think there are still some rural parts of California that are pretty conservative, though. | ||
JP says, Hey young man, JP Boomer here. | ||
If my stache was chat as yours, I would have been a porn star, but probably lose my mojo once I hear those hands rubbing in the background. | ||
Love the show. | ||
Keep doing God's work. | ||
Well, thanks, buddy. | ||
I don't know why everybody says porn stache. | ||
We've been over this before. | ||
It's just a mustache, folks. | ||
It has nothing to do with pornography. | ||
But thank you. | ||
I'm glad you like the mustache. | ||
Okay, mom is Italian, not Jewish. | ||
Although, you know, I don't know. | ||
Sometimes you wonder if there are many differences. | ||
there are certainly some similarities. | ||
JP says, "Hey, but we're obviously, Mediterranean's obviously the master race." JP says, "Hey young man, JP Boomer again, The way your mother shakes you down for money, you might as well make her your wartime conciliary. | ||
I never know how to pronounce that word, but I know what it is. | ||
Love the show, keep doing God's work. | ||
Thank you, friend. | ||
I'm probably gonna get roasted in the chat. | ||
He doesn't know how to pronounce that! | ||
I don't. | ||
unidentified
|
I have only ever read that word. | |
But let's see. | ||
Do we have any other DLive lemons? | ||
I struggle with the pronunciations because a lot of it's just from reading. | ||
Let's see also, I don't speak Italian. | ||
Let's see. | ||
We have a few more on D live Salty says I listen during work. | ||
So I owe you some money Nick. | ||
Thank you. | ||
No, thank you. | ||
Thanks for the diamond We've got some diamonds from cereal noticer. | ||
Thanks Marshall forward says don't do drunken peasants. | ||
They are cringed leftist. | ||
Yeah, but I could probably go on and win honestly Salty says, Christ is right, not fat retards. | ||
Thanks, Nicker. | ||
Yeah, so true. | ||
T-Base with another Ninjet says, Nick is our guy. | ||
Well, thank you so much for another Ninjet. | ||
Incredible! | ||
Huge thanks to D-Based and T-Based tonight. | ||
He is our MVP, number one of the stream. | ||
We've got some other diamonds from T-Based, some from Black Pill Quarantine and E-Boy Nationalist. | ||
Okay, and it looks like that's everything. | ||
Okay, sheesh! | ||
And it looks like that's everything. | ||
So, that's gonna do it for us on the stream tonight after a long show. | ||
Wow, for some reason it feels like longer than usual, but it's only like two hours. | ||
So, that's gonna do it. | ||
Remember to subscribe to my YouTube channel, leave a comment down below, give me a big thumbs up, click the notification bell to get notified every time I go live. | ||
Remember to subscribe to my DLive channel. | ||
Go to dlive.tv slash NickJayFuentes and click follow. | ||
Remember we are on the air Monday through Friday 7 p.m. | ||
Central 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time on DLive and YouTube. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
As always, this is America First. | ||
Thanks everybody for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters on Entropy. | ||
Thanks to our DLive tippers. | ||
Thanks everybody who donated lemons. | ||
Thanks in particular to our top three contributors, TBASED, who is by far and away the biggest contributor tonight. | ||
Thank you so much to that guy. | ||
Thanks to BASEDDOLLAR and CCBOOG, who are our three biggest contributors tonight. | ||
Thanks to everybody that donated. | ||
I will open the chest as well for our DLive viewers. | ||
Almost forgot there. | ||
Everybody flips out when I don't do the chest. | ||
So thanks to everybody that donated during the stream tonight. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you folks. | ||
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. |