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Jan. 25, 2020 - America First - Nicholas J. Fuentes
02:31:52
IMMIGRATION WIN: Supreme Court Affirms Trump Admin's Public Charge Rule | America First Ep. 533
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nick fuentes
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unidentified
I've never heard of a big question, just that.
I've never heard of a big question, just that.
I've never heard of a big question, just that.
I've never heard of a big question, just that.
I've never heard of a big question.
...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.
Recognition, not globalism,
will be our freedom. - will be our freedom. -
Not interested.
I'm sorry.
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of it.
I've never heard of him What is that?
Americanism, not populism Will be our freedom
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
An older generation.
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom.
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of it.
What is that?
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
I've never heard of Bigfoot.
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.
Not interested.
I'm sorry.
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
Not even once.
unidentified
I've never heard of him think, what is that?
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
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.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human being.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. will be our credo.
I'm sorry.
nick fuentes
I'm sorry, Brittany and Betsy, but I just can't do it.
unidentified
You're an e-girl.
nick fuentes
You know the rule.
No e-girls.
Who's got the clip?
No e-girls.
unidentified
Never!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
Guy, I've never heard of a big one.
It's just that.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back.
nick fuentes
Guy, I've never heard of big one.
unidentified
Who's that?
and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom. will be our freedom.
nick fuentes
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.
nick fuentes
Never!
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of it.
What is that?
Americanism, not globalism.
We'll be our freedom.
I've never heard of Big Putz.
What was that?
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo!
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
Organism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
I'm not interested in
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of Nick.
What is that?
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
I've never heard of Nick.
What?
Who's that?
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
Americanism, not globalism, will be our freedom.
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of Nick Fudge.
He's just that.
Americanism, not globalism.
Will be our freedom.
I've never heard of Nick Fudge.
Who's that?
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, will be our credo. will be our credo.
nick fuentes
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!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of a big one.
It's just that.
Americanism and globalism will be our freedom.
Americanism and globalism will be our freedom.
Americanism and globalism will be our freedom.
Americanism and 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 credo!
The boomer generation and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.
Not globalism.
Will be our freedom.
Not interested.
nick fuentes
Listen, 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.
unidentified
No e-girls.
nick fuentes
Who's got the clip?
unidentified
No e-girls.
Never!
nick fuentes
Hashtag never e-girls.
unidentified
Not even once.
I've never heard of him think, what is that?
Americanism, not globalism, will be our 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 forward, it's going to be only America first.
America first.
nick fuentes
Good evening, everybody.
We're watching America First.
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes.
We have a great show for you tonight.
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Monday.
And it's already the last week in January, which feels kind of weird.
Feels like 2020 has just begun but yet already a month down, right?
So we're excited to be back for another week of the show.
Last week of January and then begins February and so on.
We've got a lot to talk about.
Lots of news.
Some good news, some not so good news.
Our featured story for tonight is going to be about a pretty big victory with immigration in the Supreme Court.
Which I don't know if you've heard about this, but this is something that actually goes back to August of last year.
The Trump administration put out a rule defining what it means for an immigrant to be a public charge on the United States.
Expanded that definition to mean that if an immigrant comes here and they're dependent on not just cash benefits from the government, but things like Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security...
Not social security, SNAP, public housing, things like that, then they would constitute a public charge on the country and therefore we would not permit them to come into the United States.
So that was a rule that came out last August but of course immediately got challenged in the courts.
Some federal judge from New York put up an injunction And it was totally stopped in its tracks.
But today we got a ruling from the Supreme Court that says that the rule will be allowed to go through.
So this will have a pretty big impact on immigration.
We'll talk about all of that.
That'll be our main story tonight.
And we've been saying this on the show for kind of a long time now.
I would say since like August.
But immigration is going really well.
And I don't know if it's like safe to say that yet because for so long, for like three years, the message on Trump has been that he's not built a wall, he's not doing what he needs to do, he's not keeping his promises on immigration.
But you know honestly it's like almost every week or every other week for the past four or five months it's been going pretty well.
Obviously not ideal, it's not where we need to be yet, but how many weeks have we have we been doing this show?
Just this year?
Just in January?
Where we talk about some new positive development.
We talked last week about the migrant protection protocols.
We talked about these deals that are being signed with the Northern Triangle countries.
There was one other thing last week.
What was it?
The birth tourism rule that came down.
So it looks like this is part of a pretty serious pattern now.
A pretty serious accumulation of immigration wins.
And like I said last week, I think I said this when we talked about the birth tourism, It's really just all action.
Not a lot of talk, you know.
A lot of this has basically not been anticipated, but it seems like these rulings and new regulations are just coming out.
It seems like whoever's behind this, Stephen Miller, maybe it's Ken Cuccinelli, I don't know.
But whoever's the architect of this, they're just churning these things out.
So it's pretty, pretty white-pilling.
Pretty good stuff.
So we'll talk about that.
That'll be our featured story.
I will also be talking about, of course, when I said there's some good news and some bad news today, there's some kind of good news on immigration, but I mean there's some really bad news about something else.
I don't know if you guys heard, you know, we do this every year.
unidentified
Every year we remember The Holocaust.
nick fuentes
Today, of course, is Holocaust Remembrance Day, so we can't be too excited on this show.
I don't want anybody to get carried away.
I don't want to see any smiles.
I don't want to see any smiles.
I don't want to hear any laughter.
I don't want people making funny, silly jokes in the chat because that is not what today is about.
Today is not the day.
There's a time and a place for that, and it's not today.
Today is a somber occasion.
A somber occasion of remembrance.
75 years!
Can you believe it was that long ago?
And yet, even though it was so long ago, it remains as visceral as it was then, today.
And so we'll be talking a little bit about that, and we're gonna be very... We're gonna treat this with so much reverence and so much seriousness, because this is a big deal, folks.
This is big stuff.
This is the biggest news maybe of the week and it's something we all have to keep in mind.
Every day we have to remember.
You know, and sometimes it feels like these days are every day.
I don't know, I get that feeling sometimes.
Memorial Day, Remembrance Day, International, whatever day.
But that's a good thing.
But here's why that's a good thing.
Because you never know when it's going to kick off again.
That's what they all say.
ADL, SPLC, these are the experts on this stuff.
These are the Holocaust experts.
And what they tell us is, you may think you're being funny.
You may think you're being a jokester.
Talking about Cookie Monster.
Something like that, okay, on the internet.
And you never know, it spirals out of control, it snowballs in a full-scale, systematic extermination.
You never know how these things unfold.
We saw it, you know, I hear Adolf Hitler was making these kinds of silly jokes, and look what happened with that.
So, we're gonna talk about that, and of course, we're gonna be ultra, extremely serious for Ben Shapiro.
And everybody else, Jared Holt, anybody else who's watching, we are going to have the utmost seriousness about this.
And so it is sort of a somber day.
It's a bittersweet day.
It's a good day.
Immigration win, you know, things are going well.
New Sam Hyde video, you know, lots of things are in the works, but it's also a horrible day.
But at the same time, it's a tragic and a devastating day.
Particularly for me, because of my close connection with the Jewish people.
But we're gonna talk about that, and that should be most of the show.
That's most of our news for tonight.
You know, honestly, there's a lot going on, but none of it's, like, really that compelling.
You know what I mean?
Coronavirus is going on.
You got, you know, this immigration ruling, impeachment.
There's sort of a lot of things happening, but none of it's really, like, exciting.
None of it's really juicy.
So it's another boring week where there's no, I don't know, war or other kind of events or something like that.
And that's good, and we like that.
But before we get into the big news, before we get into the current events, I do just want to say a little something about The Kobe Bryant thing yesterday, which I saw.
You know, I'm obviously not a huge sports fan.
If you watch this show, you know I'm not really with it when it comes to sports.
I mean, really any sport.
Basketball, baseball, football.
I mean, I don't watch any of it.
I don't know anything about it.
You know, I'm reading through the stats.
I'm putting together my notes for this show, and I'm reading about Kobe Bryant.
So all over the news yesterday, it was like the biggest thing in the world.
And I can't make heads or tails of some of these statistics.
You know, they say he's one of the best of all time.
You know, I don't really know what half of this stuff means.
But it's still a pretty big deal.
You know, like I said, it was one of the bigger things, one of the biggest things happening in the world yesterday.
I think Twitter crashed just because of...
Maybe that's an unfortunate choice of words but Twitter crashed because everybody was just going on Twitter and social media to comment and see what was going on.
I woke up yesterday at like 4 o'clock p.m.
and I couldn't believe it.
I woke up and I checked my phone and like I said I'm not a sports guy or anything so to me it didn't have an emotional effect on me because I was never really emotionally invested in basketball or anything like that but
You know, we all know who this guy is, even if you're not touched by sports, or football, or basketball, but you know, whatever sport it was, even if you're not touched by sports, you know who this guy is, you know it's a big deal, and it was sort of shocking, it was sort of devastating, and I'll read you just a brief update, sort of the situation, what's going on.
I think everybody knows the story.
He was in a helicopter, helicopter crashed, And what was tragic about it, obviously, was a young guy, I think he was 41 years old, but he also crashed with his daughter, 13 year old daughter, and they listed the other victims since yesterday.
I think they came out with this later in the evening, but it wasn't just Kobe Bryant and his daughter, but I guess they were going to a basketball training camp for his daughter.
And so also on the helicopter were, I think, two of his daughter's teammates, who are also like 13 years old, and their parents.
So it was a pretty horrific thing.
You know, a helicopter crash, he's a young guy, young girls, and their parents.
And in a really devastating way, they were talking about the crash scene, and they said it was a 500 to 600 foot crash site.
And they were talking about how, you know, pieces of this helicopter were everywhere.
Like, this was a pretty nasty episode, and a pretty shocking thing.
And I'll say that I saw a lot of takes about this on Twitter.
It's really, you know, I don't want to get too much into this, and, you know, that's obviously not really what this show is about.
It's more current events and like news, politics, things like that.
But I will say I saw a lot of takes about this on Twitter from our side of things, from like the right-wing faction.
And a lot of people I saw on our side of things were saying, oh, well, a celebrity died.
I really resent when people do this.
unidentified
Well, a celebrity died, but what about firefighters?
nick fuentes
A celebrity died, but what about our troops?
It's like, it's not really... that's really sort of an asinine point.
Really, you know, kind of a silly thing to say.
I saw a lot of people saying, well, his death didn't matter because he was a guy that threw a ball in a net, or he was accused of rape by a woman, or something to this effect.
And I'll say that, you know, my reaction from seeing something like this You know, base reaction.
Again, ask somebody that's not really invested in sports or anything.
I wasn't, like, emotional about it.
But it was shocking.
It was a very shocking thing, obviously.
You know, a helicopter crash of one of the biggest celebrities in the world and a young guy.
You know, something like that is very unexpected and sort of jarring and unsettling when you see that.
You know, it's not to say that we expected everybody's gonna live forever or anything, but, you know, a young guy goes down in a helicopter and he's one of the biggest athletes in history.
That's kind of a serious thing.
So, you know, at the bare minimum, it was jarring, unsettling, and obviously for a lot of people, you know, Kobe Bryant did play a big part in their lives.
I know there's this weird thing on our side of Twitter where, you know, I see this all the time, you know, for example, when I talk about the movie Joker, people say, oh, you can't like Joker because that's Hollywood, and Hollywood is, you know what, and I can't say it today, Hollywood is, you know what, so we can't enjoy movies or whatever.
People have almost like knee-jerk Hostility towards popular culture.
And I saw this as well yesterday that people had a hot take about like celebrity worship or sports ball or whatever.
But you know, it is part of our shared experience in America.
Sports is a big part of our culture.
And you know, you might not like it.
I don't care for it.
But you know, this is something that people bond over.
This is something that Matters to people obviously sports is is huge in the culture and this is what you know a father and son might bond over Friends or whatever and so there is something to be said about a legend about somebody who's the best at something You know somebody's on television an icon like that and the role that they play in our lives sort of what they mean to us like I said doesn't mean much to me but For the country, I think there is something to that.
And obviously some people get wacky, you know.
Some of the stuff people were saying the other day was a little cringe.
It's a little overkill sometimes.
The way people identify with their teams where they're like, you know...
I don't know, where they think like they're on the team themselves, like they knew him or something like that.
You know, obviously there's excesses probably on both sides, but I think it is important to be respectful that for a lot of people he means something.
And I do think there's something to that.
I don't think we should be totally cynical and totally, what would be the word, intrusive.
Insensitive or apathetic about these kinds of things.
You know, some people earnestly are invested in the culture.
Some people are earnestly and sincerely invested because of their childhood or relationships in that kind of thing.
And who are we to turn our noses up at that and say, oh, you know, that's how plebeian is that?
You know, you like sports.
Well, I like books or something like that.
So I saw a lot of that going on.
And the other thing I want to say is, again, regardless of whether or not you place a lot of stock in athletics or sports, You know, here's somebody who was the top of his game.
You know, number one, I don't know anything about basketball, but you know, for as much as I heard about this guy, he was the best.
And regardless of what it is, whether it's sports, cooking, politics, whatever it is, I think there's something to be said about being a master at what you do, being the top at what you do, you know, being the best Being a competitor and being a legend, I think there is a lot to be said about that.
Even though I don't love sports, I've never been good at them, I don't really see the appeal very much.
Despite that, I do understand the respect, the recognition, the acknowledgement of somebody who...
Is at the top.
Somebody who does what it takes, whatever it is, to be at the top of their field.
So I think there's a little bit of respect there.
And then I'll also say, this is the last thing I'll say about it, another take I heard from our side is that, well, he was accused of sexual misconduct by a woman.
And it was amazing to me because a lot of people on our side of Twitter, and again, you know, maybe you're not on Twitter, so maybe you didn't see a lot of this.
I'm on Twitter all day.
So this is, you know, kind of like the, this is my life.
What's said and what what's heard what goes around in the ecosystem but another thing I heard online was about this sexual assault and I heard this by the way from leftists and right-wing people that well we should be glib about his death or something because you know he was accused of sexual assault by a woman and I'm thinking to myself like Really?
I mean, didn't we just do this with how many other people?
Roy Moore, Donald Trump, Brett Kavanaugh.
All of a sudden, because it's somebody that, you know, you're not 100% on board with what they're about or their field or whatever, we're gonna believe every single woman who's got an accusation against a billionaire, you know, against somebody, I don't know if he had a billion, but you know, mega-rich, mega-famous, you know, the best at everything, whatever.
All of a sudden we're supposed to believe all that, you know?
So I thought that was a little bit stupid.
So all in all, you know, my take on this, generally speaking, aside from those like, you know, I see a lot of bad takes from our side of Twitter when it comes to these pop culture type things.
Beyond all of that, it is a reminder of our mortality.
I don't know if I need to tell anybody that, but I think what makes that so shocking is the reminder that you don't really have a guarantee, and I know this is trite, this is gonna sound maybe a little bit...
That's a cliche or whatever, but there's no guarantee you're going to be around tomorrow.
You know, people make plans and people's idea, whether they acknowledge this consciously or not, or think about it, is that they're going to have like your standard or average lifespan.
You know, people plan and they expect, and it's not unreasonable to be practical about these kinds of things that you should probably plan on living longer than shorter, but people do have an expectation that I'm going to live 70 years or I'm going to get 80 years or whatever.
And when you see something like this, I think what makes it so jarring and unsettling and why emotions tend to go high is because people remember that we're all... that it's gonna happen to everybody.
unidentified
Right?
nick fuentes
And it might not be in a helicopter crash, and it might not be when you're 41, but you really have no control.
You don't know when, you don't know where.
This is what it says in the Bible.
Nobody knows the minute of the hour.
And they're talking about the end times when they say that, but really death is the end times for each individual.
You know, it doesn't really make a difference whether it's the end of the world or the end of your world.
You don't know the minute of the hour.
You don't know when it's going to happen.
What I couldn't get over yesterday was a lot of people gathered around the hill where the helicopter went down and they were filming.
You could still see the smoking wreckage of the helicopter like an hour after it happened yesterday.
And people went down to film it and, you know, to gather and I guess just to gawk and see what was going on.
And I saw Tariq Nasheed posted a video and it was pretty haunting to see, you know, just filming this.
It's a pretty unremarkable landscape, but then just sort of this wreckage and a little, you know, this billowing smoke rising up from the wreckage.
And it was incredible to me and a little bit haunting because I thought a lot about what if you showed Colby Bryant that still, a photograph of that scene, like three days ago.
Not knowing what it means, and I'm sure he would have no ability to interpret what that means.
You know, could you imagine that it's 2020, it's January, you know, you probably just celebrate the New Year's, you got all kinds of plans for 2020 and the next decade and so on.
You know, nobody plans to crash in a helicopter and die suddenly, right?
I'm sure he woke up on, what was it, January 26th, and he had plans for...
The training camp for his daughter, and dinner, and what he's gonna do tomorrow, and whatever.
Lakers game was going on.
Nobody expects that you're gonna get on a helicopter, or a car, or a plane for that matter, whatever it is, and you're gonna go down, and some horrible thing's gonna happen, that the next day people are gonna be standing around photographing your charred remains in a crashed helicopter.
It's a pretty hardcore reminder, and that's why, you know, and look, I don't like to get all sappy about these things, but That's why we stress the religious angle on this show often, because when you see things, at least from my perspective, when I see things like that, it's, uh, you know, it's difficult.
When you think about sort of the the great beyond death these kind of mortality these kinds of things But it always goes back to what is beyond that you know I think it's very difficult to make sense out of these things if you're not sort of Thinking with a bigger mentality about religion and Christianity and all of that You know how could you make sense of a world where you have that kind of chaos that randomness the suddenness?
If you didn't have some kind of certainty or some kind of an idea of an explanation for for all of that It's another reminder.
You know, it's all fun and games.
It's all, you know, memes and Twitter and silly things and whatever.
And then, you know, then the judgment happens.
And even as far as politics goes, we talk all the time in the show about politics and how it's life and death and demographic change and all this.
And it's not to say that we shouldn't care about what happens here, but it's a reminder about, you know, what's really important.
What is really life or death?
It tends to be these matters of faith.
You know, I was told And I heard that Kobe Bryant went to Mass, actually, yesterday morning, which is something to think about, right?
That's what they say in the Bible, too.
Nobody knows the hour, nobody knows the day when the Lord comes back, you know?
They make the analogy of, you know, you're put in charge of the land for a little while, and then the Lord comes back to check on it.
And what's it gonna be like?
Are you gonna be following the rules?
Are you gonna set a good example, whatever?
Are gonna be caught with your pants around your ankles, you know, literally or symbolically.
So it's something to think about.
Something to think about.
I tend to treat these things with reverence and respect.
I know a lot of people see a death and, like I said, because it makes people think about mortality, they get weird emotionally or glib or whatever.
But I think it's actually a serious thing and, you know, he died with his young kids and it is a tragedy.
And, you know, for a lot of people, he meant a lot to them.
So it's a sad thing and it's just, uh, it's a lot to think about.
You know, things like this, these kinds of cultural moments that we all participate in.
You know, what's interesting about Kobe Bryant, even though I never participated in the basketball career and all that, um, you know, obviously the death did make an impact on my life.
And so these are kind of the shared experiences in a country.
I don't think it's cool to be apathetic.
lesser extent than maybe bigger things or more important things, political things, whatever.
But these are what, what forge an American identity.
So to, to sort of look on these, look down on these things as though it's, it's so silly to care.
You look at these, you know, people that are unwise who care, you know, I don't think it's not, I don't think it's cool to be apathetic.
I don't think it's cool to be sort of dispassionate, cynical, you know, jag off all the time, which I do see a lot of that.
So, so in any case, that's Kobe Bryant.
You know, rest in peace.
I heard he was Catholic.
I heard he was raised Italian, which, you know, I don't know if he was... He's not really Italian, but nevertheless, you know, he seemed like an okay guy.
I don't know too much about him, but nevertheless a tragedy.
But we're gonna move on and talk about the news.
Maybe you guys think that's cringe.
Maybe you guys think it's cringe to talk about all that or whatever, but you know, it's on my mind.
I think a lot of people are thinking about it and talking about it.
It's worth a little serious reflection on bigger themes.
So I hope that, I hope that was insightful for you.
But that's, those are just my reflections.
That's Kobe Bryant.
We're gonna move on.
You know, it's just, wow, it's a real tragic world.
You know, Kobe Bryant one day, six million Jews the next.
And so, of course, and it's not funny.
And it's not funny.
It's nothing to laugh about.
But today is also Holocaust Remembrance Day, so moving right along, we're going to talk a little bit about this.
You know, like I said last week for MLK Day, you get to a point on this show where... I've been doing this show now for three years, so I've done like three Columbus Days and three Christmases and three Thanksgivings, and what would this be?
My third Holocaust Remembrance Day.
But, you know, really it feels like there's a lot of them.
I don't know about you guys.
I can't find this information anywhere.
I tried to find it, but... And I don't know.
Am I losing my mind?
Are the years and weeks just blending together?
And I'm not even memeing here.
I'm not trying to make a point.
I'm not trying to be funny, but it really does feel like these things happen all the time, doesn't it?
Holocaust Remembrance Days, and I feel like gay days, And women's days, and assorted holidays like this.
I feel like these things happen with such regularity, it's confusing.
It's like gaslighting.
It's like, well, Holocaust Remembrance Day, again, didn't we just have one of those like yesterday?
Do you know what I mean?
I feel like we did, I feel like there's one of these like four months ago.
I distinctly remember in the fall something like this, and in the summer, And the same issue with, like, the Gay Pride Month.
You know, that happened last year, obviously.
I think it's, like, June, right?
But then it, like, keeps going on.
Then they keep holding parades, and they keep doing, like, well, now it's Visibility Day, or now it's another kind of thing.
And again, I'm not trying to be tongue-in-cheek or anything.
It really just does feel like these things are just happening all the time, and I really feel like that's...
Deliberate.
Like there's a psychological attempt to pollute your consciousness with, you know, these ideas about white guilt and about, you know, marginalizing normal people, straight people, white people, men, whatever.
Because I feel like it's just ubiquitous.
I don't know, that's a groundbreaking take about this.
You know, geographically we know this is already true.
It's like every day is Remembrance Day and every street corner you've got a museum and whatever, but...
It just seems a little... Look, I'm just saying, 75 years later it seems a little excessive.
But nevertheless, today's Holocaust Remembrance Day and, you know, we get the usual.
Stuff about this usual fanfare.
You know, I think it was probably last year on Holocaust Remembrance Day that I made the cookie thing.
Probably, right?
It seems legitimate because I remember that cookie monster joke that caused me all that trouble.
I distinctly remember it was from January, and I guess Holocaust Remembrance Day is every January 27th, so it's very possible that it came around during that Time.
I don't know if I have to reassert my ironclad belief in everything Holocaust Museums say about the Holocaust.
Every part of it.
The number, the rollercoasters, the masturbation machines, the bars of soap, the lampshades, whatever it is.
At this point, I did an interview for the Washington Post last year during the Gruyper Wars and this guy literally read me the Wikipedia page.
It was almost like the Nicene Creed or some kind of profession of faith.
Do you believe that 6 million Jews died?
Do you believe that it was a systematic extermination attempt?
Do you believe?
Blah blah blah.
You know, it's like, whatever you want me to say, so you don't call me a denier, whatever it is, so you don't throw me in fucking jail and shoot me and burn my warehouse down, because that's what happens.
That's what happens to people that question it.
Whatever you want me to say, by all means.
I'm not a historian, it's not an area of expertise by any stretch of the imagination for me, and I also really care more about the genocide going on against white people right now than genocides that happened a long time ago, but You know, nevertheless, if they want to say, okay, sign here, initial here, lampshades, bars of soap, you know, rollercoaster, jerking off machine, whatever, fine.
You know, Elie Wiesel, who was a fellow Boston University alum, fine.
Did he fucking lie throughout night?
No, no he didn't.
Everything's fine, everything's legitimate, whatever, right?
But to me, this day...
We could say that we can feel bad about terrible things that have happened.
World War II was a terrible thing.
Millions of people died in Europe.
Millions of Europeans died.
Fighting-age Europeans.
This is why Europe is a shithole now.
Because all the fighting-age, strong, courageous, virtuous men, they all died in the war.
Everybody that was supposed to create a stable, safe society All the men of physical integrity or mental integrity were sacrificed.
They all died.
From England, from France, from Germany, everywhere.
I mean, this is a story of World War II.
It's a great tragedy.
And of course, during wars, horrible things happen.
Of course, you had concentration camps.
Of course, you also had concentration camps, by the way, that the Germans were put in.
After the American invasion and the Allies took over, they put Germans in concentration camps.
People talk a lot about the Holocaust, but not only Jews died in concentration camps, but also you had Russian civilians, Poles, you had Gypsies, you had all kinds of people.
So, wars, no, and this is something to think about on this day, you know, last year I, if I made the cookie joke during this day, you know, I guess that didn't go over well.
Everybody's got a bone to pick with me now.
He made a joke, now he's a Holocaust denier.
He made a tongue-in-cheek remark, and, you know, his life.
But there have been a lot of genocides in world history.
There was the Armenian Genocide.
There was a genocide against the Kurds.
There was a genocide against white people during the Holodomor in the Soviet Union.
There was a genocide against Germans during World War II.
There's been a genocide against the Chinese, you know, mass starvation under the communists.
If we look at the 20th century, the death toll is staggering.
But there's only, but we all know, there's only one word, there's only one event, which commands this kind of political clout.
And that is the Holocaust.
At 75 years on, It still carries weight that if you don't agree with every aspect of it, if you don't agree with the history of it, if you're not solemnly remembering it every day, if you don't put out a statement, if you don't put out the right statement...
Then you are political anathema.
That's the only, as far as I know, and it's bigger than Pearl Harbor.
It's bigger than 9-11.
It's bigger than the Titanic.
It's bigger than, I mean, you name it.
It's crazy the extent to which this thing has, the disproportionality with which this carries political weight behind it.
I remember Donald Trump put out a statement, maybe it was his first year or his second year in office, but he put out a statement from the White House about Holocaust Remembrance Day And like, it didn't mention Jews enough?
So he got blasted all day and all week by Jewish groups, by ADL, SPLC, you name it.
Because he was insensitive.
No, don't get me wrong.
I think he went to the memorial, and he put out a nice statement, and he made a public statement, and whatever, but because it wasn't so specific to Jewish people, he mentioned, for example, the other people that were killed in the Holocaust, which were Poles, and Russians, and other civilians, and dissidents, and whatever, because it wasn't the right kind of memorial statement 70-some years later, and he got blasted.
And you really have to think about it.
Is that normal?
Is that something that makes sense?
Does that stand the test of scrutiny?
Why is it like that?
You know, and people said last year, I made an offhand remark about this, that I was making light of people dying.
I would never make light of people dying.
You know, people dying is a tragedy.
Innocent civilians dying in war or anywhere else is a tragedy.
But what I do make light of, and what I do think is ridiculous, is this kind of weaponization of tragedy.
It's what you would call atrocity propaganda, which is to say that Look at this, feel bad about this, now you must support this policy.
Now if you don't believe me, this happened just today.
I'll read you, there's an article from the Jerusalem Post.
It's exactly what I'm talking about.
It says, quote, Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar and UK Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn have both been slammed by Jews, this is from the Jerusalem Post, okay, by Jews after they tweeted in support of International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
They were slammed by Jewish groups After they put out a statement in support of Holocaust Remembrance Day, Ilhan Omar wrote, On International Holocaust Remembrance Day, we mourn the lives of six million Jews who were systematically murdered.
Today and every day, we must redouble our efforts to confront anti-Semitism and all forms of religious discrimination and say hashtag never again.
Okay.
Perfunctory statement.
It's got everything in there, right?
It's got the six million, never again, all that.
Okay, you know.
You got your statement, you check the box, you know.
That's what you have to do every year, right?
Fine.
Well, in response to that, you have Arsen Ostrovsky, who is the Executive Director of the Israeli Jewish Congress.
He writes to her, quote, What?
How dare you defame the memory of the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust?
What?
She tweets in support of Holocaust Remembrance Day.
The executive director of the Israeli Jewish Congress.
What's that?
He says, how dare you defend the memory of the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust?
Your anti-Semitism, however you cloak it, knows no bounds.
Barely one year ago, you tried to pass boycott laws comparing Israel to Nazi Germany.
Which is not true, by the way.
And now you seek the destruction of the Jewish state.
Have you no shame?
unidentified
Really?
nick fuentes
Really?
What are you, a fucking idiot?
Sorry for the language.
I know it's a little heated today.
I'm on a little bit low sleep, low food, so I'm a little on edge here.
But really, this is ridiculous.
This is absurd.
How can anybody take that seriously?
Then further, the campaign group Stop Anti-Semitism was quick to pick up on Omar's tweet, replying, How many anti-Semitic resolutions have you signed onto into the House?
We don't need your empty words, along with an emoji snake.
Omar was not the only left-wing politician to draw theire of Ostrovsky, Jeph, Jeremy Corbyn also released a statement on Twitter on Monday in which he said that Holocaust Memorial Day was, quote, a time for us all to reflect on the horrors of the past, the evils of Nazism, genocide and anti-Semitism, and indeed all forms of racism, which we must always be determined to root out wherever they appear.
Ostrovsky, the same guy, our champion here, shots back.
He shoots back on Twitter, quote, Instead of again defaming the memory of the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust, you might use hashtag Holocaust Memorial Day to reflect on your own actions, including fanning flames of anti-Semitism, sharing platforms with Holocaust deniers, and calling Hamas and Hezbollah friends?
And this is what I'm talking about.
I'm not a leftist, and I don't support these Palestinian causes.
I don't really care about Palestine.
I don't care about Israel for that matter, right?
So I'm not sympathetic to Ilhan Omar.
I think she's anti-white.
I think she's a leftist.
You know, whenever I talk about Ilhan Omar, with sort of like a fair and, you know, an even-handed take, a lot of these conservative Inc.
Zionist types say, you're just like Ilhan Omar.
See?
You're like Ilhan Omar, the face of the Democratic Party.
It's like, I don't like Ilhan Omar.
She's anti-white.
She's anti-America.
She said terrible things about this country.
And I don't support this, like, Palestinian thing.
I just support America first, right?
Now, nevertheless, in spite of my disagreements with Ilhan Omar or Jeremy Corbyn or any of these people, I can also see that a difference of opinion on these kinds of issues that, you know, Ilhan Omar is obviously Muslim, right?
I think she's, what, Somalian or something?
She's obviously sympathetic to the plight of Palestinians.
Well, that doesn't mean that she's in favor of, like, the Holocaust, you know.
And she puts out a statement, this Holocaust remembrance statement, whatever, blasted by, you know, one of these Jewish people, heads of the world, Jewish whatever.
You don't believe that?
You're not sincere enough?
Because you disagree with me, you're anti-semitic?
And this is what it comes down to.
It's like a racket.
It's like a protection racket.
That's all it is.
And you have to pay the piper, you have to say what you have to say, support the right positions, or else you're going to have these people in your mentions, calling your office, protesting you, hunting you down, harassing you, whatever.
Saying you're a Jew-hater, you're an anti-Semite, whatever.
And that's the game, and we all know that's how it's played.
We all know that's what goes on with this.
Everybody knows that by now.
Everybody knows that.
And that is what is absurd and what just has to end.
It's just gotta stop.
It's like, really?
The Holocaust? 2020?
We can have a difference of opinion on these things without the vitriol, without this kind of stuff, and this is what I experienced all throughout the Groyper Wars.
You know, during the Groyper Wars, it was a grassroots movement of young conservatives on college campuses, real America-first nationalists.
Who had legitimate questions about immigration, about foreign policy, foreign aid, all kinds of things.
And it wasn't even directed by me at the very top.
I mean, I gave advice, I gave guidance.
Maybe I was a moral leader, a spiritual leader of the movement, and certainly, you know, we're putting some of the infrastructure behind the scenes.
I'm a big part of that.
But how it all started was people taking the initiative.
I didn't command people to go and do this.
It was people driving out to these schools, and writing these questions, and going up, and doing their part.
It was very decentralized.
But what the media did, is because it didn't line up with their narrative, they found a clip from me, where I said something about the Holocaust.
And they used that to torpedo all the rest.
Because I made an off-color remark about the Holocaust, well now all these guys are Holocaust deniers and all these guys are anti-Semites.
They're all Jew-haters!
And Michelle Malkin didn't disavow Nick Fuentes because of one off-hand remark he made out of thousands of hours of content?
Well, she's friends with Holocaust deniers now!
She's friends with anti-Semites!
She's an anti-Semite!
And she's fired too!
And don't you see how this all works?
That's all it is.
It's a political weapon.
It always has been.
And they're going to take something which you've been hearing about since you were in grade school, which is inappropriate, by the way.
You know, they show you when you're in third grade, these black and white videos of emaciated corpses and mass graves.
It's propaganda.
They program you with that throughout your education, so it gives you this visceral, knee-jerk reaction.
And then they load it up, you know, it's in the chamber, and whoever doesn't line up, whoever's not on board with the globalist agenda, whoever's not on board with the globalization of the government, the globalization of the economy, the globalization of our population, the third demographic transition, whoever's not on board, BAH!
You're dead.
You said something off-color, you said something whatever, you're not on board with Israel, you're not on board with finance, whatever, oh, you're a Holocaust denier.
Your life is over.
You're a Holocaust denier.
What does that even mean?
You know?
You're insensitive to the Holocaust.
You're anti-Semite.
Anti-Semite means whatever they want it to mean.
You're a political enemy.
Your career's over.
You're over.
You're done.
Nobody can talk to you.
Nobody can associate with you.
You're a bad person.
We'll write articles about you.
We'll manipulate the SEO so that anybody Googles your name and it comes up.
Whatever.
We'll write a profile about you.
And every Jewish organization under the sun, SPLC, ADL, Whatever.
Canary Mission.
Obscure.
Well-known.
Whatever.
We'll call your boss.
We'll call your girlfriend.
We'll call your family.
We'll call your school.
Whatever.
It's a racket.
This is what the mafia does.
You know, the mafia comes into your store, and they say, hey, you know, it'd be a shame.
It'd be a shame if something happened to your store, or we could give you a little protection.
This is what happens.
Oh, it'd be a shame if your political career got destroyed by accusations of anti-Semitism, which we all know that's what happens.
You call the anti-Semite, you're radioactive.
Well, you know, you throw some retweets our way.
Oh, well, you say Israel's our closest ally and, you know, maybe we back you up.
And this is what happens to all these guys.
You know, look, I don't have a huge problem with, like, Jack Posobiec, but take a look at Jack Posobiec.
Perfect example of this.
Ah, perfect example.
Jack Posobiec was texting Richard Spencer about, uh, who is this guy in the Northwest Alliance, the Northwest Front, whatever.
What's the guy's name?
The name escapes me right now, but he was texting Richard Spencer, and this was all leaked I think at some point a couple of years ago, Harold Covington.
Talking to Richard Spencer about Harold Covington, saying, oh, this guy's so cool.
Harold Covington's like one of these costumed, fed, neo-Nazis.
He's also like a pedophile, I'm pretty sure.
And Jack Posobiec is texting Spencer about this.
This is all public information.
If anybody else were caught, you know, enthusiastically talking about Harold Covington and costumed neo-Nazis to Richard Spencer, forget about, you know, being anywhere near conservative institutions, conservative power, anything like that.
Like, you're done.
You're done, so.
Right?
Jack Posobiec, he was tweeting throughout 2017, 2016, the number 1488.
I mean, he was tweeting that, trying to be funny, trying to be glib.
He would tweet out, oh, I think there's 14 reasons and blah blah.
You know, he was doing that, which everybody knows is the bad, you know, the Nazi number, whatever.
So why then is he able to get retweets from Donald Trump?
Why then is he able to rub shoulders with Don Jr.?
Why then is he get all these connections, all this clout?
Very, very simple.
Because if anybody calls him on this stuff, he gets all the Zionists, he gets all these full-throated Israel people to come to his defense and say, no, no, he's not anti-Semitic, he's with us.
No, no, he's the tireless defender of the Jewish people.
That's all it is.
It's a definition of a protection racket, and that's exactly what happened.
You know, if you're caught being anti-Semitic, well, you're done.
But not if you play ball.
If you play ball, well, the rules don't apply.
And that's why, you know, people on the alt-right who may have had a past like that, They get their reputation laundered.
They get their reputation cleaned.
And now you do your honeymoon in Israel and all that.
And now you're squeaky clean.
Now you're one of these MAGA guys.
Now you're part of the New Riot.
Now you get the contracts and whatever else.
You get the money from a certain person.
That's how it goes.
And look, you know, I don't have a huge problem with Jack Posobiec.
I don't think he has a problem with me.
I don't really have a problem with him.
But I'm just describing to you the process of how this works.
I would be, like, irresponsible if I was not explaining to you how this works.
Because last year, you know, I got all this shit.
Oh, you're being ironic and you're joking.
Well, that's not funny.
That's not the kind of humor we do.
You can't joke about that, whatever.
Okay, fine.
Well, then, out with it.
Then let's just say what it is.
It's just this big racket.
It's politically weaponized.
And, you know, if you want to have Remembrance Day for genocide, whatever it is, fine, by all means.
You know, I'm not gonna...
Be insensitive or disrespectful or whatever, but, you know, look, it's not 1945, it's 2020, and we have to fix our country.
And we can't let these, like, word games and guilt by association and weird, like, political hit jobs... This cannot dissuade people from doing the right thing anymore, but that's what's happening.
That's what's happening.
If you're not on board with the establishment agenda, if you're not on board with the globalist agenda, then we're going to use these kinds of things.
Racist, white nationalist, anti-semitic, denier, whatever.
And we will just tar and feather your reputation in the public square.
We'll get the media, which has more reach and more money than you could ever hope to achieve on your own, blast you day and night as these things.
Every time your name comes up, we'll list every wrongdoing you've ever committed against the people.
And that's what goes on.
So, you know, I see this day and, okay, let's not be ironic then.
Let's not be funny.
Let's just... Fine, if you didn't like that, let me just tell you unironically exactly how it happens.
And it happens to the left, and it happens to the right.
And the reason for that is because anybody that wants to make meaningful reform against the system is a threat to the system.
And this is the weapon of the system.
This is the weapon of the establishment.
You know, Jeremy Corbyn and I have really like nothing in common.
Ilhan Omar and I really have nothing in common.
But the one thing we may have in common is that we both are threatening to the status quo.
You know, when Ilhan Omar says it's all about the Benjamins, the only reason you see the support for Israel is because of APEC and so on.
Well, she's a threat to the status quo.
She must be defamed.
She must be harassed.
She must have all these, you know, her reputation destroyed.
All the websites write their little articles about them.
And the same is true with me.
You know, they've got Right Wing Watch for me, and they've got, you know, Zionist Organization of America for her.
And that's how it works.
And that's what politics is.
The system protecting itself.
And that's all it is.
You know, excuse me.
So when people talk about these kinds of things, like I said, you know, I'll be reverent for the victims and for people.
It's like, you know, people die.
People die in war.
People die in these kinds of things.
And it's terrible.
And when I say people die, I don't mean to minimize it.
But I'm simply saying, I've never made light of tragedy.
I've never made light of, you know, suffering or anything like that.
I've never... if you've watched my show for years, you know, we've never been in favor of violence.
We've never been apologists for violence.
We really have hardly even ever made light of violence.
You know, sometimes we're a little bit ironic about war in like a general sense, but never about individual tragedies unless it's like John McCain or something like that.
You know, I think typically we are very reverent about these things.
But what I cannot be reverent about is the status quo.
I will not have reverence for the status quo or anything like that.
And we have to call them like we see them.
You cannot say that you're not politically correct and then literally play the politically correct game that I'm not controlled, but they play the same games.
You know, it's just like Stefan Molyneux.
Stefan Molyneux last, you know, in 2019, towards the end, unfollowed me from Twitter.
If you're doing the right thing, you will get called the name.
So this idea that we could like quietly do the right thing and not get called the name doesn't work like that.
Now we can be tactical about it like I'm being right now and we could explain in a way that's a little bit more sober and logical and everything else but At some point, we have to just reject that and take all the consequences that come with it.
I'm taking the slings and arrows.
You see what they write about me in the media, and it's all bullshit, and I tell people that.
And at some point, we have to slog it out and fight that battle.
And then, you know, I think that this started to happen during the Gripper Wars is maybe not the end of the world.
So, you know, Holocaust Remembered States, it's terrible.
You know, it's terrible.
Terrible things happened throughout World War II.
You know, people were killed, concentration camps, and you know, all that, and there were casualties in war, and it wasn't just Jews, it was all kinds of people, and that's all tragic.
And it's fine to be reverent and somber about that, but let's stop pretending that we don't know the political game that's being played when it comes to this, because we all see it, we all know about it.
We all talk about it at the dinner table.
Well, maybe not everybody talks about it at the dinner table, but we all make these kinds of jokes or reverent remarks or observations, you know, under our breath and quietly and privately and with trusted people.
Less to be recorded and it's sent to, you know, Media Matters or whatever, but it's time to say what's happening.
If you're tired of the irony, oh, you don't like irony, oh, he's an irony bro.
This guy just is using word games.
Okay, fuck the word games.
Let's stop with this atrocity propaganda protection racket.
It's enough.
So that's the big day.
Somebody has to say it, right?
Nobody will say it, nobody will touch it, but I will because it needs to be said.
But that's that.
We're gonna move on and talk about immigration.
Looks like we're already kind of running out of time, but I'll try to fly through this.
There's not really much to discuss here.
The real feature of our story, it's sort of a Trojan horse show because the show title is Immigration Rule and most of the show is about the racket.
Anyway, but we are going to talk about this immigration ruling.
Still some important stuff here.
I'll fly through this report and I'll explain it.
It says the Supreme Court issued an order Monday allowing the Trump administration to begin enforcing new limits on immigrants who are considered likely to become overly dependent on government benefit programs.
The court voted 5-4.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan said that they would have left a lower court ruling in place that blocked enforcement while legal challenge works its way through the courts.
The Department of Homeland Security announced in August that it would expand the definition of public charge to be applied to people whose immigration to the United States would primarily depend on the government for their income.
In the past, that was largely based on an assessment that an immigrant would be dependent on cash benefits, but the Trump administration proposed to broaden the definition to include non-cash benefits, such as Medicaid, supplemental nutrition, and federal housing assistance.
Anyone who would be likely to require that broader range of help for more than 12 months in any three-year period would be swept into the expanded definition.
So this is the regulation that came out.
What happens is that immigrants come in here, and they don't have a job lined up, even if they do, if it's a minimum wage job or whatever.
In many cases, they can't support themselves.
So what do they do?
They come over, become citizens, they immigrate legally, and then they become a huge expense on the government.
Then they're living in government housing, and we all know, we all see the snap cards, EBT accepted here, whatever, and they're taking every other form of benefit.
And it's really like, you know, they don't have a job.
Walmart's not paying them for their living.
We're paying for it.
The government is subsidizing it.
It would not work for them to come over here and work a lot of these jobs if they didn't have the government sort of subsidizing their lifestyle, which is absurd.
So this new rule says, well, if you need that kind of money, then you shouldn't be here.
We're not going to let you in.
And then I'll read.
This is more about sort of the legal process.
It says, in response to a lawsuit filed by New York, Connecticut, Vermont, New York City, and immigrant aid groups, a federal judge in New York imposed a nationwide injunction blocking the government from enforcing this rule.
This was back in August.
The federal judge put an injunction saying that this rule is not constitutional.
Congress never meant to consider the kind of time limit the government proposed, the judge said.
And the test has always been whether an immigrant would become primarily dependent on cash benefits, which is bullshit.
You know, the objection from the judge is that, well, it's really, you know, well, it shouldn't be dependent on any kind of time limit, and it also is just about cash benefits.
Which is ridiculous, because why should it just be cashed?
Isn't that completely arbitrary?
Well, if they're dependent on Medicaid, housing, SNAP, and everything else, well, that's fine.
As long as it's not cash.
Well, how does that make any sense?
What would they be spending the cash on anyway, if it was just a cash benefit, right?
They'd probably be spending it on groceries or whatever.
And you look at what EBT cards look like these days.
They look like debit cards.
And they accept them at gas stations and everywhere else.
And you should see what people buy with this kind of stuff.
Why should that not be considered the same as cash?
And the same then with housing and with Medicaid and all this.
It's like those are the biggest expenses.
Housing, food, health care.
Oh, but just not cash benefits.
Well, what else should we be paying for?
A new car, right?
What else should we be paying for?
Christmas presents and Manicures and whatever, you know?
Right?
Ugg boots, Yeezys, I don't understand.
What else should we be footing the bill for that would be excessive, you know?
Well, so long as it... Well, they could get their healthcare, and they could get their transportation, and they could get their housing, and they could get their food, and everything else, but the public charge is really just about the cash benefits.
What else is there, you know?
Anyway, so that was the federal judge that issued an injunction blocking the rule from taking effect.
It says, the Acting Deputy Secretary of the DHS, Ken Cuccinelli, said the proposed rules would reinforce, quote, the ideas of self-sufficiency and personal responsibility.
Two federal appeals courts, the Ninth Circuit in the West and the Fourth Circuit in the Mid-Atlantic, declined to block the new rule.
They noted that the law allows designating someone as inadmissible if, quote, in the opinion of the Secretary of Homeland Security, that person would be likely at any time to become a public charge, which the court said gives the government broad authority.
So the federal judge said we're issuing an injunction.
The rule cannot be implemented effective immediately.
So we cannot block people based on this public charge rule.
Two appeals courts took up this opinion and they said that, well, if you look at the definition in the law, public charge is so broad that the DHS secretary can basically decide what constitutes a public charge and determine that people are inadmissible based on that definition.
So the appeals courts said that we're not going to block this new law like the federal judge did because this is totally consistent with the law.
And then it says the Trump administration urged the Supreme Court to lift the injunction opposed by the New York trial judge given that two appeals courts have come to the opposite conclusion.
Justices Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas said Monday that district court judges have been issuing nationwide injunctions much more often.
They called on their colleagues to review the practice, which they said has spread, quote, chaos for the litigants, the government, the courts, and all those affected by these conflicting decisions.
But the challengers of the public charge rule urge the justices to keep the stay in place.
So, what happened is the federal judge issues the injunction, the appeals courts decline to block the rule, the Trump administration then takes these appeals opinions to the Supreme Court and says, look, These appeals courts don't believe that there's anything improper about this rule.
There's nothing illegal about this.
So can you lift the nationwide injunction?
And so the Supreme Court, while I believe it still does have to be decided in the Supreme Court, but in the meantime they said, we're going to lift the injunction, we'll allow the rule to take effect.
And that's probably indicative of what the Supreme Court will decide.
I'm pretty sure that's how it... I'm pretty sure that's how it plays out is the injunction is lifted and then eventually I think the Supreme Court may choose to hear or not hear the appeals case.
But that's basically how it's going.
And I'll say there's sort of two white pills here.
The one white pill is about the rule itself.
It's a good rule.
And I said this last week, and it's so true.
Every immigration victory that we have reminds you how bad the immigration system is.
Right?
Whether it's the migrant protection protocols, these deals with the Northern Triangle countries, the birth tourism.
It's like every week that the Trump administration closes a loophole, you're like, wait a second.
That was a loophole?
People really doing that, you know?
Like, I'm sure a lot of, like, normie-type people would never believe that... Well, I don't know.
Maybe they're aware, maybe they're not aware.
I don't know how politically involved your average person is, but would they believe that thousands of people are coming to America and popping out babies while they're traveling, you know, on vacation or on a business trip or whatever, and those kids become citizens?
Like, that doesn't make any sense, but yet it's been going on forever.
Right?
Or when we talk about these asylees that claim asylum at a port of entry and they get released into the interior of the country simply because we can't detain them indefinitely.
Like, we just don't have the space to keep these people and hold them throughout their trials.
We just say, yeah, pack yourself out, go into the country.
It's like every week that we tie something up, we're like, wow, this is ridiculous.
How do we have a country still anymore with these kinds of rules?
Why should we have an immigration system at all?
If it's like, you know, really there's about a thousand different ways where you could break the rules and just end up here.
And this is yet another way that people just end up here, you know, and they're a leech on the public sector.
You would think, and I would imagine, it would be reasonable to believe that in a normal, sane, sensible government that immigrants would come here and wouldn't just immediately get on welfare.
But yet, that's what happens.
It's something like, and I haven't seen the numbers lately, but it's something like 67% of immigrant households are on some form of welfare.
And if you look at the number for Hispanics, you break it down by race, it's even crazier.
You know, they, immigrants in particular, but minorities in general, consume welfare, if you're looking at households, on a dramatically higher rate than native-born Americans and white people.
You know, and that's a statistic that, you know, you just can't argue with.
It's just, that's just the data.
You know, so why would we be bringing these people in if immediately they're a debit?
If immediately we are paying for their stuff?
How does that make any sense?
We're sold on the idea of immigration that, well, they're coming here and they're what makes America great.
Well, how are they making America great if they're a net cost?
If they're a net cost to the economy?
And in every other way, too, right?
How are they coming here and making the country great?
How are they contributing to the economy if they're taking money out of the economy?
You know, because where do you think that money comes from?
I know it might seem like it's a simple thing, but, you know, in order for the government to have money, they have to take it from you.
So, and this is what the libertarians kind of have right about economics, which is that taking tax money is taking productive resources out of the economy.
In other words, when you make your money, when you make your income, you've got your big paycheck, what are you going to do with it?
Save it?
And we save it in a bank, well then the bank invests it, right?
Or you're going to spend it and that's going to go towards businesses, that's going to go towards jobs, whatever.
You know, it's either going to go into investment or consumption.
It's going to keep the economy going.
It'll grow the economy.
It's like a reinvestment.
So when you make money and you spend or save money, well this is a good thing, right?
That's what keeps the economy going.
What happens with taxes is the government takes a good chunk of that and then they just like blow it.
They just waste it.
Whereas that money could have been going towards, you know, a thriving business or in your community or whatever, a charity.
Whatever it is, you know, or it's saving for your retirement or whatever.
They're taking productive capital out of the economy, taking all that money that could have paid so much, so many dividends throughout the economy, rippling throughout the economy, they're taking it out and then they're just blowing it.
They're blowing it in Afghanistan, they're blowing it on something else, and that's all it is, is a transfer scheme.
They're taking money from white people, and they're giving it to non-white people.
There's really no other simple way to say it.
They're taking money that you could have spent on a vacation, and they're giving it to immigrants.
Look, I mean, that might sound like it's an oversimplification.
It might sound like that's, you know, charged up rhetoric.
But I mean, strictly speaking, that's exactly what's happening.
Because if you look at the middle class and the upper middle class, they pay in taxes.
You know, if you look at their, like, net cash flow with the government, they're giving way more to the government than they're taking.
If they're getting any cash transfers from the government, they're paying it back and then some in taxes, right?
That's how it should work.
Obviously.
As working people, we all know how that works.
We make money, we pay a little bit to the government, and that's how it works.
Well, if you look at the lower classes, and a lot of immigrants and non-white groups, it's the opposite.
They hardly pay anything to the government, and even if they pay something, it's paid back in spades in the form of cash transfers and other benefits.
So how else are you supposed to look at it?
We're out here working.
We're out here making money.
You know, we work our fingers to the bone.
I work my fingers to the bone behind this desk making money, and then I pay it to the government, and the government then pays it to people that do not work.
And those people happen to be, generally speaking, immigrants or non-whites.
I saw a statistic that said 41% of black households have some form of public assistance.
That's insane!
That's insane!
And why should that be allowed?
And particularly, not even with that, but with immigrants in general?
It's bad enough that it's like that with everybody, but why should it be like that with immigrants?
You're telling me that people come here from another country and I'm supposed to start paying them?
How does that make any sense?
Somebody comes into our country and now I'm paying for their school and now I'm paying for their hospital bills and now I'm paying for their their grocery bill.
It's like I got to pay for my grocery bill and I got to pay for this guy who just got off the boat.
How does that make any sense?
I'm also paying into Social Security.
I'm also paying into all this other stuff, right?
I'm also paying taxes for the defense and whatever.
How's that fair?
I don't know, it's kind of a boomer argument against immigration about the money, but it's something to think about.
And this is one of the things which is wrong with living in a multiracial country.
This is one of the intrinsic problems.
It might seem like a boomer argument, but hey, let me flip that on its head right now.
A lot of people might think, well, of course, Having to pay money in taxes and immigrants getting entitlements is only one in a long list of concerns with immigration which you know probably at the top of these concerns is like disorder and social dysfunction and replacement and all of that I mean so don't get me wrong it's not like the biggest thing or the only thing and boomers do complain about this welfare and mom I'm paying for the well if they were working jobs it'd be better but here's what people don't consider
Is that what this creates is conflict.
When you all live together in the same country, and you all pay into the same pot, in theory, but people get different benefits, this creates ethnic conflict.
Don't you understand that that is just a part of it?
That when all these different groups, which see themselves as distinct and different groups, When they're all keeping score of who's getting what and who's paying into it, don't you think that tends to create passions?
Don't you think that tends to create a feeling perhaps of, you know, that you're getting the short end of the stick or you're being treated unfairly?
Where those other guys, well, they always get all the benefits or whatever.
This is like one of the biggest things that causes conflict in a multiracial democracy is the idea of drawing the short end of the stick with public benefits.
Because then all of a sudden you don't have this sort of collective national identity.
We're all in this together.
Then all of a sudden it's, well, we need to get our guys in so that we can help out our community, our people.
That's what it turns into invariably.
If there's the perception that one group is being treated better than another, well, that in itself creates a consciousness of distinction, a consciousness of race and group identity, which is not American, but, you know, it's racial, or it's ethnic, or it's religious, or whatever.
You know, for example, in Chicago, if there's this perception that, well, you know, these neighborhoods on the north side, well, their schools get all the resources.
We never get the resources.
Well, then it's a competition.
We gotta get our guys in the government, so our guys can allocate more resources for us.
And then it's a tug of war.
Well, no, no, we want more guys.
No, we want these guys.
No, we want more resources.
We want the education.
We want the hospital, the community center, whatever it is.
And then pretty soon, you come to the conclusion, well, why do we have this social contract at all?
If these are matters of, like, life and death, and I'm fighting for what's best for my community, well, why should I engage in politics?
Why should we engage in this, like, silly process where we have to, like, you know, get people to write a name on a ballot and submit it on a certain day at a certain time?
Why bother with that?
Why don't we just, you know, start taking?
Why don't we just start fighting, right?
And that's eventually the mentality.
That is the anatomy of the breakdown along these lines.
That's one among other things which contributes to that, the sort of balkanizing entropic force, which is multiracialism.
Which is to say, we want what's right for us.
We want the government to do right by us.
We want to make sure that we are getting the bang for our buck.
And it wasn't like that before, generally speaking, because there's this idea of us.
And there's the rich and the poor.
There's class, whatever.
But introduce another distinction in their race, and all of a sudden you've got tribal conflict.
Surprise, surprise.
So, you know, I see a rule like this, and that's one thing to think about.
But I see a rule like this and it's obviously a good thing because ultimately the effect of this will be less legal immigration, less like low skilled immigration people that obviously if people are going to come over and work minimum wage jobs, they're going to need it to be supplemented from the government.
So that's going to cut immigration hopefully by a lot.
There were some estimates that said it was going to be a dramatic cut because of this public charge rule.
I don't know how dramatic it'll be, but it's a step in the right direction at limiting legal immigration, which it's like, finally.
Because for so long all we hear is about illegal immigration, illegal immigration, border jumpers, and line cutters, and all this.
But what about all these people that come?
What's the difference, really?
okay, well, they got the visa, whatever it is, but now they're taken with both hands from the Treasury.
Now they're taken with both hands at the state and federal level and benefits and cash and everything else.
Well, that's no good, right?
Even if they're illegal, it's actually probably worse because then they're voting too.
So you didn't think they're going to vote for it.
So this is good.
This will limit immigration.
I don't know to what extent, but it's good.
And I'll also say the other sort of hidden white pill here.
I don't know if you were listening carefully, but the justices on the Supreme Court said they're getting tired of these federal judges issuing injunctions.
You know, they said, it says in the article, they called on their colleagues to review the practice of these nationwide injunctions, which they said has spread, quote, chaos for the litigants, the government, the courts, and all those affected by these conflicting decisions.
You know, they're basically scolding the federal judges for issuing these injunctions so frequently and carelessly, and it's obviously political.
And this is something they've been saying for a long time, but hopefully at some point, if Trump gets another term, hopefully at some point the Supreme Court really, I don't know what mechanism they could do to do this, but they could stop these federal judges from doing these injunctions.
Because it's ridiculous.
Everything the President does on immigration, no matter what it is, even if it's obviously unambiguously within his jurisdiction, There's an injunction and it's stopped immediately and we have to go through this lengthy legal process.
It happened with the travel ban, it happened with allocating the border wall money, it happened with repealing DACA, it happened with this, it happens with everything.
And so if at some point the Supreme Court disallows these federal judges from issuing these injunctions or they speed up the process for lifting these frivolous injunctions, Then that would clear the way for a lot of action on immigration.
If we could clear the way with the courts, and Trump could just legislate within his jurisdiction, according to the Immigration Nationality Act and the Constitution, if he could just do whatever is in his legal power to fix immigration, without these courts jamming it up, without these injunctions from New York City and LA and San Francisco, we would fly through this immigration agenda.
That's been one of the primary things that's slowing us down.
Across the board.
You know, if you look at, for example, the border wall money is a great example.
We could have allocated that money from the DOD, what was it?
The Civil Works Fund.
We could have allocated that money from DHS, from the Treasury forfeiture.
We could have done that on day one, and there would have been no legal challenge, seriously.
And if we could have allocated that money quickly, we would have had contracts the next week, you know, or the next month, whatever it is, and break ground on new border wall.
Like, that's That's the extent to which clearing the obstacles in the judiciary would help us with the immigration agenda.
The same is true with the travel ban.
The travel ban went through three iterations in 2017 before they finally fought it through the courts.
You know, they put down one travel ban, struck down with an injunction.
They shoot another travel ban, struck down by an injunction.
They shoot a third one and finally fought it through to completion in the Supreme Court.
Same with DACA.
Trump repealed DACA and DAPA, I think was the other one.
Supreme Court said, nope, you can't shut down DACA.
You know, think about if in the first three years, we had a travel ban immediately, and it was as extensive as we wanted it to be, we shut down DACA, we shut down all these other Dreamer programs, we greenlit money from all these different funds to fund the border wall, it'd be a different administration.
Instead of saying, boo, you know, it's getting better, but it's still no good, we would be saying, promises made, promises kept, Donald Trump, a thousand years for president!
And I think, at least, and I've been following this since February 2017, That has made all the difference, is these injunctions.
Because then it's this legal process, it's time, it's resources, it's money that we really don't have.
And then it's, you know, in 18 months you get a decision and it's half of what you wanted, so...
The hidden white pill here is if the Supreme Court, and I don't know how they would do this, I'm not a legal expert, obviously, but if the Supreme Court could stop these frivolous injunctions from happening, we would clear the way for like, you know, I was about to say something unoptical, you know, sort of a Trump empire for a thousand years, maybe you know what I was gonna say.
They would clear the way for everything we wanted in terms of immigration, which is very exciting.
So, on the one hand, it's good that it'll limit legal immigration.
On the other hand, hopefully the Supreme Court's going in that direction with the injunctions.
And beyond all of that, it's something to think about about these wealth transfers.
I don't know.
I think about doing this show and I wonder how compelling this is to people when you talk about these kinds of controversial things, when you talk about Holocaust Remembrance Day and ethnic conflict and whatever, but I mean am I saying anything that is not illogical?
I'd like to think that what I'm saying is not like charged up.
The way people talk about this show from the left or whatever, they make it seem like this is I don't even know.
Like, I come on the show and it's racial epithets and, you know, just like some uneducated screed or something.
But I believe I've explained everything and, you know, it's basically supported by evidence.
It's supported by real-life examples, lots of them.
It's explained in a way that's pretty academic, pretty cogent and concise and clinical, you know, in the way that it's not...
It's pretty dispassionate.
It's not like I'm I'm passionate obviously, but it's not like I'm really like Charged up about these people or whatever.
You know what I mean, and I'll tell you why I say this I was, uh, I'm not gonna say where I was today, but I had a meeting with, uh, you know, a service person.
Let's just put it that way, okay?
I don't want to get too specific.
I tell you about these conversations I have with various people that you deal with in your daily basis, whether it's you get a haircut, or you, uh, you know, you make small talk, wherever, whatever.
I was making small talk with one of these professionals, you know, I was, I was having a meeting.
I don't want to disclose exactly what it was.
Just just because I like to keep my activities on the down-low, but of course it always comes up They ask you well.
What do you do no matter what you know?
People always are asking me.
What do you do for a living?
That's you know what this country is about is your work And I never really have a good answer.
In this particular case, it was hard for me to not say what I was doing, because it involved finance and things like that.
And I said, well, I'm sort of like a media person.
I was trying to obfuscate and be as ambiguous as possible.
I said, I'm like a media person, you know.
And gradually, it was sort of a long conversation.
And over the course of this interaction, you know, I'm sort of telling him, yeah, I'm on YouTube and I'm a podcaster.
It's politics and I'm right wing.
And, you know, this guy's right wing.
He's a Trump supporter and so on.
But I'm always doing the show and wondering, you know, like if I go and get my hair cut and I tell the guy, you know, I do X, Y, and Z, is he going to tune into the show?
Is he going to tune into the show at night?
And will he be mortified by what he sees?
Will he meet me in person and say, oh, you know, here's this young man who seems to have a good head on his shoulders and so on, and then watch the show and say, who is this monster?
You know what I mean?
So tonight in particular, in the back of my head, I'm like, you know, is this guy going to tune into the show?
And if so, you know, what's going to be the reaction?
What do normal people think of when they watch the show?
Do they say, well, he's got a point?
Or do they say, oh, I can't think about that or whatever?
You know so nights like tonight I'm like particularly mindful about you know what is the normal perception but as we trudge on in this America first journey trying to take some of these ideas mainstream and be truth tellers and so on you know I wonder to what extent we're gonna be able to get people to even consider what we have to say you know to what extent people are gonna watch this and it's gonna resonate as opposed to people are gonna look at me like I have three heads and say you know this guy's off the goop this guy's this guy's a radical whatever so
That's why, you know, tonight I'm thinking like, you know, that was okay.
That was pretty moderate.
If I was, you know, I was just a random guy watching this, you know, mainstream sort of normie right-wing, I think this is, you know, convincing and basically inoffensive.
So in any case, but that's the public charge rule.
We're gonna move on and take a look at our super chats.
We will look at DLive first, and then we'll look at Entropy.
And remember, if you guys are not following it, we've got our Entropy set up.
We can't do Super Chats through YouTube anymore.
We have to use Entropy.
So you have to go to an external link, and it's very straightforward and easy to use.
It's just like Super Chats, but you just got to go to this link.
It's entropystream.live slash app slash America First.
If you go in there, you get Super Chat.
We've already got a dozen or so here.
But we'll take a look at DLive.
We'll see what you guys are saying here.
We've got Armenian Groybru says enjoyed the bonus stream this morning.
Love the chill deeper DLive streams.
I really learned a lot.
Well, I'm glad you enjoyed.
Yeah, we did a stream today at like 4 a.m.
Or something from 4 to 9 a.m.
I think.
Was it 4 to 9?
Yeah, something like that.
So yeah, I'm glad you enjoyed the bonus stream today.
Royal Goy says, non-ironically white-pilled from the Sam Hyde hype.
Can we get a W in chat for Wigger?
Yeah, let's get a W in chat for the W word.
Yeah, it was pretty good stuff, right?
I hope everybody was enjoying that.
I hope you enjoyed the surprise with that.
I didn't want to spoil it for anybody.
You know, Sam wanted me to keep it kind of under wraps.
I was kind of badgering him.
I felt a little bad.
I was like, can you send me the... because we took a couple of pictures.
I'm going to post some pictures on Instagram of us, you know, doing our thing, whatever.
And I wanted the pictures so bad.
It was like a week had passed and I was like, I want to show my mom these pictures.
I want to show mom these pictures of me with Sam Hyde, you know?
So I was like, can you send me the pictures?
And he was like, well, don't post them yet.
Whatever.
So I was trying to keep it kind of secretive.
I want it to be a good surprise.
So I hope everybody enjoyed it.
I have to tell you, I was like very self-conscious doing the, uh, the thing.
Because I went out there, and he sent me the script and everything, and I went down to where he is, I went to his studio or whatever, and we're reading through the script or whatever, we're shooting it, and I'm not like an actor.
I do the show, and the reason I'm able to do the show is because it's me.
You know, I'm not putting on an act.
I'm not a character or whatever.
It's just me talking to you.
So some people would look at me and say, how could you do public speaking like that?
I could never.
I would be so self-conscious or I'd be nervous or anxious or uncomfortable or whatever.
But doing this kind of thing is like a cakewalk for me.
But I'll tell you, as much as it's easy for me to do public speaking or something like this, acting, anything musical, anything like that, it's like, I feel the same way that a lot of people do about public speaking.
Particularly acting.
I'm self-conscious, very sort of like, you know...
Stiff awkward, so I was a little bit I was privately telling some of my friends like I don't know how this is gonna turn out turn out You know, I don't do acting.
I've never really done anything like dramatic or anything and you know, I'm It seems like it should be so straightforward, but you overthink it and you're you're kind of like in front of a camera You're like nervous, right?
Whatever So, uh, so I was like, I don't know how it's gonna turn out.
I don't know if I really gave, like, a funny performance in that context where you're, like, you know, doing a comedic bit as opposed to, you know, just, just being, being myself on the show and I happen to be funny, you know what I mean?
Like, it's very different for me to tell you something and I'm a funny person, you know?
I say things in a funny way as opposed to, like, I'm reading, like, a script in a funny way and I'm doing, like, kind of a character, right?
So, but I think it turned out very well.
I watched the video.
I was very nervous about it, but I think they did a great job editing it.
It's the magic, the magic of editing.
You know, they made me, I think, a little bit more funny with the editing process.
And I thought it was one of his funniest videos I've seen in a while.
You know, the script is really good and the concept was pretty funny.
The whole wigger gimmick, you know, that he bought this Twitter handle is hilarious to me.
So I was great to be a part of.
I was very gracious and appreciative.
I imagine I was a little awkward around him.
I was trying not to, like, fanboy too much.
I was trying not to, like, nerd out.
Because I've been watching this guy for years.
You know, this is, like, the guy that red-pilled me.
You know, I didn't get red-pilled really by, like, whatever, whatever book or whatever you might have in mind.
It was watching World Peace.
It was watching a friend of mine in high school turn me on to Sam Hyde.
They showed me the stand-up routine he did.
I forget what the name of it was, but he was in this basement comedy club and he was doing Hot Quiz and all this.
I was like, this guy's funny.
I watched 2070 and all the rest.
Meeting Sam Hyde is like meeting Donald Trump.
It's like meeting Ted Kaczynski or something.
He's like a legend.
it's me like meeting ted kaczynski or something it's like this guy's big he's like a legend you know larger than life literally and figuratively so when i met him i was trying not to like geek I was probably a little weird.
And I don't get that way with a lot of people these days, because now that I'm, like, a new celebrity, it's, like, different, but the guy's a living legend, you know?
So I came over, and I was trying to play it cool.
I was trying to do a good job.
I was trying just to kind of, you know, you know, the...
Be cool, not be too annoying, not be too weird, whatever.
So, I think it turned out well.
Like I said, I was very appreciative that he brought me on board.
It was very, like, spur-of-the-moment thing.
He was like, yeah, come over whenever.
We'll do a collaboration or whatever.
So, I was very appreciative.
It was a great opportunity.
It was very fun.
And he's a very normal, great guy.
You know, I think a lot of people, when you do, like, content or when you're famous, like, with actors, like Jim Carrey or something like that, or Will Ferrell, whatever, or me, they expect people to be, like, on, they expect people to be, like, a character all the time.
And I can tell you as somebody that has some level of e-fame that, you know, we're all just people, you know.
And so you meet Sam, and I actually met him at He Will Not Divide Us, but just, like, a normal duty.
He's one of us, you know, he's a gamer.
He's uh, you know, I would say he's a little bit more like that Neitz culture.
I don't want to say anything like insulting, but you know, he's like one of these people who's, you know, we're all kind of like weirdos.
We're not normies, you know, and not just in our politics, but in a lot of ways, you know.
So in that way, I found like a kindred spirit.
I'm like, oh, he's just like one of us, you know, just one of the, one of the fellow autists, whatever you want to say, you know, gamers, Neitz, whatever, so.
It was very, very epic.
Great experience.
It was very epic.
But let's see.
Jay Rochers says, my nibba.
Yeah.
Royal Goyce says, Sam Hyde officially passed the torch.
Well, I'll go that far.
I think he still is a torch holder.
America First Jew says, well, King, the day has come.
Jack banned my accounts.
Press F. Hope we can continue to talk.
Hashtag never forget another Holocaust.
unidentified
Yeah.
Yeah.
nick fuentes
And he picked quite a day to do it, right?
On Holocaust Remembrance Day of all days.
So yeah, big F in chat for JewGroiper.
Sorry to hear that, but we'll stay in touch, of course.
You'll be back.
We'll make new Twitter accounts.
EK says, given the huge influence Sam's been on most of us, it must have been surreal to meet him.
How was it?
It was surreal to meet him.
And like I said, I had met him once before but it was kind of like a low-key thing.
I met him at He Will Not Divide Us back in 2017 and we didn't interact too much.
He was just kind of there hanging out and I also happen to be there.
I you know, I got a picture with him and everything but we didn't really like hang out back then so Seeing him and see him again in real life and talking to him.
I mean, yeah, it was very surreal, you know Just just like looking over we went to like lunch or whatever went to breakfast and just looking over driving around town and using this giant truck driving like a maniac and
This guy it was it was completely surreal it's like you know I don't get that with a lot of people these days because I had been meeting a lot of people like I said from the internet so I've sort of been desensitized to this like you know you know somebody on the internet and then you meet them IRL but but you know Sam's like a legend so I was a little bit different with this one That was very cool.
Very, very epic.
Very neat.
But I, the thing is, I don't like to make it weird.
You know, we are just guys and we are just like, you know, in some capacity doing similar things.
We're content creators, we're right-wing, whatever.
So, we're doing something that's a little bit different or dissident to that effect.
So, I try not to be too, because, you know, I don't like when people, like, totally geek out or fanboy or whatever.
I don't want to, like, you know, make them uncomfortable or feel weird or whatever, but...
But I do have to say, you know, you gotta give credit where it's due.
You have to respect the elders, the people that have come before.
I gotta respect the big guy, you know?
Josh says, Nick, you are such a king.
That collab with Sam is so Kino.
Yeah, thanks.
Well, it was pretty Kino.
America First Juice has forgot to mention.
Phenomenal video with Sam.
Didn't even recognize you in that fit.
Epic.
Yeah, thanks, buddy.
I know.
I look kind of... Well, I was sick, so I look kind of like shit.
I had the beard grown out.
Sweatshirt.
That was so funny.
We were doing the video and initially I was just wearing some like stupid sweatshirt or whatever and I was wearing some like red like button-down, what would you say, like a flannel shirt.
And the theme of it was supposed to be like anonymous right or like QAnon so he was wearing all black And he's like, yeah, we need to get like a black sweatshirt for you So he goes in the back and he gets like one of his black sweatshirts.
You should have seen me I'm in like this triple extra-large black hoodie You know, which is like ten times my size.
I look like a girl, you know and when girls wear like Sweatshirts and then they're like, you know, the sleeves are flapping around that their hands don't poke out, you know So I'm in this like giant sweatshirt walking around the studio So I was laughing my ass off at that So it's pretty funny Jimmy says hi everybody.
Hi, dr. Nick.
Yeah.
Hello Armenian gripe versus the Los Angeles Nakers.
This is MSNBC.
I don't think that's what she said.
But yeah, pretty funny Polish American says John Doyle hopping on the no e-girls train.
He's cool.
Yeah, he's a cool guy I didn't see the no e-girls thing though.
Did he do was that in I saw he posted a video that was like no simps or something I don't watch it yet, though Yeah, he's pretty based.
He's as much as, I think, as much as he can be.
He's based.
Rhode Island says, I do love I-95 night drives watching and super chatting.
Yeah, good to hear.
I love the night drive.
I don't know what it is about it.
There's something very relaxing.
There's something very calming about it, the night drive.
My favorite thing, go drive out, get an ice cream.
I go to the same spot.
I go to the same spot.
I just sort of tucked away, you know, whatever it is.
If it's McDonald's, it's ice cream, and I just sit back and listen to my music.
I schmooed, you know, I eat my ice cream, eat my Big Mac, and then I go back, drive around.
I think, you know what I think it is about driving is that it's, I put my phone down.
I think that's what it is.
I'm like seriously addicted to my phone.
It's a problem.
Almost every waking minute of my life is on my phone or my computer.
It's horrible.
It's ruining my life.
I have to fix that.
I'm not trying to minimize that.
It's like a big deal.
It's something I have to work on.
But when I'm driving, it's like the one time when I'm not on my phone.
You know what I mean?
So it's not on the phone, but at the same time it's like stimulating.
You know what I mean?
Like, to me, it's almost like you think better when you're sort of occupied with the task.
Not something that you put a ton of thought into, and something that's not totally menial, but something where there's sort of just enough stimulation that it, I don't know what it is, but it sort of like focuses your thoughts, it sort of like directs your mental energy, So that it's not so off-the-wall schizophrenic.
Maybe that's just a me thing.
But I feel like when I'm driving, and not just like driving on the highway, that sucks when you're just driving for like 100 miles, you know, across state lines or whatever.
But, you know, you're driving around town, and you're messing with the radio, and you're messing with the air-conditioning, you're, you know, driving, whatever.
That to me is like just enough stimulation without the phone that I can kind of like, I can like really think.
I don't know if that makes a lot of sense, but it's like just enough mental energy is being dispelled, is being concentrated with these kinds of, you know, constant stimulation.
I'm always fiddling with some widget on my car.
You know, it's the radio, or it's the wipers, or it's the air conditioner, whatever.
I'm constantly like I have to be doing multiple things at once.
I have to be like dashboard Mentality, it's just enough that I can focus like a laser beam of mental energy Away from that.
That's right.
I have a lot.
It's like a shower thoughts kind of a thing So anyway, Evan says Kobe's dead and you're talking about the Holocaust.
Yeah America first juice is playing old Star Wars Battlefront 2 in America first.
Yeah, that's a schmood.
I love the old the old Star Wars Battlefront 2 is where it's at
You know, what's better to me, the real ASMR from my childhood is the pre-programmed messages, whether it's SmackDown vs. Raw, which we talked about this morning, Star Wars Battlefront 2, really like any game, you know that they have, like, maybe 10 pre-recorded phrases that your character will say, or, you know, in WWE games that the announcer will say, or in Battlefront 2 that the, you know, your... whatever, the radio will say, Call of Duty,
Mission failed we'll get him next time, you know that kind of thing or you know Call of Duty save it for the enemy watch those wrist rockets that that kind of stuff That's like, you know, that's where it's at.
That's the schmood save it for the enemy Good stuff good stuff Polish American says did you celebrate Holocaust Remembrance Day?
No, it's no no no reason to celebrate.
It's just a day to honor today to honor and Optics respecters is the Sam high collaboration was a total surprise amazing.
Well, I'm glad you were surprised Among the ruins says I used to think Chinese food was just orange chicken might f around and ask for the secret menu Oh, yeah, ask for the the bat menu for sure the bat Base griper says unironically maga bitch.
Yeah for real big globe says good evening.
You are watching big globe sending lemons.
Oh, yeah Thank you Base Groyd vs. Hey Joker, how much crime do blacks commit?
Half.
Somebody told me that joke when I was up doing that Sam thing.
I met up with one of my old friends from college and he told me that one.
It's pretty good.
13% of the, you'll never guess, 13% of the population responsible for this many of the murders?
unidentified
Half.
nick fuentes
Based groper says half.
unidentified
Yeah.
nick fuentes
Okay.
Jeff says the J stands for Josie What is it Josie?
I never know how to pronounce that on job, but I know it's that's that's X, right?
300 Spartans watch out for these you party next election.
Yeah Yeet says what was it like to work with Sam Hyde?
It was was very cool.
Very cool It was like it was that Joker moment in the beginning when he says I love you, Murray!
I love you, Sam!
Hey, who said I love you, too?
Hey, put the light on him, you know?
My name's Nick.
I live right here in the city with my mother.
unidentified
I take good care of her.
nick fuentes
That was like that.
It was very much like that.
You know, Sam says, oh, the gumroad, the show, I'd give it all up if it meant I could have a son like you.
unidentified
You know, that's, that was the fantasy, right?
nick fuentes
Kidding.
Kidding!
Justin Nicker, that's, I don't want to make it weird, you know.
It's like, it's like hanging out with the big kids.
It's like, I don't want to be too weird, you know.
Justin Nicker says, Gorsuch also called out the lower court's injunctions in his opinion.
No more activist judges.
Yeah, I pointed that out.
Big Globe says it's Holocaust Day and everyone's talking about Kobe.
Yeah, it's pretty, pretty sad.
Really says a lot.
Boom says, my boy, you're in a Sam Hyde video.
Yeah, I know.
America vs. Jews is from now on.
Today will be Jew-Groiper Remembrance Day.
Kobe's death is a bigger deal than impeachment.
unidentified
LOL.
nick fuentes
Yeah, Jew-Groiper Remembrance Day.
Gotta mark it on our calendars.
Yeah, that's unironically true about impeachment.
Hell yeah.
This is a serious tie.
tie for a serious day hell yeah this is a serious tie uh bass droiper says do you ever even leave the studio nick a yeah huh yeah so that's funny Yeah, more Joker quotes, we're loving that.
Blue says, love ya, make sure to open the chest.
Yeah, for sure.
BasedGroiper says, anti-pop culture dogma to the extreme is so gay.
Yeah, big agree on that.
Florida Man says, good take about Kobe.
Thanks.
Gene says, this pandemic is a reminder of your mortality.
Yeah, it's another one, sure.
Henry says, nothing's ever promised tomorrow, today.
Yeah, very, very true.
Kanye, check on that.
True something to think about and you know that is that is how I think that is what informs a lot of my decisions a lot of people they don't they think I'm weird they think I do weird things which I am kind of an eccentric kind of weird guy but you know a lot of what I think and how I act and what I do makes sense when you think about your mortality you know a lot of people they only think about life they don't think about death they think about one side of it So, uh, B says, do you have a girlfriend or are you just too busy?
Well, it's not so much that I'm too busy, although that is part of it.
I don't have a girlfriend, but partially it's I'm very busy.
I've got a lot going on this year, which by the end of this year, you'll, you'll realize like, damn, you know, mad work ethic, but this guy's, but this guy's got it going on, you know?
But, um, beyond that, when I explained this on my stream earlier today, People ask me a lot, you know.
I get a lot of e-girls soliciting me on, you know, Twitter.
You should meet me.
You should hang out with me.
Oh, hi.
I say constantly, no e-girls.
And they're like, hi, I know I'm an e-girl, but you should talk to me.
Beyond that, beyond just, you know, hating e-girls, the way that I think about it is, I'm obviously Catholic, and it's all about marriage for me.
I'm not into casual sex.
We're not allowed to do that.
I'm not, I think that's disgusting.
So casual sex is not, you know, that's not something I'm going to do.
And therefore, casual dating is also not something I'm really all that interested in, in the sense of, you know, what I want to do is date somebody and then get married, you know.
I want to date a girl so that I can marry her and then have kids with her.
Right?
And so, to me, once you incorporate into this the idea of, like, you know, you wait until marriage, and you also don't move in together until marriage, I want to have all my ducks in a row before I start the process.
Do you know what I mean?
Like, if I were to start dating now, I don't want to get, like, this might sound vulgar for this show, but I don't want to get, like, blue-balled for five years until I'm ready to buy a home and have kids and get married and settle down.
Do you know what I mean?
Like right now I'm like financially I would not be confident to start a family and to move in and all that and I would want to do that within 9 to 12 months of starting a relationship.
So I think of it in a very practical way.
Now that's not to say that you like are gonna date one person and get married obviously you know you date around and you see what's going on but you know on the offhand chance I do meet somebody I don't want it to be like Well, we gotta wait four years!
Like, I don't think that makes any sense, you know?
I see some people do that and it doesn't work out.
It doesn't work out because, you know, the whole, like, in my opinion, like, the whole Catholic model of, like, not cohabitating, waiting until marriage, all that, it really only makes sense if it's, like, you know, courtship is, like, a year or maybe a little bit longer max.
So...
I don't know if that makes a lot of sense maybe that's like an autistic way to say it but that's sort of my thought process which is like I want to get all my ducks in a row financially I want to get established professionally and then you know once that happens then I will when I am serious about starting a family that is when I'm gonna start doing that but you know for now I really have so much on my plate if you saw
Everything that's going on behind the scenes, it's like I barely have time to eat and sleep, you know, and I'm like not even taking care of myself, let alone taking care of a wife or kid or something like that.
I can't even begin to think about it.
So that's sort of where my head is at with regards to that.
But I know people are always asking me, but don't get me wrong, you know, it's so many years I'll put out the application.
I'll put out the application, people send it in, they'll send in their recipe, they'll send in their body count, No, just kidding.
If your body count's not zero, you know, I'm not taking your application, right?
We'll send out the application, you know, hey, you know, Mary, world-famous e-celebrity, Nick Fuentes, you know, put, enter in all your information in these fields.
I'll have a thorough, I'll have a thorough process, and then we'll figure it out, bud.
unidentified
Yes.
nick fuentes
Donald Trump.
Very Aristotelian.
Very Westist, I would say.
based Catholic Italian prayers.
Well, he was an Italian.
But he was Catholic from what I hear, so that's good.
Cactus says, Trump being more Aristotelian, big win for Westism.
Ah, yes, yeah.
We are going by the Garrett Mayer standard, yes.
Donald Trump, very Aristotelian, very Westist, I would say, for sure.
Vlad Groy versus treat people like it may be their last day on Earth.
Well, I wouldn't go that far because sometimes you have to yell at people.
Sometimes you have to give people the blues.
So I've never been a believer in that.
And you're not going to be wrong.
Treat people nicely, be kind generally, and be considerate and all that.
But sometimes you've got to...
I've never been a fan of this.
Treat every day like it's your last.
Well, you know, what does that really mean?
We can't all go skydiving and mountain climbing and maybe you know that song.
We can't all, we can't do that every day.
You know, some days you just have to go to work.
And sometimes you just have to run errands.
And sometimes you just take a shower and watch TV.
You know what I mean?
And sometimes you have to give somebody a hard time.
So I've never been a big believer in that.
You gotta live your life meaningfully.
That's all that is.
Live your life meaningfully and intentionally and you don't have any regrets.
Which is, you know, I try to live that way.
Which is, you know, like I didn't stay in college.
I dropped out and I started my own thing.
You know, that's like living life on my terms.
Um, so I'm not gonna like, I won't be regretting it if like the day that I die, I like, you know, spent all day watching television.
I won't be like, I didn't live every single day like I was, uh, you know, like a rock star or something.
Uh, but, you know, but broadly speaking, generally speaking, if everything was okay, then, you know, we're talking about the aggregate.
We're talking about the, the sort of average experience should be meaningful.
Sir Pancakes says, God bless.
Hey, thanks, you too.
Snooze God says, never forget, never again.
Okay, disavow.
American Beauty says, who gets paid for ads on Nick Fuentes' clips?
The channel, the person who runs the channel, which is fine.
America Flirts says, the important mission of our side, take over comedy and normalize making fun of them.
Ah, yes.
Take over comedy.
That's a great idea.
Hey guys, I got a plan.
We're gonna infiltrate comedy.
Some of these people, it's like, are you normal?
Are you a normal person?
What is the thought process of a person who says this?
The most important mission of our time, take over comedy.
And he says, from J's, from Jews.
And normalize making fun of Jewish people.
Like, what's wrong with you?
What is the matter with you?
Are you, like, retarded?
Normal people don't talk, like, clearly you're having a normal one over there, right?
Yeah, no.
America vs. Jews says, wow, incredible take on the mafia.
Yeah, okay.
We have to, let's be a little more optical, please, here.
Dimitri says, show me your war face, Nick.
Haha.
Rorik says, Omar was one of the first to make me question AIPAC.
Yeah, pretty based.
America vs. Jews says, I'm not out of control.
I'm just not in their control.
Exactly.
Saint Pablo check.
Greased.
Greets.
Oh, oh, great.
Greatest, greatest story.
So Stefan been called all those things a lot longer.
Yeah, until he didn't.
Reggie says coronavirus made it to New Zealand.
Thanks, Waman leaders.
Please don't say Waman.
That is just, like, grating.
I want to, like...
Smashed my head with a cartoon, like, giant wooden mallet when I hear that.
Somebody asked me the other day, what is the cringiest meme on our side?
It's definitely, like, wahmen and all this, like, faggot baby talk that used to be funny, like, a million years ago, five years ago.
Wahmens.
I see people saying wahmens, and that's the equivalent of, like, internets.
You know what people used to say on the internets like saying wahmen is the equivalent of that I want to like I want there to be a grand piano hanging over my head and like to cut a Fishing line and have a drop on my fucking head when I hear that Okay, sorry for the language, but um, I'm a little on edge today.
I don't know if you can tell or not Thanks, thanks wahmen haha America vs. Jews says, this is why I believe in you so much.
Never deterred.
Nick Fuentes will never back down.
God bless you, King.
Well, thanks, buddy.
It's true.
I never will back down.
Fake Christian says, Norman Lowell, Simon Shepard.
Okay, I don't know who these people are.
Max says, three of the four who voted against the bill are Jewish.
Wow, well there you go.
It really makes you think.
Faye Christian says, Okay, I don't know what the intention is with that.
Funny, based, I don't really know what you're going for, but didn't really accomplish anything actually.
Chicken on a raft says it was neither funny nor really that insightful.
Chicken on a raft says wish I could move to Mexico and get cash.
Yeah, right?
Wish I could move to another country and just get free stuff, right?
That would be nice.
Autism Unstoppable says, how was making a video with Sam Hyde?
Which was very cool.
Chicken on a raft says, half the black people you know got your money.
I got your money.
I got your money.
unidentified
Yeah, it's uh, it's okay.
nick fuentes
What's his name?
JD.
If JD's got my money, if um...
Who are the others that I know?
The other black wipers.
They got my money.
You know what?
That's fine.
They can have it.
Nitro says, King!
Yes.
Bulban.
What is this?
Bulban.
Says, good show, Nick.
Brap.
Okay.
One and only patches.
Okay, I'm not reading that.
Lance says, Chinese in America wear those surgical masks because they think we are unclean and disgusting.
Is that true?
I don't know why they wear them, so I honestly have no idea.
unidentified
Thanks.
nick fuentes
Yeah, moderately.
I can't always say that.
Let's just say sometimes you can't say that.
a serious question.
Are you concerned for your life?
Yeah, moderately.
Max says, if normies ask you what you do, just say you're a neat.
Why?
I can't always say that.
Let's just say sometimes you can't say that.
Nuke Telly says it was gone from Holocaust remembrance to worship.
Yeah, very true.
Vlad Gruyper says, buy only U.S. products or use small countries labor?
You know, honestly, I don't think it makes a huge difference.
You know, if you can buy American, if it doesn't make a huge difference, then I would.
But honestly, it's like we're not going to fix trade until we fix our monetary and our trade policy.
You know, people that get autistic about this made in America stuff, people give me a hard time because I don't think these mugs are made in America.
unidentified
I don't even, I don't even know, actually.
nick fuentes
But it's like, look, the system is the way it is.
You know, you can't compete with China.
You can't compete with a lot of the stuff that's going on.
That's the way the system is.
You know, it's sort of like vegans.
It's like, oh, you eat meat?
It's the same thing with like Made in America.
It's like, what?
is what it is, you know?
It's what it is.
You eat meat?
Yeah, I do.
I do eat hamburgers, you know?
And yeah, maybe factory farming is like unethical or whatever, but I'm hungry, okay?
And I want to eat a hamburger, alright?
That's what we do here.
So, I feel like it's the same way.
It's like, you cannot eat meat.
Is that going to change anything, you know?
You could turn on, you could put on these regulators on your faucet and your shower head and all that.
Is that going to like save the planet?
I don't know.
So, that's the way that I think about it.
These people that get weird about it.
So, No, I think as much as you can buy Made in America, but I generally just buy, you know, I don't really look at the label.
Skaggs says W. Polish Americans is when you're unable to say the n-word.
Great job.
Thanks.
Monochromes is what's your favorite Gatorade flavor?
I like Frost.
What's that?
It's like clear and it's berry flavored.
Of course, the lemon lime one is like the classic, but Frost is also one of my favorites.
Frost Glacier Cherry.
Yeah, that's a good one.
That's a yummy one.
I had that not too long ago.
It's very delicious.
I really, like, love... I love the beverages, and that way I'm very much an American.
I go to 7-Eleven and I buy, like, three or four beverages.
I'll buy a bottle of water, I'll buy a can of pop, and I'll buy a Gatorade, you know, but I'll just... I'll go to 7-Eleven, I'll come up with, like, a handful of beverages, and I'll just slunk them while I'm gaming, slunk them while I'm driving, whatever, you know.
That's kind of how I operate.
When I was up doing the sand thing, when I was driving back to my Airbnb, it was kind of a trek, I stopped at a 7-Eleven, I got a Gatorade Frost, I got a big bottle of water, I got a big ginger ale, I got a Monster, you know?
I got stocked up!
Love the beverages!
Love these sugary, mmm, sugary beverages.
I'm a addicted sugar guy, you know, that's how it goes.
I don't know, I haven't really decided yet.
Boat school says coronavirus in Illinois per CDC.
Stay safe.
Yeah, it's kind of old news.
Boomer says take this diamond and pierce the devil's heart with it.
I will.
Rhode Island says saw Sam at Five Guys, was paralyzed, didn't react.
I could imagine.
I would be like, that would be pretty crazy.
It's weird enough to like schedule something and, you know, be expecting it and meeting him, but I can't imagine just like running into somebody like that, you know, pretty crazy.
Boo Radley.
Speaking of which, I gotta get a hamburger in me after this show.
I'm so hungry.
I haven't eaten anything all day.
I haven't eaten anything since... 2 a.m.?
3 a.m.?
I haven't eaten anything since 3 a.m.
So it's been... What is that?
18 hours.
I haven't eaten ANYTHING in 18 hours.
I ordered a pizza yesterday.
Some shitty 12-inch pizza.
It was okay.
Got the job done, you know?
So, I gotta get a hamburger.
I gotta get something.
Hamburger and ice cream.
That's what I'm doing.
Right after the show, I'm gonna go out, cheeseburger, and I'm gonna get a... gonna get some ice cream.
God, I wish that were me right now.
I'm thinking about myself eating ice cream and I'm like, God, I wish that were me.
I'm like, salivating.
I'm so, I really gotta, the food thing is gonna be the death of me, man.
That's my one vice.
It's just like, I'm a disgusting cavone when it comes to the food, you know?
When it comes to fast food and cheeseburgers and ice cream and whatever.
unidentified
Sheesh.
nick fuentes
I don't know, but if that's the worst vice you have, that's not the worst thing, you know?
Some people are like, it's heroin, you know?
So I guess it's better than that, but...
You know, such a piggy when it comes to the ice cream, the cheeseburgers.
Hold me back!
You know, I'm like salivating.
I'm like really having a moment here just thinking about like a butter burger or, you know, even from Five Guys.
I don't even like Five Guys that much, but just thinking about the smell, the peanuts, the french fry oil.
unidentified
I'm like... Ten more minutes?
nick fuentes
Ten more minutes?
Gotta get through?
Uh, let's see.
Boo Radley says, my local drugstores are all out of N95 respirators.
Okay, I don't know what that means.
Warren says, is Charlie having another tour this semester?
I don't know.
But we'll see.
Boomer Uncle says, is Bernie any kind of legit threat to Trump?
Yeah, I think he's a serious threat.
EK says, are there any behind-the-scenes vids of you and Sam?
Um, I don't know.
He might have been filming things, but he's probably got outtakes and things like that, but I don't have any of the footage.
So if he wants to release that or send it, you know, maybe I could talk to one of his guys, his editors.
But as far as I know, that's aside from the outtakes, I don't think there's any behind-the-scenes stuff.
I probably should have recorded something we were driving.
I just didn't want to be weird, you know, because like I meet up with people and Sometimes they're goofy about that kind of thing, so I don't want to, you know, impose.
I want to just be as, you know, pleasant as possible.
I have the utmost respect, so I don't want to be, you know, goofy or... Because I know some people get the phone in your face or whatever, they treat you differently, so I just want to be kind of like normal mode, you know?
Boat school says noun maker a kettledrum, okay Greatest says asked for a hide collab in for a chat a month ago.
Thanks.
Yeah, you're welcome I did the Sam Hyde collaboration because you asked me to you know I saw your super chat you asked me to a month ago, and you know you made it happen I called them up.
I said hey listen Greatest story never told from D live says I need to collaborate with you.
He said say no more buy a plane ticket Let's do it What, like, who are the people sending these things in?
I have to imagine people sending these things in, like, breathe through their mouth, and they're like... You know, just, like, breathing heavily.
They, like, have candy wrappers around their desk, or, I don't know, cans, wrappers, bottles, things like that.
Long hair, something like that, you know what I mean?
unidentified
Well, I asked you, I don't know if you remember, but I asked you, thank you.
nick fuentes
Like, okay, yeah, you're welcome.
Let's see, Armenian Groypris is the awkward moment when your N95 mask is made in China.
Yeah, funny department.
Millsboro says 13% is more like 7%.
Okay, how many times have we heard that correction?
Oh, actually, it's 7%.
Okay, but the meme is 13.
So, you know, shut up and die.
We all know it's 7.
Like, what, have we never heard that before?
1350 is a thousand years old and seven is the correction is a thousand oh really oh whoa that's a great point i've never heard that before i swear i'm gonna take this i'm gonna take this mouse cord i'm gonna wrap it around my neck And I'm not going to do anything else.
And then I'm going to unwrap it and go back to reading Super Chats.
Okay?
Not going to... No suicidal thoughts.
I'm totally... Look.
Totally stable.
Totally safe driver.
unidentified
Okay?
nick fuentes
Especially in light of today's show.
Totally safe driver.
Totally of sound mind.
Confident.
You know?
Not depressed or anything like that.
I'm not going to do anything like that.
So, uh, Young Groyper says, Love ya, got a feeling it's gonna be a busy week.
Yeah, perhaps.
Based Jim Brose's great take on Kobe and a perfectly chill stream tonight.
Thanks for the bonus stream this a.m.
It was good.
Well, hey, thanks.
Pedgoats says, they've sent in the Supers.
Yeah, they've sent in the Supers.
Watch those wrist rockets!
What are the other ones?
Kind of drawing a blank.
I just like when they scream when they get like brutally like they get blown up by a tank and they scream.
Those are funny.
unidentified
What else?
nick fuentes
What else do they say?
Save it for the enemy.
Watch those wrist rockets.
They're sending in the supers.
What else?
I don't know.
It's been a long time since I played that game.
Good morning guard watch, you know that they would ever in Java's palace.
They do that Boo Radley says Wuhan BSL for virus lab announced back in 2015.
Uh-oh Legacy says best night drive stimulation is manual transmission that Seems a little too involved that this says been watching for a year no longer a freeloader.
Hey good to hear Yeet says Nick said the flavor, not the color of Gatorade.
Fed?
Oh yeah.
Well, because there's multiple clear flavors.
If you go with the clear one, I believe there's multiple flavors.
So I have to tell you Frost.
Yeah, yellow one, clear one.
I like the red one.
The fruit punch one's pretty good too.
I grew up on Gatorade.
I'm a big Gatorade respecter.
Propel.
Is Propel still around?
I used to love the berry Propel flavor.
That was good shit.
Do they still make that?
Okay, anyway, let's see.
We've got Boo Radley says, the CDC recommends N95 respirators.
Get on it, King.
Okay, I will do that.
Angle says, what is the best item on McDonald's breakfast menu?
The McGriddle, hands down.
Delicious.
I don't love McDonald's breakfast, I'm gonna be honest with you.
When I go there, I get a hash brown, I get the breakfast burritos, and I get McGriddle.
And the McGriddle's delicious.
It's like a pancake, but it's got like the syrup like cooked into it.
It's not my favorite, but it does hit the spot sometimes with a little sausage on there.
Boomer Destroyer says, enjoy your Burger King.
Great show and collaboration.
Thanks.
Save the West says, don't die.
We need you.
I'm trying.
I would like to not die.
I don't want to die.
I do not want to die.
I'll try my best.
You have to protect me.
Somebody's got to take a bullet.
Somebody with a lesser social value.
Look, I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna make the determination.
That's something you have to determine for yourself and you got to give your life for me.
Okay, somebody's gonna have to jump in front.
Somebody's gonna have to, uh, you know, throw themselves on top.
It's gonna have to happen.
Announces you ever notice how leftists are using school shooter as an anti-white slur now?
Yeah, it's been going on forever.
Announces I may not show it, but having unrestricted internet access since age 8, really be giving me a warped perception of reality and severe problems socializing normally.
Yeah, you could say that again.
Metallica fans says, hey King, after Conservative Inc, who's our next target?
Well, let's let's take out Conservative Inc first.
Anon says, God be like, too many... okay, I'm not gonna read that.
Custards says, congrats on the collaboration.
Thanks.
Bilbo says, brought your part in Sam's new video as keynote.
Thanks.
I was a little anxious about it, but I'm glad it was well received.
Kane Jeepers says, Nick, how do I maximize my coronavirus experience?
I don't know, big guy, go to China.
Dresden says the native religions of the greatest Aryan civilizations, Egypt, Greece, Rome, were pagan long before Christian sanity came around.
That's literally what it says, by the way.
Which was just another sect of heretical Judaism.
Something to ponder.
Okay, well that's completely retarded and you're retarded.
Josh the Remover says, Nick, can you tell my friend Jason to stop shitting in the truck?
Yeah, sure.
Daniel says, hello from Dundee, Scotland.
Shout out to C. Muir.
You need been on that brainwashing as usual lately, even though doing a law degree.
Okay.
Also about the Christian, this pagan, oh, Rome and Egypt.
They're all pedophiles, okay?
Okay, yeah.
Congratulations on pederasty.
Yeah, cause she is.
Scarlett says, hey Nick, also going to hell.
Hey Nick, why is Kathy G.U. attacking conservatives over bat soup jokes?
Seems as though she's more liberal than conservative.
Yeah, because she is.
Why do so many minorities end up being fake conservatives?
Love the show, by the way.
You know why.
Because they don't see themselves as like us.
They are sensitive to so-called xenophobia, all this stuff.
They can say they're not, but they are.
That's what it comes down to.
Leftism favors non-white people.
It's very simple.
I would say today they're cringe, but they used to be based.
what are your thoughts on Spain as a country historically and today?
Based or cringe?
I would say today they're cringe, but they used to be based.
Now I, I have never been there, but I heard that it's pretty, uh, degenerate and leftist in Spain lately.
But, um, Franco was based and generally they were based throughout history.
Drezna says, every time you go live, I can tell you just woke up from your cat boy baby nap.
Your sleepy face is the dead giveaway.
unidentified
Okay.
nick fuentes
I didn't just wake up.
I woke up.
I woke up at six o'clock.
Okay, so I didn't just wake up.
Unknown Assassin says, remove all the immigrants, take women out of the workforce, increase wages for all men equals peace and prosperity.
Yeah, you said it big guy.
Yeah, congratulations on another... Okay, so the YouTube Super Chats are decidedly garbage.
The DLive Super Chats are very good.
I was having a great time with these and then I immediately transferred over to Entropy and these are all just like...
Just straight ass.
I just can't I just can't even Faticotti says read and Joker voice.
What do you get when you combine an old-scale meme and some other shitty meme?
Okay, we literally did the same thing like five months ago this exact format Inclusion says did you hear about the Jewish groups trying to remove the Catholic Church near Auschwitz?
They should be jailed No, I didn't hear about that Half-face is the virgin bubonic plague transmitted by rats versus the Chad bioweapon transmitted human to human Jokes aside.
How likely do you think it?
Yeah, that was a funny joke jokes aside.
Yeah aside from that hilarious joke How likely do you think it is that a Chinese lab coat accidentally released the virus?
I have no idea.
It's possible.
But who knows?
It's very look people coming up with conspiracy theories.
It's like I You know, is anyone surprised that it could have come out of China?
People are like, it's just like in that movie Contagion.
It's predictive programming.
Wuhan is the center of their, you know, virus... What is it?
Their virus bank or whatever.
It's like... Are we really, like, floored that something like this came out of China?
Is that, like, surprising?
Is that not possible, you know?
So it's possible that there was something going on like foul play or, you know, more to the story, whatever.
But it is also equally likely that, you know, this virus just happened.
I mean, you look at the conditions, the population density, the sanitary stuff, how food is prepared.
It's like, I mean, is it completely possible that this just came out of nowhere?
Absolutely, you know?
I think it was only a matter of time before something like this came out of China, so I'm not, I'm not really shocked if it's one way or the other.
It's entirely possible that, you know, somebody spilled a vial of chemical X or whatever, But unless I see any evidence, it's like probably, you know, probably the simplest explanation is that, you know, they just don't wash their hands, you know, and they just they're chopping meat in these unsanitary markets or eating bush meat.
It's like you see what they're eating bat meat.
They're eating raw mice.
It's like, oh, are you surprised?
Is it unlikely or impossible that this has happened?
Ben Pease says, There is a natural order in the world, and every deviation in societal trend against it creates dissonance and disorder within that society.
Yeah, that's such a huge galaxy brain takeaway.
Wow, you have like a tractor beam on your brain.
It's so huge.
My mind is like crumbling and it's being spaghettified.
Announces on that point about taxes if a Democrat wins and passes official reparations.
Instead of unofficial reparations, I am unironically committing tax evasion.
I can't endorse that.
Albert says to your fans, you're passionate but logical.
Perhaps even to some normies, they'll find you reasonable enough, but to the left, you'll always be Chance Delmayne.
Yeah, okay, thanks for that.
Inclusion says, latest video from John Doyle is decent.
He mentioned Nick, probably you.
Dude's decent.
Yeah, he's decent from what I've seen.
Fatacottis has agreed, my phone is ruining my life.
Was gonna Batman post about some white-pilling stuff that happened today, but no Batman posting.
For sure neo novices love the collab with Hyde man.
Hope you do some more in the future.
Yeah, we'll see Tyler says did Sam let you play Kanye in the Raptor and no he did not he was playing this.
What is it electronic ambient music?
He did him driving in the Raptor.
He's a maniac man, and I actually was inspired.
Well, no, no, I don't drive like a maniac.
I Take that back.
I was Terrified I do not drive like that now because of that, but I was I was inspired He was driving this the Raptor this huge truck and he should fly it down the highway blast in the horn Joe Driving all over the place and I was like this this is where it's at.
This is how we need to be We need to command the road here.
Very epic and It was very true to form, you know, it's like it's like how Darth Vader has his own TIE fighter It was like Sam Hyde six foot whatever six foot six six foot seven whatever six foot five Driving this huge truck and just you know being as belligerent as possible.
I love it I thought it was awesome.
Dresden, I'm not reading that.
DJ says Lutherans and Anglicans are cocked and cringed compared to their evangelical counterparts.
Is that true?
I don't really know too much about Lutherans and Anglicans.
I'm not like, it's all Protestant to me and that's why I see it.
JAR says you look tired, King.
Here's some shekels for a burger.
God bless, thanks.
Yeah, I am tired.
I'm not, yeah, I'm just, don't worry, I'm just tired.
You okay?
Yeah, just tired.
I'm just tired, just hanging in there, haven't slept.
Anon says, do you think Bernie has a chance at the nomination?
Also, what's your take on Joe Rogan endorsing him?
R.I.P.
Joe Rogan, he died in the helicopter crash, haha.
Yeah, he has a chance at the nomination.
He's shooting up in the national polls, he's shooting up in New Hampshire, Iowa, he's doing pretty good.
So yeah, he's got it.
He's definitely got a chance.
And what are my thoughts on Joe Rogan endorsing him?
Not surprising.
Joe Rogan's this, you know, dude weed.
Reddit man.
Like, I mean, he's a total progressive.
So I don't know why anybody's really surprised at this.
Doesn't really make a big deal, you know, one way or the other, in my opinion.
People are canceling Bernie for it, whatever.
It's like, who cares?
But let's see.
We've got a few more from DLive.
And I'm gonna call it.
I gotta go eat.
Vlad says eating the burger has become serious and spiritual.
Very true.
Millsboro says sorry King for the 7% new here.
That's okay.
If you're new here, it's a learning experience, but you know, we got it.
We got to keep a tight ship here.
T-base says YouTube chat is trash.
Yeah, big agree.
It's total garbage.
That's why I'm abandoning ship with YouTube.
Bepis says coronavirus case in my country or my county.
Should I be worried?
I don't know.
I mean, just take the proper precautions and you should be fine.
Yeet says, real ones watch DLive.
Also try Kiwi Propel.
Ah, good tip.
I will give that a shot.
Chicken says, can I take an order please?
Yeah, one 16-inch pizza please.
16-inch cheese, stuffed crust, green pepper, extra cheese.
Okay, it looks like that's all our Super Chats, so that's gonna do it for us on the show tonight.
Sheesh!
That's a long show!
So that's gonna do it for me on the show tonight.
Remember to check out my email list.
Remember to sign up for the mailing list.
So important.
The mailing list is band-proof.
The, you know, this show, shows like this.
I don't know how much longer I have on YouTube.
I don't know how much longer I have on even DLive, Twitter, Telegram, anything.
The only thing that's band proof is the email.
So be sure to sign up for that.
It's nicholasj.com.
You put your email right in the box there.
Super straightforward.
And you'll be able to hear from me about where I go if I get banned.
There's going to be some big updates in maybe next month that I'm going to be sending out through the email.
So be sure to sign up for that.
The link is down below.
Remember to follow me on my Telegram channel if you're on, or I'm sorry, my DLive channel.
Follow me on Telegram too, but follow me on DLive.
If you're watching on DLive, the follow button should be like right up here.
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Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m.
Central, 8 p.m.
Eastern Standard Time.
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes.
As always, thanks for watching.
Thanks to everybody that has super chatted tonight on DLive and, you know, some of them on Entropy, some of them were good on Entropy.
In particular, thanks to our three biggest contributors on DLive.
We've got Johnny Appleseed, T-Based, and Armenian Groyper.
So, huge shout out to our top three on DLive.
And thanks to everybody that's donated.
Ah, yes, in the chest.
Okay, I'll open the chest.
And thanks to everybody that's donated tonight.
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.
donald j trump
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo.
unidentified
It's going to be only America first.
America first.
The American people will come first once again.
America first!
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