Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I teach a play. I teach a play. | ||
And at any moment, I teach a play. | ||
And at any moment, I teach a play. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
All right. | ||
All right. | ||
I'm going to say goodbye. | ||
I'm going to say adios. | ||
This is from your biggest Boston fan, may you one day see the light! | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as you can start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can check that yay button. | ||
I'm going to go first. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
They said, trust no, baby. | ||
I was thinking to believe your day was in the ground. | ||
I'm a drunk, but now I'm thinking about it. | ||
I'm a sad truck, no hope, use a weapon. | ||
But they said, trust no, baby. | ||
I was thinking to believe your day was in the ground. | ||
Last out of the sky. | ||
Oh, shit. | ||
Everybody. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to roll. | ||
All right. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the lights. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in a religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, you can take that yay button. | ||
And at any moment, you can take you can take that yay button. | ||
And at any moment, you can take you can take that yay button. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enforce them, all right? | ||
And at any moment, you can take that yay button. | ||
I just enforce them. | ||
I just enforce them. | ||
I just enforce them. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
But as soon as you can start playing games, that's that. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, you can take that yay button. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. . | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
unidentified
|
Love you, too. | |
I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can check that day button I think that's the first edition okay | ||
not my words not my rules I can force them, all right? | ||
Blackout Scott. | ||
Everything. | ||
Everything is warming on everybody We dare to vote We dare to | ||
Swarming on everybody who dare to oppose. | ||
And your mama ain't cheap. | ||
I'm ready and shit. | ||
I'm in a building way. | ||
It's made me fallin' slow, kick. | ||
No, it's in the city. | ||
But I was just a chick. | ||
With the old black city. | ||
Think you with the waiters. | ||
It's in the mood. | ||
Yo, what's it? | ||
It's a shit. | ||
Yeah, it's a shit. | ||
It's a shit. | ||
Who's tight? | ||
It's a damn set. | ||
You take me to my first show. | ||
vote We dare to | ||
I go. | ||
vote We dare to vote We dare to vote This is from your biggest positive fan May you one day see the light Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as you can start playing games, have stopped. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can take that day place I'm going to go first | ||
okay not | ||
my words not my rules I can force them alright | ||
last time Scott and Everything. | ||
Forming. | ||
Everybody. | ||
I'm going | ||
I'm here at the first pitch. | ||
I'm here at the first pitch. | ||
I'm here at the first pitch. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you too, but I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in a religion that makes sense, so. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can hit that yay button. | ||
I said, trust no man. | ||
I said, we'll eat you. | ||
Take yours and your brother. | ||
I said, drink with girls in the puddle. | ||
I said, trust no hoes. | ||
I said, one, two, stop the track. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just need your steps, alright? | ||
They say, trust no man but your mother, so listen to me, don't take my surrondings. | ||
They say, trust no man but your mother, so listen to me, don't take my surrondings. | ||
My momma said, trust no hoes, use a rubber. | ||
They say, trust no man but your mother, so listen to me, don't take my surrondings. | ||
Black dogs do not rule in this church. | ||
It's everything. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
This is from your biggest positive family. | ||
One day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
So. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can just say, yeah, you play. | ||
They said trust no man to come to someone. | ||
I need you to take those in the color. | ||
I said change from girls in the corner. | ||
My mama said trust no ho. | ||
So come on. | ||
I can't do it. | ||
But don't stop the track. | ||
I'm going to go first. | ||
Catch you. | ||
See, Ricky said, but I don't want to call you. | ||
If he want to call you, he don't want to. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm going to. | ||
I'm going to. | ||
I just enforce them, alright? | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
Not my words, not my words, not my words, not my words. not my words. | ||
Not my words, not my not my words. | ||
Not my words, not my words. | ||
This is from your biggest Protestant fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense, so. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can hit that YAY button. | ||
Let me introduce myself. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I can endorse them, alright? | ||
They say trust your man, I can't believe your day was in the ground. | ||
I said trust, trust, trust, no hope, use a weapon. | ||
But they say trust your man, I can't believe your day was in the ground. | ||
Last time, Scott, everything, it's warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, ask that. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can hit that yay button I'm going to start the track I'm going to start the first okay | ||
One, two, three. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just need your stuff, all right? | ||
They say, trust, don't be. | ||
I'm just kidding, believe your day was. | ||
I'm not a problem. | ||
But they say, trust, don't be. | ||
I'm just kidding, believe your day was. | ||
Blacked out the sky. | ||
Everything. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
Dare to avoid. | ||
And your mama ain't cheap. | ||
I'm ready to cheat. | ||
And I'm thinking ways. | ||
Maybe told it's not a chick. | ||
That's a young city. | ||
When I was just a chick. | ||
I'm all back. | ||
Standing thinking with the weight of faith. | ||
That was in group shape. | ||
Yo, what's it? | ||
This shit. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Three, six. | ||
Who'd say it? | ||
Yes, I'm upset. | ||
One, two. | ||
My first shot. | ||
I go over. | ||
Only drop heels. | ||
Way before they drop. | ||
Shut up. | ||
First year. | ||
Hold it. | ||
Now we're here. | ||
What the way does it say? | ||
Be bad. | ||
They think those budgets. | ||
They say. | ||
Oh, I'm here in the first. | ||
Bitch. | ||
They say, trust, don't be. | ||
I don't need your day was. | ||
Gotta. | ||
They say, drink. | ||
Girls. | ||
You never come. | ||
I don't want to say. | ||
Trust, no. | ||
You should never. | ||
They say, trust, don't be. | ||
I don't need your day was. | ||
Oh, I said, drink. | ||
I'm girls. | ||
I can't cover. | ||
I'm a mama's in a dress. | ||
No home. | ||
You's a rubble. | ||
This is from your biggest positive family. | ||
One day, see the lights. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can take that yay button I'm going to start the track I'm going to start the first okay | ||
okay Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
They say trust, don't be. | ||
I was a hitter, the lead, your day was. | ||
I'm a rock, I'm a rock, I'm a rock. | ||
But they say trust, don't be. | ||
I was a hitter, the lead, your day was. | ||
I'm a rock, I'm a rock, I'm a rock, I'm a rock. | ||
Forming. | ||
Everybody. | ||
here to a little. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thank you. | ||
We'll see you next time. | ||
This is from your biggest Boston fan, may you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop them. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
I said, trust your man. | ||
I'm a son of a movie. | ||
I'm a day, cause I'm a daughter. | ||
I said, change your girls in the bottle. | ||
My mama said, trust don't hold you. | ||
So, brother, man. | ||
I need one, two, stop the track. | ||
I'm a person. | ||
Itch. | ||
See what they said. | ||
I don't want to pull you. | ||
I don't want to pull you. | ||
Get a world. | ||
Okay. | ||
I don't want to pull you. | ||
I can endorse them, alright? | ||
They say, no, they're just going to be in the chair. | ||
I can enforce them, alright? | ||
Black dogs are not monsters. | ||
It's everything. | ||
It's forming. | ||
Not everybody dare to vote. | ||
Not everybody dare to vote. | ||
Not everybody dare to vote. | ||
Not everybody dare to vote. | ||
This is from your biggest positive fan. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in a religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
But as soon as you can start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can check that. I can check that. | ||
I can check that. | ||
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. | ||
America first. | ||
Good evening, everybody. | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be with you here tonight on Friday. | ||
And thank God it is Friday. | ||
Can you relate? | ||
Can the wagees watching the show tonight relate? | ||
Wow, Friday already. | ||
And we've got a great show for you tonight. | ||
It's gonna be a casual Friday show. | ||
As you can see, I am not wearing a necktie. | ||
And that means it's gonna be a casual show. | ||
That means it's low-key, chill, relaxed, laid-back, casual Friday. | ||
And so... | ||
It's about time. | ||
It's about time we had that energy. | ||
A lot going on this week and lots happening in the world. | ||
Tonight our featured story we're going to be talking about what the media is saying about the 2020 election, which it's funny how this played out over the course of the day today. | ||
I woke up today and I saw on Twitter, I saw all over the news, the biggest story, the most prominent story on Twitter for example, Bernie Sanders is being aided by Russia in the 2020 Democratic Presidential Primary. | ||
Of course. | ||
Of course they're going to accuse him of that. | ||
Especially now that he's on his way to the nomination, which we've been talking about all weekend since Iowa, really. | ||
And so I was like, yeah, not really so surprising. | ||
And it also is satisfying to see that he's getting the same treatment that we got, or we have been getting, I should say, for the past few years. | ||
But then, to make it even better, then later on in the day, I didn't see this until a couple hours ago, later on in the day I start compiling my notes, I'm doing my research, And I see that now Donald Trump is being accused of having the Russians helping him in the 2020 election. | ||
So the Washington Post puts out today that Russia is helping him in the primary and the New York Times has reported that Russia is helping Donald Trump in the presidential election for his re-election. | ||
So we're going to talk about that, these accusations. | ||
It's very funny to me. | ||
You can probably guess my take. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, it's possibly true that Russia is helping Trump. | ||
Maybe it's true that Russia is helping Bernie because they know that Bernie would lose to Trump. | ||
Helping Bernie is helping Trump. | ||
Maybe that's the theory. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But we also know that it could be totally wrong and that this is simply what they say to undermine their political rivals. | ||
And who is they? | ||
It is the establishment, it is the elites, the globalists. | ||
The Council on Foreign Relations, the collection of people who decide who gets to govern the country, who gets to be the figurehead for the people that are really governing the country, which is all of the above. | ||
So that'll be our featured story. | ||
We'll be talking all about that, going over the two different reports. | ||
I gotta tell you, it's so hard doing the show now because all these publications, you have to pay for them now. | ||
It never used to be that way. | ||
Almost every publication, you need to pay for a subscription. | ||
The New York Times, The Washington Post, those were the two papers that made these They broke the story that Trump was getting help by Russia, Bernie's getting help by Russia, allegedly, and both of these papers you have to pay. | ||
I can't tell you how many times I need to report the news and I click on the New York Times and it says, you've run out of free articles this month, you need to pay a dollar per week. | ||
And then the same with the Washington Post. | ||
And I don't want to pay a dollar. | ||
It's not that I can't. | ||
It's not that I don't have $1 a week to spend on these papers, but I don't want to, on principle, pay the New York Times money. | ||
And that may sound hypocritical. | ||
I'm the first one to say that that kind of idea is ridiculous when you're talking about movies or something like that, but at least I get entertainment value out of a movie. | ||
These publications, it's going straight to journalists. | ||
That actively are hurting us directly like they report on me in the Washington Post or the New York Times and lie. | ||
Right? | ||
So... I am signed up for the New York Times. | ||
I had to for the primary coverage because they have the best primary coverage. | ||
I hate to say... | ||
But the Washington Post, I refuse. | ||
And maybe it's because they have you pay for it all up front. | ||
They make you pay for one year. | ||
New York Times, it's pay-as-you-go. | ||
It's about a month. | ||
Maybe I'll cancel it after the primaries are over. | ||
But Washington Post, they're like, you need to give us $40 up front for the year. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know if I'm going to give them $40 for the year. | ||
I'll give you one per week for maybe a couple months, but I'm not giving you $40 for the year. | ||
And the Washington Post is the worst one, so... | ||
So anyway, it's so hard. | ||
Then you gotta do LA Times. | ||
You have to pay for that one. | ||
You have to pay for the Chicago Tribune. | ||
It's like... Anyway, these are my problems. | ||
Maybe you don't. | ||
You don't have this problem because you get your news from me. | ||
So I have to... I have to bear the burden here. | ||
So that is our featured story. | ||
We'll also be talking about this big development in Afghanistan. | ||
Not surprisingly, nobody's talking about this. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
This was announced this afternoon, and then people have already stopped talking about it by tonight. | ||
Now I don't know if I just haven't been spending enough time online, or maybe watching television, but I know that when I go to compile the stories for my show, I go on Twitter, I go on social media, and I see what are the trending topics, and Afghanistan isn't up there. | ||
It's not up there in the featured, it's not in the news section, And it's not surprising because this is a huge groundbreaking development that is unequivocally, unambiguously good for the president, good for the country, and also against the military-industrial complex. | ||
So if you didn't see, it's big big news today on Afghanistan. | ||
They have brokered, the Trump administration has brokered a truce with the Taliban. | ||
They're going to sign an agreement at the end of February, and then this could serve as the basis for the end to the war in Afghanistan. | ||
Now I will say, how many times have we heard that the Afghanistan war is coming to an end? | ||
How many times in this administration or the last administration have we heard, it seems like, oh maybe this could be the beginning of the end? | ||
And it obviously has never come to fruition. | ||
I don't know if this is going to work out. | ||
Who knows if we'll even make it to the truce, to the signing of the agreement, let alone build upon it to get us out of the country. | ||
We actually had something very similar that was talked about last summer, that the Taliban allegedly was supposed to come to Camp David and negotiate directly with the Trump administration, but that that was cancelled last minute because of a big car bomb or a suicide bomb that went off in Kabul, something like that. | ||
And they called it off. | ||
It was very public. | ||
I think this happened last August. | ||
So, who knows? | ||
Who knows where this could go? | ||
I always have to sort of temper the white pillar of the optimism, but we'll be talking about that as well. | ||
Could be a big deal. | ||
If this is the stepping stone, and this is the process if you were to end the war in Afghanistan, but if this is it, if this is the time when it's gonna work, could be a huge deal. | ||
And that'll be a huge deal for our country. | ||
It'll also be a really big deal for re-election. | ||
If Trump can come to voters in November and say that he ended the war in Afghanistan, that's like a really big deal. | ||
And all the haters on both sides, on the left and I know there's a lot of people on the right, who have, they have something about them where they want, they're invested in not liking Trump, they're invested in being down on him or his achievements or whatever. | ||
They'll have to say, well, he did end the war in Afghanistan. | ||
That will be a big deal. | ||
Or could be a big deal if it happens. | ||
So that'll be our other story we're talking about. | ||
Lots to discuss tonight. | ||
Lots happening. | ||
Before we dive into that, I do want to give you a coronavirus update. | ||
I wasn't going to talk about this, but I've been following Mr. Medeker. | ||
And I check his timeline every so often. | ||
If you want to follow the coronavirus, I have to give credit where credit is due. | ||
Mr. Medeker is like the guy to go to. | ||
His Twitter timeline is maybe like the best aggregation. | ||
Is that a word? | ||
It's the best aggregate of all the news, all the information, speculation about the spread and the development of this pandemic. | ||
I don't know, maybe you feel the same way. | ||
I'm checking for updates and I am also using that for show preparation whenever we need to discuss it. | ||
And so I wasn't really going to talk so much about this, but I was checking out the timeline today and it's getting really bad. | ||
It is getting bad. | ||
And I don't know, maybe you feel the same way. | ||
I'll tell you how I feel about this and then you tell me if you're feeling the same way. | ||
I have been monitoring the situation with coronavirus on the show, obviously. | ||
And we've been talking about the potential for it to break out and cause problems and so on. | ||
But on a certain level, for me personally, I'm not really going to feel in jeopardy. | ||
I'm not really going to feel threatened by the coronavirus until it is spreading in other countries. | ||
Do you feel the same way? | ||
Because I could look at the facts, and I could look at the news reports, and I could tell you that the CDC is freaking out, the Army's preparing for a pandemic, you know, that they're releasing information that is not true. | ||
There's all these. | ||
Crematoriums being open in China and coffins and ambulances driving around and people are being quarantined and so on. | ||
But at least on a personal level, I don't feel very moved. | ||
I don't feel totally bothered or concerned about it until it starts spreading in other countries and then ultimately in the United States. | ||
Because so far, as bad as the coronavirus has been, we've really only seen it in China. | ||
It's really only spread and killed significant amounts of people in China. | ||
Except for now. | ||
Now, that's not happening. | ||
So, for me, for the longest time, I said like, well, you know, it's... | ||
Could be a pandemic. | ||
You should make preparations. | ||
Could be bad. | ||
Maybe it is. | ||
Maybe it's not. | ||
But whatever. | ||
But who really cares? | ||
It's in China. | ||
I'm not in China. | ||
I'm not near China. | ||
I've never been to China. | ||
So what do I have to worry about? | ||
I'll worry about it when it starts spreading here or elsewhere. | ||
But the latest numbers are showing that it is spreading elsewhere. | ||
It's not only spread across the globe, and you see it now in dozens of countries where they have at least one case. | ||
It's all over Europe. | ||
It's in the United States. | ||
It is all over the Middle East. | ||
It is all over Asia. | ||
But now it's also spreading in these countries, and that's the concern. | ||
Very early on, a month ago, three weeks ago, you had all the cases in China, and you had like one case in the United States. | ||
One case in France. | ||
And it was all people that had just got off the plane from China. | ||
But that's not the case anymore. | ||
And I'll read you the latest numbers here. | ||
We've got 76,288 confirmed cases in China. | ||
And again, that is the confirmed cases. | ||
We have no way of knowing if that's the full extent of the outbreak in China. | ||
I doubt that it is, but these are the latest numbers. | ||
That's what was reported in China. | ||
There are now 346 cases in South Korea. | ||
346. So you could say that you will see an outbreak level in South Korea that you saw in China. | ||
Now I don't know, we don't know what the peak rate will look like in China or the peak number of cases in China yet. | ||
And in the same way in South Korea we don't know the rate at which it's going to continue to spread now that we're aware of it and I would imagine to be a little bit more controlled than it was in China. | ||
But we know for now that it has ballooned from a small number of cases to hundreds of people getting it. | ||
There's 109 cases in Japan and it's also spreading rapidly in Iran. | ||
They're talking about people dying from it in Italy. | ||
21 cases in Italy and now 35 confirmed cases in the United States. | ||
So I'm not going to read you every single number but There is now a lot of concern that you're seeing 1, 2, 3 cases in all these different countries very far from China are now starting to balloon into tens and in some countries hundreds of cases and the severity of the cases seems to be an issue as well. | ||
For example in Italy, 6 people are in critical condition. | ||
There's already multiple deaths from the coronavirus there. | ||
So it seems to me like this could snowball into a real global problem and global meaning on many continents you are going to see a large-scale outbreak that will be uncontrollable and is gonna burn through probably many many people and so so I'm gonna keep an eye and there's not it's not really too much to say beyond that You know, I mean, I don't really have like an analytical take about these things. | ||
Usually with the news, I'm telling you about what does this really mean? | ||
How do we decipher this? | ||
How do we analyze this? | ||
As far as China goes, it's really just these news updates telling you how it is progressing and where it's progressing and so on. | ||
So those are your latest numbers. | ||
Just saying might not be the worst idea to start preparing for an outbreak in the United States. | ||
And what does that mean? | ||
That means just be mindful. | ||
Just be on alert, and it's going to be alert in general, but if you're going to public places, if you're on public transportation, if you're in a place where it's high density and exposure to lots of people, where You're gonna be in close proximity to many, many different people in cities or elsewhere. | ||
Gonna be a good idea to just mind your hands. | ||
You know, don't touch your face if you're out in public. | ||
Make sure you're washing your hands. | ||
Just be mindful of other people if they're showing symptoms or something. | ||
You never know. | ||
I mean, there are people that get sick. | ||
People have the flu right now, too. | ||
But, it's always better to be safe than sorry. | ||
And the thing is, and here's the trouble is, you don't know That the government knows all the cases that are out there. | ||
You know, not all the people that have the virus are in quarantine. | ||
Not all the people that have the virus are in a hospital or being monitored. | ||
That's the nature of an outbreak at this scale, at this level, is you just simply have no idea who's got it and who doesn't. | ||
And so, until we get an idea of the outbreak and get it under control in some capacity, it's good to just be alert. | ||
And it might not also be a bad idea to invest in basic medical supplies. | ||
You know, these face masks are selling out now. | ||
You might have seen that there's a global shortage now of the face masks that you can see people wearing in China. | ||
You know, stock up on, I don't know, hand sanitizer, things like that. | ||
I'm not like a medical expert, so I don't know what you need to combat like a virus, like a, what would you call that? | ||
A respiratory virus that is the coronavirus. | ||
I don't know what kind of like homeopathic type things are good for you to, you know, build up your immune system. | ||
Maybe vitamin C, but it's always just better to be alert and aware and better to be safe than sorry. | ||
But that's the coronavirus. | ||
We'll see. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm kind of like seeing this slow burn, seeing this slow rise of the coronavirus. | ||
It does have a way with your imagination when you think about could we in six months be looking at something where you've got like millions of people sick and hundreds of thousands of people dead and it's totally transformed the landscape, it's totally dominated like | ||
there will look back on this in history and say 2020 the beginning of this global health emergency this global health catastrophe it is something to think about but that's the coronavirus we're going to move on and and get into our news here We're gonna dive in, talk a little bit about Afghanistan. | ||
Not much in the way, you know, that's the thing. | ||
With a health emergency like that, it's like, well, this is happening. | ||
It's not like this is being done to people. | ||
Maybe it is. | ||
Maybe it's a bioweapon, right? | ||
But it's not like a war where you could talk about, is this good? | ||
Should they have done this? | ||
Or whatever. | ||
It's like, well, eh, better just be safe. | ||
But we're gonna move on and talk about Afghanistan. | ||
Like I said, this is a huge development and Seems like not too many people are talking about it. | ||
Seems like it's, uh, they're trying deliberately to suppress the good news here. | ||
And the development is not, again, it's not like it's a guaranteed surefire thing, but it looks like they have started to carve out a path to a withdrawal in Afghanistan, which is great news, because if you're not aware, the war in Afghanistan has been going on since 2001. | ||
It's the longest war in American history and we read the Afghan papers I think in January or December those came out. | ||
You might have remembered the Washington Post recently leaked like tens of thousands of previously classified and confidential documents pertaining to the conduct of the military in the war in Afghanistan. | ||
And it is just outrageous the kind of abuse, the waste, the fraud that has been going on, how much we've been misled about this war effort. | ||
There is no good reason. | ||
There wasn't a good reason to begin with, but there is no good reason that this war has gone on for as long as it has. | ||
There's just no argument to be made that this should continue. | ||
We talked about some of these papers that got released again, I think a couple months ago, maybe a month ago, where they were talking about how every single military vehicle in Afghanistan Trucks, tanks, armored vehicles. | ||
They have been idling 24 hours a day, every day, for 20 years. | ||
Every single vehicle. | ||
And the reason is so that they can spend money on gas. | ||
Because they have so much money, they literally don't know what to do with it. | ||
That was one of the documents. | ||
One out of, I think, 50 or 60,000 documents. | ||
that got released was a report where I think some bureaucrat was saying something to the effect of, are we really going to idle all these vehicles forever? | ||
And it was more supposed to be hyperbole. | ||
And this other bureaucrat said, yes, yes, that is actually exactly what we're doing. | ||
We're idling all the vehicles. | ||
They're all running 24-7, 365 days a year for 24, or 24, for 20 years in order that we can spend the money. | ||
And the list of abuses like that, that's one, goes on and on and on. | ||
They talked about how the annual cost of every single, every individual, military personnel in Afghanistan is $1 million. dollars. | ||
Every year, for each soldier, it costs us $1,000,000 to have them over there. | ||
So you imagine, if you at one point had more than 100,000 troops in the Middle East, every single one of them costs a million dollars per year. | ||
The numbers boggle the mind. | ||
In any case, I don't need to tell you. | ||
We need to end the war. | ||
But I'll read you the report on the latest and all the details. | ||
This is from the New York Post. | ||
It says, quote, The U.S. | ||
and the Taliban have reached an understanding that could lead to a significant and nationwide reduction in violence across Afghanistan and ultimately end America's oldest war, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. | ||
A seven-day reduction of violence period will begin Friday night, and if it is successful, U.S. | ||
and Taliban officials will sign the long sought-after peace agreement on February 29th in Doha, Qatar, according to a senior State Department official. | ||
The two parties have been engaged in extensive talks intended to facilitate a political settlement to end the war in Afghanistan, reduce U.S. | ||
and allied forces' presence, and ensure that no terrorist group ever uses Afghan soil to threaten the United States or our allies, according to Mike Pompeo. | ||
Intra-Afghan negotiations will begin soon after the February 29th signing and, quote, will build on this fundamental step to deliver a comprehensive and permanent ceasefire and the future political roadmap for Afghanistan. | ||
He says, quote, the only way to achieve a sustainable peace in Afghanistan is for Afghans to come together and agree on the way forward. | ||
The Taliban issued its own statement on the deal on Friday. | ||
The Taliban said, quote, quote, Taliban said, quote, quote, Taliban said, quote, quote, Taliban To participate in the signing ceremony, make arrangements for the release of prisoners, structure a path for intra-Afghan negotiations with various political parties of the country, and finally lay the groundwork for peace across the country with the withdrawal of all foreign forces. | ||
The war began in October 2001 and if the deal is signed it would mark an important step for President Trump toward meeting his campaign pledge to withdraw American troops from Afghanistan. | ||
And, you know, I have to laugh a little bit because they're doing these negotiations, they're doing They're doing these talks. | ||
And Mike Pompeo says that, well, the condition that has to be met for Afghanistan to have all of our troops out of there is Afghans have to come together and unite and rebuild the country. | ||
That's never going to happen. | ||
That is never, ever going to happen. | ||
First of all, This idea that the Afghan people are going to take the leadership, they're going to take the initiative and bring the country together. | ||
These people have no political agency. | ||
These are mountain people with like 90-85 IQs. | ||
And they have never had anything that looks like a country. | ||
You understand that this is like tribes hanging out in the desert and the mountains. | ||
This is not a coherent civilization. | ||
This is not a coherent country. | ||
When people talk about, oh, they have to... | ||
Come together and unite and unite under the same banner and have a country that is not in the cards. | ||
That is not going to happen. | ||
And I guarantee that the minute we get out of there, that country is going to blow up. | ||
And it will be torn in pieces. | ||
And in pieces. | ||
It was never a coherent whole. | ||
And that is just simply how it is over there. | ||
And we just have to live with that. | ||
But this is what we've been hearing for 20 years. | ||
Is, well, it's not a good time to leave because, well, we're just holding it all together. | ||
You have to hold it all together! | ||
Because it's not a one single thing. | ||
It's not a coherent thing. | ||
The nature of a place like that is entropy and disorder and chaos and disunion. | ||
And that's because of the terrain, it's the history, it's the culture, it's the people. | ||
The idea that the American military can hold every anarchic country In static control, that is insanity. | ||
But that is the pitch. | ||
They're saying that, well, if we pull out too soon, the country's going to blow up. | ||
And if the country blows up, then you're going to have these people who will use Afghanistan and use the terrain as a base to launch operations against the United States. | ||
Well, that on its face is ridiculous logic. | ||
The idea that if there's a place in the world that is controlled by our enemies, or not controlled by a government, that they could use that as a springboard and that would cause problems for the United States. | ||
Where is the flaw in that logic? | ||
Well, there's places all over the world that we don't have control over. | ||
There's places all over the world Where a government doesn't have control over it, or an ally doesn't have control over it. | ||
There are places in the United States where we don't even know what's going on. | ||
There was last year, or maybe two years ago, a terrorist training camp in Arizona. | ||
Do you remember that? | ||
It was a story that got totally memory hold, and I don't remember all the specifics for that reason. | ||
But there was a story about maybe it was Arizona or New Mexico where there was a terrorist training compound and there ended up being a lot more like fishy details but point being just look at the history of the United States. | ||
Look at things like Waco or the Unabomber or you know you could look at all kinds of examples and that's not to make you know like a valid judgment about Waco and you know things have gone on in the country but but the point is to say that Because there is terrain that the US government doesn't know everything that's going on and doesn't have complete and total control over it, that's a story of the entire planet. | ||
The idea that we could control everything that goes on, on every parcel of land in the world, is ridiculous. | ||
We can't even do that in our own country. | ||
People are able to launch terrorist attacks in our country, from our country. | ||
So to say that we have to remain in Afghanistan because we will not allow Afghanistan to be a place where terrorists might group together or something, this is ridiculous. | ||
The way that you prevent terrorism, the way that you prevent these kinds of attacks, is with intelligence. | ||
And maybe you have some kind of presence where you know what's going on. | ||
You know, there are ways to do this with special forces or spies. | ||
Or better yet, you just simply shut down the borders. | ||
You can't launch a terrorist attack from Afghanistan if you don't have people in the country from Afghanistan. | ||
How hard is that? | ||
And which is actually a more difficult policy to sustain? | ||
Does it make more sense to station troops wherever terrorists might be hiding? | ||
Or simply close the borders to the places where the terrorists might be hiding? | ||
Instead of having a force in Somalia that is trying to engage this non-state actor, which is Somalia itself. | ||
Somalia is this completely anarchic place. | ||
It's all different clans. | ||
In these complex networks of clans and these blood feuds that go back for so many years, instead of having people in this insane situation, this country which is just like totally, you know, ridiculous, why don't we just close our borders to Somalia? | ||
Why don't we just close our borders to Afghanistan? | ||
Just close our borders to Sudan, like Trump suggested with the travel ban. | ||
Just ban all Muslims. | ||
Problem solved. | ||
You can't use any Muslim country as a springboard for a terrorist attack if no Muslims are allowed in the country. | ||
That would solve the whole issue. | ||
Instead of having troops stationed from Pakistan to Morocco, let's just ban all the people from Pakistan to Morocco. | ||
Problem solved! | ||
It saves us trillions of dollars a year. | ||
So I have to read the statement and say, if this is the logic that we're going into it with, we're never going to leave. | ||
And I think that's maybe the point, right? | ||
Is the idea that until these completely impossible conditions are satisfied, we cannot leave the region. | ||
Well that's why we've been in there for 20 years. | ||
We should just say, we've been in there far too long. | ||
We were in there for too long 10 years ago, and it's been 20 years. | ||
Let's just cut our losses and get out of there. | ||
You know, tie it in a nice bow, do whatever you need to do to dot your I's and cross your T's and whatever, but just give a timetable and say, we are just going to begin to pull our troops out of here. | ||
It's done. | ||
Because this idea of withdrawing with valor, it's like the idea with Nixon and Vietnamization. | ||
It's almost essentially the same strategy. | ||
If you remember, Donald Trump, when he got inaugurated in 2017, he actually began a troop surge in Afghanistan. | ||
He doubled the amount of troops in Afghanistan. | ||
He dropped the MOAB there. | ||
He was aggressively pursuing terrorists and leaders in Afghanistan. | ||
And that was very similar to Richard Nixon's policy of Vietnamization, where you increase the amount of bombings and increase the amount of troops, and then you're able to do this retreat with honor, so to speak. | ||
You're able to withdraw with honor, you really go balls to the wall, you push as hard against the enemy as you can, you establish some level of control, and then you're able to bail. | ||
And I think that was the Trump administration's intention here, something very similar. | ||
Troop surge, shows a force, threatened to kill everyone in the country, and then you say, you know what, we're going to draw it down, and we could say, okay, we won, and now we're going home. | ||
But we should just not care about whether we won or lost, or care about the situation, because if that's the way it's going to be, and we'll see how this plays out with this current agreement, my fear is that we have put forward a seven-day timetable now with this current truce agreement. | ||
This seven-day, what is it, ceasefire, or what are they calling it? | ||
There's a technical term that they use, but they're doing this seven-day temporary truce, and then if that works, if there's no shootings or bombings or anything like that, then they're going to sign this agreement on the 29th. | ||
Well, my fear is you're going to have a bombing in that week, or maybe have a bombing next week, or in two weeks, or something, after the agreement is signed. | ||
Maybe you have a big car bomb. | ||
Maybe the people that are benefiting from all these military contracts set off a bomb themselves. | ||
You have no way of knowing. | ||
We're not on the ground. | ||
The press isn't on the ground. | ||
How would anybody know if that was a bomb from the Taliban, you know, from these hill people riding on horses from the 14th century, or if that was the military industrial complex or the contractors that are benefiting from it? | ||
You have no idea. | ||
And either one could happen at any moment. | ||
And are we prepared to say that if a bomb goes off, that we're going to rip up the truce and rip up the peace talks and say, we have to stay, a bomb went off in Afghanistan? | ||
Because if those are the conditions, then it's never going to happen. | ||
We just have to commit and say, okay, it doesn't matter. | ||
It literally doesn't matter what happens there. | ||
You could have a million car bombs go off. | ||
We are getting out, because that is just the nature of that country. | ||
And maybe you leave, you know, a couple of guys, you leave a residual special ops force, and maybe pull those guys out later, but there has to be a commitment to say, we're getting out no matter what. | ||
Because that's how we've been kicking the can down the road for all this time is, well, we'll just withdraw after this. | ||
We'll just withdraw after this. | ||
Well, this has to be met. | ||
You know, it's like, it's like, just one more turn. | ||
Just one more turn. | ||
I just want to play one more, you know, I want to play Fortnite. | ||
Just one more game. | ||
You know, I just never, and then it never ends. | ||
So, that's my take on this truce agreement. | ||
I hope it works. | ||
I hope it goes well, obviously. | ||
If we could end the war in Afghanistan, that would be a huge deal. | ||
That would be like an historical moment, right? | ||
I mean, obviously. | ||
That would be a moment in history that we would close a chapter on our history as a country Ending these forever wars and I'm sure that you would get momentum then after closing down Afghanistan to then Galvanize people behind closing down the war in Iraq and maybe finally pulling everybody out of Syria and so on I don't think you'll ever get zero troops in the Middle East but at the very least we could close the book close the chapter on | ||
You know, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of ground forces that are trying to occupy and nation-build and just burning cash and so on. | ||
So that would be a big deal for the country. | ||
It would also be a huge boon for Trump's reelection. | ||
If he could campaign on, I got a trade deal with China, I ended the war in Afghanistan, I built 500 miles of wall, and so on. | ||
If we could tie all that up in the next, what would that be, in the next nine months? | ||
That would be one of the most successful first terms of a president in U.S. | ||
history. | ||
I would say that. | ||
So, I hope it works out, but seeing these kinds of conditions laid out where they talk about, well, Afghans have to come together and we just gotta unite and all this, I'm thinking, if they really mean that and they're not just saying that, not gonna work. | ||
But, we'll see. | ||
But we'll see what happens. | ||
We're gonna move on and talk about this Russia stuff. | ||
We're gonna move on to our featured story. | ||
For whatever reason, whenever I talk about Afghanistan, nobody wants to watch. | ||
That's why I had to put that at the beginning of the show. | ||
Because if I titled the show, like, Afghanistan Withdrawal, nobody would watch. | ||
Nobody likes that. | ||
It's like, nobody cares about Afghanistan, and up until the coronavirus, nobody cares about China or North Korea. | ||
And I've noticed that for... I've been doing this show for years, and whenever I title the show, and it has Afghanistan in the headline, oh, nobody wants to watch. | ||
I title it with China, North Korea, and it's about geopolitics, nobody wants to watch. | ||
Which I don't get. | ||
I'm so interested in international affairs. | ||
I'm so interested in war and all these things. | ||
you know, like an analytical point of view, not like I'm into war. | ||
I'm, you know, from analyzing it and as a curiosity. | ||
And for whatever reason, people are like, oh, it's Afghanistan tonight. | ||
I think I'll just, I don't know what you guys do when you're not watching this. | ||
I think I'll just listen to lo-fi beats to study and relax to instead while I play Terraria or, you know, whatever. | ||
So I had to sneak that one in there. | ||
You're going to hear about Afghanistan, whether you like it or not. | ||
But we're going to move on to our featured story here about Russia, Russia, Russia. | ||
Normally, I don't like to talk about Russia because... | ||
And by Russia, I mean like the Russian hacking and the Russian interference and all that. | ||
Because it is just so obviously a game, you know. | ||
None of that is real. | ||
It is all gaslighting. | ||
It is all a PSYOP. | ||
The Russian collusion narrative. | ||
And we know. | ||
You've been watching the show for long enough. | ||
I didn't even cover when they were doing that big investigation in Congress, when Robert Mueller was testifying. | ||
I don't really even know most of the details. | ||
I can't do it. | ||
You know, I tune in to Rachel Maddow on MSNBC and, you know, they have all these, the phone call and the Trump Tower meeting and Sergey Kislyak and Jeff Sessions and, you know, they've got, they've got all, all the resistance boomers have every part of it memorized. | ||
It's like a soap opera. | ||
And they've got every, oh, but the meeting and the phone call and the Kislyak and this guy and then, you know, Papadopoulos and all. | ||
And I'm like, who cares? | ||
It's all, none of that matters. | ||
It's like WWE or soap opera. | ||
It's just the cereal that doesn't matter. | ||
So, but we are going to talk about this because maybe this is the start of season two, you know, if that was season one of the Russia soap opera. | ||
Maybe this is the season 2 trailer and we'll talk a little bit about the significance of it but now not only Donald Trump but also Bernie Sanders are being told, they were told by United States intelligence that Russia is planning on helping them in the 2020 election. | ||
Russia is helping Bernie Sanders to win the primary and Russia is also helping Donald Trump to be re-elected. | ||
It's pretty crazy stuff. | ||
And I'll read you each report here. | ||
The Trump one is from the New York Times. | ||
The Sanders one is from the Washington Post. | ||
on trump it says quote intelligence officials warned house lawmakers last week that russia was interfering in the 2020 campaign to try to get president trump re-elected ah according to five people familiar with the matter the day after the february 13th briefing the lawmakers the president berated joseph mcguire the outgoing acting director of national excuse me intelligence for allowing it to take place according to people familiar with the exchange | ||
President Trump was particularly irritated that Representative Adam Schiff and the leader of the impeachment proceedings was at the briefing. | ||
During the briefing to the House Intelligence Committee, Mr. Trump's allies challenged the conclusions, arguing that he had been tough on Russia and had strengthened European security. | ||
Some intelligence officials viewed the briefing as a tactical error, saying the conclusions could have been delivered in a less pointed manner or left out entirely to avoid angering Republicans. | ||
The intelligence officials have previously told lawmakers that Russia's interference campaign was continuing. | ||
Last week's briefing included what appeared to be new information that Russia intended to interfere with the 2020 Democratic primaries as well. | ||
And then this is the Washington Post. | ||
It says federal officials told the Democratic frontrunner Bernie Sanders that Russia is trying to help his campaign in an effort to meddle in the primary. | ||
The Post reports, President Trump and lawmakers have been informed, although it's unclear what kind of assistance Russia has attempted to provide. | ||
That part is always suspicious. | ||
The Wall Street Journal reported there was specific intelligence compelling enough that Sanders needed to be alerted, though the information didn't reach the scale of what was found during Russia's efforts to interfere in Trump's 2016 campaign. | ||
So this is what they're going with. | ||
You know, this is... | ||
This is just the strategy. | ||
It's almost cartoonish. | ||
It's hard to believe that Democrats believe that this is compelling to anybody. | ||
Do they really believe that? | ||
Because you have to imagine that at a certain point it's the boy who cried wolf, you know? | ||
Oh, well, Trump got elected, it was Russia. | ||
Trump's social media stuff, oh, it was Russia. | ||
People didn't like Star Wars, it was Russia. | ||
And then it's like, it's already ridiculous! | ||
And now that Bernie Sanders, an insurgent, anti-establishment, Democratic candidate, is poised to go all the way and win the nomination in the Democratic Party, What is the argument? | ||
Oh, well, he's being held by Russia. | ||
Who believes this? | ||
Does anybody actually believe this? | ||
I wonder if you went out on the street and asked Democrats, Republicans, you know, a healthy mix of people if they really believe this stuff. | ||
I wonder how many people, like real people in the world, not journalists, not, you know, people that write for the New York Times, not politicians, but if you ask real people if anybody actually buys it. | ||
I don't know how it's possible at this point. | ||
I don't know how we could be beaten over the head after so many years with this, and you could have resistance boomers saying, yup, yeah, yeah, all these birdie bros, Chapo Trap House, they're getting money from Russia. | ||
Everyone's getting money from Russia. | ||
It just doesn't make any sense. | ||
But we know that's how it goes. | ||
We've been subject to this since the election even happened. | ||
You know, the FISA court warrants to investigate Donald Trump for the Russia connection. | ||
The FISA court was approached for that in June 2016. | ||
That was, what, five months before the 2016 election. | ||
So, we've been hearing about this forever. | ||
We knew about this for as long as it's been going on. | ||
So, we get it when it comes to Russia. | ||
And now, the latest thing is with Sanders. | ||
And it's become clear that this is just simply the go-to. | ||
When the establishment does not like what you're saying, when the establishment is afraid of a political victory, they blame it on Russia. | ||
We saw it with Trump, now we're seeing it with Sanders. | ||
And there is a level of satisfaction that comes with this one in particular. | ||
When it's coming down on Trump, or it's coming down on a right-wing person, it's like, of course. | ||
I remember Glenn Beck did a whole whiteboard about the alt-right, and he connected Richard Spencer and all these different guys, Jared Taylor to Alexander Dugan, and Dugan is connected to Putin, which is like, I mean, you know, those connections are real, but the idea that Putin is controlling all these people, I don't know if I go that far. | ||
So we have been subject to this forever, but now to see that the left is being called the Russian hackers, that there is some delicious irony in that. | ||
There is a little bit of satisfaction to see all these people that for years, and you know, I never took, I never put much stock in that. | ||
You get a boomer saying, oh, you're a Russian bot. | ||
Oh, okay, blocked. | ||
But there is some satisfaction that now they are being called Russians and they got to say, oh no, no, no, we're not. | ||
What are you kidding me? | ||
We're not Russians. | ||
They just, they're just afraid of Sanders. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
Tell it to the judge. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
Oh, yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I think it's Russian bots. | ||
I see somebody supporting Bernie Sanders. | ||
Oh, I don't know. | ||
Russian bot alert. | ||
That's what the intelligence, that's what Robert Mueller said. | ||
Oh, you know Robert Mueller, that really serious FBI agent, protector, vanguard of our democratic values. | ||
He said it's Russian bots. | ||
Hey, I believe in our civic institutions. | ||
And it's so funny, and the reason they're doing it now to Sanders, as we know, is because they do not want Sanders, obviously, to be the nominee. | ||
They rolled it out against Trump because they don't like that Trump is president, and now they roll it out against Sanders because they do not want Sanders to be the nominee. | ||
That is a clear effort to undermine his credibility because they know that he is on his way to winning the nomination. | ||
This ties in perfectly with Coincidentally, out of pure coincidence, pure serendipity, that Bernie Sanders has now emerged as the frontrunner and, by the way, the only candidate that can probably secure the nomination outright with the majority of the pledged delegates. | ||
And we talked about this on Wednesday during the debate. | ||
And we talked about it during the New Hampshire primary. | ||
That if you're looking at the democratic system for the nomination, I explained it before, but I'll explain it again. | ||
You've got, I think it's just under 3,000. | ||
I'm not sure exactly the number. | ||
But there are so many pledged delegates in the country. | ||
I don't have the numbers for this right in front of me like I did during the debate. | ||
But you've got, I think it's maybe 4,000, just under 4,000, like 3,900, something like that. | ||
I think you have like 3,900 pledged delegates where The candidates go through all the different states, all the different states hold their contests to decide the electors for their state. | ||
You know, we just had Iowa and New Hampshire. | ||
Because Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg won the caucus in Iowa, they are going to get Iowa's pledged delegates, the delegates that represent Iowa in the nominating contest at the convention. | ||
So they picked up delegates in Iowa, they pick up delegates in New Hampshire, they pick up delegates across the states in proportion to the percentage of the vote that they win in each contest, whether it's a caucus or a primary held across the states. | ||
And in total, all the delegates from all these different state contests number just under 4,000. | ||
Just under 4,000 pledged delegates that are coming from these state contests. | ||
At the convention in the summer, you will have a ballot where all the pledged delegates will assemble from all the different states and territories, and they will do a roll call, you might remember from 2016, and the delegates will say, you know, from Iowa, nine delegates, I pledge my support for Bernie Sanders, nine delegates, I pledge my support for Bernie Sanders, or so on. | ||
And if a candidate does not win that first ballot outright, if they do not win a majority of those pledged delegates outright in the first ballot, Then all the delegates vote again except Except this time you get something like 700 superdelegates that are now factored in. | ||
So now instead of needing, I think it's 1,990, Delegates to get a majority of the pledge delegates. | ||
You now need something like 2300, a majority of delegates and superdelegates. | ||
So now superdelegates jump in, the pledge delegates get to make a new decision, and then I second ballot the candidate that wins 2300, a majority of all the delegates combined, then they become the nominee. | ||
It's important why I'm explaining this because what we saw in Iowa and New Hampshire and the trend that we're seeing now in Nevada, which is on Saturday, tomorrow, South Carolina next week and Super Tuesday, is that no other candidate will even come close to winning a majority outright. | ||
The only candidate that has the national infrastructure, that has the polling, that has the pledge delegates so far, to go all the way and win the nomination outright, the pledge delegates, without a second ballot, without any kind of jockeying, without the superdelegates, before the superdelegates even get factored in, is Sanders. | ||
He's the only one. | ||
He is by far and away the frontrunner, and in a way, in a unique category of his own, because no other candidate can even win at this point. | ||
Like, that is... | ||
That is almost set in stone, and we'll see for sure whether that shakes out by March 3rd, Super Tuesday, but that's the way it's looking. | ||
And that was only... that is a recent development that this is the dynamic. | ||
What they're hedging on now is that Michael Bloomberg or Pete Buttigieg will be able to, during a contested convention, win on the second ballot. | ||
That if Bernie Sanders doesn't win a majority of the delegates outright, and they have to do a second ballot, that Buttigieg or Bloomberg will be able to lobby and jockey With support from the party and they'll be able to clinch the nomination even though they might have had significantly less delegates, significantly less support than Bernie Sanders. | ||
Now the reason I'm explaining that is because that is a recent development and that's why the story comes out now. | ||
And it was engineered by the federal government. | ||
This was engineered by the intelligence services. | ||
The Washington Post reports today, in a total coincidence, the biggest coincidence, it just so happens to completely work out for the Democratic Party establishment, that the Russians are helping the Sanders campaign. | ||
And we don't know the ways in which they're helping, and the ways in which they're helping are much less significant than the ways they're helping Trump, but the evidence is compelling enough that we have to tell the Sanders campaign. | ||
And by the way, the evidence is also compelling enough to tell everyone in the country and to tell the Washington Post and to remind everybody that Bernie Sanders is cheating, Bernie Sanders is getting support from the Russians, they want him to be the nominee because he's going to lose, he's going to beat Donald Trump, and hey, voters in Nevada, voters in South Carolina, voters in California, Texas, New York, don't vote for this guy! | ||
He's gonna lose! | ||
Vote for Bloomberg! | ||
Vote for Buttigieg! | ||
And that's all that it is. | ||
And what does it tell you that at this point, the political game, like the curtain has been pushed aside, the facade is gone, the mask is off, what used to be, and I, look, I don't know, I'm 21, so me analyzing this stuff on this level, I've only been doing this for like five years, right? | ||
Watching the news obsessively and so on, so I don't know. | ||
But it appears to me That any kind of semblance of the illusion of politics has been thrown out. | ||
I feel like maybe before you had like this kind of suspension of disbelief when you go to the ballot box or when you watch the news. | ||
That what is happening is a story. | ||
A story of politicians that care deeply about the country. | ||
Great leaders, men of integrity, and they just don't agree about how to govern, and they're fighting for their little lives, they're fighting for their vision of the country, and they're joined with the coalition of families and like-minded Americans to make things happen. | ||
There was like a suspension of disbelief, like going to see a movie. | ||
That that is what politics was, and You know, well, like seeing a movie, you know that it's all just lights and magic and sound and cameras and equipment and studios and so on. | ||
When you're watching the movie, you're in it, you're believing it. | ||
In the same way with politics, maybe on a level you know that it's people getting murdered and it's people getting cheated and it's money and it's pork bills and it's all this, but you want to believe. | ||
You want to believe that Barack Obama is the first black president And he doesn't believe in a white and black America. | ||
He believes in a United States of America. | ||
And he's a guy that had a dream. | ||
The dreams of his father. | ||
You know, all this. | ||
And now, they're just giving you the finger. | ||
They're just getting on TV and they're saying... | ||
No, no, no, it's not gonna be Sanders. | ||
No, no, you know people are like hey I think we want Sanders to win and the lizard people get on television. | ||
They say fuck you It's not gonna be Bernie Sanders. | ||
What are you an idiot vote for the guy with 60 billion dollars instead? | ||
Oh, you're not gonna do that? | ||
Okay, well, we're going to get the DNI to come forward and say that Russia's helping him. | ||
And we're just going to start lying, and the government's going to get involved, and the intel community's going to get involved, because you chose wrong, and now it's time for you to be punished. | ||
Like they don't care anymore! | ||
There's this alliance, and we all know this by the way, we have known this, but there's this obvious direct alliance between the intelligence community, the deep state, the bureaucrats, these like governmental forces. | ||
It's the lobbyists, the interests, the deep state, Wall Street, finance, the contractors, all this. | ||
It's the media, which is the big networks, radio, print, publications, social media, now with You know, Jack Dorsey, Mark Zuckerberg, these characters, and it's the parties. | ||
Specifically, the Democratic Party establishment, and to a far lesser extent, the Republican Party establishment. | ||
And all these different institutions, which by the way, these are all, these are all the institutions of power in America. | ||
And like academia, think tanks, you know, maybe I left out a few, but... | ||
All the institutions of power in the country are working together. | ||
There is no wall. | ||
There's no firewall separating them. | ||
Maybe there is some jockeying for influence or something. | ||
But they're all working together. | ||
And they're all working together towards the same outcome. | ||
They're all on the same page. | ||
They are coordinating. | ||
And they're all working towards the same vision. | ||
Towards what? | ||
Well, if you talk about what the endgame is, you get banned, we're gonna lie about you, we're gonna call you a name, we're gonna get you fired from your job, the intelligence community's gonna come and take your gun away and arrest you and put you in jail and whatever. | ||
But this is, to me, like naked evidence that that is happening. | ||
And it was like that with the Russia investigation and Trump, and like with this, it just proves that it's non-partisan. | ||
This just goes to show, it's not like it's this Democrat... Oh, it's these Democrats! | ||
Corrupt Democrats! | ||
Corrupt Democrats are just trying to make Trump look bad with this Russia stuff! | ||
These corrupt Democrats! | ||
Wrong! | ||
Because the Democrats are going against Bernie Sanders too. | ||
It is this entire Leviathan state and everything orbiting the state. | ||
That is what we're talking about. | ||
And they're all in it together. | ||
Intelligence community comes forward, tells the campaign. | ||
The Washington Post reports it. | ||
It is in the service of the interests of the DNC. | ||
Do you not see what's going on here? | ||
And maybe you get it. | ||
Maybe you do get it. | ||
But it is important sometimes to think it all the way through. | ||
And what do I mean by that? | ||
We all know, we all have kind of like this very general idea that it's corrupt. | ||
We all have a very general idea about the elites, the globalists, the establishment, and so on. | ||
We see this Russia stuff and we have like a general sort of like Unarticulated idea that, oh, like, this is a hoax. | ||
It's not true. | ||
They're doing it to screw him. | ||
But it's important to really break it down, to really articulate every component of this and then just realize how bad it is. | ||
Oh, it's corrupt. | ||
Oh, it's a hoax. | ||
No, it's like the intelligence community is fabricating intelligence, working with the parties, and then collaborating with the media to take down people running for president. | ||
You know, somebody like Bernie Sanders, as much as I don't agree with him, I do kind of believe that he is just like a guy who's independent of the establishment. | ||
Maybe he's a little corrupt, maybe he's a little bit of a hypocrite, but he is somebody that actually is at this big level running for president and challenging the establishment. | ||
And they're not going to allow that. | ||
They're not going to allow some guy to just waltz in there and get the nomination. | ||
Or, you know, if there is, you know, I think it was proof with Trump that that can happen, that they do still count all the votes and so on, but they're trying to ensure that that has the least likelihood, least probability chance of happening. | ||
And it's important then to spell all that out. | ||
This is the level of collusion. | ||
This is who we're talking about. | ||
So that's what it is with Sanders. | ||
That's what it is with Trump. | ||
This is what you call a conspiracy theory, by the way. | ||
People that talk about this are conspiracy theorists. | ||
That's a conspiracy theory. | ||
And I say that because whenever you talk about elites conspiring, what are you branding as a conspiracy theorist and what's the connotation for that? | ||
Tinfoil hat, crazy, disreputable, somebody that's not credible, all these things, right? | ||
They call you a conspiracy theorist and that word is supposed to brand you as crazy. | ||
No, there's the media. | ||
Trusted. | ||
Legitimate. | ||
Big money. | ||
You know, these are the news. | ||
The news doesn't lie. | ||
Conspiracy theorist. | ||
Dirty guy in a van. | ||
Crazy. | ||
You know, eccentric. | ||
Weird. | ||
Liar. | ||
Dangerous. | ||
All these things. | ||
And what is a conspiracy theory? | ||
It is a theory, which is something that you cannot prove, that the elites or other people in the society are conspiring, which means working together in secret. | ||
Is there any doubt that people are working together in secret at the highest levels? | ||
And would that be a theory because it is not imminently provable? | ||
It is not testable like a science experiment or something? | ||
Of course! | ||
You are not a serious person if you are not a conspiracy theorist. | ||
You are not a serious person if you do not engage with conspiracy theories. | ||
That is the way of the world. | ||
Conspiracies which are unproven because we do not see what happens, for example, in Afghanistan, or in the Persian Gulf, or the conversations in the Pentagon, or the conversations in the Intel community. | ||
The world is conspiracy theories. | ||
That's the only way to explain it. | ||
But, and this is maybe the most important thing, The very idea of that is, you know, the connotation is not credible, not legitimate, crazy, and so on. | ||
Don't look at that, don't engage with it. | ||
It's dangerous, it's misinformation, and so on. | ||
So I see this thing with Sanders and it like triggers my... | ||
Triggers my paranoia, my neuroticism when I say that this is not, this is no good. | ||
Not, it's not anything we don't know, like I said. | ||
Not groundbreaking. | ||
Oh hey, by the way, everyone at the top is working together. | ||
Oh, you know, newsflash, right? | ||
But it is funny to see how, to really lay it out and just really bask and enjoy the corruption. | ||
really take a look at it in broad daylight for everything that it is, every nuance, every part of it. | ||
And that's what's going on with Sanders. | ||
So for that reason, I hope he wins. | ||
I don't even care anymore. | ||
I just want to see destruction. | ||
And I don't mean that in the way of violence. | ||
I just mean credibility for the institutions, the institutions themselves. | ||
You've got to think about it this way. | ||
The only way to bring down the elite is to create instability. | ||
That is the only opportunity for somebody to challenge the elite to rise up. | ||
The elite loves when everything is coordinated, everything is tight, everything is solid, it is immovable, it is static. | ||
Because the status quo then gets to dictate all the rules and they sit on top of it. | ||
But when it starts to shake a little bit and there's cracks in the system, it's through those cracks then that we're able to rise up and exploit vulnerabilities and then we're able to make change. | ||
So at this point, I'm just forward doing damage. | ||
Just take a big wrecking ball and just keep fucking smashing. | ||
And sorry for the language, but it always gets me heated to think about this. | ||
Just keep smashing the edifice of I don't care what the ideology is. | ||
I don't care what the policy is. | ||
We just need to create enough of an opportunity such that what is going on can be exposed and displaced. | ||
So that's Sanders. | ||
That's all this. | ||
What the hell? | ||
Sanders for the nomination. | ||
to be done so sanders trump i don't care what the ideology is i don't care what the policy is we just need to create enough of an opportunity such that what is going on can be exposed and displaced so that's sanders that's all this what the hell sanders for the nomination let's see sanders versus trump let's you know who even cares anymore let's Let's see Sanders versus Trump. | ||
Let's have Sanders go in. | ||
Now, don't get me wrong. | ||
Don't vote this way. | ||
Sanders is going to be a nightmare for our movement and so on. | ||
But, you know, let's see Trump smash Sanders. | ||
Let's just see Trump do a bunch of ridiculous stuff. | ||
Shut down the government forever. | ||
You know, go to war with Mexico. | ||
It doesn't even matter anymore. | ||
We just need to see an opportunity arise where some of these people can get cleaned out. | ||
That's Russia. | ||
That's the latest from the lizard people. | ||
They're telling you, don't vote for Sanders. | ||
He's the wrong choice. | ||
He's with the Russians. | ||
Vote for Michael Bloomberg. | ||
Vote for the Jewish media billionaire. | ||
Instead, he will be a fair and moderate choice. | ||
He's a likable and relatable guy. | ||
He eats at Subway. | ||
Don't you eat at Subway, you dumb animals? | ||
He eats at Subway. | ||
Vote for the Jewish media billionaire. | ||
He doesn't suck blood from babies. | ||
That's... what? | ||
That's liable. | ||
He doesn't, he does not eat babies. | ||
That's crazy. | ||
He eats Subway, lots of onions, lots of pickles on my sandwich. | ||
He's a, he's a New York guy. | ||
Hey, oh, he's a real New York guy. | ||
Real, real neighborhood city guy. | ||
Am I right? | ||
He eats at Subway. | ||
Ah, he smokes on cigars and he's one of the guys. | ||
He doesn't eat babies at night. | ||
He's not drinking their blood because it contains adrenochrome and that allows him to commune with spirits. | ||
Adrenochrome 16 times more powerful than DMT. | ||
And allows you to commune with demons from a higher spiritual dimension? | ||
What? | ||
That's crazy. | ||
He put up a billboard that says that Trump eats burnt steak. | ||
What a scamp. | ||
What a rascal. | ||
He's throwing people in woodchippers? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Okay, so that's the Russia stuff. | ||
That's all a joke, by the way. | ||
Please do not Google Adrenochrome. | ||
That is all a joke. | ||
That's just a little comedy. | ||
That is just a little gross out. | ||
Gross out, that's real crazy performance art. | ||
Comedy. | ||
Not anything based in reality. | ||
But we're gonna move on and take a look at our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
Bloomberg. | ||
Vote for Michael Bloo... Vote for Shekelberg. | ||
Ah, the billionaire, Shekelberg. | ||
unidentified
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3 foot tall, 3 foot tall, Shekelberg. | |
You know, he's 150 years old. | ||
He's been kept alive by the miracles of medical science. | ||
He's 3 feet tall and he looks evil. | ||
And, you know, he's a rapist. | ||
pedophile baby killer and uh but he's but we're gonna put makeup on him and he's gonna play wheel of fortune okay uh we gotta read our super chats i could you know we could go crazy mode all night but let's see we've got nick or nash who says first coronavirus case in israel Horrible news. | ||
but I'm sure Mark Fuentes is happy. | ||
Yeah, Mark Fuentes, that anti-Semitic Holocaust belittler, I'm sure he's really jumping for joy. | ||
I'm not. | ||
I think that's terrible. | ||
I do not want coronavirus to spread, and especially not to the chosen people. | ||
Anna Mae says, I love you, Mark Ponte. | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
Well, you may have me confused. | ||
I'm not Mark Ponte. | ||
I'm Nick Fuentes. | ||
Mark Ponte is a different guy. | ||
He's real evil. | ||
He's involved in a lot of serious stuff. | ||
Pine Cone says, reading Pat Buchanan. | ||
Thanks for recommending. | ||
That's good to hear. | ||
You're welcome for recommending. | ||
Yeah, Pat is the best. | ||
And it might be helpful. | ||
This is what I do. | ||
Whenever I read Pat Buchanan, I have a, well, and books in general, I have a notebook beside me. | ||
And Pat Buchanan, if you read him, you notice that it's full of literary allusions and all kinds of, like, knowledge in there. | ||
So I always keep, like, a little notebook, and I jot down if he references a book or an author or a quote or a poem or something like that. | ||
Because it really is, like, a rich text. | ||
And if you just kind of blast by that, you're not going to get the full effect. | ||
So... | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
base dollar says anybody see the price of gold today coronavirus I don't know I'm not a market guy so I I wouldn't know but yeah I did notice the gold has been going up pretty what is it up like 27% so but I don't know if we could attribute that to coronavirus I don't know enough about it to say what was the variable there could be studio ikns is a studio in the kernel walk into AF pack Who's the colonel? | ||
Oh, is that Ethan Ralph? | ||
Yeah, that'll be good. | ||
Yeah, it'll be good to see you guys. | ||
Plo Koon says, is that Benny Johnson? | ||
Or he says, I bet Benny Johnson doesn't know who Plo Koon is. | ||
I'm going Reddit mode for the new Clone Wars. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
And what do you mean the new Clone Wars? | ||
Is there, what is that, like the last season of the show or something? | ||
I saw it was trending on Twitter, but I didn't look into it. | ||
Astro says Tyson Fury or Deontay Wilder. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Is that a fight or something? | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
I don't watch. | ||
What is this, boxing or is this UFC? | ||
Yeah, I don't I don't follow boxing. | ||
So I don't know. | ||
King Hippo says thanks for helping me reach my true power level. | ||
Yeah, no problem. | ||
Nicker Nache says Finnow... What is this? | ||
Eugrik Master Race? | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Big Globe says Nibitride selling me a car with 15% APR and GTFO. | ||
Yeah, for real. | ||
Nicker Nache says don't worry boys more cringe on the menu tonight. | ||
Yeah, and you're you're a part of it. | ||
West Offensive says, fuck vaccines, reinstate the Chinese Exclusion Act. | ||
Are you into horror movies? | ||
If so, what's your favorite? | ||
Well yeah, I definitely agree about shutting down immigration for now, or travel from China at least. | ||
And horror movies? | ||
No, I do not watch horror movies and I don't have a favorite. | ||
Base Dollars says, get your Friday on nibbas. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Base Dollars says, Ninjagini to respect Bernie's fallen morality. | ||
R.I.P. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I don't know. | |
That's kind of a weird way to say it, but sure. | ||
Firetrucks, as I'll keep that promise when I become a lawyer, I'll represent you for free if you get into trouble. | ||
Well, hey, don't just be saying that, but I appreciate that. | ||
Good luck with your, what is it, LSAT. | ||
Reptard says Vladimir Pupin is behind the pee-pee poo-poo chats. | ||
Yeah, funny. | ||
Holy Servant says LOL, Bernie bringing communism to the U.S. 60 years after the Cold War, sleeper cell check. | ||
Bless you, King. | ||
That's pretty funny, yeah. | ||
That is a little bit funny considering that he is a socialist communist, you know, and he's being backed by Russia, maybe 50 years ago. | ||
Johnny Rockett says sad hearing Trump say America first in the intro of, Okay, you're gay if you say that Save Western Civs. | ||
I'm really sad grow up Save Western Civs says are you going to wear your dashiki this month? | ||
Probably not. | ||
I just don't feel in the spirit of Black History Month It's just hitting different this year TakeCover says you can use Archive.is to work around the NYT block. | ||
Is everything archived there? | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
I guess that makes sense, actually. | ||
So, hey, good tip. | ||
Mr. says disable JavaScript to bypass the paywall for New York Times. | ||
Does that work? | ||
Maybe I'll try that too. | ||
Sky fries as Israel has coronavirus. | ||
Now press S to pray. | ||
Press S to pray. | ||
That's funny. | ||
What is this? | ||
PAP? | ||
Says please stop supporting media that wants you dead. | ||
Okay, I'm about to roll my eyes so far into the back of my head that they break off and fall out out of my face. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
What is this number? | ||
City D Live? | ||
I don't know what that part means. | ||
I think I actually said the opposite. | ||
Yeah, get your canned soup. | ||
Official Corona Chan number, what is this number? | ||
City DLive? | ||
I don't know what that part means. | ||
I don't think I ever, I think I actually said the opposite. | ||
Hot dogs is dry goods check. | ||
Yeah, get your canned soup. | ||
Well, does canned soup last? | ||
I don't know. | ||
What do I look like? | ||
A chef? | ||
I don't know, alas, so what doesn't? | ||
But yeah, get your canned bread, boxed milk, your non-perishables. | ||
Base dollars says, someday we'll beat these Afghans. | ||
Someday, yeah. | ||
Johnny Rockett says, masks are selling fast. | ||
P100 and N100, most reliable. | ||
I'm going to have to cop one of those. | ||
Maybe I'll just buy a bunch of them and be like a merchant of death. | ||
$100, you want a mask? | ||
$1,000, you know. | ||
Maybe I'll just buy like 1,000 masks, and then when it really gets bad, I'll get on the internet and say, oh, you want a mask to save your life? | ||
$10,000 for four of them, you know? | ||
unidentified
|
That would be... No, that would be unethical. | |
I would give them out. | ||
James says, Hey Nick, watch those wrist rockets. | ||
Saves them for the enemy! | ||
Dimitri says, Humvees idling longer than some zoomers alive. | ||
Yeah, for real, literally! | ||
Those Humvees have been running longer than Folk Salad Nation has been alive. | ||
Wow, funny joke, dude. | ||
This is a fresh concept for a joke. | ||
Groeper says, oh, you've been living like shit in the desert for 2,000 years? | ||
Have you heard of the Constitution? | ||
Wow, funny joke, dude. | ||
This is a fresh concept for a joke. | ||
Never heard that. | ||
Never heard that one. | ||
I gotta hire you as a comedy writer, I think. | ||
That's a really good point. | ||
That's really fresh. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
That is not derivative at all. | ||
Action Jackson says, first time Super Chatter. | ||
Keep it up, King. | ||
Thanks, buddy. | ||
NJ Conservatives says, Only Stans is greater than Only Fans. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeastwoods is a German businessman walks into a something lounge. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
No more forever wars. | ||
Big agree. | ||
Molly Maguire says, Mom, just one more Moab, then we leave. | ||
Yeah, Mom. | ||
The Moab was cool. | ||
I'm not going to lie, the Moab was epic. | ||
If you don't think huge bombs are cool, you're kind of cringe. | ||
And there's two ways to take that. | ||
Some people say, oh, you think like bombs are cool? | ||
What are you, a neocon? | ||
It's like, no, I'm just a man. | ||
And warfare, whether you're in favor of wars or not, warfare is cool. | ||
Huge bombs, the mother of all bombs, blowing a bunch of shit up is cool. | ||
I'm not saying war is cool. | ||
I'm not saying wars for Israel are cool. | ||
I'm saying That in general, military stuff is cool. | ||
Big ships, big tanks, big guns, big bombs. | ||
It's fascinating. | ||
And I like... You have to draw that meaningful distinction. | ||
It's like with Trump and the defense budget. | ||
A lot of people are like, Trump spent all this money on the military. | ||
The military's so big. | ||
unidentified
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Good! | |
The military should be big. | ||
What are you like... I don't understand that. | ||
Like, we don't have to use the military, but it's cool to have a big military. | ||
What, do you want to have a small military? | ||
You want to have a small baby military? | ||
It would be like if somebody said, oh, an AR-15? | ||
That's far too much for me. | ||
I don't want to have an entire arsenal. | ||
I want to have like a little baby gun. | ||
I want to have a water gun, or I want to have a slingshot. | ||
Oh, an AR-15? | ||
What are you, a neocon? | ||
Oh, you have a ton of guns in your house? | ||
What are you, a murderer? | ||
What are you, a neocon? | ||
It's like, no, guns are cool. | ||
And you would want to have lots of them because they're cool. | ||
And it's about, you know, force and power. | ||
And as a man, there should be something instinctual that admires this or is, you know, interested in this. | ||
And so there's a fine line between saying, I don't like wars for Israel and saying, Ew! | ||
unidentified
|
Ew! | |
More! | ||
unidentified
|
Ew! | |
Bombs! | ||
Ew! | ||
Why can't we all just get along? | ||
We will never get along! | ||
We could never get along! | ||
The state of the most natural thing the state of man is warfare and I that doesn't mean I'm like in favor of war But you know, we should always be deterring it. | ||
We should always be preparing for it. | ||
We should always be thinking about it Perhaps even threatening it if I put war war is in the DNA of mankind. | ||
So to be one of these like a Womanly people they don't like war war needs to end. | ||
We're never gonna get rid of it and Okay, anyway, it's an important point to make. | ||
A lot of people just don't get it. | ||
Polish American says, don't want to sound retarded, but where can I find more info on Black Cube and Kabbalah? | ||
Sorry, big guy. | ||
Dude, use the internet. | ||
Just look it up. | ||
Just look it up. | ||
Just look up Saturn, Black Cube. | ||
You'll find stuff. | ||
Just look up Kabbalah. | ||
Not, you know, Kabbalah? | ||
There's tons of resources on this. | ||
And it's so funny, like Kabbalah, Kabbalah, Kabbalah. | ||
Literally, the word comes from Kabbalah. | ||
It's like, how does that not in itself wake you up, right? | ||
Like, the word Kabbalah. | ||
Like, I was literally thinking about that the other day. | ||
I was doing some research into Kabbalah. | ||
And I thought, wait a second, Kabbalah, Kabbalah, Kabbalist, Kabbalah. | ||
And I was like, are those two related? | ||
And I Googled it. | ||
And sure enough, yes, the word cabal comes from cabala. | ||
Hmm. | ||
That's very interesting. | ||
Wow. | ||
I'm sure there's nothing to see there. | ||
That is not an item of interest at all, but just use the old Google machine. | ||
Base Dollars says, imagine being Russia. | ||
Everyone's saying you did shit like you're incapable of being covert. | ||
I mean, I'm sure Russia does do meddling, but, you know, whatever they do, or if they do it, or if they don't, I mean, you can bet that the intel community is lying about it. | ||
Whatever the activity is, they're exaggerating it, or they're misrepresenting it, or they're just straight up fabricating it, but I'm sure Russia does some things. | ||
Action says, went to high school with a Somalian immigrant that was planning a terrorist attack. | ||
Minnesota's trash. | ||
I think Minnesota's actually, I've never been, but from what I hear, it's really nice, and the reason they send all the refugees there is because it's so nice, because it's got great social services and so on, but, yeah, they're making it bad. | ||
They're making it worse. | ||
Swiss Groyper says, keep up the good work, King. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Jack Kent says, Putin pigeons with MAGA hats. | ||
Add them debate. | ||
Epic. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
NJ Conservatives says, libertarians cannot be converted. | ||
If they are atheists. | ||
I don't think that's necessarily true, actually, because there are a lot of non-religious conservatives over the years who have come up with a secular basis for... | ||
like a catholic foundation for the world like if you read uh... carl schmidt and even uh... they say about uh... to master art of my stray i don't know how to pronounce it i'm not french and i only read but um... if you read him i i've i've read that he wasn't even a totally devout catholic but he was a firm believer in like a catholic oriented worldview he was like not only catholic but there's some historical speculation about what was he really as uh... you know | ||
Was he really as pious a Catholic as he was intensely, you know, orienting his politics around Catholicism? | ||
That's something that I've read and, you know, Schmitt wrote about this and there's a lot of authors that have written about, you know, maybe there should be a Thomistic or Catholic basis for the world or a Christian basis, even if they themselves are not religious or more secular or something like that. | ||
So, I don't necessarily believe that's true. | ||
I think that being a Christian definitely helps. | ||
But I don't think it is always necessary for people to become, like, true conservatives. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, I mean, it's necessary for you to be saved and everything, but in order to be a true conservative and possess understanding, I think you could understand being a conservative and even being a Catholic conservative or, you know, an Integralist or something like that, but without actually subscribing to the ideas themselves. | ||
You just have to be high IQ. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I literally don't believe anything they say. | ||
What's the latest one? | ||
I might have missed it. | ||
their claims yeah i literally don't believe anything they say gavin says great show king i hope everyone can watch the latest american renaissance video taylor is spot on what's the latest one i might have missed it i'll have to check it out uh pap says bernie Yeah, can we not do that? | ||
Okay, yeah, that's... Thank you, Joe the Boomer, for that. | ||
Yeah, I don't know about that. | ||
Joe the Boomer says, lizard people be like I shed my own ball skin. | ||
Okay, yeah, thank you, Joe the Boomer, for that. | ||
Nick Renache says, Nick's naming everyone. | ||
This is the last episode. | ||
Yeah, I don't know about that. | ||
Swiss Groiper says, Victor Orban saw the globalist game early on. | ||
Our guy. | ||
Yeah, he is our guy. | ||
King Hippo says, wife, lizard people, me. | ||
Yes, blood sucking skin eaters. | ||
Wow, that was a really cool conversation you had with your wife. | ||
Thanks for sharing. | ||
My wife was like, what? | ||
And I was like, yeah, I know. | ||
Wow, cool dude. | ||
Cool conversation that you had with your wife. | ||
unidentified
|
Look, I don't even know if I should say this. | |
There are some things that you will just never be ready for. | ||
There are some things that are funny to me and that I know, but that I just can't share with a mass audience. | ||
A mass audience does not possess understanding. | ||
They will never get certain things. | ||
That is one of the great tragedies of being a transcendent intellect, as Patrick Casey might say. | ||
One of the great tragedies of being a transcendent intellect, a non-NPC, is that there are so many things I take joy in, but I know I cannot share them with NPCs or the masses. | ||
What I was going to say is that what I tend to find on the internet is that Once people get married they like immediately become cringe, and I don't want to say that because I want people to get married And that's we should all be we should all be married with kids I mean that is that is the natural course and that is I think probably the most healthy way to live and the most I Don't know what the order beats. | ||
It's the best thing for a person probably and it's good for our movement and all that and But, uh, when it comes to the internet, it's like all the people that I see online, a lot of them that are cringed, it's like they're married. | ||
And it's all it takes. | ||
I always expect that somebody will post something cringe. | ||
I'm like, wait for it, wait for it, and then I'll see them post later. | ||
My wife. | ||
My wife. | ||
Ah, there it is. | ||
There it is. | ||
You know, my wife. | ||
Oh, here we go. | ||
Any day now. | ||
Gonna be cringe. | ||
I'm never wrong about this. | ||
I'm never wrong about this. | ||
Recently in a group DM, I was in Baked Alaska's group chat. | ||
on Twitter and some guy was in there saying something about my wife, my wife. | ||
And we were kind of joking with him. | ||
And I said, you know, every time on the Internet somebody says my wife, they end up being cringe or, you know, they're cringe. | ||
And then I'm saying my wife. | ||
And I just I just said that straight up. | ||
And the guy was like, yeah, yeah, well, blah, blah, blah, blah, you know, whatever. | ||
And then within like a week, he was full on cringe posting like some of the worst content I've ever seen. | ||
And it's like, yeah, sure enough. | ||
That's not, look, and I don't want to say that because then people are going to say, oh, Nick is saying getting married is cringe. | ||
That's what always happens. | ||
Oh, Nick says getting married is cringe. | ||
No, I never said that. | ||
Getting married is good and it's a good thing. | ||
And it's probably a fair trade-off. | ||
You know, it's probably better to be married and have kids and be cringe than to be unmarried and not have kids and, you know, be based. | ||
But it is. | ||
But nevertheless, it is an observation. | ||
It is a fact of life, nonetheless. | ||
So we'll see if it happens to me. | ||
We'll see if when I get married, will I become cringe? | ||
I think what it is, is... | ||
Well, what would it be? | ||
I think it's what makes you based, and what makes you funny, is being a little bit off. | ||
You know, whether that is a little bit depressed, or a little bit anxious, or a little bit something. | ||
You know, just not having it all together. | ||
Not being all together, I think is what makes somebody have that edge, has that comedic edge, or something like that. | ||
I've noticed that with comedians, it's the same thing. | ||
Once a comedian gets rich or married or something like that, once they become prosperous, they cease to be funny. | ||
Because then it's like, oh, I'm just a nice guy. | ||
I'm a proud dad, a proud husband, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I've got a joke for it, and it's totally lame, totally stale. | ||
When they were good is when they were hungry or homeless or they had real mental problems or something like that. | ||
So I tend to find that, you know, only through strife, only through like constant exposure to, I don't know what you would even say, suffering or something like that, that sort of, That is my perception. | ||
And without any kind of consolation, without anything like that, I think it was only in that environment can a funny person or a fresh mimetic person be forward. | ||
So I think outside that, I don't know, but that's my perception. | ||
That is my perception. | ||
That is just sort of, you know, I'm just sort of thinking out loud here. | ||
unidentified
|
That's when I see this, you know, my wife. | |
My wife said, lizard people? | ||
You know, a woman. | ||
My wife said, lizard people? | ||
What are you crazy? | ||
What are you crazy, Jim? | ||
unidentified
|
What are you crazy, Kevin? | |
My husband believes in lizard people. | ||
You know, I can imagine what a woman might say. | ||
And I'm like, yeah, honey. | ||
Yeah, honey. | ||
Yeah, babe. | ||
Really, really, babe. | ||
Really, really, hon. | ||
Karen it's there. | ||
Yeah, I really uh, what a wow this story. | ||
I'm like, oh my gosh What a what a hilarious bro the whole squad. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
This is just this is just vicious I have no chill sometimes, you know, it wasn't you know, it wasn't that bad of a super shot now I'm just being a jerk Nick or Nay says, it all has to burn. | ||
You have, figuratively. | ||
Yeastwood says, we need a revolution led by autistic gamers. | ||
Agree with that. | ||
Big agree with that. | ||
Swiss Groypers has heard about Soros ties with the EU Court of Justice. | ||
No, I have not. | ||
Reptarts says, brilliant show. | ||
Love the episodes that lay out the scope and skill of the machine. | ||
Keep preaching King. | ||
Well, hey, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
Thanks for Ninjagini. | ||
BigMoneyWagey says sup. | ||
Sup. | ||
BigMoneyWagey thinks he's cool now. | ||
He thinks he's fly coming in here. | ||
Sup. | ||
Sup, cuh. | ||
Sup, big guy. | ||
What's going on? | ||
DelcoGroiper says, are you ready for Sean to debate Hunter Avalon? | ||
Is that happening? | ||
If that... I want to watch that if that happens. | ||
Sean is totally based and Hunter is totally cringe, so I gotta see that. | ||
Polish American says, Nick, please go crazy mode. | ||
I am learning a lot. | ||
Ah, crazy mode. | ||
That's gonna get me in trouble. | ||
It's gonna make me not credible. | ||
If I go too crazy mode, then people are gonna say, oh, that guy, that guy's off the deep end. | ||
That guy's out of his mind. | ||
Merck says, was Shekelberg, Kovechdin, Bloomberg the whole time? | ||
Yeah, bro, whole squad is dying right now. | ||
Spend my weekly four hours of net a week watching America first. | ||
I wonder if that's true. | ||
I wonder if anybody does watch America first in jail. | ||
Can you watch YouTube in jail? | ||
Probably a lark, but who knows it'd be funny if it was real WD says watch the NJF show today. | ||
So young and handsome. | ||
Ah, yes, the Nicholas Jaffe went to show the name of my high school show the name of my show in Yeah, yeah, good times. | ||
Good times. | ||
That was the first time I ever did anything on camera. | ||
And it's funny because a lot of people who become content creators, it's like their dream to become a YouTuber, you know? | ||
That's what they want to do. | ||
They watch YouTube, they love YouTube, and they're like, I'm going to become a YouTuber. | ||
And I never, funnily enough, As much as I have an aptitude for public speaking, I never had ambitions of being a streamer or a YouTuber or anything like that. | ||
I don't know anything about cameras. | ||
I don't know anything about video editing. | ||
I never developed that skill set. | ||
A lot of YouTubers have that, like James Alsop, Hunter Avalon even, for better or for worse. | ||
These are people that were passionate about making content. | ||
They bought their cameras and they bought their laptop and their editing suite and they made their videos. | ||
I was never that guy. | ||
Somebody approached me in high school. | ||
I did a radio show in high school for years. | ||
I was on radio and that was so fun because I love music, actually. | ||
And I also love to talk, and so I was doing radio. | ||
And my senior year, all the way at the end, somebody approached me and said, you know, do you want to do a news show for the TV station? | ||
Somebody from the TV club said, we think you'd be a good fit. | ||
And I said, well, I don't know. | ||
I said, I'll give it a shot. | ||
And they did the whole thing. | ||
You know, they did the filming and the editing. | ||
I just showed up with a script, and I shot those seven episodes. | ||
Over the course of the show I had ideas about what to do, a panel show, a monologue show, change the background, change the setup, change the editing, and we did all seven episodes have like kind of a different format and a different runtime and you know we did debates, interviews, that kind of thing. | ||
And then with the show, America First, this show, the show, first broadcasted on RSBN. | ||
Again, that was another case of Cassie Dillon and the RSBN network recruited me to do a show for them. | ||
And they sent me all the proper supplies and everything. | ||
And I found myself sort of thrust into this. | ||
You would think that somebody like me, as sort of like a, well, I was a YouTuber, as somebody that had like a huge, well, still does have a huge streaming following and a huge internet following, that I would be like this social media, oh, I was 10 years old when I bought my first camera. | ||
You always hear those stories. | ||
I've been a YouTuber since I was nine years old when I bought my first camera with my birthday money and I, you know, and my content evolved and blah, blah, blah. | ||
It's like, no, I just, you know. | ||
Just accidentally I just reluctantly became the leader of the online dissident, right? | ||
But anyway, yeah. | ||
Yeah good times. | ||
I was young. | ||
I was a young man I was 17 when I did that show. | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
I had just turned 17 when I did my first Nicholas J Fuentes show 17 year old Nick Fuentes. | ||
What a rascal and now here I am 21 years old. | ||
I'm in the twilight of my years And now my life is like Wine. | ||
Okay. | ||
Unmute says, more crazy mode please. | ||
I need to know. | ||
God bless. | ||
Can't do it. | ||
Can't do it. | ||
Mark Fuentes says, I belittle. | ||
Okay, I'm not gonna read. | ||
Oh, he says, I belittle. | ||
It's Mark Fuentes. | ||
Says, I belittle the Holocaust. | ||
M for Mark. | ||
Okay, disavow. | ||
SP with a Ninjet. | ||
Hey, thanks a lot for the Ninjet. | ||
Says, Ayo, Bloomberg paid for my college tuition with all his donations to Johns Hopkins. | ||
Chill with the adrenochrome talk. | ||
Ah, so SP's in the pocket too. | ||
Does that mean that SP is paying me Bloomberg money? | ||
Did I just get a ninjette from the Bloomberg campaign? | ||
I'll take it. | ||
I'll stop talking about the adrenochrome, you know, what is it called? | ||
The, uh... | ||
I'll stop talking about the Blood Passover. | ||
I will stop talking about... Who's the author? | ||
I'll stop talking about Blood Passover if you give me Bloomberg by Ariel Taufe. | ||
Don't say it! | ||
If you give me my Bloomberg books. | ||
Nah, I'm just kidding. | ||
That book is a work of fiction. | ||
SwissDroipers says, COVID-19 came to North Italy, mountain bunker time. | ||
Yeah, cringe, Northern Italy. | ||
Andrew Jackson says my brother says I resemble you very flattering Andrew Jackson or you know, whoever's behind this username is watching America first and thinking oh boy. | ||
He's just like me Yeah, all these droopers watching America first he's just like me Why I pray if you say it's flattering. | ||
I appreciate that Mark Fuentes says miss Malkin support my okay I don't know if I'm gonna read that TK Wise is these adrenochrome jokes gonna get nibba's frazzled. | ||
Yeah Armenian groper says if democracy dies in darkness shut off the lights. | ||
Yeah for real Anon says CA senator wants to exempt LGBT pedos from sex From sex registry. | ||
Okay, same guy who decriminalized AIDS transmission off to check that out Well, I mean, it only makes sense. | ||
That is a logical conclusion because most homosexuals are pedophiles. | ||
So, I mean, that is a logical conclusion. | ||
And most pedophiles are homosexuals. | ||
This is statistics. | ||
You can't, you can't, look, you can't get mad at me. | ||
These are the facts. | ||
These are the numbers, so. | ||
But yeah, people shouldn't be surprised when that is the next stage. | ||
That's the next development. | ||
Homosexuals, transsexuals... I don't know how quickly we're going to get there, but the pedophile stuff, that is going to become the crusade. | ||
They might be pushing the envelope now, but... | ||
You know five to ten years I think that they're gonna make that the next iteration of it and it's not it sounds silly now maybe maybe not to this audience but for most people but just look at how it was ten years ago if you argued that gay marriage would open the door to polyamory and bestiality and so on people said oh that's not gonna happen that's crazy and here we are now and everyone's in an open relationship and there are conversations about bestiality and | ||
And now this pedophilia stuff is emergent and transsexuals and all that. | ||
So it did open the floodgate. | ||
Armini Groyper says, Thank you, Nick. | ||
May I have another? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Clockwork to Superchats like, How about another joke? | ||
Yeah. | ||
Lifted Truck says, Which Jewish person would you vote for if you had to pick? | ||
Between Bernie Sanders or Bloomberg? | ||
Probably Bloomberg, honestly. | ||
Sky fries is would you ever go on tinfoil hat or to degenerate? | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Unmute says, I'm addicted to esoteric dots being connected. | ||
Wow, cool. | ||
Quirky. | ||
Cookie Monster says, differences between Italian and Mexican Catholics. | ||
Is that a question or a statement? | ||
Lieutenant says, you read the Brothers Karamazov, very Christ-pilled. | ||
How do you pronounce that? | ||
Karamazov, Karamazov? | ||
I don't know what the emphasis is. | ||
No, I've never read that. | ||
No, I do not read a lot of fiction. | ||
Have you read Russian literature? | ||
No, I don't read fiction generally. | ||
I mean, I have the book, and it's on my list, but I'm not like, oh, a thousand pages of Russian literature? | ||
Tolstoy? | ||
Tolstoy? | ||
Dostoevsky? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I read mostly nonfiction, but I haven't even been reading that much lately. | ||
I've been busy doing. | ||
I don't listen to podcasts. | ||
I listen to music. | ||
Does that happen if you take a turn too fast too many times? | ||
Nick, that's pretty based. | ||
I swerve in the whip, but I don't listen to podcasts. | ||
I listen to, like, music. | ||
I think I messed up my car a little bit because I was, like, driving too fast. | ||
Does that happen? | ||
If you take a turn too fast too many times, does that mess up your car? | ||
Because I, there was, well, I don't want to talk too much about my driving, which is safe and always responsible. | ||
And I will never get in a car accident because I'm a great driver. | ||
I'm a responsible and safe and law-abiding driver, but hypothetically. | ||
Hypothetically, if I were taking turns really, really fast, would that do damage to the car? | ||
Would that cause problems? | ||
I wonder. | ||
I'm just wondering, just out of curiosity. | ||
I don't know much about cars and I thought about that recently. | ||
I'm blasting, I'm swerving, but I'm blasting Kanye. | ||
Yeah, for real. | ||
It's so dumb. | ||
People that think that way are not us. | ||
Good job. | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
Glad you enjoyed. | ||
MAGA Country says, Is anything more overrated than getting along? | ||
Yeah, for real. | ||
It's so dumb. | ||
People that think that way are not us. | ||
You know, there's this fine line between being a cringe-like liberal and saying, No more wars. | ||
Because war is evil. | ||
War is bad. | ||
War should be outlawed. | ||
We should never have war. | ||
And we should always be about peace and unity. | ||
I'm not that, okay? | ||
I'm against these wars. | ||
I'm not against war. | ||
And that doesn't mean, like, I love war. | ||
War is horrible. | ||
War is tragic, and innocent people die, and it's brutal. | ||
I mean, it is not good. | ||
But it is also a fact of our existence. | ||
It is also a fact of human civilization. | ||
So the idea that a war will be eradicated, I mean, should we strive to not have wars? | ||
Certainly. | ||
But are we going to get rid of wars? | ||
No. | ||
Well, we shouldn't be fighting in Iraq because war is wrong. | ||
Well, we should not be fighting in Iraq because it is not a just war that serves our interests. | ||
So, yeah, big agree. | ||
Jack Kent says, Google it, Putin pigeons united to interfere. | ||
I'm not Googling it right now. | ||
I'll Google it later, okay? | ||
Okie Gruyper says purge the world of coasties. | ||
Midwest gang rise up. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I like the people on the coasts. | ||
I don't know if I live on the coasts, but I like the people. | ||
Fartsmeller says, My wife's BF said I can kiss her tonight. | ||
I can't wait. | ||
Ah, good for you. | ||
Lucky you, right? | ||
My wife. | ||
Whenever people throw that out there, I'm like, oh boy, here we go. | ||
Millennial check. | ||
I think it's also an age thing. | ||
Usually if you're married... I mean, I don't know a lot of married Zoomers. | ||
Zoomer, the cutoff is like 23. | ||
So I don't know a lot of Zoomers that are married. | ||
Typically, it's more of a correlation thing. | ||
It's like if you're married, that probably means you're a millennial or Gen X or a boomer. | ||
And if you're not a Zoomer, then you're probably cringe. | ||
So maybe it's more of a correlation thing. | ||
It's more an age thing. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
Molly Maguire says having a wife means you have to compromise to a woman. | ||
Yeah, that too. | ||
Because then you can't be too edgy or too funny. | ||
You have to be like... There's almost like a mental block put in your brain. | ||
Because you have to constantly be self-censoring yourself around your wife. | ||
Don't say this. | ||
Don't tell her the truth. | ||
Don't, you know, whatever. | ||
Because you can't, like, just be straight up with a woman about, like, anything. | ||
You have to constantly be, like, you know, does this dress make me look fat? | ||
Do you like this on me? | ||
Do you like the way this perfume smells? | ||
You know, blah blah blah. | ||
The list goes on and on of things that women, like, just can't handle. | ||
You telling them whether it's news or information or politics or, like, a lot of things. | ||
So with women, your entire discourse with a woman over the course of your life is about accommodating. | ||
It's really not even communication. | ||
It's really communication with women, between women, and between men and women. | ||
The communication is almost qualitatively different because it is very much less about exchanging information than it is about a form of emotional communication. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
It's almost like using words is like a verbal stimuli as opposed to transmitting information. | ||
It's more like you just need to use words to direct and guide their emotions or their behaviors, and the content of the words doesn't really matter. | ||
The content of the sentences, the meaning contained in the words, is really secondary. | ||
You know, that's excluding things like, oh, what time are you getting home? | ||
What are you doing? | ||
Whatever. | ||
What should I get you at McDonald's? | ||
Something like that. | ||
But generally speaking, communication is really more about accommodating and managing that relationship. | ||
And that is the same way to a lesser extent with men, but it is almost entirely that way with women. | ||
And that's how women communicate with us. | ||
Women don't tell us what they want, and they don't tell us the truth and all the rest. | ||
So it's also like what has to break in your brain to be a memer is like any shred of agreeability or having that super ego that says, no, that's beyond the pale. | ||
No, that's not okay. | ||
You really have to go all the way. | ||
And women, you can't do that with women because women are like they're all, I don't know. | ||
It's just a different dynamic, so that's another good point. | ||
Me? | ||
Racist? | ||
Uh, no. | ||
You've got the wrong guy. | ||
I'm gonna be a cool dad, but I'm gonna be a cool dad because I'm just gonna be epic, you know? | ||
I'm just gonna be the man of the house, okay? | ||
I'm gonna lay down the law. | ||
And people are just going to have to live with that. | ||
I mean, maybe the whole family will live in fear of me. | ||
Wife and kids will be living in fear of my volatility and my rage, which I can snap at any minute. | ||
And, uh, but at the same time, they'll also see a much warmer side, you know, and I feel like that's what I want. | ||
I would want my children to think back like he had a legendary temper and you did not want to, and the things he would do, but, but when, but he could be the nicest guy, but we, when he took me to the ball game once, | ||
You know that that is what I want to cultivate is an air of like tear I want it I want to just Loom over the family casting a long shadow over the family You know, but but the legendary volatility you have to be volatile volatility is Manipulative it's a manipulative thing, but it also can but also can be quite effective especially when you're talking about like a I'm not going to finish that. | ||
Not going to finish that sentence. | ||
unidentified
|
Especially with, you know, certain kinds of people. | |
The volatility. | ||
Do not, oh no. | ||
Do not be volatile. | ||
It is not going to be volatile. | ||
I am a volatile person. | ||
I have just, I can just snap. | ||
It's in my DNA. | ||
It's in my, every aspect. | ||
The Irish, the Mexican, the Italian. | ||
It's all in there. | ||
Just a violent volatility, a bad temper. | ||
I'm working on it. | ||
I'm trying to get better. | ||
I think I've been getting better, but sometimes I just, you know, it'll be a perfect storm. | ||
I'll be tired and hungry, and then something will happen, and that is when I'm at my worst. | ||
When I get hungry, I'm like a different person, and then add to that being tired, and then add to that like another irritant, and then something else, and it's like, forget about it. | ||
Then I just fly. | ||
Then I just fly off. | ||
That's why I need, but maybe the wife will temper that because she will be taking care of me. | ||
She'll be like, do you want a snack? | ||
Do you want a snack? | ||
Do you want a granola bar? | ||
Do you want an apple? | ||
You know, something like that. | ||
So it'll almost be a perfect relationship. | ||
If I get volatile, it's because she's not doing her job. | ||
Oh, honey, do you want a milkshake? | ||
Do you want a, you know, whatever? | ||
And if she's not doing her job, she's not making sure that I'm fed and I'm satisfied, you know, then she's going to get a very different side. | ||
And that is, you know, maybe that is like sort of a self-regulating ecosystem, right? | ||
You don't take care of me, and I'll become a monster! | ||
Then, then, you know, that's gonna be, you're not gonna, your life is not gonna be a fun time. | ||
But, take care of me, your life's gonna be great. | ||
I'll be, I'll be very cheerful, I'll be very benevolent, happy, all the good things. | ||
I'll be warm, I'll be in good spirits. | ||
If you don't take care of me, everybody's gonna pay. | ||
Take Cover says, I just read that. | ||
Molly Maguire says, getting married is like hard times make good men. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
King Hippo says, thanks, King. | ||
Love you for that, LMAO. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Joe Blow says, the vast audience may not possess understanding, but at least you and I do. | ||
Right, Nick? | ||
Yes, some people do beyond that. | ||
No, but I get it, right, Nick? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Well, I'm sure there are people who watch the show that get it. | ||
It's weird. | ||
It's like it's such a such a bizarre thing ever since I became like even a minor e-celebrity It's like the real the real and present distinction between NPCs and non NPCs It's very real. | ||
There's nothing wrong with being an NPC, but if there is a real distinction so So I'm sure people are out there and they're like totally getting the vibe. | ||
mom they're totally getting it and we're in like silent like yeah yeah but we're but we know but we know we are those that possess understanding uh debt collector says nick future father of six daughters and two tiny dogs dude if that were the case just forget about it forget about it man i don't know i I hope I have sons. | ||
We'll see. | ||
I'll just keep, look, I'll just keep trying until I get my, you know, five sons. | ||
We'll just keep going. | ||
You know, I don't, I do not care. | ||
We're at eight and there's no sons? | ||
We're gonna do eight more, okay? | ||
And that's just the way it's gonna be. | ||
And, uh, and my wife's just gonna have to live with that. | ||
That's just how it's, that's gonna be the contract. | ||
So, pedestrians has apologized for what you said about crockpot weenies. | ||
No, I will not apologize. | ||
I'll not apologize for, you know, throwing down the crockpot. | ||
My mom is very big on the crockpot. | ||
My mom, she has like this weird dynamic where she is, she came from a very Italian neighborhood. | ||
She came from a very Italian neighborhood, and for whatever reason, she wants normalcy. | ||
And for whatever reason, she wants like normalcy. | ||
She wants to like be more assimilated, for lack of a better word. | ||
She wants to be more assimilated, for lack of a better word, into a waspy kind of archetype or a waspy mold. | ||
So she will do the crockpot thing, and she got the crockpot, and she loves the crockpot recipe. | ||
And I'm like, I don't want something that came out of a crockpot. | ||
If all you had to do was dump a bunch of shit into this big thing, and it sits there for hours and hours, I don't believe that produces a good meal. | ||
A good meal, and look, I have no idea what I'm talking about. | ||
I don't cook. | ||
But I feel like to produce a good meal, cooking is involved. | ||
Effort is involved. | ||
You know, there has to be... | ||
Cutting and chopping and stirring and I don't know all the different actions that are involved It seems to me counterintuitive that it's like oh, we just separate out all our ingredients Dump it in dump in the meat dump in the whatever this and that and we just Turn on the thing we make it hot and now it's this. | ||
Oh now. | ||
It's a delicious meal No, you just made like stew you just made like a big soupy mess, and I don't know maybe it tastes good But I don't I don't want your crock pot concoctions Okay. | ||
I just don't something about it to me is just like cheap and like I don't know probably better than if you're looking for something cheap and easy that's probably what you go for but I can't imagine it's like oh this is an alternative to cooking oh crock-pot this solves all our problems like that'd be like looking at the microwave and being like mmm mmm the microwave heat up food in the microwave oh dinner delicious like forget about it you need to cook dinner you need to cook the dinner okay | ||
Yes, so I know I will not I'll not take back what I said about crock-pot weenies I'll not be eating food out of a plastic. | ||
I think it's plastic ceramic on the inside Maybe plastic on the outside. | ||
I'll not be eating your Crock-pot your liquid mess there Bad faith poster says I get a nick. | ||
I'm not like the other knickers. | ||
Yeah, it's true Debt collector says wool sweaters number one dad mugs. | ||
Yeah, it's gonna be good. | ||
I want to have kids and I feel like that's the only, like... Is that gonna be bad to say? | ||
It's like the only gratifying thing about life. | ||
So much about life is just, like, thankless and ultimately not satisfying. | ||
But I feel like having children is one of the few things that really is like, this is nice, you know? | ||
I feel like so much, increasingly, is just like, oh brother, it's just... Maybe it's because I'm working a lot lately. | ||
It's just one thing after another. | ||
Wake up, brush your teeth, shower, eat your breakfast, and then it's... | ||
unidentified
|
Work. | |
You know, it's driving, it's doing these menial, monotonous tasks, and it's, oh, I gotta talk to this person, I gotta do this, I gotta check off the boxes, chores, all that, and then, you know, crawl back in bed and... | ||
They start all over again. | ||
I feel like the idea of children is maybe rewarding. | ||
It's not like what I do isn't rewarding, but on some level I think that's deeper, obviously, the connection, the emotional connection you have with your kids as opposed to like a body of work. | ||
So, I don't know, just some thinking out loud there. | ||
Molly McGuire says, yo yo, put that white boy with the big hands on TV. | ||
That's funny. | ||
Asmr says Dr. Taylor Marshall is a based conspiracy theorist. | ||
Is Taylor Marshall based? | ||
He unfollowed me on Twitter, so I don't know how based he can be, actually. | ||
Taycom versus Cassie Dillon be like, you are the chosen one! | ||
Yeah, for real, though. | ||
The other day I was looking through my camera roll from years ago, and I found a screenshot that she had sent to me where she was texting Ben Shapiro. | ||
And she said, Ben, you've got to take this kid under your wing. | ||
He's incredible, and he's got so much potential. | ||
He's a bit of a Trumper, but you've got to see him. | ||
And Ben replied to her and said something like, I'll check that out. | ||
But she sent me that screenshot of that conversation like three years ago. | ||
So you know that all these people rubbing their hands together and saying they're grooming me to be the next Zionist, grooming me to be the next Israel-first neocon. | ||
And I want you to remember that, by the way, ingrates, when people are so quick to throw me under the bus, or doubt me, or believe rumors, or lies, or whatever. | ||
He's a neocon, it's this, it's that. | ||
I want everybody to remember the life that I could have had, the life that I could have been living, but that I turned down. | ||
And that's not to say, like, Oh, like, you should be grateful or anything like that? | ||
It's to say, like, if I cared about money or if I was a sellout, I could have been a sellout and I could have, you know, done really well for myself and not have to put up with a fraction of the bullshit that I have to put up with now. | ||
The deplatforming, the hate, the slander, the attacks from the media, obstacles every step of the way. | ||
You know, I had it made. | ||
I had made the connection. | ||
I was on my way. | ||
You know? | ||
And she offered me the trip to Israel the first time she met me. | ||
We did a Periscope interview, and she said, and finally, for my last question, would you ever go to Israel? | ||
I just came back from a trip, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And I said, no. | ||
I said, I think we have everything we need right here in America. | ||
She's like, oh, it's really nice, blah, blah, blah. | ||
And she legit offered! | ||
She said, we could do a free trip to Israel. | ||
I want to set you up with that. | ||
And I said, I'm not interested in taking a trip to Israel. | ||
And then I started to wonder, why does everybody take the trip? | ||
What is the deal with Israel? | ||
Why can't I critique it? | ||
Why are Shapiro and Cassie Dillon so obsessed with this country? | ||
And I was asking these questions. | ||
And they gradually threatened me and so on. | ||
Oh, you shouldn't talk about that. | ||
That's not how you're supposed to talk about that. | ||
If you want to have that conversation, we could talk privately, but don't tweet about it. | ||
Don't talk about it. | ||
Don't question Ben about it. | ||
You're anti-semitic if you ask that. | ||
That's really bad. | ||
Pretty soon. | ||
Blah blah blah. | ||
And then they, you know, cut ties all together and I became the pariah. | ||
So, people get... They're so quick to throw me under the bus and say, Oh, he was in a picture with Milo. | ||
He works for Steve Bannon. | ||
He's being blackmailed. | ||
He's owned. | ||
Oh, he won't talk about, you know, whatever topic. | ||
And that means that he's in the pocket of Iran. | ||
Or he's in the pocket of China. | ||
He's in the pocket of Russia. | ||
Or something else. | ||
You know, take your pick at any scandal. | ||
People are so quick. | ||
And it's like, never forget the trip. | ||
I turned down the trip and that's why they hate me. | ||
That is why I am like... | ||
That's why I'm public enemy number one of so many people. | ||
So, never forget. | ||
I was the chosen one. | ||
I still am, but just chosen to do a different thing. | ||
RoboTalker says, I think you should broadcast on public access TV. | ||
I don't even know how to begin to do that. | ||
James says, American products with Spanish labels? | ||
Is that a question? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Globo Dono says, no accident you're doing America first. | ||
It was the divine hand of God. | ||
It's possible. | ||
It's possible. | ||
WD says, you ate a lot of red pills since the NJF show. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
I was not red-pilled in high school. | ||
I was very blue-pilled. | ||
But I always, like, on an intuitive level, knew the score. | ||
If you know what I mean. | ||
Like, when it came to women, when it came to the minority situation, in general, I kind of always, like, knew what was up. | ||
I kind of always knew, hmm, in general, I had, like, a feeling, like, a gut feeling about certain things. | ||
Like, I've always been a chauvinist towards women. | ||
And I've always been, like, I've never felt white guilt or anything like that. | ||
I've always, you know, I've also always knew the reality of race on a, like I said, that intuitive level. | ||
Well, Across the board, even about like morality, Christianity, even though I didn't until college really get into Christianity. | ||
I was Catholic. | ||
I was born and raised Catholic, but I was never like a zealot or like a true like Catholic in the actual sense. | ||
I believed in God. | ||
I believed in Jesus Christ, but I was never, you know, I didn't get a strong religious upbringing. | ||
So in any case, in spite of that, even then I had a strong moral code and strong feelings about moral questions. | ||
And drugs and sexuality and all that. | ||
And then, you know, I just kind of unlocked, oh, here's why I feel that way. | ||
Here's why all of... here's the explanation for all this. | ||
And that's really what happened, I guess, in college. | ||
I don't even know what that says. | ||
That's pretty interesting. | ||
Louis Groyper says... | ||
What is the... | ||
I don't even know what that says. | ||
Johnny Rocket says... | ||
Romulus, shrine, possible coffin discovered in Rome. | ||
That's pretty interesting. | ||
Warren says... | ||
Are you planning on debating any conservative ink people in D.C.? | ||
Ah, we'll see. | ||
Sponge says... | ||
Know anyone who could bring me soup? | ||
That's funny. | ||
Debt Collector says eventually you wear out suspension parts over tens of thousands of miles. | ||
Maybe that's it. | ||
Yeet says too fast. | ||
We'll F up the ball joints and Tire and tie rod ends. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
I don't, I don't know. | ||
Car talk, but good to know. | ||
Uh, guns ups is just buying our 32 GTR. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
I'll get right on that. | ||
Delco says Bloomberg wignets are the worst thing I've seen right now. | ||
Are there Bloomberg wignets? | ||
I don't, I've never seen that. | ||
Silicons. | ||
Cause I blocked all the wignets. | ||
Silicons is grug here. | ||
Okay. | ||
No, no, no, a grug meme. | ||
It's a grug long nose meme. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
Could you please get, in a car accident? | ||
Yeet says super chat is trying to diss us. | ||
New England nobility. | ||
Yeah. | ||
New England is based. | ||
Don't diss new England. | ||
I always love new England. | ||
Connor says debate was so good Bloomberg is the ceo of money. | ||
Yeah, I have to respect I have to stand a 60 billion dollar person. | ||
Yeah, silicon groiper. | ||
Shut up. | ||
Just stop watching, man. | ||
His super chat is, it's a grug here, six long nose clan in smoke huts. | ||
It's like, if you're saying that shit in 2020, please like, just stop taking your vitamin C, okay? | ||
Go on the subway, have somebody cough on you, stop washing your hands. | ||
I see that and it just makes me rage. | ||
I don't think there's anything less funny than that. | ||
Debt collectors, marry a 4 or a 5 and do whatever you want. | ||
No. | ||
Get rich, marry a 10 and do whatever you want. | ||
I'm gonna do whatever I want and you think I'm gonna like, oh my wife is pretty, I can't do it, I gotta keep her. | ||
That is like such a terrible mentality. | ||
It's the opposite. | ||
I think the women, the pretty women, go for men that do whatever they want no matter what. | ||
And it's actually the 4s and 5s that have men that are the simping, right? | ||
I would think it's something like that. | ||
Oh, what is this? | ||
Marry a 4 or 5? | ||
I assume you mean like a 4 or 5 in a ranking and not like 4 or 5 people. | ||
And do whatever you want. | ||
Like I'm not going to do whatever I want no matter what. | ||
Please. | ||
Weeb Waker says, did you hear about the Young Turks Union on Twitter versus Cenk? | ||
I wonder which side Hassan takes. | ||
No, I didn't see that, but I'll have to check it out. | ||
Plo Coons says, the original Groyper was the Jordan Peterson guy. | ||
Or Jordan Peterson guy. | ||
The original Groyper was Yusuf. | ||
Antil says, can you back these claims about Adrenochrome and DMT? | ||
I can. | ||
But imagine, can you back that claim? | ||
Can you shut up and die? | ||
WS is do you invest any of the money you get from stream? | ||
Do I invest any of the money? | ||
Yeah, I invest money. | ||
No, I just have it under my mattress. | ||
That's potentially true. | ||
That's a very intelligent four-year-old. | ||
on the same wavelength that's potentially true maga country says my four-year-old son uncle nick is like trump me how so son he's making america great again just happened that's a very intelligent four-year-old i wonder if that's like my three-year-old just told me that the refugee crisis in yemen is out of control and supranational organizations must get to it right is that Is that one of those or is that real? | ||
But, in any case, four years old is a little young to be watching the show, but if true, hey, big if true, a very smart guy. | ||
Millenia Welder says most kids born from one woman is 69. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Oh, they were born in 69? | ||
Born from one woman. | ||
Who is born from not... What does that even mean? | ||
Most kids born from... Were you born from multiple women? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Green Cedars says, my cousin was like you, then he stopped after five girls. | ||
Stopped... Oh, stopped having kids? | ||
Geez, I could only imagine. | ||
I would do everything in my power to ensure that that would not happen. | ||
Whatever you have to do during the moon cycle or take these supplements or whatever five girls I think I would I would meet my end by my own hand if that were the case five girls I could even come up with five girls names Hmm. | ||
Yeah, no way no way Could you imagine me in like a minivan with like five girls in the in the car the oldest girl in the passenger seat? | ||
Four younger girls and in the back and you know, they're I don't even know screaming carrying on whatever and I'm just driving the car I've got to drive them to cheer practice or whatever because wife is busy or she's sick or something I'm just driving I would be like | ||
I'd be like in that million dollar extreme thing when, what's his name, goes into work and he spills his coffee on himself, smashes his laptop against his head, popping the, you know, 100 niacin pills. | ||
Let's see, manga country, I just read that. | ||
Yeastwoods is gonna hang with zoomers even if I'm from 94. | ||
Well, you're not a zoomer, but yeah, I don't know, maybe he can hang out with us. | ||
Based in Red Pilt says, Properitarianism, John Mark and Kurt Doolittle? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Cookie Monster says, Thank you for not taking the trip, Nick. | ||
Yeah, you're welcome. | ||
Crimean says, The crockpot will save western people. | ||
Yeah, no. | ||
Bad Faith Poster says, That Aussie kid is crying and you're all laughing. | ||
Oh, that midget or whatever? | ||
Yeah, I don't know what to make of that. | ||
Was that kind of adult or was he nine actually? | ||
That's the thing I think you're talking about. | ||
Polish American says, we're not out of control, just out of their control. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Just like in St. | ||
unidentified
|
Pablo. | |
So true. | ||
Thin Red Line says, thank you for not taking the trip. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
Bad Faith Poster says, the red pill is intrinsic, just dormant for most. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Green Cedar says, Albert check. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Can you hear this? | ||
Loud ass dog. | ||
Molly Maguire says, love him or hate him, Albert speaking straight facts. | ||
He's really just, he's something. | ||
Sponge says, say my name right or I'll say basketball American. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, don't. | |
Maga Country says, true story, hears you in the car. | ||
He hears you in the car, he's a genius. | ||
Yeah, sounds, he must be a genius if he likes the show. | ||
Polish American says, Nick, what is this? | ||
I'm not reading that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Yeah, that sounds, uh, that's a little too graphic for the show, but good to know. | ||
Green Cedars says, Nick with five daughters is an eternal screaming Wojak. | ||
Yeah, seriously, that would be like my personal hell. | ||
Cookie, that'll be, and I'm sure, maybe that'll be like a Dante's Inferno type punishment, you know? | ||
You put women on blast your whole life, and then, you know, cursed. | ||
Every child you have will be a woman, and then I'm just like, you know, clawing my face off. | ||
Cookie Monster says, the midget thing was a scam by his mother. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I didn't investigate that. | ||
It could be true. | ||
Chancellor says, hi Nick. | ||
Huge fan from the UK here. | ||
Hope you're well. | ||
Oi! | ||
Cheers, mate. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
But it looks like that's your last Super Chat. | ||
So that's going to do it for me on the show. | ||
OK, there's one more. | ||
Maga Country says, he calls you out when you drop F-bombs, LMAO. | ||
He doesn't like the bad language. | ||
That's why I apologize. | ||
That's why I do apologize for the language. | ||
Because it's a family show. | ||
But that's funny. | ||
Okay, well that's our last Super Chat. | ||
You're going to see me on the Ralph Retort in like a minute anyway. | ||
I'm going to be live on the Ralph Retort at 10, so that's in 20 minutes. | ||
But that's going to do it for us on this show. | ||
Remember to follow me on DLive. | ||
Click the follow button. | ||
Remember to subscribe to my email list at nicholasjfuentes.com. | ||
We are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
In particular, thank you to our top three contributors tonight. | ||
SP123, ArmenianGroper, and BassDollar. | ||
Big shout out, big thanks to our top three. | ||
Thanks to everybody else who superchatted or donated during the stream, and thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
I will see you on Monday. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend and have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America first! |