Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
unidentified
|
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? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard of a big one. | |
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of big ones. | ||
Who's that? | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our credo. 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. | ||
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 it. | ||
unidentified
|
What's that? | |
What is that? | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
...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, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, not globalism, | ||
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 a big one. | ||
Just that. | ||
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of a big one. | ||
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? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
I've never heard of him think what he was that. | |
Americanism, not globalism. | ||
Will be our freedom. | ||
I've never heard of Nick Fudge. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Thank you. | ||
An older generation. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human beings. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick, what is that? | |
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
An older generation. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the... | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Not even once. | |
I've never heard of it. | ||
I've never heard of it. | ||
What is that? | ||
I've never heard of Bigfoot's. | ||
unidentified
|
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. | ||
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? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of him think, what is that? | |
Americanism, not globalism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
The former 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 race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, 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. | ||
Never! | ||
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick. | |
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism. not globalism. | ||
We'll be our freedom. | ||
Consumer Generation. | ||
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it. | ||
You're an e-girl. | ||
You know the rule. | ||
No e-girls. | ||
Who's got the clip? | ||
No e-girls. | ||
unidentified
|
Never! | |
Hashtag never e-girls. | ||
Not even once. | ||
unidentified
|
Guy, I've never heard of Nick Pudge. | |
Who's that? | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Who's that? | ||
Bigfoot. | ||
Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. Bigfoot. | ||
Bigfoot. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right I've never heard of Bigfoot. | ||
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
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 a big question. | |
What is that? | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
With respect, the respect that we deserve. | ||
From this day to all, it's going to be only America. | ||
America first. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday. | ||
And there is lots to talk about, lots to get into this evening. | ||
Tonight we continue our coverage. | ||
We continue our pandemic watch. | ||
We're talking, of course, tonight about the imminent global pandemic. | ||
with the Chinese coronavirus. | ||
There has now been a quarantine. | ||
It has expanded to 25 million people in China. | ||
This virus that we talked about two days ago, it looks like things are really going south. | ||
It looks like it could be a big one. | ||
So tonight we're going to talk all about The virus, the quarantine, the outbreak. | ||
We've got a lot of new information about it this evening. | ||
Like I said, we did cover the disease. | ||
We did cover the epidemic two days ago, but we didn't really know anything about it. | ||
We didn't have great numbers. | ||
China's lying about them. | ||
We didn't know much about transmission, the origin, anything like that. | ||
But tonight we have more information. | ||
The disease has now spread to many different countries in Asia, also including the United States. | ||
United States isn't in Asia, but you know, on top of the countries in Asia, it has spread to the United States. | ||
They're also reporting they may have found the origin of the virus, which could have been a market In Wuhan where apparently they're serving all kinds of weird exotic meats, bush meat, things like snakes, bats, wolves, things of this nature. | ||
So we're going to talk all about that. | ||
They've quarantined now I think something like seven cities, four at least, but there are other reports that they've partially quarantined other cities. | ||
You know, for example, the city of Wuhan, where this virus originated. | ||
They shut down all outbound flights, they shut down all outbound trains, buses, they're putting up barricades in the streets so that people can't leave. | ||
And this is a city of millions and millions of people. | ||
This is a city, I think, what, I read an article, it said it's like three times the size of London, or something like that, so... | ||
They're taking these huge cities and completely shutting them down Store shelves are bare people have been trying to buy up supplies and food and things like that This is all happening during the Chinese New Year as well. | ||
So that only adds to the panic So we're gonna be talking all about that. | ||
I am glad it seems like this. | ||
Well, I'm not glad I'm not glad I'm not glad that there's about to be a global pandemic that will invariably claim many lives But we do have sort of like a new segment on the show. | ||
We're watching the pandemic I'm very I am excited. | ||
I ordered a costume yesterday not gonna tell you what it is, but maybe I'll show you tomorrow So that that part does excite me a little bit. | ||
We have sort of a new a new gimmick on the show So what do we have but of course? | ||
Very tragic. | ||
Very tragic, you know. | ||
We are very terrified of what is possible with this, but that'll be our main story. | ||
We'll also be talking about a huge white pill. | ||
On immigration, the president today announced a new regulation that will restrict birth tourism, which if you know anything about birth tourism, excuse me, and our immigration laws, basically you've got this trend where thousands of people every year from China, Nigeria, Russia, some of these developing countries, will come to the United States, pregnant, have their children on US soil, | ||
And then because they have the child on the soil, their kids will be U.S. | ||
citizens and they will get all the benefits that are involved with citizenship. | ||
Their kids can use American health care, their kids can use the American education system, study eventually at American colleges, they can even bring over their relatives. | ||
You know, that accrues immigration benefits for the rest of the family as well. | ||
So there's this big new regulation that came down today from the administration seeking to curb that, which basically says that they're not going to give visas to women who are pregnant. | ||
And on top of that, there are some other regulations about health care. | ||
For example, one new provision within this regulation says that if somebody is trying to come to the United States, they have to prove that they will be able to pay for their health care costs if they need that for them. | ||
For example, if they're pregnant or if they have something else going on. | ||
So, we're going to talk all about that. | ||
It's very exciting. | ||
Finally something on, excuse me, birth tourism. | ||
I will say though, you know, and this is just a clarification. | ||
We'll get into this more in a moment. | ||
That's not the same thing as birthright citizenship. | ||
I see some people are conflating the two online, you know, not trying to rain on anybody's parade here. | ||
It's a big victory. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
I'm white pilled. | ||
But it's not quite the same thing as shutting down birthright citizenship. | ||
So we'll get into all of that. | ||
Those will be our two main stories. | ||
Pandemic Watch, Global Pandemic Incoming. | ||
That'll be the featured story. | ||
That is going to be our main story. | ||
And we'll also be talking about this Birth Tourism Regulations. | ||
So, should be a pretty good show. | ||
Before we dive into any of that, I do just want to give you a quick update. | ||
I don't know if you guys caught this. | ||
I was hosting this on DLive earlier, and I put it on my Telegram, and I put it on my Twitter. | ||
Jaden McNeil, who is the founder, of course, of America First Students at Kansas State University. | ||
You might remember we talked about that a little bit earlier this week. | ||
This is a brand new college organization starting on The Kansas State University campus, which is basically built in contradistinction to Turning Point USA. | ||
This is a campus organization that is defined by its support of Christian values, of traditional families, immigration restriction, fighting free trade, economic globalization, things of that nature. | ||
And so Jaden, who founded this chapter, he's the first official president of a chapter, He did a stream today on DLive. | ||
There's about 30 minutes going over everything that's involved in this, what the organization's about, how you can get involved, how you can donate, sort of where it's going. | ||
So if you didn't catch that, be sure to check out his channel. | ||
It's dlive.tv slash Jaden McNeil. | ||
And McNeil is M-C-N-E-I-L. | ||
I've been spelling it with an A. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, it's just a little bit confusing. | ||
You get these Irish names, right? | ||
So, be sure to check out his channel. | ||
It's dlive.tv slash jademcneal. | ||
You can watch it in the replays, I believe, for a few days. | ||
Hopefully, maybe they'll get that on YouTube or Twitter or something, but it's very exciting. | ||
You know, we did a little blurb about that on the show two days ago. | ||
And I told you that it's extremely white-pilling that that's happening, like, getting the institutionalization, building the infrastructure, and particularly on the campus, like, this is... these are exciting times! | ||
Lots of potential there, and in other areas as well, so I think there's a lot to stay tuned for from Jayden, from America First Students, you know, it's... I think it's rolling out this semester, so I understand they have a lot of big plans. | ||
So something to see if you if you caught it Congratulations, if you didn't you should check that out one other thing before we dive in just a reminder We are using entropy now instead of super chats. | ||
I know if you've been watching the show all week. | ||
You're probably tired of hearing about it You probably know about it already, but you know, remember we are split now between DLive and YouTube. | ||
I prefer at this point that you watch the show on DLive, and then if you're gonna throw super chats or tips, you do it through DLive, you buy lemons, and you donate a diamond or an Injigini or an Injet. | ||
You know, that is an option on DLive just because, you know, YouTube sucks. | ||
I don't really like it anymore. | ||
So I prefer that people watch and do the tips on DLive. | ||
But if you are on YouTube, you may notice the super chats are disabled and demonetized on YouTube. | ||
So that's not coming back. | ||
But if you use the entropy link, which is in the description of the video, Which is entropystream.live slash app slash america first i know that's a long link i'll paste in the live chat right now if you go and use that you will be able to send in super chats | ||
Do a couple of other things as well if you click on the link you see that you can do live Reactions with emojis and there's a separate live chat in there and also you can super chat as well So just a reminder for YouTube people that that is the new super chat option. | ||
I know it's a bit of a hassle There's like an extra step you have to click the link, but that's how we've been doing it and it's been working so far So with all that out of the way Well, there's one more thing. | ||
You know, I did just tweet this out before the show started. | ||
It just dawned on me. | ||
Somebody DM'd me before the show. | ||
Good friend. | ||
Somebody who sends me a lot of good tips. | ||
This person sent me a DM and he said, uh, didn't Cathy Xu I promised to bring you soup when you were sick not too long ago and sure enough I went through my telegram messages and I did find a message from Kathy Zhu. | ||
She put it on her telegram channel where she said something to the effect of I was sick at the time I was complaining about it on telegram and she said if we were close I would bring you soup. | ||
I would bring you soup and medicine. | ||
And the more I thought about it, the more I started to make the connection. | ||
Do you see it yet? | ||
Cathy Xu, of China! | ||
She's from China! | ||
She was born in China, okay, and she came to America. | ||
She was born over there, and I think when she was like three years old, she came to America. | ||
She offered to bring me soup! | ||
The current global pandemic, the coronavirus, originated from soup from China! | ||
Just like Cathy Xu being born in China and coming to the United States, so too did the coronavirus. | ||
It was born in China, it spread in China, and now it came to the United States through soup! | ||
Are you starting to see it yet? | ||
Are you starting to get the picture here? | ||
So I think we should consider ourselves lucky. | ||
I should consider myself lucky that I survived an assassination attempt. | ||
I was almost patient zero. | ||
Talk about coronavirus, global pandemic. | ||
Don't think I don't take it seriously. | ||
I was almost patient zero. | ||
She was gonna ride over in my house in a rickshaw or something. | ||
unidentified
|
She's gonna ride over in a moped or a rickshaw. | |
I don't know. | ||
Whatever they drive over there, hustling and bustling through the alleyways. | ||
You know, she passes some noodle vendor on the way over, some guy carrying a lot of boxes, and there's all kinds of traffic going on through the alleyways, and she's on her, you know, rickshaw, some kind of modified bicycle situation with a little carry-out container. | ||
She arrives at my door, I open up the container, And it's the strangest soup I've ever seen. | ||
There's bats inside of it. | ||
Bats. | ||
Snakes. | ||
She says, I thought this would help you feel a little bit better. | ||
Thank God we avoided that scenario. | ||
You could easily see how that could have happened. | ||
And where would I be? | ||
Where would any of us be? | ||
I'd be in the hospital on some kind of breathing apparatus. | ||
You know, I already suffer from severe allergies chronically, but I would be in the hospital somewhere on some kind of ventilator. | ||
I'd be out. | ||
I'd be out for the count. | ||
Groyper Wars, cancelled. | ||
2010's Rewind stream, cancelled. | ||
D-Live, gaming streams. | ||
It would all be over. | ||
It would be over then and there. | ||
America first, throttled in the crib. | ||
So thank God, hey, if you needed any more evidence, No e-girls, right? | ||
If you needed any more proof of the tricks that they're up to, even the kindest advances. | ||
You know, you might think I'm talking about very obvious fed, fishing, you know, DMs, whatever, catfishing. | ||
But even if they're offering you soup, even when you're at your weakest, immune system's down, you're sick, and they offer you warm bowl of soup. | ||
No eagles, no eagles. | ||
You see the possibilities here. | ||
So I really dodged a bullet there. | ||
I'm sort of breathing a sigh of relief. | ||
I have a new lease on life. | ||
I'm thanking God now more so every day, you know, that I have on this earth, that I'm not, that I'm not ailing from the pandemic. | ||
Yeah, Kathy's you, nice try, but your tricks are not going to work on me. | ||
You're going to have to throw a ninja star at my throat if you want to take me out. | ||
But anyway, we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to move on to The news before we get into the pandemic, which is you know, I'm eager to talk about before we dive into that We are going to talk about this birth tourism | ||
regulation and like I said it's a big white pill it's a part of a series of white pills that we've seen from this administration this week and really like for the past six months we just actually covered this what on Tuesday I think going over this article from Apsios that showed all the different immigration wins that we've gotten just in the last so many months if you look at border apprehensions they're down like 80% if you look at | ||
These deals that we're making with the Northern Triangle countries, which are El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras. | ||
We're making all kinds of agreements where we can send asylum seekers and illegal immigrants back to Central America. | ||
We've got this new migrant protection protocols in place that allows us to keep asylum seekers and other border jumpers, people like that, on the Mexican side of the border. | ||
So all across, it seems like a lot of good things are happening with immigration, which I kind of had a feeling this would be the case. | ||
Today we got another new announcement, good news, that the Trump administration passed a regulation which will curb birth tourism. | ||
The new regulation says that it will deny visas to women that are pregnant. | ||
Now I will say it doesn't apply to, I think it's 39 countries that do not require a visa to get to the United States, and this is like the United Kingdom, Canada, a lot of European countries, but it does affect the main offenders when it comes to birth tourism which are Like I said earlier, China, Russia, Nigeria, countries like that. | ||
And it also is not the same thing as birthright citizenship. | ||
But nevertheless, it's a big victory. | ||
This is a source of thousands of new, I mean basically citizens every year. | ||
Thousands of foreign born people every year, essentially. | ||
You know, thousands of people every year come to this country as visitors, travelers, whatever, to have their children and then the children become citizens. | ||
I mean, this is just like an illicit way of immigrating. | ||
It's an immigration loophole. | ||
So, it's pretty good news. | ||
And I'll read you, this is a news report about it. | ||
It says, quote, the State Department plans to deny tourist visas to pregnant women If officials believe they are traveling here to secure American citizenship for their child by giving birth on U.S. | ||
soil. | ||
The Trump administration says it is targeting the practice known as birth tourism. | ||
The State Department says that traveling to deliver a child in the U.S. | ||
is not a quote legitimate activity for pleasure or of a recreational nature. | ||
The State Department's rule which was unveiled Thursday states quote birth tourism poses risks to national security. | ||
The Department contends that birth tourism has created an industry rife with criminal activity, including international criminal schemes. | ||
Under the new rule, consular officials will have the authority to deny a visitor visa if they have reason to believe the applicant intends to travel to the U.S. | ||
for the primary purpose of giving birth. | ||
A consular officer has reason to believe a visa applicant will give birth during her stay in the U.S. | ||
The rule states that the officer should conclude that the main reason for the trip is to secure U.S. | ||
citizenship for the child. | ||
The change will take effect on Friday, January 24th when it's scheduled to be published in the Federal Register. | ||
So that is tomorrow. | ||
The State Department did not specifically say how many babies are born in the U.S. | ||
due to birth tourism saying it's a challenge to derive a precise number, but it estimates that thousands of children are born in the U.S. | ||
each year to people who are either visiting or conducting business on non-immigrant visas. | ||
The U.S. | ||
announced the first-ever federal charges related to birth tourism last January, based on cases rooted in the Obama administration. | ||
In early 2015, ICE raided groups in Southern California that charged Chinese women up to $60,000, promising to help with their visas, travel, and lodging at maternity hotels so their children could become U.S. | ||
citizens. | ||
So this is obviously something that should have been taken care of a long time ago. | ||
You know, the more that the Trump administration buttons up immigration, I think the more you realize just how bad, how broken the system is. | ||
So much of what has been cleaned up in the last three years, I think are things that a lot of people are not even aware of. | ||
Or things that if people find out about, they're like, really? | ||
That goes on? | ||
That was allowed to happen? | ||
You know, for example, with the asylum seekers. | ||
One of the biggest problems pertaining to illegal immigration during this administration is asylum seekers in particular. | ||
You know, not just people that are crossing at night without documentation or whatever. | ||
You know, not border jumpers, line cutters, visa overstays. | ||
But in particular, asylum seekers who will go to a port of entry, declare themselves, and because of all these loopholes in the law, they get brought into the country and then released just out into the open after so many days. | ||
It's like, are you crazy? | ||
How does that make any sense? | ||
Why would you bother even having immigration laws, or a border, or any kind of rules at all? | ||
If literally all you have to do Is go to the port of entry, I mean go to the door, surrender yourself to the agents, say the magic words, I'm claiming asylum, and you're home free. | ||
It's the same thing as illegal immigration, except you don't have to sneak. | ||
If you get caught, that's what you're trying to do, that's the intention, it's a bonus. | ||
You know, so it's things like that where over the course of the administration, We're tying up these loopholes when it comes to, you know, like detaining people at the border who then get released into the interior. | ||
Or asylum seekers that just get released because they're awaiting trial, right? | ||
Or when you're talking about the caravans or even something like birthright citizenship. | ||
It's like, of course! | ||
How does that make any sense? | ||
That somebody's gonna travel here on vacation or something, they plop out a baby, now we have to take care of that baby for the rest of its life? | ||
How does that make any sense? | ||
You know, some Chinese woman or some Nigerian woman or Russian woman. | ||
They travel to the United States for a business conference. | ||
A business conference, right? | ||
They have a baby, and now for 75 years that baby is our responsibility. | ||
Have to pay for its education, its healthcare, they get to go to our colleges, you know, they get social security benefits, they get to have citizenship, they get to vote. | ||
That's insanity! | ||
And that's just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this loophole in general. | ||
Because understand the origin, the root cause of all of it is birthright citizenship. | ||
The idea that if you're born on the land you become a citizen should not be the case. | ||
Should not be the case for illegals, should not be the case for tourists. | ||
As far as I'm concerned I'm wondering if it's even a good idea for like first-generation immigrants that they have a child. | ||
And when we look at everything that's going on with the mass demographic change, this massive influx of people into the country over the last 50 years, none of these people are assimilating. | ||
None of these people are trying to assimilate. | ||
We don't even know if it's possible, by the way, that a mass number of people can assimilate anyway. | ||
But they're not even trying. | ||
It's not even happening. | ||
And the question is, we have to cut it off at some point. | ||
You don't get to be a part of this just by getting on the land. | ||
Certainly not because you traveled the Disney World when you had a kid. | ||
Definitely not because you make it over the border, you make it into the end zone, and you're safe, you know? | ||
I guess that's mixing analogies, but you get the picture. | ||
Somebody corrected me on that in a different stream. | ||
Get in the end zone safe. | ||
It's kind of combining football and baseball there. | ||
But you get the picture. | ||
Just because you get in the zone, just because you you sort of dive across the border, dive in with your pregnant, you know, pregnant wife and baby in hand. | ||
Oh, well, they're in. | ||
Now we have to take care of them forever and all their descendants and all their relatives and abuelas and tíos and tías and niños and everything. | ||
Doesn't make any sense. | ||
It has to be cut off so this is a start and you know I said this earlier but... | ||
I suspected that this would basically be the case with immigration. | ||
That the Trump administration has, I mean, generally speaking, not been very focused on immigration. | ||
It's been a very slow process. | ||
We've been doing this for three years now. | ||
Inauguration was three years ago. | ||
And we are only beginning to implement a lot of these policies. | ||
It was only May of last year that we had more illegal crossings, more apprehensions, than in 20 years for the month of May. | ||
The months last year of May and June were like record bad years, or rather record bad months for illegal immigration. | ||
Like 20 year records. | ||
You hadn't seen a month, for example, in May. | ||
You haven't had the month of May be as bad in terms of illegal crossings than since 2001. | ||
Since and that was like when Bill Clinton was still president, you know 2001 obviously Bush got inaugurated, but all right, maybe it was 2000 I'm not exactly sure but you get the picture is a 20-year high, you know So it was only six months ago that we were at rock-bottom 20-year lows rather 20-year highs for these border crossings It's only now that that's getting tied up with these agreements with Central America the new protocols the green lighting of the border wall money from DHS and Treasury forfeiture and | ||
Uh, the DOD infrastructure budget and all that, and now this birth tourism thing. | ||
And the reason, to me, for this, is because of the election. | ||
The only reason why I think it's all starting to come together in the last, you know, so many days before the election, is because now the pressure is on. | ||
Now the pressure is on for Trump to make the case to his voters that he's actually been trying to keep his promises. | ||
So now it's this 300 day scramble to try to put up 400 miles of wall and it's a 300 day scramble to shut down birth tourism and you know maybe they're building the case to shut down birthright citizenship. | ||
All the executive orders, basically everything that was promised The first year, and before the midterms, and then shortly after that, during the government shutdown, they are now scrambling to put it all together before November. | ||
I mean, that is, to me, how it's going down. | ||
And honestly, you know, as long as it gets done, who really cares, right? | ||
In some capacity, it hurts us to procrastinate, it hurts us to delay, but look, if by November we've got 500 miles of wall, Or 450, whatever. | ||
And we've got record low crossings, we've got agreements with all these countries, and Mexico is shutting down their southern border to keep out Hondurans and Guatemalans and so on. | ||
I'm not gonna complain. | ||
You know, just because it was hasty and it was quick and it came together at the last minute, I'm not gonna say, oh well. | ||
It wasn't worth doing. | ||
I mean, that'll be good. | ||
Maybe we should have gotten a head start, and it'd be more of a guarantee. | ||
We'd be more confident at this point that all these different promises would be kept. | ||
But I'm just happy that it's turning around. | ||
I'm not gonna look the gift horse. | ||
Is that what it is? | ||
Looking a gift horse in the mouth? | ||
You know, I'm not gonna take it for granted. | ||
If it's coming together, it's coming together. | ||
Better late than never, right? | ||
So it is exciting to see that there is movement on a lot of these things because I remember right before the midterms we got so many promises. | ||
I don't know if you remember this, but it was a month or two before the midterms. | ||
Do you remember all the shit that this guy said? | ||
You know, sorry for the language, but really... | ||
He said, well, we've got a birthright citizenship executive order. | ||
Yeah, that's in the works. | ||
Never happened. | ||
We sent down all these National Guard troops to the border. | ||
They went home like 10 days after the election. | ||
He said, well, we've got an executive order that's going to completely shut everything down and blah blah blah. | ||
We got no executive orders. | ||
We got no money for the border wall. | ||
You know, we shut down the government and won nothing from that. | ||
That was a month later. | ||
And at that point I said, like, okay, I'm out. | ||
I'm done. | ||
This guy doesn't take it seriously, obviously. | ||
Made all these promises. | ||
We got murdered in the midterms. | ||
We lost the House. | ||
barely hung on to the Senate when we should have kept it by a big margin, and then didn't even fulfill anything that was promised beforehand, right? | ||
And then you had the government shutdown, which was probably the humiliation of the entire administration, the biggest embarrassment maybe of the whole four years so far, right? | ||
So all of this is to say it is so refreshing to see that there appears to be a renewed focus, a renewed effort to really make things happen, There's a lot of movement. | ||
Where for a long time we heard promises and we saw tweets and things like that, now we're just seeing a flurry of action. | ||
You know, this wasn't announced a month beforehand. | ||
Trump didn't tweet out 30 days ago, I promise I'm going to do this executive order, I promise I'm going to fix birthright. | ||
Or rather, birth tourism. | ||
He just did it. | ||
Which is good! | ||
Which we want. | ||
So, hopefully we have more of this. | ||
You know, yes. | ||
So much yes. | ||
Everyone liked that, okay? | ||
That is a wholesome 100 moment. | ||
We need this for the rest of the year. | ||
And if we get this for the rest of the year, like I said, maybe by November we could actually have a serious immigration. | ||
Policy and if that's the case this administration is a success if we build 500 miles of border wall now granted That's not like ideal. | ||
We want a thousand or two thousand miles of wall But if we get 500 miles we secure these agreements. | ||
We did our best to clean up immigration I would say that that's a pretty successful First term and I think a lot of these things will start to get tied up by the end of the year, you know So so that's pretty exciting. | ||
But you know again I will say, not to dampen the mood, although the birth tourism regulation is good, it's not birthright citizenship. | ||
Birth tourism is the thousands. | ||
Birthright citizenship is in the millions. | ||
That's to give you an idea of the scale. | ||
I don't know what the scale is. | ||
They don't know what the scale is with birth tourism, how many thousands come over here, and they have kids on these work visas or other temporary visas. | ||
But when it comes to the birthright citizenship, which is really the root of it, you know, illegal aliens coming over, plopping out a kid, I mean, that's like millions of people. | ||
And we went over this a few days ago. | ||
The problem is not simply the first generation, but the problem is that this ripples throughout centuries. | ||
This ripples throughout generations, obviously. | ||
One illegal immigrant comes over, they have a kid, maybe, and then because that kid is here, he's a citizen, or she is a citizen. | ||
And now that kid's gonna grow up, and then he's gonna have a few kids. | ||
And not only is he going to have a few kids, but because he's a citizen, he's entitled to bring over his family through chain migration. | ||
So now maybe all the family comes over, and the family's got kids, and those kids are having kids, and on and on and on. | ||
And you're talking about exponential growth. | ||
You're talking about one kid that has three kids, and those three kids have three kids, and you know, then you're talking about nine kids each having three kids, and so on. | ||
And this is happening on the scale of millions of people coming here and doing that. | ||
That is not sustainable. | ||
That is not something that can be undone or reversed. | ||
I don't think even at all. | ||
I don't even think it's possible. | ||
So, until we cut that off, like, we are not serious about immigration. | ||
So, hopefully that comes next. | ||
But that's the birth tourism. | ||
We're gonna move on and talk about the coronavirus quarantine. | ||
Very scary times, but also some very interesting stuff. | ||
We talked about this on Tuesday and we don't have a ton of information still. | ||
We have more information now than we did a few days ago. | ||
You've got this virus that originated in Wuhan, which is a city in China. | ||
I guess what a coronavirus is, it's a family of viruses and it causes pneumonia-like symptoms, or I think in some cases it does cause pneumonia. | ||
It's basically a respiratory infection is what I understand it to be. | ||
And so this is something that is spreading very rapidly within this city in China. | ||
And really China is the worst place for it. | ||
Obviously because you've got millions and millions of people stacked on top of each other in dozens of cities. | ||
And you've got, what is it, one billion people in China? | ||
Or is it one and a half? | ||
I always get India and China mixed up. | ||
Do they have one and a half or is it India that has one and a half? | ||
In any case, they've got an insane amount of people in this country, millions of people in these super cities, high population density, they're in close quarters on transportation, in living quarters, in businesses, in all that, and so that is probably the most conducive to transmitting diseases. | ||
Add to that all kinds of spurious regulations or maybe even no regulations at all when it comes to livestock, when it comes to handling animals or handling food, when it comes to sanitation. | ||
Definitely a big question mark when you're going over to China. | ||
So you basically combine those two things with international travel. | ||
The fact that you've got millions of people moving around in China, within the country, and outside the country internationally. | ||
And these three things make China like, I mean, that's going to be ground zero for the first global pandemic. | ||
I don't know if that's what this is going to be, but you can look at these three factors and you're just ripe for some kind of serious outbreak. | ||
You know, the fact that you've got the high population density, you've got all these people together, you've got these weird sanitation things going on, and you've also got the traveling, you know, so that this can spread throughout the world and throughout the country. | ||
So we do have a little bit more information. | ||
The Chinese are taking this very seriously right now. | ||
They have now quarantined at least four cities, but they also possibly might have quarantined three others. | ||
There's Kind of like it's difficult to confirm what's happening in China because they're actually cracking down on people releasing images and information from inside of China about what's going on. | ||
So we have four confirmations on cities being quarantined. | ||
I think there's like three that are partially quarantined and there's a lot of other things going on beyond that. | ||
So I'll read you this is an article from the New York Post about this. | ||
It says quote major Chinese cities including Beijing and quarantine-blocked Wuhan banned all large gatherings over the coming Lunar New Year festival, the most important holiday on the Chinese calendar, in an expanding effort to contain a rapidly spreading coronavirus outbreak. | ||
The announcement Thursday came as authorities expanded travel restrictions imposed on Wuhan to surrounding municipalities, shutting down travel networks, and attempting to quarantine about 25 million people. | ||
That's huge. | ||
You know, there's what? | ||
8 million people in New York City, 3 million in Chicago, 3 million in LA. | ||
You know, I think there's 25 million people in the whole state of Florida. | ||
You know, so imagine that. | ||
Imagine if we took the whole state of Florida and quarantined it. | ||
That's the scale of what's happening here. | ||
The extreme measures were accompanied by other indications that Communist Party authorities were struggling to control the outbreak, notably the aggressive censorship of any criticism or skepticism on social media. | ||
But some outspoken doctors warned that the controls would not be enough to stop the spread of the pneumonia-like virus, which has killed 17 people in Wuhan and surrounding Hubei province. | ||
A virologist named Guan Yi, who helped identify SARS in 2003, said, quote, A bigger outbreak is certain. | ||
He estimated conservatively that the outbreak could be 10 times bigger than the SARS epidemic because that virus was transmitted by only a few super spreaders in a more defined part of the country. | ||
So in other words, I guess because you have such a high rate of transmission and so many people already have it, basically it's outside of our control and now it's just going to burn itself out. | ||
I guess it's going to get very big. | ||
They really sort of let the the horse out of the barn so to speak. | ||
It's now in all these different countries. | ||
They say it is now in Hong Kong, Macau, Japan, South Korea, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam. | ||
I heard there was a case in Saudi Arabia and the United States. | ||
So it's already traveled all over the world. | ||
It's all over China. | ||
It's all over You know every one of their major cities and also Macau and Hong Kong which are I guess peripherally a part of China in some capacity so this thing is spreading pretty far and the problem is we don't really know much about it. | ||
They say that a Chinese market was at the center of the outbreak. | ||
This is the same report. | ||
It says the market that could be at the center of the outbreak sold live animals including wolf pups, foxes, rats, and peacocks to eat. | ||
The wild animals were among 112 items that were peddled at the Huanan Seafood Market. | ||
Other wildlife sold at the market, which has since been shuttered, included crocodiles, giant salamanders, snakes, porcupines, and camel meat. | ||
We know that this is possibly where it came from, you know, eating this bush meat or exotic meats, things like that, that might not be stored or prepared in the most sanitary of ways. | ||
And I guess it only takes one person and then it's off to the races, you know? | ||
Then it's spread all throughout this particular city, throughout the province, then throughout China, and now it's all over the world. | ||
And like I said, they still don't know if it's possible to transmit this disease from person to person. | ||
They say there's evidence that there is human-to-human transmission, which I think would make sense. | ||
That, for example, if you cough, sneeze on somebody, shake somebody's hand, they say that the secretions from a person who is infected, if you come into contact with that, that will make you infected. | ||
But they don't know how transmittable it is. | ||
They don't know what the mortality rate is, how survivable this is once you get the disease. | ||
They say that the people that have died from the coronavirus have all been older people with pre-existing issues. | ||
They say that they're all between the ages of 49 and I think on the higher end something like 80 years old. | ||
People that have diabetes, people that have heart conditions, things like that. | ||
So, you know, I was thinking about it before I went on the show. | ||
You can almost think of it as like a disease that targets baby boomers, right? | ||
You know, if you look at the age span there, it's almost like only baby boomers are the ones that are being affected. | ||
You know, not saying anything. | ||
They're just saying. | ||
So we'll have to keep an eye on this. | ||
We'll watch and see what happens. | ||
But it's pretty scary. | ||
And this is one of these consequences of globalization. | ||
You know, I talked about this on Tuesday as well. | ||
But the transmission of disease is only one aspect. | ||
It's only yet another reason why globalization, this sort of mass mixing of populations and transmission of goods and peoples and everything across the world, across these different countries, is a bad idea. | ||
You know, to me that is just yet another part of a much bigger argument against mixing all these different countries in general and at all. | ||
You know, for example, we look in China how all this started. | ||
How did it start? | ||
It's because they're not washing their hands. | ||
It's because they're eating bat meat. | ||
They're eating snake meat. | ||
And you know probably the people that are preparing this stuff are not washing their hands. | ||
It's not clean. | ||
That is not a 21st century civilization. | ||
Sorry. | ||
These are not 21st century standards for health and wellness. | ||
And you can't have a modern, developed civilization without that! | ||
You know, you think about, like, the example of development in Western civilization, in European cities, in London, in Paris, in Germany, you think about the Industrial Revolution, and all that we went through, you know, basically since, like, the Middle Ages, trying to clean up our cities, trying to clean up sanitation, whatever, Black Plague, Spanish Flu, all kinds of things that swept through our civilization. | ||
And the only way that we're able to scale up to this size, this is something to think about, as a civilization with these megacities and transportation and everything like we do, it's built on a lot of these unseen and unrecognized aspects. | ||
That other parts of the world do not have. | ||
You know, a lot of people might think, for example, how to become a rich, prosperous, wealthy, mega civilization like the United States. | ||
Well, yeah, you have to have a lot of money, you have to have big military, whatever. | ||
But, on a much smaller level, but just as important, you have to wash your hands. | ||
And the people making the food have to wash their hands, and there has to be health regulations, and health inspectors, and hygiene, and all of that. | ||
It's all a part of it. | ||
I know it's sort of like this idea of survivorship bias. | ||
You know, you look at how our civilization has developed and our civilization is the best, bar none. | ||
You know, maybe Japan is up there as well, but definitely Europe, definitely the United States. | ||
We are the world standard for what it is like to have a, you know, and lately things have been kind of going off the rails, but generally speaking you could say that America, maybe 20 years ago, is the global benchmark in terms of Safety, cleanliness, order, all these things. | ||
I'm talking in very general terms when you compare it to Africa, the Middle East, South America, you know, excluding a city like Hong Kong or, you know, whatever. | ||
We are the global standard. | ||
And you have to go back and look at all the things that contributed to that. | ||
There are a lot of things that if you got together in a room of experts, they could not pinpoint every single thing that contributed to that. | ||
They could not pinpoint every single aspect that led to that. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
And so in that way, when we're trying to mix with all these other different civilizations, it's things like this that it's just not going to work out. | ||
Bringing people into our country temporarily, permanently, fusing our cultures with these other places. | ||
You know, we, all this to say, we don't even, we can't even begin to understand the problems that they are bringing over. | ||
We cannot even begin to comprehend how many different problems we are inviting into our country by inviting alien cultures and alien peoples. | ||
This is just one example, right, of a vast array of other problems that are minor, that are small, unseen parts of their culture, of their civilization, that are detrimental To civilization at our level, on our scale, at our level of development. | ||
I mean, does all of that make sense? | ||
Because a lot of people might think, oh sure, globalization is great, you know. | ||
Now that we have modern transportation technology, we've got jet engines, and we've got communications and so on, and everything's cheap, and you got, you know, free trade and everything, that means that now we can all just have these global countries that are hubs for international travel, international trade, and so on. | ||
Not understanding that we are bringing over peoples and cultures that just cannot handle this. | ||
That they are inviting different elements that could be detrimental to how we organize our lives here. | ||
You know, disease is one element. | ||
Crime is a part of it. | ||
Drug use, behavioral things, people's, you know, how people think about democracy, how people think about all kinds of other different customs. | ||
I mean, it's such a complicated thing when you're talking about peoples and nations and trying to get them to gel with the United States is something that is so poorly thought out. | ||
And now we are seeing the consequences of that. | ||
You know, we should have considered this like a national security thing from the get go. | ||
I'm talking about globalization in general. | ||
We should have considered when all of this started maybe 25 years ago, and you could probably go back further still, but really maybe 25 years ago, I would say when George H.W. | ||
Bush said New World Order, and maybe it started with the Reagan era, but all this travel, all this trade, all this immigration, this should have been treated like a national security threat. | ||
We should have put up barricades and walls, and we should have put security guards and officers. | ||
It would have slowed down the GDP, but we would have some control over the direction of where things are going. | ||
Now we have no control. | ||
Now we have no idea what we're dealing with. | ||
We have people in here, we don't know what they're about, we don't know... I mean, these people are like ticking time bombs as far as the health of our nation goes. | ||
It's disease one day, it's crime the next, or it's terrorism, or it's something else. | ||
We have no idea the perils that await us because we've invited the entire world into our homes. | ||
And now they're coughing, and now they're sneezing, and now they're misbehaving, and now they're doing all kinds of other things, and we just have to deal with it. | ||
It's like the biggest mistake. | ||
I imagine that in the long-term scope of things, if you look at the long-term view of history, we will view what's happening today like the Columbian Exchange. | ||
The Columbian Exchange when, of course, Columbus came to the New World, the European settlers arrived in the New World, and it was catastrophic. | ||
It was catastrophic. | ||
We brought diseases, we brought all... I mean, it was a clash of cultures, clash of civilizations, bringing gold back, destroyed the European economy. | ||
I mean, this was one of the most disruptive events in human history. | ||
Deadly, destroyed nations, destroyed empires, 500 years ago when the Europeans first came to the Western Hemisphere. | ||
I think it'll be on that level when we're looking back on this in so many hundreds of years. | ||
If we even are looking back, we might all be dead. | ||
We might all have 65 IQ and return to tradition, returning to mud huts. | ||
But I think that if we're still around in 500 years, we'll look at this globalization period and say, we had no idea what we were in for. | ||
We had no idea What we were asking for with this kind of globalization stuff is the more I think about it the more you just think what a big fat mistake you think you look at any map of like planes flying around in the air you know the daily volume of air travel all the different flights all the different people coming from all different places you look at what's happening at the border people running across And you just think, this cannot possibly be going in a good place. | ||
This cannot possibly be helping us. | ||
God help us with all that is going on, right? | ||
So, this coronavirus, maybe this one will work out. | ||
Maybe it won't be so bad. | ||
Maybe it'll be terrible. | ||
But this is the beginning. | ||
This is the beginning of what is to come with diseases and with everything else. | ||
So that's something to consider. | ||
A lot of people, and it's just like the hubris. | ||
That is what I cannot get over. | ||
The hubris and the ignorance and the arrogance of people who look at this fundamental transformation of the world, of our country, of our demographics, and they think that none of this is significant. | ||
None of this matters. | ||
They think that nothing will change as a result of this. | ||
How could they not possibly understand the gravity of what we're talking about here? | ||
You know, you imagine there are people like Charlie Kirk who think that, well, everyone can come here as long as they, like, I don't know, they have jobs or something. | ||
Like, do you not understand the gravity of what we're talking about? | ||
Forget the economy, forget crime, forget even the racial makeup. | ||
We're talking about a civilizational transformation. | ||
A global transformation the likes of which we have never seen in human history. | ||
We have not seen on the scale since 500 years of what's happening right now. | ||
And people don't have the first clue about some of the ramifications of this. | ||
They think the only possible consequence is that we'll have nicer cafeterias, right? | ||
We'll have more foods to choose from, and you'll hear more languages on the subway. | ||
Well, I got a news flash for you. | ||
A lot more is going to result from this than that. | ||
And this is only the beginning. | ||
And it just blows my mind that people don't get that! | ||
This is huge! | ||
Globalization is the story of our lifetimes. | ||
This is the biggest thing that's going on. | ||
And all of its consequences, good and bad, all of it, it is a transformation. | ||
And you know, the more that I do this show and the more I study the world and all these different aspects, you know, of political angle, you know, we're looking at a disease right now or we're talking about immigration law or crime or drug trade, commerce, the more you realize this is the force. | ||
This is the force that is so transformative and That's where we're headed. | ||
So that's the coronavirus. | ||
Like I said, we're going to keep an eye on it and I hope this is not going to be a catastrophe, but honestly it's only a matter of time. | ||
You cannot stop this. | ||
Understand, you know, if this is any demonstration of what we're in store for in the future, we have no capacity to stop a pandemic when it arrives. | ||
You know, if this thing burns through and it's not such a big deal, it won't be because there was any kind of precautionary infrastructure in place to minimize the damage or contain this or anything like that. | ||
It'll be because this strangers wasn't bad enough. | ||
But there will be a strain that is bad enough. | ||
And when it arrives, it will spread. | ||
They will not be able to control it. | ||
China will not be able to control it. | ||
The World Health Organization won't control it. | ||
The UN will be powerless to stop it. | ||
Our government will be powerless to stop it. | ||
Our government doesn't have a secure border. | ||
Do we even need to begin to talk about the incompetence of our government? | ||
We are on borrowed time when it comes to stuff like this. | ||
And this is one among a variety of issues. | ||
Terrorism, disease, it's jobs, it's everything, right? | ||
So, it's a bit of a black pill, bit of a black pill, but that is the way you have to interpret this stuff. | ||
So, like I said, we'll watch it and we'll see. | ||
I don't, from what I've seen so far, and look, I'm not a doctor, I'm not a, you know, UN bureaucrat, so I don't really know what I'm talking about when it comes to these pandemics and studying the epidemiology of diseases and All that, but from what I've read, it doesn't seem like this is going to be the end of the world, but I do fear for when that disease does come, because if it spreads as fast as this one, it's like, hey, game over. | ||
So, but that is the coronavirus. | ||
We're going to move on and take a look at our Super Chats, and we'll see what you guys are saying. | ||
We'll be looking on entropy, and we'll also be looking on DLive, and we'll see, we'll see what, what are the unwashed masses, what are they saying tonight, right? | ||
But it's, I'm just like, open your eyes when it comes to globalization. | ||
It's like, what a bad idea. | ||
I said this on Tuesday. | ||
It couldn't be more true. | ||
Don't give any visas to people that do not wash their hands. | ||
Do not give visas to people that do not wash their hands. | ||
These people we're dealing with do not wash their hands! | ||
In India, they don't use toilets! | ||
They don't use them in the Middle East! | ||
In sub-Saharan Africa, they don't have written language, and we're like, come on in! | ||
This'll be fine! | ||
We have the most advanced, sophisticated, developed, complicated, schizophrenic, neurotic society in the history of the world, and now we're about to add to that all these people from the Middle Ages. | ||
All these people from ancient times, basically. | ||
And not even ancient times. | ||
They built pyramids in the ancient times. | ||
These people built huts. | ||
Pouring them in! | ||
Pouring them in! | ||
Come on in! | ||
Every one of them. | ||
Everybody wants to come. | ||
I see nothing wrong with this. | ||
How could this possibly go wrong, right? | ||
It's that dog in that comic, you know, his whole house is on fire. | ||
This is fine. | ||
Pouring them all on! | ||
Nobody sees... And it's not even like, you know, people will watch us and say, you're a racist! | ||
You're a white nationalist! | ||
It's not any of that. | ||
It's like, you could be a fucking UN bureaucrat and see this stuff. | ||
You know, I don't hate anybody or anything like that, whatever. | ||
Forget ideology, forget race, forget anything for that matter, for just a moment, and think about pouring all these different people from such backwards, undeveloped countries into our own, and expecting them, well, they will perpetuate this. | ||
They will do fine here. | ||
And introducing such different people into this ecosystem, there will be no negative consequences. | ||
In fact, there will be no significant consequences. | ||
There will just be trivial consequences and positive consequences, and that's it. | ||
What is the matter with you? | ||
How could you be an intelligent person and believe this? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
I don't get it. | ||
I don't think they believe that. | ||
You know, you think about, like, ecosystems in nature. | ||
You think about the rainforest, right? | ||
Or you think about a marsh, or you think about the woods, or whatever. | ||
And it's like you bring in the wrong fish to the wrong river and the whole ecosystem dies. | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
You bring in the wrong poisonous dart frog to the wrong woods and the whole thing is dead. | ||
You know, my friend, a friend of mine lives up in the mountains in the northwest. | ||
They recently introduced a species of wolf. | ||
The species of wolf was an invasive species, killed out all the native wolves, is killing all the livestock, population is exploding. | ||
It's like you bring in one species to an ecosystem in nature and the whole thing goes upside down. | ||
And we think it's going to be any different for us? | ||
You think we're gonna bring in everybody from China, and from Africa, and from Mexico, and from Honduras, and from Saudi Arabia, and humans are much more complicated than animals, and we're gonna drop them into Boston, and in Chicago, and into Dallas, and LA, and everything's gonna be fine, everything's gonna be fine, nothing will change, there will be no consequences. | ||
They won't even admit that things will change. | ||
They won't even admit, let alone that things will go bad, that things will go south, but they won't even admit that things will be different. | ||
They say that the changes will be trivial, minimal, not at all, or if there are, they'll be positive, unambiguously. | ||
What the f... What are you thinking? | ||
How can any person of sound mind believe that? | ||
You're like retarded if you believe that. | ||
Okay. | ||
Anyway, I'm going off. | ||
I'm going off the goop here because It's just like, you know, sometimes I do this show and I, you know, I go on my rant and I tell you these things, but you know, it's moments like this when I, you know, I'm, I'm really just like bewildered when you see something like this. | ||
It's like, I get it. | ||
What's not to get here? | ||
Anyway, we're going to move on. | ||
We're going to take a look at our super chats here. | ||
Uh, we'll start with D live and then we'll go to entropy. | ||
And remember I, the entropy link is in the description. | ||
If you're on YouTube, We've got Andrew Jackson who says, which is better, Fallout 3 or New Vegas? | ||
I like New Vegas better. | ||
I played Fallout 3. | ||
I don't think I completed it, but I like New Vegas better. | ||
America Floats says, Bernie is cucked, no spine, no chance. | ||
Yeah, that's a big flaw for him is that he really is not... He does not stand up for himself. | ||
You know, and I talked about that on the debate last week when that moderator said, uh, so are you saying that you did not tell Elizabeth Warren that a woman could not be president? | ||
And he said, uh, that is correct. | ||
I didn't tell her that. | ||
And then she turns immediately, Elizabeth Warren, how did you react when Bernie Sanders told you a woman can't be president? | ||
And he laughed and he laughed. | ||
What a clown. | ||
Yeah, so I think that's legitimate. | ||
Coke says you forgot to update the dashboard on DLive. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Oh! | ||
Fongool, yeah, you're right. | ||
I forgot to, there's, you have to click a save button. | ||
On YouTube it automatically saves, and on DLive it does not automatically save, so that's why I forgot to click the save button. | ||
God damn it. | ||
I didn't mean to do that. | ||
Well, that's okay. | ||
We're learning. | ||
We're learning. | ||
We're getting used to it. | ||
So, thank you for the tip, though. | ||
I wish I had known that an hour and a half ago, but whatever. | ||
Zamunda First says, Kathy unleashed the virus because you didn't text back. | ||
That's right. | ||
Kathy. | ||
She unleashed the bug. | ||
She unleashed the disease. | ||
You know, she was going into the Wuhan livestock market at night and she poured in Chemical X into the bat soup. | ||
That'll show Nick not to respond to my texts! | ||
She was in her father's... It was like in Kung Fu Panda. | ||
She's in her father's noodle shop. | ||
Oh father, father, go home. | ||
I'll take care of the soup. | ||
unidentified
|
You are very mature beyond your years, Kathy. | |
Father, father, I'll clean up the noodles for today. | ||
You go on and get some rest. | ||
And you know, he bows. | ||
Ah, yes, thank you. | ||
I'm so proud of the girl you've become. | ||
He goes off to bed, and then Kathy Zhu sneaks away into the back room. | ||
You know, she pours in the bats. | ||
She pours in the bats. | ||
She pours in the, uh, wasabi. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I'm just, you know, making up ingredients. | ||
She pours in the, uh, carrots and the, you know, whatever. | ||
And then she pours in a little vial of Chemical X. Ha ha ha! | ||
That'll show Nick not to respond to my text messages! | ||
That'll show Nick to be a more handsome version of my boyfriend! | ||
And the rest is history, right? | ||
That'll be written about in the history books. | ||
It's like it's like the Great Chicago Fire. | ||
It's the cow that tipped over the lantern. | ||
Anyway, America Floats says diamonds ain't a thang. | ||
Yeah, well, thanks. | ||
Minnesota Groipers says everyone follow amfirststudents on Twitter. | ||
Yeah, at amfirststudents for sure. | ||
Galaxy Brain says, I hope they make X movie. | ||
Robotnik, March 4th, 2011. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
But yeah, I, uh... Well, I don't know. | ||
I'm not sure what you're... I hope they make X movie. | ||
Robotnik, March 4th, 2011. | ||
What do you mean, make X movie? | ||
America Floats says, P.S. | ||
Never eat girls, ever. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
America vs. Juices, Kathy Xu eats bats. | ||
Confirmed, yeah. | ||
America vs. Jews is all cultures are equal. | ||
Some eat bats and some tendies. | ||
Coronavirus is a form of diversity. | ||
Biodiversity. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
And that's just it. | ||
Not all, well, it's not even not all cultures are equal, but they're not all the same. | ||
And yeah, some are, you know, clearly not prepared to mix with ours. | ||
It's really more than mixing. | ||
I don't care. | ||
Like, if you want to go to China, And do what the Chinese do. | ||
Knock yourself out. | ||
It's great. | ||
China is a fellow advanced civilization. | ||
The Orient is fine. | ||
You know, Japan is great. | ||
Whatever. | ||
Do your thing. | ||
Do your thing. | ||
Wherever you are. | ||
If you're, you know, one of these Zulu people or whatever in Zimbabwe, knock your socks off. | ||
Do your thing. | ||
But you can't bring it here. | ||
But you can't mix it up with our thing. | ||
That messes up our thing. | ||
You know, obviously. | ||
Obviously, the problem is in this incompatibility, the heterogeneity. | ||
That is the problem. | ||
They are not compatible. | ||
Let's see. | ||
E-boy Nationalist says, meet Chinese. | ||
Okay, I'm not going to read that. | ||
America Floats says, credo! | ||
Yeah. | ||
Martin Shkreli says, big salutes in chat for Jade McNeil. | ||
Yeah, big salute. | ||
Good job. | ||
America Floats says, America first, groip hard or go home. | ||
Yeah, groip hard or go home. | ||
That's what I say. | ||
Jude says it'd be cool if you sent a letter to Xi to tell DLive to let you say FAG really helps you out, King. | ||
Yeah, I will definitely get Xi Jinping to reach out to DLive for sure. | ||
Peach Crayon says love the show, King. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Martin Shkreli says think China released it so they don't need US agriculture. | ||
Yeah, I don't think that's it. | ||
Delary says three tabs. | ||
The echo will drive you crazy. | ||
Ah, that's very funny. | ||
What's the third tab? | ||
Is that entropy? | ||
CoolBlueSquare says, would you do a rap battle against Vouch? | ||
No, that would be cringe. | ||
Martin Shkreli says, we stan Jaden. | ||
Yeah, I'm a Jaden stan. | ||
ArmenianGroiper says, Charlie Kirk shitting his diapers after hearing about America First students. | ||
Give him hell, Jaden! | ||
Yeah, he's a tough cookie, this Jaden. | ||
You know, he's moving into the movement, you know? | ||
He's really come a long way, so it's good to see that he's really become a leader in the movement. | ||
You know, it's not easy to get in the spotlight like he did by shutting down his Turning Point chapter. | ||
I mean, that took a lot of guts. | ||
And then to step up and do this America First Students thing, it's a lot of initiative. | ||
It's a lot of courage. | ||
And, you know, he's really coming into his own. | ||
I'm very proud of him. | ||
T-Based says, soup check? | ||
Yeah, no soup for me. | ||
I had some soup actually for dinner, but it wasn't bat soup. | ||
It was some homemade soup from the family. | ||
Yeah, always. | ||
says, can the Jew be grocery shopping at the animal shelter? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Yeah, that's funny. | ||
I'm a Fed, says, thanks for naming the Jew. | ||
Yeah, always. | ||
Castizo Gamer says, was multicultural immigration in large empires bad? | ||
Yes. | ||
But it was also different in an empire. | ||
It was different in an empire because, you know, sort of intrinsic in the empire is the idea that there's like a master state or a master polity. | ||
You know, in other words, when you look at like the Roman Empire, you had Rome, which was at the seat of the empire. | ||
In the Soviet Union, you had Russia, which was, and more specifically, the European part of Russia, which was the heart of this empire that spanned You know to the Balkans and to Central Asia and out to Mongolia. | ||
And, you know, even the Russian Empire, which preceded the Soviet Union. | ||
You know, you had St. | ||
Petersburg, and then you had all these peripheral entities, even China today. | ||
China's got the Han Corps, and then you've got, on the periphery, Manchuria, you've got Tibet, Mongolia, and, um, and who's the other group? | ||
The Uyghurs, I think. | ||
So, you've got sort of this core, you've got this, this, you know, main country, and then you've got these more imperial entities, imperial acquisitions. | ||
So that's why it's a little bit different for an empire to be multiracial or multicultural, because it's understood that there is a degree of separation within, or there's a degree of distinction within, or hierarchy even. | ||
There was a study that was done about heterogeneous societies, and it said that ranked multiracial societies are better off than unranked multiracial societies. | ||
I'm not saying that. | ||
There's a study that said this. | ||
Like, for example, if you look at India, which has a caste system that ranks the different peoples, it works better. | ||
When there's different legal rights for the different people involved, there's a clear... And look, I'm not like saying I'm advocating for that. | ||
This is what the literature says. | ||
that rank societies are more stable was, was the conclusion of the study. | ||
And I think that, that, that ties in nicely with the idea of empire, that as long as there's a clear pecking order and distinction and all of that, well, then it goes a little bit more smoothly. | ||
That's not to say that, you know, it's totally comparable to the United States or anything like that. | ||
The United States has not, you know, built like an empire. | ||
We don't have laws like an empire. | ||
We don't act like one, so it's not really applicable. | ||
And it's not to say that empires are always the best or anything, but it does say that it's different than what we're doing right now. | ||
If we started to act more like that, if there was like an ethnic core in America and we kind of dictated what happened outside of it and there was like a Mexican part and a black part and a whatever part, you know, that would be a different story. | ||
But that's not how it exists. | ||
That's why it's a problem, you know, because we don't operate that way. | ||
West Ward says, what's your prediction on who will win Iowa? | ||
Um, you know, I honestly don't really know. | ||
I think it's kind of a toss-up because if you look at the polling, it's kind of inconclusive. | ||
They're all clustering around, you know, between 15 and 20 some percent. | ||
So, I would say maybe it's between Biden and Sanders for number one in Iowa. | ||
Shineye says, my grandpa was from Wuhan. | ||
They really be eating bats. | ||
Yeah, it doesn't surprise me. | ||
Lord Marilyn says I have cough after sitting next to Chinese tourists on the metro. | ||
It was nice knowing you, Nick. | ||
Yeah, well... | ||
Thanks from the Ninjagini. | ||
Gotta write me into the will, okay? | ||
Gotta write some of the lemons into the will if you have some kind of untimely passing there. | ||
But I think you'll pull through. | ||
We are, we have a strong immune system over here in America. | ||
Americans are always micro-dosing because we drink tap water and we eat McDonald's. | ||
You know, what part of trust the plan don't you understand? | ||
Why are, why were we eating Zodchow all along? | ||
Why were we eating all these things that are bad for us? | ||
We were micro-dosing our immune system so that when something like this comes to our shore, You know, compared to the disaster that's happening with my gut, um, you know, biome, the micro, what is, what do you call that? | ||
Your, your microbiotica, whatever it is, your gut biome, whatever disaster is in there, whatever comes in from China is going to look, look like a joke compared to what is in there already because of McDonald's and Wendy's and, you know, White Castle and everything else. | ||
So it was like that all along. | ||
All these nibbas that are on the farms and they're, uh, You know, eating their fresh greens and everything, they're gonna die immediately. | ||
You know, eats fresh green from the garden, dies immediately. | ||
I caught this virus. | ||
My body doesn't know how to handle it because it's been babied my whole life with baby baby milk and baby vegetables and baby carrots and all that. | ||
I was eating good my whole life, but now I'm going to die. | ||
And you know, me, slonking, you know, I'll like drop my Big Mac on the ground, pick it up and eat it. | ||
unidentified
|
What? | |
I didn't hear you. | ||
I lost my hearing because I'm diabetic. | ||
What did you say? | ||
I have all these mutations that have, you know, that have actually helped me to survive in this landscape. | ||
You know, I've maybe developed some kind of special spinal, uh, some kind of special spinal organizations so I can hunch over and use my computer more effectively. | ||
I'm like, what did you say? | ||
Some guy who's on a farm is like foaming at the mouth, bleeding from his eyeballs. | ||
I touched a little bit of dirt. | ||
I touched something that has germs on it. | ||
Now I'm going to die. | ||
We've been eating bat meat our whole lives. | ||
It's called McChicken. | ||
We're all safe. | ||
We've been training for this our whole lives. | ||
By the way, that's jokes. | ||
I understand that is completely unscientific. | ||
Mark my words. | ||
Watch. | ||
I'm going to have people in the comments and on Twitter tomorrow saying, uh, actually, unpasteurized milk helps your gut biome and your immune system. | ||
It's just a reminder. | ||
It's jokes, everybody. | ||
I am kidding. | ||
I am saying that to be funny and not to be informing you about science. | ||
Leftfoot says, I'll nunchuck a cyanothon into space if I have to. | ||
Hey, if they come near you, you know, if they do, if they do the reach, you know that meme with the guy with his, uh, he's got the bloodshot eyes and he's reaching out. | ||
If, if any, if you see any Chinese person coming at you like that, you'd be justified. | ||
It's self-defense, you know. | ||
A Chinese person comes at you with their hand outstretched. | ||
Get that thing away from me! | ||
Don't touch me! | ||
You know, you're putting on your mask, hazmat suit goes on, rubber gloves. | ||
It's like when I was in, you know, Boston for school. | ||
You're on the subway. | ||
You're at Boston University. | ||
You see a Chinese person from the corner of your eye. | ||
And they're coming towards you. | ||
unidentified
|
Get away from me! | |
I don't want to catch it. | ||
I don't want to catch it. | ||
I'm holed up in my room. | ||
Everything's locked. | ||
There's like, you know, one of those little cubbies where they, you know, like in prison. | ||
They put the food in. | ||
It rotates out through the door. | ||
That's how we have to be. | ||
That's how we have to be in 2020. | ||
California Groyper says, here's a chalky milk because you're epic. | ||
Ah, thank you. | ||
Doom Groypes says, don't look a gift horse in the end zone. | ||
Yeah, that's great. | ||
Very funny. | ||
Jay Rockster says, Nick, I'm at work. | ||
Save me. | ||
Wagey out. | ||
Sorry, big guy. | ||
Can't save you when you're on company time. | ||
When you when you plead for health, make sure you do that on your allotted bathroom break. | ||
OK, make sure you do that on your 15 minute break. | ||
OK, your lunch hour. | ||
But no pleading for help when you're on company time. | ||
When you're on company time, your ass belongs to the company. | ||
So I would shut up and get back to work. | ||
You want to scream for help? | ||
You want to you want to talk to me? | ||
You know, you can do that on your own time. | ||
You can do that when you're on your 30 second allotted poop break. | ||
But then it's back to work. | ||
OK, I don't make the rules. | ||
Among the ruins says after seeing Joker eight times. | ||
How much of the film do you think was Arthur's imagination versus reality? | ||
I tend to believe that All of it was reality with the exception of the girlfriend You know only because I think it undermines the movie if Lots of it or most of it is fictitious. | ||
I think that's sort of like a cheap gimmick that people do in movies. | ||
In some movies it works, in a lot of them it doesn't though. | ||
I would say that, you know, it's an unreliable narrator about the movie, so we don't really know what happened, what didn't happen, maybe things didn't happen the way that he perceives them. | ||
You know, for example, if you look at the clocks in the movie, there are three clocks in the movie. | ||
When he's in the therapist's office, the clock on the walls is 11-11. | ||
He He flashes back to when he was in the mental hospital, banging his head against the door. | ||
There's a clock on the wall that says 11-11. | ||
And when he gets fired from his job, and he says, oh I forgot to punch out, and he punches the clock where they punch in, it says 11-11 there too. | ||
And they say that this contributes to the idea that there is like a dream-like quality about the movie, that not everything is as it seems. | ||
You know, obviously not all these clocks really read 1111. | ||
It suggests that something is not quite right there. | ||
You know, they say that in like a dream, your clock doesn't run the same way. | ||
They play with this concept in inception so it speaks to the sort of the unreality of events the unreliability of the narrator for example I think maybe the subway scene didn't happen exactly the way that He said it did or the way that we're shown You know the way that what we're shown is that he gets beat up for no reason by these guys and then he shoots and kills them I don't know. | ||
I mean, the way he talks about it on the Murray show later on suggests that maybe he just killed them randomly. | ||
You know, he said, he didn't say, I killed them because they beat me up. | ||
He said, I killed them because they were awful. | ||
Everybody's awful. | ||
That's not quite the same thing. | ||
So that leads me to believe that, I don't know, maybe it wasn't just this unprovoked attack. | ||
Maybe that was his perception or something like that. | ||
There's just an idea, sort of a postulate. | ||
But, uh, but I guess we'll have to wait and see if there's a sequel. | ||
The director, uh, who's the director again? | ||
It's, uh, what's his name? | ||
What's his name? | ||
Tim Phillips, I think? | ||
He said that he's gonna sort of reveal what's going on later on. | ||
He said that after people have seen it, he'll kind of clue us into what's going on. | ||
But those are my thoughts. | ||
Boat schools is actually the population of China is 1.439 million. | ||
Okay, thank you very much. | ||
Saxon says too many bat feet respecters in Wuhan. | ||
Okay, not sure what that means. | ||
Okay, well, it sounded like one. | ||
Nick, don't red pill your friends. | ||
Okay, well, it sounded like one. | ||
Mickey Mouse says, go out and make disciples of all nations. | ||
Nick, don't red pill your friends. | ||
Sorry, Nick had to do it to them. | ||
Okay, that's retarded. | ||
We're obviously not talking about the same thing. | ||
You know, Jesus Christ is going to make disciples of all nations spread Christianity to you. | ||
Nick says don't tell your parents about, you know, the guy, you know, the thing. | ||
Definitely the same thing. | ||
So yeah, I understand if you have a low IQ, but those things are not the same. | ||
Warren says guy above's family doesn't love him. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
Mickey Mouse says, Chinese meat got me acting strange. | ||
I said, the F happened June 5th, 1985 out of Tiananmen Square. | ||
Okay, Cozer says, why birth tourism and not birthright citizenship? | ||
Probably because it's easier. | ||
Oh, Warren says, Sean Hannity has beef in his brain. | ||
Okay, I don't know what that means. | ||
Jtapes says, more I learn about China, the more I doubt the 105. | ||
I don't know what that means either. | ||
Max says Chinese make frying oil out of what they dig out of the sewer. | ||
Yeah, I don't know if that's true Fart smellers is fucking Greenland will be the only country left. | ||
Well, Greenland is not a country. | ||
So America floats naturally Greenland is not a country. | ||
But yeah, I mean maybe they'll hang on America floats says globalism is a lie. | ||
Well, it's not a lie. | ||
It's just you know, it's been sold to us under false pretenses William Pepe says Joker calls Chinese food and orders bat wontons and Haha, yeah, it's like Joker and the other thing combined. | ||
ZX1 says, Chad Mudhut versus virgin advanced architecture. | ||
Yeah, yeah, very true. | ||
Return to tradition, white man. | ||
Rhode Island says, Jaden is a king. | ||
Big agree. | ||
Mickey Mouse says, I miss those autistic hysterical laughing fits with the boys. | ||
Your show gives me the same vibe. | ||
Ah, well, that's very high praise. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I miss that as well. | ||
I miss that as well. | ||
Yeah, that's that's uh, making me feel a little wistful there making feel making me feel a little bit a little bit nostalgic Going back to the old days when you're you know in high school or middle school middle school hanging out with the fellas hanging out the boys, you know, you're playing call of duty black ops 2 zombies after band camp You know, you're getting on top of going onto the roof of PetSmart. | ||
It's just, we'll never be the same. | ||
So, I do feel a bit wistful. | ||
Thanks for punching me in the stomach there, emotionally speaking. | ||
But, hey, high praise. | ||
I'm glad that you're getting the same energy from the show that you get from bowling with the boys back in the day. | ||
We'll never be the same. | ||
You know, I imagine what it's like to be an old man I imagine what it's like to be an old man, you know, and your bones and muscles ache, and you're hunched over, skin is wrinkled, and you're like, I was young once. | ||
I can't imagine, like, being what I am now and then becoming old and looking back and like, that used to be me. | ||
unidentified
|
It used to be! | |
But that's how I feel, but that's how I feel now, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
It's very... | |
Very sad. | ||
But that's life, right? | ||
Anyway, wow. | ||
Alan, that was a very challenging Super Chat for me emotionally to surmount. | ||
We've gotten over it. | ||
T-Base with a Ninjet says, Dr. Nick, hey, well, thank you so much. | ||
He's back again with another Ninjet. | ||
Flying Overhead, thank you so much. | ||
That's a lot of Ninjets. | ||
Mickey Mouse says, don't mind me, I'm just jelking. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Uh, Zaviva says, much love to all Chad's gifting subscriptions. | ||
Yeah, thanks to everybody gifting subscriptions. | ||
Uh, DoomGroip says, boomer gnawing on bat wings and camel hump be like, but they have better food as his organs slop out. | ||
Yeah. | ||
AquaticBasedNibba says, what's your opinion on lo-fi Home Depot type beats? | ||
Some of them really be hitting different, you know. | ||
Is that when they take the Home Depot like commercial song and Do something over it. | ||
That's what you're talking about. | ||
I kind of hate the Home Depot song. | ||
It's very triggering to me. | ||
I don't know if anybody can relate, but when I was a kid, my father would always drag me to Home Depot, and I hated it! | ||
That was my least favorite story. | ||
He would always drag me and my sister to Home Depot when he needed something, and it was just the worst. | ||
I don't know what about it was bad, But I just didn't like, I just, for whatever reason, I just hated going to Home Depot. | ||
I hated going to all the stores for what it's worth, but Home Depot was maybe the worst. | ||
And, uh, the one good thing about Home Depot, the one by me, is they had a little hot dog stand, which was great. | ||
They had hot dogs, chips. | ||
So sometimes we would go and my dad would buy me and my sister would get a hot dog and California Groper says we will stop the upcoming disaster with Super Chats. | ||
Not a huge fan of the store, so, you know, seeing the commercials kind of triggers me a little bit. | ||
Let's see. | ||
California Groiper says we will stop the upcoming disaster with Super Chats. | ||
That's right. | ||
If I just keep doing the show, there will be no catastrophe. | ||
Scar says they're not washing their hands and you're laughing. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, we've kind of done this a lot kind of done that one to death Gamer nationalist I today I was watching that scene and I was I literally just did the whole thing word for word I've seen it enough times in theaters that I was watching it on YouTube. | ||
I was just going line for a line watching the whole scene It's just such a perfect, such a perfect ending, man. | ||
I love that. | ||
I'm probably gonna go see it in theaters again tomorrow. | ||
I think it's the last day it's gonna be. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
Or is it already gone? | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see. | |
Come on, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on, come on. | ||
Yeah, yeah! | ||
All right, we got a showing tonight. | ||
Yeah, yeah! | ||
Oh, we got one Saturday. | ||
Yeah! | ||
What? | ||
It's playing until Wednesday? | ||
We are in business! | ||
We are in business! | ||
This week! | ||
Hell yeah! | ||
But it looks like it's far. | ||
Where is this theater? | ||
Where is this? | ||
Oh, this is far. | ||
Oh, this is in a bad neighborhood. | ||
I think, right? | ||
Yikes! | ||
Yeah, this is, uh... Uh, in... | ||
In Austin yeah, I don't know maybe I'm having second thoughts. | ||
I want to see Joker I don't want to see Joker that bad if it's in If it's in Austin, I'm gonna take a big pass on that maybe I'll have to find a different location. | ||
I'd rather drive, you know, an hour west than a half hour east. | ||
Let's just put it that way. | ||
So anyway, so I, I still have time. | ||
Looks like I still have time to see it. | ||
I want to get up to 10. | ||
I want to get up to 10. | ||
I have to, uh, have to get those numbers up a little bit. | ||
Okay. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Gamer Nationalist says, Kathy should be slonking bats. | ||
Drip Slips says, there's a great game on Steam called Sub Rosa. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
I'll look it up though. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's see, game? | |
It's not coming up right away. | ||
Okay, well I'll take a look. | ||
Looks kind of interesting. | ||
Ja G says, Zhu says, Bad dumplings. | ||
Imagine eating this good. | ||
Yeah, Kathy Zhu takes a picture of a, you know, boiled rattlesnake. | ||
Imagine eating this good. | ||
Toxic child says, Nibba's in Paris. | ||
More like boogers and sinus. | ||
Well, the problem is not even like mucus. | ||
Look, not to get technical, but the funny thing is, I was on an airplane recently, and I was sniffling the whole time, and the lady turns around. | ||
She's like, "Can you like blow your nose?" And I'm like, can you stop being fat? | ||
But in any case, the problem is not that I have mucus and like need to blow my nose. | ||
The problem is just blockage. | ||
The problem is like my sinus Whatever it is, the lining or the cavity swells. | ||
I don't know if that's technically how it works, but it's not a mucus buildup. | ||
It's like, it's just like swelling. | ||
So it's not even, I wish it was mucus. | ||
You could blow your nose and then get some relief, but it's not. | ||
It's just like your nose is closed. | ||
It's horrible. | ||
So I gotta get, I gotta get out of here. | ||
I got to get away from this dog. | ||
Warren says, China hates Wignats. | ||
Very, very nice play on words. | ||
Holly Nicole says, great show tonight, Nick. | ||
Wolf check. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Yeah, Wolves responsible for the pandemic. | ||
Makes you think. | ||
Theodore says, do you know the name of Jesus' 13th apostle? | ||
No. | ||
Cheese Cannon says, BRB getting five McDoubles for coronaviruses. | ||
Yeah, stock up. | ||
Stock up while you can. | ||
T-Base with another ninja ad. | ||
Wow. | ||
He says, McDonald's microbiome master race. | ||
Unironically, but hey, thanks for the huge donation. | ||
Thanks for the big ninja ad. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Holy smokes. | ||
This guy's got the big bucks here. | ||
We've got George Soros in chat live with us. | ||
But yeah, we are micro dosing. | ||
F it. | ||
I'm macro dosing. | ||
I'm macro dosing. | ||
I'm eating dirt. | ||
I'm eating... I'm eating shit. | ||
I'm eating McDonald's. | ||
I'm eating White Castle. | ||
I'm gonna take my White Castle original sliders. | ||
I'm gonna, you know, wipe them on a escalator railing and eat it. | ||
I'm macro dosing. | ||
I'm not taking any chances. | ||
I'll get everything and, you know, I'll catch the cold. | ||
I'll catch whatever. | ||
And by the time I'm recovered, I'll be immune. | ||
I'll be totally invulnerable. | ||
I'll be invincible. | ||
California Groyper says, Kathy, eat everything at the zoo. | ||
Oh, at the zoo. | ||
Oh, I understand. | ||
unidentified
|
Funny. | |
Cool Blue Squares says, what's the unfunniest popular meme right now? | ||
Unfunniest popular meme. | ||
Hmm. | ||
Well, that's tough. | ||
I mean, is it a boomer meme or is it like one of our memes cuz you know Most memes that are not from our space are not funny But there are a lot of memes within our area that are just bad and way overdone Unfunniest meme There was one I had in mind recently but I can't think of it right now. | ||
I really hate the ex-nationalism meme. | ||
I think that one's terrible. | ||
There was one notable one that I had in mind that I was like, what are you doing? | ||
I saw it on the timeline and I was like, what does it matter with you? | ||
Why would you post that? | ||
What was it? | ||
I might have to come back to that one. | ||
Generally, I just hate stale memes. | ||
I just hate stale memes that just go on and on for years or months. | ||
People that are still using things that are, you know, just so old. | ||
And they're not even, like, ironically reappropriating it. | ||
They're just throwing it out there, you know? | ||
So, I can't really think of anything off the top of my head right now, but just generally things like that. | ||
I know that's not a great answer, but let's see. | ||
Member says, do you support Bunga? | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Jaji says, T-based, is Barron Trump? | ||
Possible, possible. | ||
Wildchild says, think my favorite thing is after pointless super chat, Nick. | ||
Okay, what am I supposed to do with some of these, you know? | ||
It's like, okay, well, you said that, thank you, you know? | ||
Racist incels says, Nick on the PetSmart roof, I wonder what he'll do, yeah. | ||
Oh my gosh, Nick is on the PetSmart roof, what's going to happen? | ||
Yeah, the PetSmart roof, good times, good times. | ||
Oh man, the suburbs were like utopia. | ||
Heaven on earth. | ||
This is like, this is where my initial preservationist instinct came from. | ||
It's where it kicked in. | ||
When I went to college, I was like, the suburbs are heaven. | ||
The suburbs are like paradise. | ||
unidentified
|
We must secure the existence of the suburbs. | |
That was always my mentality. | ||
So, you know, I loved the area that I grew up in. | ||
I was like, we must have more of this. | ||
We must have more of the little league. | ||
You know train crossings and little little aesthetic things like that has to be maintained. | ||
I didn't like it, but now I understand the importance of it. | ||
Yeah, I would have graduated this year. | ||
I would have been a senior and I'd be graduating. | ||
Yeah, I'm like me. | ||
I don't know. | ||
now i understand the importance of it uh based groiper says bro would you have graduated college this year yeah i would have graduated this year i would have been a senior and i'd be graduating yeah i'm like may uh dur coomer says thoughts on rh negative blood type i don't know don't really have any thoughts on that uh dur coomer says thoughts on j man aka dur coomer i don't really have any thoughts uh brian says | ||
use blah blah blah hcl one percent four hour nose spray i'm using a nose spray right now but it doesn't work so but i'll look it up Probably. | ||
unidentified
|
I'll look it up. | |
I'll give it a shot, whatever. | ||
Member says, Hey Nick, I'm rather new to the show, but I'm liking most of your takes. | ||
Hey, well, thanks. | ||
Welcome. | ||
Gonna want to change your name though. | ||
I see the mark of the beast in your name. | ||
That's not great. | ||
But hey, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Hope you stick around, but let's get the devil. | ||
Let's get the, let's get that number out of the username. | ||
Okay, big guy, but glad you liked the takes. | ||
T-Based says ex-nationalism is so bad. | ||
It's good. | ||
Nope. | ||
It's just really bad, but but thanks for the ninja respectfully. | ||
Hey, but respectfully disagree, but thanks for another ninja at all. | ||
He's got two squadrons of ninjettes lined up Tuesday Thursday Thank you very much. | ||
Chicken on a Raft says, Dog problems? | ||
Call Kathy. | ||
I gotta get Kathy Zhu over here. | ||
She's like the wolf in Pulp Fiction. | ||
You know, I call her up. | ||
She handles problems. | ||
She handles problems like this. | ||
That's 30 minutes away. | ||
I'll be there in 10. | ||
Kathy Zhu. | ||
Flying. | ||
You know, driving very poorly. | ||
Flying across traffic arrives with a fork and knife. | ||
Okay, kidding, kidding, kidding. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
It's a joke. | ||
We're just kidding. | ||
Just kidding. | ||
Okay, let's look at our Entropy Super Chats. | ||
We've got Yamato who says, Hello, I'm Nick Fuentes with America First. | ||
Okay, Ran says, Why did Boyjamin Soy Piro try to insult you by saying you read Nietzsche? | ||
I swear the guy is shrinking by the minute he even opens his show. | ||
Schilling Gold, sad. | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
Well, I think it's because there was this Vice article by Will Nardi that said, I'm a hypocrite because I'm a Christian, but I have read Nietzsche before. | ||
It's like, I just don't even know what to say to that. | ||
The stupidity is just on another level. | ||
So I think that's where that came from. | ||
Zachary says, my ex-GF of three years, F day guy she had known for a week, huge liar. | ||
I got into your show around then, red pill me on the woman, interracial and immigration question. | ||
She's Latina, daughter of an illegal. | ||
Yes, I'm going to think about, sorry to hear that, but yeah, I hope you are now awake. | ||
I hope your third eye is now opened. | ||
Thoughts. | ||
It says, Thoughts on Richard Spencer's advocacy for equality over quantity. | ||
Top-down approach to save the white race versus his criticism of America First's approach. | ||
You know, it's very interesting. | ||
So I caught a little bit of the stream yesterday. | ||
He was on Ralph Retort, and Catboy Cammy went on there, which was interesting. | ||
But in any case, Spencer talked about his strategy and his tactics and everything, and he said he favors a top-down approach. | ||
And, you know, I find this fascinating because in the case of Richard Spencer in particular, he was poised to do a top-down approach in 2015. | ||
Because he had, I don't know if you guys know this, if you're in the scene, you kind of understand this, but this guy got around, okay? | ||
Not gonna lie, a lot has changed in the last five years. | ||
And from what I understand, 2015, Spencer was a pretty connected guy. | ||
In terms of, you know, he was at Talkie Mag, and he had connections in American Conservative, and knew all the guys in the dissident rights scene. | ||
And some pretty, like, high up people talked to him at one point. | ||
And he blew it. | ||
So if he wanted to do this top-down approach, he should have done that. | ||
He should have been behind the scenes influencing people from the shadows and manipulating influencers. | ||
But is that what he did? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
He went on a $100,000 college tour. | ||
He blew like tens of thousands of dollars going to Gainesville to get humiliated. | ||
People get arrested there. | ||
tens of thousands of dollars to go to Michigan, where somebody got arrested on a gun charge, and he spoke to like 10 people. | ||
Okay. | ||
He did the Charlottesville rally, which was a disaster. | ||
You know, so it's just this guy says one thing, and then he does something else. | ||
Well, we should do a top-down approach. | ||
Well, what was Charlottesville then? | ||
Was that the top-down approach? | ||
That was a rally for anybody and everybody. | ||
Top-down approach. | ||
Well, then why did you do a college tour? | ||
That seems like something trying to rally the masses. | ||
You know, so if he were serious about that, he would be writing. | ||
He would be a much more subtle figure. | ||
But he goes on like CNN and says these outrageous things. | ||
You know, he would be a much more muted character because there are people like this behind the scenes. | ||
By the way, they exist. | ||
I know them. | ||
I talk to them. | ||
They work in the White House. | ||
People that are doing things behind the scenes, that are working on a top-down approach, that's not the way to do it. | ||
So he says that, and, uh, you know, and in any case, um, this, this, uh, Catboy Cammy guy made a pretty good point, actually. | ||
He said, you know, if you look at all the people in power, there are people in power that are trying to make things happen. | ||
It's kind of not working. | ||
The elites, we're not going to convince the elites to become America first. | ||
I mean, which elites are you going to convince? | ||
We can't get a single billionaire to fund us. | ||
And how many billionaires are in the world? | ||
There's a lot. | ||
And in this country, there's a lot. | ||
We can't get a single hundred millionaire to fund something like American Renaissance or whatever. | ||
So how's that, like, really working out? | ||
Tucker Carlson's on the air every night talking to three million people about, you know, America first or whatever. | ||
How's that going? | ||
Are there a lot of congressmen pushing this? | ||
Are there a lot of bureaucrats? | ||
Are there a lot of money people? | ||
Not as far as I know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe there's something huge that I just have no idea, but I don't think there is You know, I basically Have my pulse on the America first scene and it's basically what you would expect So this idea of like influencing elites, I mean, that's a great idea, but it's not happening, you know and this this individual Made a good point again. | ||
Spencer, he said, you know, you need a base of public support to become an elite. | ||
You need a base of support to propel your ideas into the mainstream and maybe then convince elites or something to that effect. | ||
In other words, you kind of need the people on your side in some capacity. | ||
You don't you need, you know, 100 million people, but you do need some support, which has been proven over and over again. | ||
So, I mean, look at like somebody like Menchus Moldbug. | ||
His whole NRX theory was we're going to influence the elites. | ||
It's like, how's that going? | ||
You know, we're reading American Mind articles, people droning on and on about political theory and whatever. | ||
It's like... Seems like a big fat circle jerk to me, so... | ||
To an extent, it has to be a movement that's built on some degree of mass support. | ||
That doesn't mean 100 million people, but it does mean you have to have a base of support and you have to propel your own people into elite positions. | ||
You have to propel your own people into elite political positions, other positions, and you do that by having them either be subversive or having an ideology that can open the window further. | ||
You know, and this has been the dialectic for years with this guy. | ||
I was on a podcast with James Alsup and Spencer in 2017, and I said, what's the roadmap? | ||
Uh, Charlottesville, the alt-right, and how do we get to where we need to go? | ||
And he said, oh, don't worry about that. | ||
The point of, what we need to have, this is what he says, what we need to have is something aspirational. | ||
We need to have something to look forward to. | ||
Something that's unreal, I want us to dream big. | ||
That's like, that's fucking fantastic. | ||
That's great. | ||
Wow, dream to your heart's content, fag. | ||
But how are we going to make anything practical happen in our lifetimes? | ||
Well, that he has no answer for. | ||
Charlottesville, McSpencer Group, and somehow that leads to tangible victories? | ||
He has not given us a roadmap. | ||
And that's what the optics thing was all about. | ||
Three years ago I was on this podcast and I said, how do we get there? | ||
How was Charlottesville? | ||
Because at that time, everybody was saying Charlottesville was a great victory. | ||
I said it was a disaster. | ||
It was a failure. | ||
We need to change. | ||
We need to adapt. | ||
And they were saying, stop countersignaling. | ||
They were unironically, stop countersignaling. | ||
Stop countersignaling Charlottesville. | ||
You're making so much trouble. | ||
Blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I would say, what's your plan? | ||
How is that a victory? | ||
How did that help us? | ||
How does that help us achieve our goals? | ||
And they said, you just don't get it. | ||
You know, Spencer did this very aristocratic scoff. | ||
You just don't get it. | ||
You didn't go to college, okay? | ||
Uh, we need to dream big. | ||
You don't understand that. | ||
You're not an intellectual. | ||
It's like, okay, well clearly you have nothing. | ||
And nothing has changed! | ||
The things that we're talking about, there's a very practical roadmap. | ||
Practical roadmap for how things begin to move in the other direction. | ||
You know, creating resources, networks, infrastructure that will have the capacity to do pragmatic, tangible things. | ||
And this guy's gonna be the backseat driver and say, uh, we need to jerk off and talk about Francis Parker Yaqui. | ||
We need to do hour-long live streams jerking off talking about movie reviews. | ||
And we need to talk about my girlfriend. | ||
That's not going to help anybody. | ||
The McSpencer Group? | ||
Sorry. | ||
Not going to help anybody. | ||
No serious person is watching what this faggot's doing. | ||
Anyway. | ||
He says, what do you think about Latinx who identifies as white and Asians who intermarry because they want white kids? | ||
Well, some Latinos are white because some of them have mostly European DNA. | ||
And what do you mean, what do I think about people intermarried because they want kids? | ||
What do you mean, what do I think about that? | ||
I don't think really about that at all. | ||
Danielle with just, doesn't look like there's a message. | ||
Thanks for that. | ||
Jarrod says, if there are any animators out there, please make a short of Kathy Xu bringing Nick Batsoup on her rickshaw. | ||
unidentified
|
Boomer be like, attention, if there's any animators, you should totally make a cartoon of the funny thing Nick just said. | |
Hey, if there's any animators, you should totally make a cartoon of that hilarious thing Nick just said. | ||
That would be so funny. | ||
Nimbus be like, I want a cartoon. | ||
He said the joke, but now I want a cartoon. | ||
unidentified
|
What if there was a cartoon of it? | |
What if there was a cartoon of it? | ||
I tell you man, some of these super chats, it's like, what are we doing? | ||
Faticotti says, uh, the message about Trump writing you a letter was a joke about the dude who said you should go on Joe Rogan. | ||
Even if you did make fun of me, I wouldn't care. | ||
Thanks for coming to my TED talk. | ||
Okay, well, I'm glad you're good sport about it. | ||
Thanks. | ||
I didn't get that at first. | ||
Flora says, uh, you said on Milo's show that you want female supporters. | ||
unidentified
|
Here we go. | |
But on your show that you don't want women to be red-pilled. | ||
Don't you want to have deep conversation with your future wife? | ||
unidentified
|
Something in common? | |
Oh, yeah, I just want to strike the law. | ||
I just want to... | ||
Put another hole in the wall right, right here. | ||
Do I want to have deep conversations with my wife? | ||
About what? | ||
Chicken soup? | ||
About skedal and beans? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't think so. | |
Deep conversation with my wife. | ||
Give me a break. | ||
unidentified
|
Please, yeah. | |
Yeah, I'm really... Let me clear off the table. | ||
Honey, let's have a really deep conversation about, like, the universe and politics. | ||
unidentified
|
What the fuck is the matter with you, man? | |
Do you even watch this show? | ||
Don't you wanna have deep conversations with your wife? | ||
Yeah, yeah, I can definitely imagine that. | ||
unidentified
|
Me and a female. | |
We're gonna sit down, and we're gonna say, So, honey, what do you think about impeachment? | ||
unidentified
|
What do you think about impeachment? | |
What do you think about impeachment? | ||
Honey, I was just, you know, I'm dying to know. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm just so interested. | |
I'm so interested to know. | ||
What do you think about the virus or whatever? | ||
I can't even get over it. | ||
I can't even get over how stupid that is. | ||
So many people talk to me about this kind of thing and I guess I could just never do it. | ||
I could just never handle it. | ||
I'm not even fake laughing. | ||
unidentified
|
It really is just so funny to me. | |
Somebody would super chat this show and say, don't you want to have a deep conversation with your wife about politics? | ||
No, no, I do not. | ||
I do not want to talk to my wife about politics. | ||
I do not want to have deep conversations with my wife about political theory. | ||
And I don't want my wife to be Redfield. | ||
I mean, I want my wife to be traditional and, you know, act as though she knows all the relevant facts, but in a very organic and in a very instinctual and intuitive way. | ||
And I don't want my wife to be, you know, reading Evola. | ||
I don't want to be reading philosophy and all this. | ||
And like, you know, I already get my balls busted enough by super chatters. | ||
What do you think about Spengler's hypothesis? | ||
I don't need that from, you know, my wife. | ||
I want my wife to tell me about nice things and, you know, simple things and the kids and all that. | ||
unidentified
|
So that is funny. | |
That is funny. | ||
You said that you want female supporters. | ||
I don't know if I ever said that. | ||
I think I said, you know, females want to support us. | ||
They can. | ||
But, you know, I am a firm believer that politics is for men. | ||
Okay? | ||
It's for men. | ||
I think that men think politically. | ||
I think that men are interested in politics. | ||
I think men understand politics. | ||
And political movements must be comprised of men. | ||
And men can have wives, and wives can be involved in that capacity. | ||
And, you know, there are some exceptions. | ||
There's like Faith Golding, Michelle Malkin, Ann Coulter. | ||
There are people that have established themselves as authors. | ||
But that is by far the exception. | ||
Generally speaking, you know, trying, and you know, to get serious, trying to appease women is always a disaster. | ||
Because the only way to appease modern women is to make concessions on the most important family-based issues. | ||
So, and in other areas as well. | ||
You know, women will naturally be attracted to a movement that is strong and that is traditional and so on. | ||
The right women will naturally be attracted to that. | ||
And, you know, women that are going to try and dictate how things go and be assertive and change the direction, well, you know, they will either sort themselves out, you know, they'll not be attracted to this, or they'll come here and they'll be unwelcome. | ||
But that has to be the approach. | ||
This idea that we need to be, like, pandering to women. | ||
Have you met women? | ||
They don't exactly like to be pandered to. | ||
And that's kind of been what's effed us over as a country and a movement for as long as the two things have been around. | ||
So, Bing says, I can't read that. | ||
Garros says they are not dumb. | ||
They are dishonest. | ||
They don't care about the results. | ||
They only care about the aesthetics of their ideas being played out. | ||
It's all performative. | ||
Super bugs be damned. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Oh, of globalists? | ||
Yeah, I don't know if I agree with all of that. | ||
Peter says, thoughts on ethnically Portuguese Brazilians based meds or tainted? | ||
I don't really know enough about them, about Brazil. | ||
I think for the most part, the Europeans in Brazil have mixed substantially with the native population and others. | ||
So I don't know if they're really Portuguese. | ||
They probably do have more of like a Brazilian ethnicity at this point. | ||
Nuke says let me know next time you're in Providence. | ||
I just missed you last time, but I'm heading back permanently soon Jet says you're a cool guy IRL check out autistic boys money clan also keep up the good work Is that nuke like the real nuke from Twitter because if so, yeah, I'd be happy to meet you But yeah, yeah, Jet is cool. | ||
That whole crew is cool. | ||
The Autistic Money Boys clan. | ||
At first, I didn't know who they were. | ||
But now I think they're very based. | ||
I think they're very cool. | ||
And yeah, for sure. | ||
Next time I'm up there, I'll hit you up. | ||
Talos with a big super chat. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
He says, Hello Nick, Hungarian here. | ||
You said yesterday that if America goes down, you would move to Poland. | ||
The Visegrad countries are become... I don't know how to pronounce that. | ||
Countries are becoming stronger by the day versus Western Europe. | ||
Why not move to Poland? | ||
I would move to Italy. | ||
I understand that, you know, maybe these countries are growing stronger or something, but it's not my home. | ||
I'm not Polish, and I don't really relate to anything that is Polish, aside from Catholicism, you know, Polish culture, anything like that. | ||
It's just not, it just feels so alien to me. | ||
It would be alien enough to me, honestly, to be in another country, to be in Italy for that matter, or something like that, but I would feel totally out of place in a country like Poland. | ||
Unknown assassin says the only Hispanics allowed in this country are descendants of the inhabitants of the former Mexican territories in America The others can get out. | ||
Yeah, good luck with that Faticati says I want to go see Joker not die because of the urban youth. | ||
Yeah, same dude I'm gonna go to Joker and I'll be dancing outside with my ticket, you know Like he is with the sign and a three urban youth are gonna come and beat me up take my ticket stub and run away with it I'll chase I'll be chasing after them And they'll smash me over the head. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that'll be my fate if I go see this movie in Austin. | |
Joseph says, hey, bro, I'm a French royalist. | ||
What's your opinion on classical European royalism? | ||
I think it's a LARP. | ||
Glenn says, I'm a European royalist. | ||
It's like when leftists say, I'm a neo-Marxist Maoist with Leninist tendencies. | ||
I am a French royalist. | ||
Does anybody even know what any of this shit means? | ||
I'm a neo-absolutist. | ||
I'm a neo-reactionary. | ||
I'm a illiberal nationalist monarchist. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm a French royalist. | |
Well, I'm gonna jump into the river. | ||
So anyway, Glenn says Tucker being on Fox News is so huge to convey a message. | ||
Him being president or campaigning for president takes away from that. | ||
Tucker's right where we need him. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Faticotti says, the deep conversations thing had to be a joke lololol. | ||
Me, honey, what do you think about Milton's take on the fall of man? | ||
All women ever. | ||
That's bad. | ||
Women have the most basic things ever. | ||
I've yet, I have yet. | ||
Look, look, I love women. | ||
But, you know, it's like we have to love women where they are. | ||
You know, we have to love women in the sense that it's like Women being women not not being men not being you know shitty version of a man being women And I will tell you the qualities that I love in a woman is not her deep philosophical insights about you know The nature of man or something like that. | ||
Okay, so that it's just that I've never really heard to take I've never generally heard to take from a woman on these things that that strike me as like indicative of deep thought deep reflection or something really novel and You know, synthesizing different information. | ||
I just haven't seen that in my lifetime. | ||
So, you know, that's not to say, oh wow, I mean, yeah, women are so smart. | ||
Yeah, you're the best. | ||
You're amazing, sweetheart. | ||
But, yeah, I just don't see the appeal there. | ||
I don't want a wife who is going to impress me with her hot takes. | ||
That's, like, sick. | ||
That is, like, a sickness. | ||
You know, that is a Twitter illness that people, you know, the mother of their kids, they want them to be giving, you know, hot, like, nihilistic, ironic takes about politics? | ||
Like, what's wrong with you? | ||
What does it matter with you? | ||
Let's see. | ||
We've got Chicken on a Raft, or I just read that. | ||
Scar says, Nick, sports guy. | ||
What position did you play in baseball? | ||
I played, uh, I played what, like, well, I played right field, left field, center field. | ||
I played, uh, That was more when I was younger, but then I then I graduated I played third base That's not a great position, but it's better than the outfield. | ||
I think I played Shortstop maybe once or twice, but you know, I only played until I was in like middle school I think I quit when I got into middle school So at that point it wasn't like you play a position. | ||
It was like you kind of rotate around But yeah, I was never they never made me the first baseman. | ||
They didn't trust me with that because I I Uh, you know, I'm just not in terms of like the intelligence of coordinating bodily movements. | ||
It's just not there. | ||
It's just not leaves a lot to be desired there, you know, I think God maxed me out on some traits, you know, if you go at the What is it in Fallout New Vegas so you've got your what do they what is the thing called? | ||
You've got all your different character attributes definitely got maxed out on charisma definitely got maxed out on Intelligence, but you know agility some of the other more physical ones. | ||
Yeah, that's probably a little bit lower so I mean, I tried. | ||
I tried. | ||
I put myself out there and I was maybe the second or third worst guy on the team, but I, you know, I did it for years and, you know, not necessarily all my... not necessarily all my... | ||
No, that was not my prerogative, really, to be playing baseball for years, but nevertheless, uh, that was, uh, you know, a good experience, I guess. | ||
Uh, Bulban says, can I take a sniff? | ||
Okay, I'm not gonna read that. | ||
Gabe says, I want to be ninja. | ||
Okay. | ||
Aquatic base nib buses, lol. | ||
Nope. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Tyler says, what do you think of the Terran tactical situation? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Cool Blue says, are the Entropy Super Chatters drunk? | ||
Yeah, they must be. | ||
Big Globes says, Alex Clark, unblock me on Twitter. | ||
Okay. | ||
Aquatic Base Nibbas says, Entropy Nibbas trippin. | ||
Repeal the 19th. | ||
Yeah, facts. | ||
T-Based says, thanks for everything you do for us. | ||
So many of us would still be watching Daily Wire or Crowder if we didn't know any better. | ||
You're the king! | ||
Well, thank you so much and thanks for another ninjette. | ||
Sheesh! | ||
What is that, like four ninjettes? | ||
We're crying out loud. | ||
That's a lot of dough. | ||
This guy must be like, I don't know, this guy talk about millionaires and billionaires. | ||
This is a serious player we got in chat. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Thanks for everything you do for the movement. | ||
Chicken on a raft says, women kill children often. | ||
Deep conversations. | ||
Shaking my head, yeah. | ||
Look at what women are up to these days, you know, across the board. | ||
It's like, please. | ||
Uh, Needle says, what's the word on the Delaware Senate candidate? | ||
Um, and I don't know a lot about her, but from all appearances, she seems to be pretty based. | ||
You know, seems to know all the relevant facts. | ||
Platform looks good. | ||
I don't know, I mean, a lot of these America First candidates, they don't have, like, huge funding or infrastructure. | ||
A lot of them are just people. | ||
You know, like this Jerome Bell guy, and this Foxworth guy, and, uh, this girl, I think her name is Witski. | ||
There's a few others. | ||
So, yeah, I mean, all appearances lead me to believe that she's legitimate, authentic, America first. | ||
I'm not in love with the idea of females running for office, but you know what? | ||
If it's like Chris Coons versus a woman who's going to, say, close the borders and shut down foreign aid, I'm like, well, it kind of leaves me with a tough choice. | ||
So she seems pretty base to me. | ||
LT says, Yeehaw from Texas, y'all. | ||
Found you from the Groiper Wars and learned something new every show. | ||
Keep it up, King. | ||
Well, thanks a lot. | ||
Thanks a lot, partner. | ||
Well, yeehaw! | ||
Thanks a lot, partner. | ||
Thanks a lot for that there, Ninjagini. | ||
Bye-bye. | ||
That'll afford me a new pickup truck. | ||
I'll be able... I call that a ninja pickup truck, not a ninja guinea. | ||
That's my ninja pickup truck. | ||
So thanks a lot, partner. | ||
Get along. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
I'm just busting your chops a little bit. | ||
Just busting your chops a little bit. | ||
Just busting your chops a little bit. | ||
Yeah, before I went on the air and joined a fresh plate of grits, my mama made me a fresh plate of grits. | ||
Grits! | ||
Homemade grits! | ||
Yeah, no self-respecting southerner ever eats instant grits. | ||
My mama made them fresh. | ||
Fresh! | ||
Fresh grits! | ||
unidentified
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Fresh grits! | |
So, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Appreciate that. | ||
Just being a little funny there. | ||
Not being serious. | ||
California groper says the southern accent is a speech impediment. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Yeah, seriously. | ||
I Don't know some of these accents. | ||
It's like I Blows me away that that to people is like not having an accent. | ||
You know, I mean, I can't imagine being British and talking like a British person is like standard like that's just how you talk and And everybody else has an accent. | ||
I can't imagine, you know? | ||
Or like being in the South, and you're walking around in your cowboy boots, and that's just how people talk. | ||
You grow up your whole life there, and that's the only way people talk. | ||
And you go to the Midwest, and somebody says, like, hello, how are you? | ||
And you're like, well, this man has an accent. | ||
I cannot imagine that being the case. | ||
It's so strange to me. | ||
I was thinking about that with Asians. | ||
You know, they're like, do Asians walk around and they're like, this is just how it is. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
It's just weird. | ||
Snarf says, Italy is great, but gotta know the language. | ||
Yeah, well, I'll learn the language. | ||
That's the last thing I'm worried about, really. | ||
If America's going so badly that I have to flee somewhere. | ||
Cool Blue says, buy T-Based a pizza. | ||
He's giving out like 100 subs. | ||
Yeah, I'll buy him a pizza. | ||
I'll buy this guy a Big Mac and a pizza and some roast beef. | ||
Rhode Island says I'm going to be at BU Saturday. | ||
Recommendations for what? | ||
If you're going to go to BU, well, it's sort of like my old stomping grounds. | ||
If you want to take the Nicholas J. Fuentes tour, if you go to Warren Towers, that's where I used to live. | ||
Warren Towers is at 700 Commonwealth Avenue. | ||
That's where I used to live. | ||
College of Arts and Sciences, what is the Marsh Chapel? | ||
That's where I used to go to classes right around that area. | ||
If you go to T. Anthony's, T. Anthony's is on Commonwealth Avenue. | ||
So, let me think. | ||
It's a little bit further west than West Campus, if you keep going down Commonwealth. | ||
But T. Anthony's has a mozzarella stick pizza. | ||
It's so good. | ||
They have great, well I don't know if it's great pizza, but it was sort of like a late night. | ||
So if you go to T Anthony's, you get a mozzarella stick pizza. | ||
They got all kinds of good stuff there. | ||
And if you go to In-N-Out Burger, not In-N-Out, Tasty Burger by Fenway Park, which is not far. | ||
It's within walking distance from BU. | ||
If you go to Tasty Burger by Fenway Park, that is where I got red-pilled. | ||
That is where the red-pilling happened. | ||
That is the meeting of the minds. | ||
The guy that made the theme song for my show, the guy that I used to host my show out of his dorm room, a different person, We all used to eat at tasty burger there and discuss politics and You know the ideas of the day back in 2016. | ||
So so those are some tasty burger. | ||
I recommend I recommend T Anthony's Trying to think what else what else is around there? | ||
Yeah off the top those really the only places I went to when I was in school there so I Uh, so yeah, be sure to check all that out. | ||
Um, Rhode Island says, or I just read that, Chicken on a Wraps has just got a six-figure job, anything for Super Chats. | ||
That's right, getting a six-figure job is a means to fund Super Chats. | ||
So I, you know, you threw a diamond my way here, I'm gonna expect a little bit more. | ||
You're getting six figures, we can do a little better than a diamond, can't we? | ||
No, I'm just joking, but congratulations. | ||
Boomer Destroyer says, who would want an IRL cringe super chat wife? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
I'm gonna have some wife who's gonna be like, honey, do you think we can, are we all gonna make it? | ||
Are we all gonna make it without violence? | ||
I'm gonna be like, I'm not gonna do that. | ||
I'm not gonna do that, but I'll be like, okay, let me go back to sleep. | ||
Let me go back to sleep. | ||
Yeah, I've never been to New Orleans. | ||
I don't really know much about it. | ||
There's something great about New Orleans. | ||
I've never been to New Orleans. | ||
I don't really know much about it, but hey, greetings. | ||
Greetings to the New Orleans people. | ||
There's something great about New Orleans. | ||
It's very much like got a continental culture as opposed to an English culture because it's French Catholics. | ||
You know, in the same way that a lot of Spanish influences there in like Florida and around and also I think around New Orleans too, honestly. | ||
I'm pretty sure So so it's kind of based in Red Pill Save the West so screw the Freedom Trail. | ||
I'm taking the NJF Trail Yeah, do it big guy. | ||
just walk up and down commonwealth avenue that was my life when i was there is going from maybe kenmore station all the way uh all the way east of the campus and then going down to you know t anthony's all the way west um there's also a great there's a great market uh right off of what is the street it's um damn it what is the street There's a really interesting Chinese supermarket, I'll say. | ||
Very, it's almost like in Austin. | ||
It's right on the border of Austin and the Back Bay there. | ||
You'll know what I'm talking about if you see it, if you get there. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Royal Goy says, can we get a tea in chat for tea based? | ||
Holy shit, man. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Yeah, big tea in chat for this guy. | ||
Send me an email, tea based. | ||
Send me an email. | ||
I'll send him a proper. | ||
Thank you T-dubs says tasty burger unesco world heritage site now. | ||
Yes, seriously Yeah, if we ever send and gain control of the reins of power, then uh, yeah, we'll have to designate that whole trail That'll be like a sacred site. | ||
You know, this is where the When we have a cult of personality, this is where the leader used to used to roam the streets royal voices can we get can we see t-based and big money wagey super chat war I think they've both done a lot so far I don't know I think I think we're on good terms with both of them right now but let's take a look if we have anything more from entropy that's everything from D live Yeah, we got two more. | ||
Faticotti says, I want a woman to have my kids, not be my based in Red Pill bar buddy. | ||
Yeah, exactly, exactly right. | ||
Have my kids, be my wife. | ||
You know, the benefit of a woman is that she offers a sort of feminine comfort. | ||
You know what I mean by that? | ||
That they offer something that is softer, you know, not to go, you know, cringe mode, not to go simp mode on you, but that is the whole appeal of women, is they offer something softer, they offer something gentler, a comfort, a reassurance, they empower their man, you know, they do not bicker with their man, they do not, you know, engage on that level, and so it's just completely outside, just missing the point, really, with women altogether. | ||
Bob Sacamano says, do you like these sped up gif memes with these stupid captions? | ||
I think they're pretty good. | ||
Yeah, those are pretty funny. | ||
Unknown Assassin says, wife, hey honey, so what's your, what are your thoughts on the dispossession of the Boers in South Africa by the hostile Bantu majority? | ||
Me, lol, why is my steak undercooked? | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
We're at dinner. | ||
You know, I'm eating my dinner. | ||
She's asking me about politics. | ||
Yeah, okay. | ||
Why is this chicken dry? | ||
You know? | ||
Okay, but why is the chicken dry? | ||
Not very true. | ||
Okay, looks like that is our last Super Chat. | ||
Let me check DLive one more time. | ||
Yeah, looks like that's everything. | ||
Sheesh! | ||
So that's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
What a long show. | ||
Remember to check us out at NicholasJFuentes.com. | ||
Sign up for the email list. | ||
Remember, I don't know how much longer we're going to have on YouTube, on DLive, on anything. | ||
The only thing that's band proof is the email list. | ||
So if you want to stop playing the cat and mouse games, the only thing that'll be left after everything goes will be the emails. | ||
So be sure to put that in. | ||
It's NicholasJFuentes.com. | ||
You just go there, put your email in. | ||
Very simple. | ||
It's right there on the page. | ||
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Leave a comment down below. | ||
Click the notification bell to get notified every time I go live and that's on YouTube. | ||
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Follow button is right up here. | ||
Just click the follow button. | ||
And you'll be able to participate in the live chat and all that. | ||
If you're not watching on DLive, the link is dlive.tv slash NickJFuentes. | ||
All my links are down below. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Thanks to everybody on Entropy. | ||
Thanks to everybody donating lemons, particularly, hello, T-Based. | ||
Hello! | ||
epic t-based check uh particularly thanks to our biggest contributors on d live which are t-based by far and away number one and then we also have america floats and mickey mouse so thanks to our biggest contributors and especially a huge thank you to t-based very exciting And I will open the chest as well. | ||
I will open the chest on DLive for everybody to collect. | ||
But thanks to everybody that donated. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
And I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America First! |