Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can check that yay button I'm here to go first okay | ||
okay I just enforce them, alright? | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
They said, trust your man. | ||
I was coming to the scene, your day was. | ||
Blackout, Scott, everything. | ||
Warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
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. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can check that yeah you play I'm gonna start the track and shoot see what they said I don't wanna pull you but they wanna pull you okay | ||
not my words not my rules I can endorse them alright | ||
last time and Everything. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
Warming on everybody who dared to vote. | ||
Protestant fan may you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you too, but sorry. | ||
I believe in religion the next time. | ||
So. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing dance. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
Okay, bro. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
Not my rules. | ||
I can endorse them, all right? | ||
I can endorse them. | ||
All right? | ||
They said trust no man, but I'm not saying to believe your day was. | ||
I can endorse them. | ||
All right? | ||
I'm not saying to love you, but I'm not saying to love you. | ||
My mama said trust no hope, you's a woman. | ||
But they said trust no man, but I'm not saying to believe your day was. | ||
The last time we've got everything, it's warming up everybody who dared to oppose. | ||
And you know I'm 18, I'm ready to shake, it's been in waves, wait before the star kick. | ||
Yo, in New York City, when I was just a chick, from the ball back, they didn't think you were the way to take, yo, it's cool, say yo, what's it, this shit, yeah, what's the freak, six, who type, what's the upset? | ||
Yo, I'm taking to my first show, I go, before they drop juice, wait before they drop, Yo, I'm still looking, now I'm being, oh, girl. | ||
What the way does it say, be a type, they take those targets, they say fuck, you, yes, they're the same. | ||
They're in the first, bitch. | ||
We don't say trust no man, but I'm not saying to believe your day was. | ||
Gotta do it, I said trust no girl, I'm not saying to love you. | ||
I'm not saying trust no hope, you should never do it. | ||
They say trust no man, but I'm not saying to believe your day was. | ||
They say trust no hope, you should never do it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Bye. | ||
This is from your biggest Boston fan, may 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 it. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment, I can take that day. | ||
I think it's the first action. | ||
See what they said. | ||
I don't want to pull you. | ||
If you want to pull you, you don't want to pull you. | ||
This is my team that called the Sacky, but we gon' have it back with the partners. | ||
It's doing a big one, always, always, always. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I can do your stuff, all right? | ||
They say trust no man, promise I can't believe your day was. | ||
They say trust no man, promise I can't believe your day was. | ||
Last out, Scott. | ||
Everything. | ||
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 I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
So. | ||
But as soon as you can start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. | ||
Okay. Okay. | ||
Blast off, Scott. | ||
This is everything. | ||
This is warming up. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
We'll be right back. | ||
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 a religion that makes sense. | ||
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can kick that yay button. | ||
I'm going to start the track. | ||
I'm going to start the track. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just endorse them, all right? | ||
No, they wasn't a problem. | ||
I'm going to start the track. | ||
I'm going to start the track. | ||
My mama said, trust no hoes. | ||
Use a problem. | ||
But they said, trust no man. | ||
I'm going to start the track. | ||
Last out is God. | ||
He's everything. | ||
It's warming on everybody who cares. | ||
It's warming on everybody who cares. | ||
It's warming on everybody who cares. | ||
It's warming on everybody who cares. | ||
This is from your biggest Boston fan, may one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
But sorry, I believe in religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
But as soon as people start playing games, I stop. | |
I stop playing games. | ||
and at any moment I can check that yay button. | ||
Okay. | ||
Okay. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enjoy stuff, all right? | ||
Okay. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
You're welcome. | ||
It's everything. | ||
It's warming up. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
Everybody dare to vote. | ||
May you one day see the light. | ||
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
but sorry, I believe in a religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
But as soon as people start playing games, ask that. | ||
I stop playing games. | ||
And at any moment, I can take that yay button. | ||
I said trust no man, but I'm sorry. | ||
I believe you, Dave was in the car. | ||
I said treat you with girls in the world. | ||
I said trust no hoes, you's a rubber. | ||
Run that, run it to, stop the track. | ||
I think I'm going to reverse it. | ||
See what they said. | ||
I don't want to pull you. | ||
I don't want to pull you in a world. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I don't want to pull you in a world. | ||
Not my words, not my rules. | ||
I just enforce them, all right? | ||
unidentified
|
They say, trust me, baby. | |
I'm a leader. | ||
They want to send a car. | ||
They say, trust me, girl. | ||
I'm a mother. | ||
My mama said, trust me. | ||
I'm a leader. | ||
They say, trust me, baby. | ||
I'm a leader. | ||
They want to send a car. | ||
Last up, Scott. | ||
Everything. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Warming on everybody. | ||
Thank you. | ||
This is from your biggest Boston fan. | ||
unidentified
|
May you one day see the light. | |
Well, hey, thanks. | ||
Love you, too. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
I believe in a religion that makes sense. | ||
unidentified
|
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'm here for the first action | ||
okay not | ||
my words not my rules I just endorse them alright they said I'm excited to believe on the day it was in the car I just enforce them, alright? | ||
Last doubt is God. | ||
He's everything. | ||
He's forming. | ||
unidentified
|
Everybody dare to vote. | |
We'll be right back. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It 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 back with you here tonight on Tuesday for another exciting show, another epic show, and there's lots to talk about tonight. | ||
More on immigration this evening. | ||
Yesterday we talked a little bit about immigration. | ||
We talked about the capitalist class. | ||
We talked about the problem of the rich and money. | ||
A little bit of a different tone for the show, but I like it. | ||
But I'm liking that. | ||
Tonight we're carrying on with our themes on immigration. | ||
Yesterday our featured story is about a bill which may resurface in the Senate. | ||
It's a bill that is actually kind of old news. | ||
It passed the House of Representatives back in December, but it is now being reconsidered by Senate Republicans and it is a mass amnesty bill for the agriculture sector. | ||
The bill is number 5038. | ||
It is the Agriculture Modernization Act. | ||
You might have heard of this. | ||
If you follow prominent immigration restrictionists, people like Michelle Malkin, Tucker Carlson, among others, you will have heard about it. | ||
We're going to talk about it tonight. | ||
It may be coming back in a big way. | ||
So we'll get into everything that's inside the bill, why we're talking about it, why it's back in the news, who's proposing that it come back, and all the rest, numbers, everything else. | ||
So that should be pretty exciting, pretty big feature. | ||
And we'll be talking as well about what is happening in Nevada. | ||
So tomorrow is the debate for the Nevada caucus, the Democratic primary debate for the Nevada caucus. | ||
The caucus is going to be on Saturday. | ||
Debate's tomorrow. | ||
And we're going to talk a little bit about the debate and what's going on tomorrow, but our second story is actually about the Nevada caucus itself and the state of Nevada. | ||
It's very interesting. | ||
A friend of mine sent me this article from USA Today. | ||
And I think we have to start compiling these. | ||
I don't know where we would do it. | ||
I don't know what we would create out of this. | ||
But we've been doing this show now for three years. | ||
And I feel like there has to be an article for every single swing state in the country about how the changing demographics is going to shift the electoral balance of power in favor of the Democrats forever. | ||
Somebody needs to compile this. | ||
Because just off the top of my head... | ||
I know that in the past so many months on this show we have covered an article just like this about Virginia. | ||
How the changing demographics as a result of immigration have made Virginia a permanently blue state. | ||
We read an article on this show about California turning blue forever because of immigration and how the same thing is going to happen in Texas. | ||
We've reviewed an article on this show in the New York Times, or maybe it was the Atlantic, about Georgia and how the demographics are going to forever shift the balance of power in favor of the Democrats in the state elections and the federal elections. | ||
And I have to imagine that at this point maybe there is an article for every single state in the country about how more non-white immigrants means more Democrats in power. | ||
And I don't know. | ||
I'm very cynical at this point, but maybe if we could compile all of this information, which is documented, the headlines, all the different articles, maybe then we could make a very compelling and concrete and rock-solid case that what's happening isn't just in our imaginations. | ||
Because we've got yet another one of these tonight about Nevada. | ||
As I said, a friend of mine sent me an article today from USA Today, and the theme of the article was this. | ||
Demographics is destiny. | ||
The changing demographics in Nevada as a result of largely illegal immigration will make Nevada blue forever. | ||
So we're going to talk about that as well tonight. | ||
That'll be our second story. | ||
Should be a pretty good show talking about the amnesty bill and talking about what is happening in Nevada. | ||
So it's exciting stuff. | ||
Before we dive into that, you may have noticed, I don't know if this is housekeeping, I don't know what subject, what category, You would call this, but you may have noticed, you may have noticed about my face that my mustache is gone! | ||
It's a new era! | ||
unidentified
|
New era! | |
We are now no longer on YouTube and I am once again without a mustache. | ||
Once again without a beard or a mustache. | ||
So, I would be remiss of it if I didn't address this. | ||
Some people get bent out of shape when I talk about this. | ||
I see people on Twitter, no joke, or in the comments section formerly on YouTube, and people would say, this guy talks so much about his facial hair and that means he is vain? | ||
unidentified
|
That means that he is obsessed with vanity and he is a fake Christian? | |
The extrapolations, the crazy things you'll see. | ||
I'm not making that up. | ||
I see that whenever I bring it up, I see that. | ||
And the reason I bring it up is not because of vanity or whatever, but it's because I feel like weird if yesterday I come on the show and I have a full mustache, and then today I come on the show and I don't. | ||
And it's like, oh hey, you know, I don't know. | ||
Is it weird that I feel the need to address it? | ||
I don't think that's like a weird vanity thing. | ||
I think that's just like, oh and by the way, as you may know, the mustache is gone. | ||
It's also tongue-in-cheek. | ||
It's also just funny, alright? | ||
But I see that all. | ||
It's like, you can't look too much at the comments on the internet. | ||
It'll drive you crazy. | ||
Like on Twitter and... | ||
On the image boards, whatever. | ||
The little minutiae that people nitpick and they get at you for it, but you may have noticed. | ||
No mustache. | ||
I felt it was time for a change. | ||
Last night, I don't know. | ||
I was just in kind of like a hardcore mood. | ||
I was in a hardcore, like, time to get down to business. | ||
It's time for the plan. | ||
It's time for Nick Fuentes to take it to the next level. | ||
So I said we have to get serious. | ||
There's no more time. | ||
There's no more time for silly facial hair. | ||
It was sort of like an ironic mustache. | ||
There's no more time for ironic facial hair. | ||
It's time to have an unironic physical appearance. | ||
So it was a game day 3 a.m. | ||
decision. | ||
So anyway, that may be of interest to you. | ||
Maybe you think that's vain. | ||
I don't really care. | ||
It must be discussed. | ||
So there's that. | ||
And one other thing before we dive in, and this is actually kind of a good segue tomorrow for the show. | ||
We are going to start the show at 8 o'clock Central Time tomorrow. | ||
I know that's a big difference from normally. | ||
Normally we're at 7 o'clock sharp, not a minute sooner, not a minute later. | ||
But tomorrow we're going to be at 8 o'clock because it is the Nevada Democratic Debate. | ||
Can you believe it? | ||
Already another one. | ||
I feel like, when was the last one? | ||
The last one was in New Hampshire. | ||
The New Hampshire primary was what? | ||
The 11th? | ||
So I think the last one was literally less than two weeks ago. | ||
The last Democratic debate. | ||
How many have there been? | ||
I feel like a prisoner. | ||
Like I need to scratch a tally onto the wall every time I have to sit through one of these things. | ||
We're at like 15 or something. | ||
15 different nights of debates. | ||
Something like that. | ||
So tomorrow's the Democratic debate. | ||
We're going to be covering it live. | ||
I'll be watching live, reacting. | ||
It starts at 8 o'clock. | ||
And the reason I want to cover this one is obviously we've been covering the Democratic primary and February is a very critical and eventful time because February is the first four contests and those are the most important ones. | ||
They really set the stage for the rest of the contest overall. | ||
You know, you've got Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, and then it's Super Tuesday, and then it's big states, big days, lots of states in a given day. | ||
So, it's an important month, so we're covering the primary, but also, more than that, the dynamic's gonna be different tomorrow. | ||
It's gonna be a little bit more interesting than usual because the lineup is totally different. | ||
Uh, where we've been watching the debates, it's basically been the same cast of characters every time since June. | ||
Obviously the field has narrowed a lot, but now even some of the core players are being swapped out. | ||
This time you will not have Tom Steyer, which is great. | ||
I hate Tom Steyer, so he won't be there tonight. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
And no Andrew Yang. | ||
Andrew Yang dropped out of the race, obviously, last week. | ||
So Andrew Yang will not be there. | ||
That's a bit of a disappointment. | ||
I liked Andrew Yang. | ||
And there will be an addition. | ||
Michael Bloomberg has qualified for the debate. | ||
That was last minute. | ||
I think he qualified today or yesterday. | ||
And this will be the first debate that he's qualified for yet. | ||
It's interesting to note as well, tomorrow the debate is being held in Nevada because that's the next contest. | ||
The Nevada caucus is on Saturday. | ||
So that's how they've been doing it. | ||
They did a debate in Iowa before the Iowa caucus, a debate in New Hampshire before the New Hampshire primary. | ||
Now it's in Nevada before the caucus on Saturday. | ||
And what's interesting about Michael Bloomberg qualifying for this debate tomorrow is he's not in the ballot. | ||
Or rather, he's not on the ballot in Nevada. | ||
So he'll be up there in Nevada debating, but they won't even be able to vote for him in Nevada. | ||
I think they might be able to write him in. | ||
I'm not 100% on that. | ||
I don't think they can. | ||
So he's not even somebody that you can vote for in the upcoming contest. | ||
And I'm not sure about South Carolina, which is the one after that. | ||
That's a little... I don't know if that's interesting to you, but that's... | ||
Something interesting about this coming debate. | ||
So I'll be very curious to see what the dynamic will be tomorrow now that Bloomberg is on the stage. | ||
More than that, a national poll just came out today which has Bloomberg polling in second place nationally. | ||
Second place overall! | ||
I think that's the first time that's happened. | ||
And we've been talking about this on the show, the Bloomberg phenomenon, that he's bought his way into the race. | ||
We talked a lot about it yesterday in a general sense. | ||
But I think a lot of people, Bloomberg has flown under their radar. | ||
I think a lot of people don't understand that he actually has a really good chance of winning the nomination. | ||
I think they underestimate him for a good reason, because he hasn't been on the ballot in any of the states so far. | ||
He's not been on the debate stage in any of the debates so far, but he'll be jumping onto the debate stage for the first time tomorrow without even being on the ballot, second place nationally. | ||
And if you look at any of the polling for Super Tuesday, he's actually polling higher than most of the candidates. | ||
He's right there in a lot of states in third or fourth place. | ||
In some states he's number one, like in Arkansas a poll came out last week that had him polling at number one. | ||
So it's going to be pretty shocking for Bloomberg to enter into the race, obviously with all the money that he's made, and so it'll be... | ||
It'll be cool to see what the dynamic looks like, particularly, and I've said this before, the contrast between Bloomberg, who is now this insurgent, maybe he's the best poised to inherit the moderate coalition. | ||
Joe Biden is obviously on the way out. | ||
Pete Buttigieg, I think his luck just ran out in New Hampshire. | ||
I don't think he'll do great in the Super Tuesday states and the remaining states in February. | ||
Klobuchar is going nowhere fast. | ||
Elizabeth Warren has collapsed. | ||
Bloomberg might be poised to be the one to inherit the moderate vote, the vote that says we want to beat Trump more than we want to agree on the issues, or people that they simply think Bernie Sanders is too radical. | ||
So you've got Bloomberg as basically the next in line. | ||
He's maybe the only one that can now rise up and challenge Bernie, who is the frontrunner. | ||
And to me that is incredible that you've got Bernie Sanders as number one and how does he campaign? | ||
He campaigns against millionaires and billionaires and he's a socialist and he hates Wall Street and he hates capitalism and he's going to be going head-to-head with the 61, 64 billion dollar man who bought his way into the race, literally bribed and paid his way into the race just by paying for commercials. | ||
And honestly, again, I've gotten a lot of people, because I don't tweet always, you know, sometimes they say about Bloomberg, like I said yesterday, that his comments about blacks and Hispanics are true. | ||
And I say that and people say, why are you supporting Bloomberg? | ||
That's suspicious. | ||
Is he paying you? | ||
And whatever. | ||
And I don't support Bloomberg, but I think it is so funny to me that all these other candidates have worked their fingers to the bone campaigning and stumping and debating and they have to talk to these slovenly Democrat voters and beg them, beg them to go for them in the caucuses. | ||
You know, the Virgin tried so hard to get the nomination versus the Chad buys $500 million worth of commercials, right? | ||
I just can't that is just so funny to me and it's funny when I see people like Michael Tracy and others who they're literally he was tweeting the other day my face is melting because I'm so upset about Bloomberg Hello! | ||
Welcome to America! | ||
unidentified
|
Hello! | |
Welcome to Earth! | ||
Billionaires run everything. | ||
People are like, outraged! | ||
Oh, uh, sorry. | ||
What planet are you from? | ||
What dimension did you just... Did you come through a wormhole? | ||
Did you come from the ghost zone? | ||
Did you come from the chalk zone? | ||
Where did you come from that you're surprised that a billionaire is overtly buying an election as opposed to, like, behind the scenes buying the election? | ||
So I do find it very funny. | ||
I'm finding it hard not to become an ironic or unironic bloomer. | ||
Bloomer for Bloomberg, because on the one hand, you've got the Chad, yeah, I'll just buy all the commercials. | ||
Oh, I'll just hire everyone in politics. | ||
And at the same time, every day, something cool comes out about him. | ||
You know, last week, what did he say? | ||
All the criminals are blacks and Hispanics. | ||
Based? | ||
And then what did he say yesterday? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, blacks and Hispanics don't want to behave in the workplace. | |
And then he said today, then the BuzzFeed was reporting today, there's new comments now where Bloomberg said last year in 2019, he said about transgender, something to the effect, he said he, she, it, it's a guy in a dress going into a girl's locker room. | ||
From last year. | ||
We're not even talking about like 2005. | ||
That's like last year. | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
I'm finding it very difficult. | ||
I'm finding it very difficult not to become an unironic bloomer. | ||
The Chad buys it all, says what he wants, it doesn't matter. | ||
The Chad based in Red Pilled on minorities and trans people literally doesn't matter, too much money. | ||
The Chad just saunters into the race whenever he feels like it, drops half a billion dollars, buys the nomination. | ||
I'm finding it hard not to respect it. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
But that is a joke, by the way. | ||
I have to clarify for the boomers out there. | ||
I know the boomers are going to get on my case. | ||
You know it's going to happen after this show on Twitter or on 4chan or whatever. | ||
unidentified
|
Nick Fuentes says Bloomberg is based. | |
He's controlled by Bloomberg in the Jewish order. | ||
You know, whatever. | ||
It's jokes, folks. | ||
I'm being ironic. | ||
I don't support billionaires buying the election. | ||
I just think it's funny. | ||
I just think it's clown world. | ||
So that's the debate tomorrow, and as I said, it's a good segue. | ||
It's also funny to me. | ||
Life becomes so much easier when instead of taking the black pill, you just see the funny side. | ||
I know that's an old meme, but it really is true. | ||
Life becomes a lot easier when instead of carrying the weight of all this horrendous stuff on your shoulders, you just see the funny side. | ||
You just see the humor in it. | ||
You know, you think it's a tragedy, and then you realize it's a comedy, and then you just start laughing. | ||
So, I could be like Michael Tracy and, oh, Michael Bloomberg's buying the election. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, that's not what the founders wanted. | |
Or you could just say, well, that's pretty Chad. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
You have this little Jewish guy buying the election. | ||
Kind of funny, though. | ||
But, as I said, Okay, but let's get serious. | ||
That's a perfect segue into our first story here about Nevada, the Nevada debate, the Nevada caucus, and there's a great article in USA Today about Nevada. | ||
And this is along the same lines... Did I talk about this on Friday, I think? | ||
It's almost like every day now, like literally every day, that an article comes out and the headline is, fuck white people, demographics are changing forever, and there's nothing you can do about it, and we're gonna take over, right? | ||
Because at least, I feel like four years ago, they were trying to keep it under wraps. | ||
Four or five years ago, they were trying to kind of be secretive about it. | ||
Don't tell the goyim, white race is going away. | ||
That's ironic. | ||
But now they don't even care. | ||
Every day it's like that's all that's in the news is Jewish journalists gloating about demographic change. | ||
Or, you know, there's non-Jewish journalist gloating too, and there's non-white journalist gloating as well. | ||
unidentified
|
But it's what it is! | |
And there was another article like this today. | ||
We literally just talked about one last week, to give you an idea. | ||
When I say it's every day, it's every day. | ||
And today's no different. | ||
You know, another day, another article about how my people are being displaced, and that means that we're going to become a one-party state, which is a good thing. | ||
The headline was from USA Today, it says Nevada's changing demographics are a roadmap showing Democrats how to win elections. | ||
Go figure! | ||
Imagine that. | ||
Changing demographics is a roadmap for how to win elections. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
How do Democrats win elections? | ||
Well, they change the demographics. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
How do you win elections? | ||
You change the people that are voting in them. | ||
If you can't win over people, simply bring in people who will vote for you. | ||
Simply import millions of people from Mexico, Central America. | ||
We know how it goes. | ||
We know how the operation works at this point. | ||
And I'll read you the article. | ||
It's very brief. | ||
It's an opinion piece, so there's some editorializing. | ||
It says, quote, This has been a dark month so far for Democrats and progressives. | ||
Between the Iowa caucus debacle, President Trump's State of the Union address, and his impeachment acquittal, we were gut-punched not once, but three times. | ||
Epic. | ||
And left deeply worried about the political road ahead. | ||
But for those seeking a silver lining, perhaps we need to look no further than the Silver State Caucuses on Saturday. | ||
Nevada, which has been trending blue in recent elections, shows Democrats how to actually beat Trump and win, in states and nationally. | ||
Take advantage of demographic shifts, couple that with authentic, on-the-ground organizing, and stress bread-and-butter issues. | ||
You know, I think you could actually just dispense with the latter two issues altogether and just have the first. | ||
It says, based on my calculations using the 1990 census and the 2018 American Community Survey, Nevada's population grew a staggering 154 percent over that period, far higher than the national rate of 32 percent. | ||
So the country grew at 32 percent, Nevada 154 percent. | ||
So Nevada's population grew five times more. | ||
A little math mathematics there for you. | ||
Five times faster than the national average. | ||
Much of that growth has come from immigrants and people of color, naturally. | ||
Nevada's population had about 21% people of color in 1990, and is now, quote, majority minority at 52%, the fifth state to reach that threshold. | ||
The bulk of that population is Latinos, who make up 29% of the state. | ||
Blacks and Asian Pacific Islanders are at about 10% each. | ||
So is a 21% non-white in 1990, 30 years ago, and today, 52%. | ||
So the proportion of non-white people in the state doubled in 30 years. | ||
You know, again, more math throwing at you, but just to give you an idea of the scale. | ||
And that it's happening everywhere, right? | ||
It says, a blue wave is likely to continue of the U.S. born turning 18 this year and thus gaining the ability to vote. | ||
Nearly two-thirds are kids of color. | ||
And over 100,000 immigrants in the state are long-term legal residents who are eligible to naturalize. | ||
If they did so, that would raise the citizen voting age population by roughly 6 percentage points. | ||
So, not only have you seen this rapid demographic transformation in 30 years, not only is this a majority-minority state and trending blue because of it, but if you're looking at... | ||
The U.S. | ||
born kids turning 18, two-thirds of them are people of color. | ||
And that gives you an idea of the dynamic nature of the transformation. | ||
Everybody knows sort of the metrics and the current numbers, but just to give you an idea of how fast it's happening, like we know we're at today and how far we've come in the last 30 years, but already. | ||
The population turning 18, it's two-thirds, 66%. | ||
So while the state overall is 52% non-white, the population that's reaching the age of adulthood is 66%. | ||
And you can imagine what the rate is for newborns. | ||
And that's to give you an idea of where we're going to be in the next generation, in the next 20 years. | ||
And then, subsequently, what the politics will look like. | ||
If the state is trending blue, and it's difficult for Republicans to win now, some say impossible now, what's it going to look like in a generation? | ||
State's 52% non-white now, it's going to trend much further non-white in the future, and it's already essentially unwinnable for Republicans. | ||
That gives you an idea. | ||
And that's, as you know, happening everywhere. | ||
That is happening, to give you a list. | ||
Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Virginia, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Colorado, all the swing states. | ||
And then eventually, all the states, period. | ||
Even states you wouldn't expect. | ||
States like Minnesota, states like South Dakota, all kinds of states. | ||
It'll take a longer time for them, but just look at the refugees pouring in, just look it from Asia from Africa pouring into states where you would least expect it. | ||
It's happening everywhere. | ||
It's happening at different rates, but this is as we saw in Virginia with those elections in fall 2019, just a few months ago. | ||
As we saw in Georgia with the special elections. | ||
In every single state they are all falling at different rates, but they're all treading in the same direction. | ||
And what's amazing about this article, which I just found incredible about this one in particular, The author actually says in the article, demographics are not destiny. | ||
And some people might read that and say, oh see, there you go. | ||
The author is gloating about demographic change helping Democrats, but he says demographics isn't destiny. | ||
So, case closed. | ||
Do you want to know why the author of this article said demographics are not destiny? | ||
He says because so many of the non-white people in Nevada are illegal immigrants who can't vote. | ||
So he says, well, well, well, let's not get ahead of ourselves. | ||
Demographic change is going to deliver Nevada for Democrats forever, but not so fast. | ||
First, the illegal immigrants that comprise so much of the nonwhite population have to have kids, and they have to get amnesty themselves, or the legal residents have to become citizens. | ||
So when this author, and that's the furthest they will go, As far as talking about demographics not being a one-to-one correlation between victory and population, they will say, well, it's not quite destiny because we still have to get all those legal residents to become citizens first. | ||
Well, demographics isn't destiny exactly. | ||
Before all these non-white people who have poured into Nevada turn the state blue forever, first we have to convince them to become citizens. | ||
And that makes it not destiny. | ||
I mean, who knows, right? | ||
And first these illegal immigrants have to have their anchor babies, and then we're okay. | ||
But until that happens, not destiny, okay. | ||
Okay, really? | ||
So, and I know this is nothing new. | ||
I know, if you watch this show, we know, we know. | ||
This article, how many times, how many times have you seen this article? | ||
And it's for every state, as I said at the top of the show. | ||
Doing this show alone, just off the top of my head, I can remember this article being written now for Nevada, for Virginia, for Georgia, for Texas, for Arizona, off the top of my head. | ||
New Hampshire even, they talk about New Hampshire's too white, we need to make it less white to change the demographics, to change the vote. | ||
Everywhere! | ||
And like, I... | ||
I feel like I'm going crazy. | ||
I've said this a hundred million times, but I still get called a white nationalist, alt-right, white majoritarian, like that's a bad thing, white separatist, all the names in the book, simply for acknowledging this. | ||
That's the definition of gaslighting! | ||
That is the definition of gaslighting. | ||
And I just want everybody to know to watch this. | ||
Like, here's just irrefutable proof. | ||
Because I think this is how they win on these issues, is they just convince people that they're crazy. | ||
They convince people that people like me are crazy. | ||
Oh, no, no, no, no, no. | ||
Well, demographic change isn't happening because, well, the people talking about that are Nazis, so... | ||
Well, demographic change is not happening. | ||
You may see all the facts and the numbers and the statistics and the trends and so on, but that's a conspiracy theory. | ||
Duh! | ||
It's a conspiracy theory. | ||
Oh, that's happening? | ||
Well, that's a conspiracy theory. | ||
You're crazy if you say that. | ||
Well, okay, but it's obviously... but they're admitting it. | ||
So, you're not crazy, and you're not an extremist, and it's not fringe of the fringe. | ||
This is a... this is descriptive. | ||
This is objectively an observation about what's happening in the country. | ||
Without a valid judgment, I mean, these are Democrats that are writing these articles. | ||
They're gloating, but it's Democrats writing these things. | ||
They're talking about the same thing we are, but they're obviously in favor of it because it's going to help them and their goals. | ||
We're obviously opposed to it because it's going to hurt us and our goals, but For opposing it, I'm like Hitler too, right? | ||
I'm literally a neo-Nazi Charlottesville attendee. | ||
Charlottesville attendee. | ||
They don't call me Joker attendee. | ||
unidentified
|
I saw Joker more times than I was at Charlottesville. | |
They don't say Joker rally guard. | ||
Joker movie attendee, Nick Fuentes. | ||
They say Charlottesville rally goer. | ||
I went to Charlottesville once. | ||
I saw Joker in theaters eight times. | ||
But, and isn't that how it goes? | ||
You see Joker eight times. | ||
Nobody calls you a Joker film attendee. | ||
You attend the Charlottesville rally one time and for the rest of your life, Shut up! | ||
So shut up! | ||
Stupid journalist! | ||
unidentified
|
Bitch! | |
I am not a bad person! | ||
unidentified
|
You're admitting what's going on! | |
We're talking about the same thing! | ||
And I'm the bad guy? | ||
Eat shit! | ||
Okay, you know what? | ||
The mustache went away, and it's like... Normally what happens is the mustache is there, and I'm high tea. | ||
The mustache has gone away, and now I'm just like... | ||
Sheesh, now I'm like feeling it. | ||
I'm like, I'm riled up. | ||
My apologies for the language, but I'm just feeling fired up tonight. | ||
I don't know what it is. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Superfoods. | ||
I had a vegetable soup tonight. | ||
Maybe that was, you know, firing me up. | ||
Superfood. | ||
Without the Big Macs, maybe there's something to this vegetable business. | ||
Okay. | ||
So that is the Nevada article. | ||
In case you didn't know, we are being displaced in our home countries deliberately so that a slave class, underclass of low IQ minorities can be created to serve the capitalist class forever. | ||
In case you forgot, That is still happening. | ||
They are not hiding it. | ||
unidentified
|
So that's Nevada. | |
And we'll see what happens in the caucus. | ||
It's actually, there's a grand irony in all of this that people like Pete Buttigieg and the establishment are going to die in these states because all these people are going for Bernie Sanders. | ||
Maybe that's what's funny about it. | ||
Is that at the end of the day, all these minorities that they brought into the country, we really shouldn't call them minorities. | ||
That word should be retired because they will be in the majority, so they are non-whites. | ||
They brought all these non-whites into the country and now they can't corral them into the political activities that they need them. | ||
I think increasingly that's going to be a problem. | ||
They all are going for Bernie. | ||
None of them are going for the CIA candidate, Buttigieg, and I don't think they'll go for Bloomberg. | ||
Bernie has consolidated that vote, took it away from Joe Biden. | ||
I should also add there's another dimension to that which is funny and should be worth noting. | ||
Bernie Sanders will win the Hispanics and the Blacks. | ||
I don't think Joe Biden's gonna do it. | ||
I think Bernie will do it. | ||
And it should tell you something that not only are Hispanics and Blacks going 70% and 90% respectively for Democrats on average in the past so many elections, not only that, but in the primaries, they're voting for the most radical left-wing socialist candidates. | ||
So, in case you're like a boomer that still believes in mass immigration, you know, I know this is not anything else that's very new, but I think that's something we overlooked during the Iowa caucus, that all the non-whites are going for the socialists. | ||
So, all the Republicans tell us all day long about these natural conservatives and so on, and we know that that's not true. | ||
We know they go for Democrats, but not only are they going for Democrats, but they are going for the socialists. | ||
So Republicans are saying, oh well, demographics is not destiny, our real problem is socialism. | ||
Well, who's going to give it to us? | ||
The non-white immigrants are going to give us socialism. | ||
Okay, but that's Nevada. | ||
Kind of boilerplate stuff, but we're gonna move on and talk about this bill. | ||
This bill which is being reconsidered now in the Senate, passed the House as I said in December, and now it seems like it's being re-conjured in the Senate. | ||
So this is Bill 5038, 5038, HR 5038. | ||
The bill is called the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, and you might have heard about this, maybe not. | ||
It didn't really get a lot of mainstream press play. | ||
It wasn't on New York Times, it wasn't in any of the major publications, any of the major network TV stations. | ||
Which is a pattern, by the way. | ||
We talked about that crazy bill last week, I think on Thursday or Friday, that is being sponsored by Chuy Garcia. | ||
The name of it escapes me right now, but you remember we talked about it last week. | ||
It decriminalizes illegal immigration, it jams up the courts, it makes taxpayers pay for illegal immigrants to come back who are deported. | ||
Nobody talked about that. | ||
And nobody's talking about this. | ||
And nothing's new there. | ||
Except for Tucker Carlson. | ||
He covered this. | ||
But so, last, or I'm sorry, not last month, two months ago, in mid-December, this bill passed the House with overwhelming Democratic support. | ||
34 Republicans voted for it as well. | ||
And what this represents is a huge amnesty giveaway to the agriculture sector. | ||
A lot of people have been comparing it to the 1986 amnesty with Ronald Reagan. | ||
And I'll read you a summary of the bill and then we'll get into kind of the current dynamics right now. | ||
So the content of the bill, there's actually a really great fact sheet which I have from Numbers USA. | ||
Numbers USA is a great immigration restrictionist organization. | ||
We talked about them a little bit yesterday with Trump's immigration proposal. | ||
They put together a really succinct fact sheet about everything that's in here. | ||
It says, quote, H.R. | ||
5038 would give amnesty, including work permits, green cards, and a pathway to citizenship to illegal aliens who have been unlawfully employed in agriculture at least part-time during the past two years. | ||
In fact, illegal aliens who spent just most weekends working in agriculture over two years would qualify, since only 1,035 hours or 180 workdays are required. | ||
So the amnesty is basically for these illegal immigrants who have been working in the agriculture sector. | ||
They're going to give them a pathway to citizenship, even if they were only working on the weekends. | ||
However, Congress knows that giving amnesty to illegal agricultural workers will fail to produce a stable legal workforce because they've tried it before. | ||
Congress passed an agricultural amnesty in 1986 as part of the Immigration Reform and Control Act. | ||
That law was sold to the American people as a one-time amnesty in exchange for border security and a prohibition on hiring illegal aliens in the future. | ||
That would provide a stable and legal agricultural workforce. | ||
We ended up giving amnesty to almost 1.1 million quote special agricultural workers plus their spouses and minor children. | ||
And there was a catch. | ||
Most of these special agricultural workers left agriculture for better paying jobs as soon as they got their work permits. | ||
So it's very similar. | ||
It's mirroring this 1986 bill. | ||
It goes on in this fact sheet. | ||
It says, The sponsors of the Farm Workforce Modernization Act decided to address this problem by regressing to the 17th century practice of indenturing newly amnestied agricultural workers for various durations. | ||
Under the bill, if an alien worked unlawfully in agriculture for at least 10 years prior to the date of enactment, that alien will be granted certified agricultural worker status for five and a half years with an employment authorization document that allows him or her to work for any employer in the United States in agriculture or not. | ||
After four years in certified agricultural worker status, the alien can apply for a green card and the path to citizenship. | ||
If the alien worked in agriculture for at least 575 hours or 100 workdays in each of those four years. | ||
So long-time illegal workers are only indentured for four years. | ||
However, if an alien worked unlawfully in agriculture for fewer than 10 years prior to enactment, that alien will also be granted CAW status but will be required to work in agriculture for the next 8 years. | ||
Aliens in this category cannot apply for a green card and the path to citizenship until they have CAW status for 8 years and can show that they worked in agriculture for at least 575 hours or 100 workdays in each of the past 8 years. | ||
So these aliens who worked unlawfully for less time will be indentured to agriculture for eight years before they can completely abandon farm work. | ||
Like the first category, though, they will still have an employment authorization document that is not limited to agriculture. | ||
So they can get a part-time or even most-time jobs in another industry while they are completing the term of their CAW permit. | ||
The bottom line, though, is it's a short-term solution for keeping workers on the farm. | ||
So if you didn't, that's a lot of details. | ||
That's a lot of, like, complicated stuff. | ||
But basically, these illegal immigrants who have been working in the agricultural sector, they will get a permit. | ||
Well, they are allowed to remain in agriculture. | ||
They work for 8 years if they've been working in agriculture for less than 10. | ||
They get this permit for 8 years where they can work in agriculture and also work part-time or most time in another job. | ||
After those 8 years, they get a green card. | ||
And for people that have been working illegals that have been working more than 10 years in agriculture, what is it they only have to work four years? | ||
I think is what it said under the CAW program where they work agriculture and also other work possibly. | ||
And then they get their green card. | ||
So, what it represents, though, is for all these illegal immigrants that are working in agriculture, it gives them a clear pathway to citizenship. | ||
And, you know, you might think about it that it's actually even bad for the illegal immigrant, that it's like, these people are, and they keep using the word indentured, because that's what it is, they're indentured to work on these farms for years, while they dangle citizenship, they dangle the green card in front of them. | ||
And then they get the green card, and they immediately leave the farms. | ||
That's what happened with the IRCA in 1986. | ||
They get their amnesty, they're able to work another job, and then they immediately leave because the agriculture jobs are not good. | ||
I mean they're not great jobs. | ||
So they will go get higher paying jobs, more decent jobs, and then they're just in our country. | ||
So they say that what this represents in numbers, they don't know how many people would get amnesty for this. | ||
There is no good estimate. | ||
The number of beneficiaries, they do have an estimate. | ||
It's 1.5 million, but they really have no idea how many illegals would get amnesty for this or a pathway to citizenship. | ||
There's some other good stuff in there. | ||
It allows illegal aliens with multiple DUIs or other charges to get amnesty, and also they don't have to pay back taxes. | ||
So you could have illegal immigrants that have been here for years, violating the law, working in agriculture, They will work more in agriculture and under the CAW indentured agriculture program, they'll be able to continue working on the farm for so many years, a set amount of years, and they will not be deported. | ||
They will not, you know, technically even be criminals, I don't think. | ||
And then after that, they can get their green card and then they're in the country. | ||
And, I mean, what this is, is amnesty. | ||
It is a huge... | ||
It's huge welfare, a huge subsidy to farms, to the agricultural lobby, and it's also a mass amnesty. | ||
So you kind of get the worst of both worlds. | ||
Not only are you propping up this industry, and that's going to cause problems in itself. | ||
Some people have pointed out actually, Center for Immigration Studies pointed out that actually one of the side effects of this will be that, ironically, it says that this is the Farm Modernization Act. | ||
If you have a constant supply of cheap labor, like you literally don't have to worry about raising wages or hiring more people, anything like that, if that's never a concern, then farms will never actually invest in machinery. | ||
They will never invest in technological upgrades or farm equipment. | ||
Because they don't need it. | ||
Because it would cost more to invest in R&D and that kind of stuff, more to invest in heavy machinery, than it would be to just have this reliable source of cheap labor. | ||
So, since it's a modernization act, it's actually the opposite. | ||
So that's one other side effect. | ||
So you have this huge giveaway to the agriculture sector. | ||
And that's no good. | ||
And then at the same time then we get the amnesty on top of that, the 1.5 million at least who will get the pathway to citizenship. | ||
And then the big question mark is, of course, this will invite millions and millions more illegal immigrants. | ||
It's been shown that every time an amnesty like this happens, every time a pathway to citizenship opens up, Even every time they talk about a pathway to citizenship, illegal immigration surges. | ||
Even when they talk about opening it up. | ||
You know, for example, Donald Trump was negotiating with Congress, I think this was back in January 2018, he was negotiating with Congress about maybe doing a deal to enshrine DACA into law, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the DREAMers and all that. | ||
And just because he was negotiating, huge spike in illegal immigration just because they were negotiating about it. | ||
Because word goes out to Mexico and Central America that basically the door is closing. | ||
I mean, that is what is communicated. | ||
It says, well, they're negotiating about amnesty, which means that if you get in now, you might be factored in. | ||
If you get in now, limited time offer. | ||
If you get across the border, you get through the end zone in time for the amnesty, you might just become a legal resident or a citizen. | ||
So there's no telling. | ||
This is only the beginning of the amnesty. | ||
And that's exactly what we saw in 1986. | ||
Now in this bill as well there's a promise for mandatory e-verify. | ||
But that was the same deal in 1986. | ||
In 1986 they said we'll do a one-time amnesty and then we're going to do stringent enforcement and workplaces will not be able to hire illegals. | ||
What do you think happened? | ||
We got the amnesty. | ||
We never got the enforcement. | ||
And it created a flood of illegal immigrants just because the amnesty happened. | ||
It's mirrored. | ||
It's exactly the same with this. | ||
And this is back in the news. | ||
It passed in the House in December. | ||
It's now being taken up again by Republicans in the Senate. | ||
This is an article from Breitbart about the original passing. | ||
It says nearly all House Democrats plus a group of 34 Republicans voted to approve an amnesty for illegal farm workers. | ||
This is 5038 and it talks about the bill and everything in there. | ||
It says Americans comprise roughly three-quarters of the 2.1 million workers in farming, fishing, and forestry. | ||
According to a report from Pew Research, in contrast, the workforce includes 325,000 illegal workers or one in six of the workforce. | ||
The estimate of working illegal aliens is far below other estimates from Democrats and other people. | ||
It says in 2019, farm companies hired roughly a quarter of a million H-2A workers but complained bitterly about their rising wages and the nation's good economy. | ||
Now this is back in the news. | ||
This is from Daniel Horowitz. | ||
This is another opinion piece, so there is some editorializing, but he's writing about why this is back. | ||
He says, quote, Two GOP staffers have informed me that Senator Tom Tillis as well as Senators James Lankford and Lindsey Graham began working this Wednesday on an effort to get Trump support for a mass amnesty bill that passed the House last year. | ||
That is 5038. | ||
Rosemary Jenks, Government Relations Director of Numbers USA, which is opening the bill, confirmed to me that those are the three leaders of the potential bill in the Senate. | ||
Conservative HQ, a publication run by the legendary conservative Richard Vigery, I think that's how you pronounce it, reports that Tillis is expected to be the lead Senate sponsor and that Vice President Pence's PAC is rumored to be supporting the bill. | ||
He's heard from the same sources in the Senate as well. | ||
Tillis has already publicly praised the bill and according to my sources has met with Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue along with several other GOP senators who plan to support the bill. | ||
Notably, nobody from the DHS was present at the meeting to offer the border security perspective on the bill. | ||
The bill grants amnesty to every illegal alien in the country who claims Who claims to have worked at least part-time for agriculture and creates an unlimited agriculture guest worker program for the future to bring in millions of low-skilled workers. | ||
The cultural and fiscal costs are never factored in. | ||
It permanently tethers green cards for people coming in on H-2 visas to the condition of working in agriculture for 10 years, creating an indentured service model that, as we talked about with CIS, will prevent farms from ever modernizing and mechanizing their processes because of the boundless flow of cheap labor. | ||
So this is like the worst of the worst when it comes to immigration bills. | ||
And what makes it the worst of the worst is that we already got this. | ||
We got this a long time ago, as I've been saying, in 1986. | ||
And we know exactly what's going to happen. | ||
We had this in 1986. | ||
It was the exact... I mean, it's not exactly the same, but it's virtually the same provisions in terms of the amnesty, the promise for enforcement, the giveaway to agriculture. | ||
We know exactly how it turned out. | ||
We know exactly the effects. | ||
We got millions of illegal immigrants who poured in, millions of illegal immigrants got amnesty, depressed wages in the agricultural sector, and it was a huge giveaway to big agriculture. | ||
And that's exactly what's going to happen here. | ||
And it was, and this is something to think about, it was Democrats who passed it in the House of Representatives. | ||
But it's Republicans that are taking it up in the Senate, and according to these sources, which, you know, we'll see, we're taking it on the word of Daniel Horowitz, that Mike Pence's PAC is supporting this, and they're going to the administration for support on this. | ||
And so when the President talks about people need the workers, isn't this what we hear from the President? | ||
He's been saying for about the last year. | ||
He's been saying that unemployment is so low that factories and business leaders are begging him to open up legal immigration. | ||
He said this at the State of the Union last year. | ||
He's been saying this at the rallies. | ||
He says we need the workers. | ||
This is what he's talking about. | ||
I mean, in a lot of cases he's talking about tech workers and STEM workers and factory workers, but he's also talking about agriculture. | ||
And that's what this is. | ||
It's a huge corporate giveaway. | ||
It kind of goes along with what we were saying yesterday about who owns Washington, D.C. | ||
It is big agriculture. | ||
It's not about right and left. | ||
You know, forget conservative and liberal. | ||
It's liberal politicians that passed it in the House, and it's conservative, allegedly, politicians that are passing it in the Senate. | ||
And even conservative elements In the White House. | ||
And that's because the distinction in this country is not between conservatives and liberals, at least when it comes to who's in charge, it's between the globalist corporate interests and all these specific interest lobbies and the American people. | ||
It's between the firm, as I said, the firm owners, the people that wield and hold capital, and the people that are employed. | ||
Who's going to get screwed by this? | ||
People competing with illegal aliens in agricultural jobs or in all other jobs, because while they get their temporary agricultural work permit, the CAW, they can work part-time in other places. | ||
They can work most time, you know, not nearly full-time, but close to it in other jobs. | ||
And once they get their green card, once they get their citizenship, then they get to go work anywhere else and compete with everybody else. | ||
So this comes, as it always does, at the expense, the cost is extracted from the workers, from the working class, from the middle class, and who derives the benefit? | ||
It is the people that own the farms. | ||
That's all that is. | ||
Who do you think's pushing for this stuff? | ||
Do you think that congresspeople are sitting around and thinking, how can we give away tons of money to big agriculture? | ||
Do you think that Tom Tillis and all these guys Do you think Republicans are just really passionate about giving away free money to agriculture? | ||
Do you think they're just passionate about screwing over workers? | ||
Or do you think that what happens is the people that own the factory farms and farming is not what it used to be by the way. | ||
Republicans use so much propaganda about the American farmer where they portray farmers as like Farmer Brown sitting on his rocking chair with a, you know, with a piece of straw sticking out of his mouth and it's a family farm and they wear overalls and they wake up at the crack of dawn and they pick the eggs by hand. | ||
That is not what is happening. | ||
Most of the farming is done by massive, massive corporate entities, you know, factory techniques and all this. | ||
I have a good friend who tells me these things. | ||
QAnon. | ||
So, anyway, where was I going with that? | ||
So, Republicans are not sitting around saying to themselves, we need to screw over the American worker, we need to bring over more illegal agricultural workers. | ||
No! | ||
They get paid to do that. | ||
All these huge agricultural titans pay lobbyists, and they pay and bribe politicians to write this stuff. | ||
They pay people to write the legislation. | ||
They rent out a Sheraton in Washington DC, a conference room. | ||
They lavish congressmen with hotel rooms and meals and bottles of wine and gifts and all the rest. | ||
And all they do is have their people, their lawyers, whoever, pass them the legislation and the congressmen and their teams pass it off themselves in the House or in the Senate. | ||
And that's what it is. | ||
That's the process. | ||
This is happening on both sides. | ||
Democrats, Republicans, conservatives, liberals. | ||
It's coming from big agriculture. | ||
And, you know, should that be allowed? | ||
Why would we do that? | ||
Why do we think that is a good idea to have in the country? | ||
You know, that is where you have to draw the line and say, The problem is mass immigration, but what is the cause of the problem? | ||
Is the cause of the problem the immigrants? | ||
If you think about it in that way, why do immigrants come here? | ||
It's because they come from poor countries and we live in a rich country. | ||
So, until the countries they live in become rich, or the country we live in becomes poor, immigrants will always want to come here. | ||
So think about it that way. | ||
If we're to look at the problem of, okay, this invasion is happening, it's destroying the social fabric, it's destroying the cohesion and stability of the nation, it's drawing on the public purse, and so on, well, what is the root cause? | ||
Well, let's look at it from the perspective of immigrants. | ||
Immigrants wanting to come here. | ||
Well, that's never going to stop. | ||
Immigrants are never going to not want to come here because the countries they come from will never be rich and the country we live in will hopefully will never become poor. | ||
I don't think that would be a solution. | ||
I'm not going to say that's never going to happen, but obviously if we were going to try to solve the problem of immigration by changing the relative Levels of wealth. | ||
Well, I don't think it's gonna happen anytime soon that Mexico becomes a first world country And it's not a solution to make our country like Mexico I mean that is not obviously something that we would deliberately pursue if we were in charge So so that's not it. | ||
Well, then the next question is who's allowing them to come here? | ||
If our government's task is to protect the workers, if it's the government's task, as opposed to foreigners, to protect our interests, let's think about it that way. | ||
Immigrants are looking after their interests. | ||
They're looking after the interests of their families or themselves. | ||
And that's their prerogative. | ||
I don't know if what they're doing is exactly moral or ethical, but we understand that people are motivated by self-interest, and so that is what they are doing. | ||
But we, then, should also be self-interested. | ||
And we should say that, well, it's not in our interest to have these immigrants come here. | ||
We should shut it down. | ||
How do we do that? | ||
Well, it's ultimately the government's responsibility to enforce the laws, to protect the workers, Negotiate on the international stage. | ||
Represent America as an entity against other countries or other populations. | ||
Why are they not protecting our workers? | ||
Why are they not protecting our people? | ||
And then it comes down to, well, they're getting paid not to. | ||
They're getting paid not to, and if they don't play ball, well, somebody else does. | ||
If they don't play ball with big agriculture, big agriculture simply throws millions of dollars behind their opponent. | ||
And you saw this with the Koch brothers was the perfect example. | ||
In 2018, in the midterms, the Koch brothers, who conventionally have been the biggest donors in the country, multi-multi-billionaires, and we know forever that they've been associated with the Republicans, even though they give extensively to Republicans, they are libertarians. | ||
They are open borders. | ||
Libertarians. | ||
And they said, the Koch brothers, now it's the Koch brother, but the Koch brothers said in 2018 that they would back opponents of Republicans who are in favor of immigration restriction. | ||
They said for the first time they would back Democrats and they would also back Republican primary candidates running against the president's immigration agenda if that person was running on closing up the borders, closing up the loopholes and the visas and all the rest. | ||
There's the problem. | ||
If you want to diagnose the problem of mass immigration, you have to understand where the root of it comes from. | ||
That's the root. | ||
It's the people that are paying all this stuff. | ||
And so it's actually funny because people will tell me all the time, I'm vilifying immigrants. | ||
I hate immigrants. | ||
I hate these people coming over. | ||
I honestly don't. | ||
I don't hate them. | ||
I hate what they're doing to our country. | ||
I hate that that is being done to our country. | ||
But I think ultimately, their responsibility, if you're looking at it from the perspective of who has the responsibility to act, and more specifically, who has responsibility to act in our interest, it's not the illegal immigrant. | ||
Why is it incumbent upon an illegal immigrant to think about what's best for us in our country? | ||
They're a foreigner. | ||
That's not to excuse them. | ||
You know, they come here and they're free load, and it's dubious if that's ethical in a universal sense. | ||
But thinking about it practically, I think it is way more the responsibility of our elected officials to be looking after our interests than the illegal immigrants. | ||
We should not, in other words, be counting on the benevolence or the goodwill or the integrity of foreigners for our national interest. | ||
We should be counting on our elected officials and our representatives. | ||
And it's their failing. | ||
And that's not to, you know, I'm not trying to do this whole, oh no, we actually love immigrants. | ||
I don't love immigrants, believe me. | ||
I don't hate them, but I don't love them. | ||
I'm just sort of neutral. | ||
I hate the people that are bringing them in. | ||
I hate the people that are writing these bills. | ||
I hate the people that are proposing these bills. | ||
I hate the people that are lobbying for them and funding them. | ||
Those people are our enemy. | ||
Those people are the enemy of our country. | ||
And that is how we have to think about the problem. | ||
They are the problem. | ||
And until that gets solved, forget about it. | ||
We could defeat this bill. | ||
We could deport illegal aliens. | ||
But so long as you have this parasitic ruling elite, the people that wield the money, that wield capital, that own the firms, so long as they dictate, on the disproportionate level that they do, what is done in Washington, D.C., the problem will never be solved. | ||
That is, at the end of the day, what the problem is. | ||
And they are the enemy of the American people. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
The Koch brothers are the enemy of the American people. | ||
The agricultural lobby is the enemy of the American people. | ||
Who destroyed your hometown? | ||
Who made your hometown, once formerly, you look at some of these cities in New York State, or even in my city, Little Italy, you look across the country, who took these places and turned them into Little Mexico? | ||
Who took the small towns in our country, in the heartland, and gutted them, and took out all the manufacturing and all the factories? | ||
It was the capitalist class. | ||
It was them. | ||
They destroyed everything in pursuit of profit. | ||
They extracted the wealth from the country and they gave it to themselves. | ||
They will always be fine. | ||
They took out the factories and maybe they put them in China or Mexico. | ||
They opened up something in Chicago or something like that. | ||
Downtown in a city, you know, they changed the logistics or they sold it off, whatever. | ||
But they have been looking after their interests. | ||
As opposed to the interest of the workers, or the people, or the country. | ||
And there has to be accountability for that. | ||
You can't do that. | ||
You know, this libertarian ethic that we've promoted basically says that you can destroy the country and there's no consequence. | ||
You're free to do anything you want, even if you're destroying the country that did everything for you. | ||
That's unacceptable. | ||
Because we have freedom, but the only reason that we have freedom and liberty is because we have a foundation. | ||
We have a country. | ||
You destroy the country, you get rid of the liberty. | ||
And therefore, if somebody who is abusing their freedom and their liberty to destroy the country, you know, to destroy all of that, well then, I think they should. | ||
They should pay a pretty heavy price for that, obviously. | ||
You know, you don't just get to make all this money and be rich. | ||
That's a privilege. | ||
You then have a responsibility, then, to take care of the rest of it. | ||
So, I look at this, I look at this bill, and it's just getting harder and harder not to see that dimension to it. | ||
And don't get me wrong, the racial politics is still very real, as I talked about. | ||
The changing demographics, there is still a racial dimension to that. | ||
And these people that are coming here, I mean, these are not pawns. | ||
It's not fair to say that these people Just because we should not be outsourcing the responsibility to take care of our country to the illegal immigrants, and we cannot expect them to be custodians of our country, that doesn't mean that they're not in our country. | ||
And it doesn't mean that they are not a nefarious influence on our country. | ||
And it doesn't mean that they're not going to be a malignant force in our country, because they will be. | ||
And we will have to deal with that as well, you know? | ||
So some people like to say, oh it's all the elites and it's not the immigrants. | ||
And I don't mean to say that. | ||
Because once they come in here, they're in here. | ||
And once they're in here, they're causing problems. | ||
And they're causing problems too. | ||
They're causing their fair share of the problems as well. | ||
But, if we want to figure out the root of those problems, we have to go all the way back. | ||
So we could say that ultimate responsibility comes from the people that are funding this whole apparatus, that they are the impetus behind this whole system, but we have to take care of the symptoms. | ||
We have to take care of the symptoms which are now causing themselves of symptoms all their own too. | ||
So that's the agricultural bill. | ||
It's a total disaster. | ||
That's just what it is. | ||
I don't know how people don't see this anymore. | ||
I don't know how you could really be in favor of mass immigration. | ||
It is like racial and economic warfare on the American people. | ||
There's almost no other way to look at it other than that. | ||
It's corporations saying, we are going to destroy your jobs. | ||
We hate you. | ||
We don't want to pay you. | ||
We view you as a number in a data sheet that is coming at the expense of my yacht and my You know, whatever, my Beverly Hills mansion, my Malibu lake house, or Oceanview mansion, whatever, you know, it is coming at the expense of the largesse of my wealth, so I'm going to crush you. | ||
I will destroy you, I will destroy your country, your neighborhood, so that I'm okay. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
I mean that is explicitly, that is the only way to look at it. | ||
There's no, and they will come up, and that's on both sides, the left and the right, they will come up with every rationalization. | ||
That's the free market. | ||
They're natural conservatives. | ||
Our real problem is socialism. | ||
They bleed red, white, and blue. | ||
Well, you know what? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, I'm not a socialist, but this system is not good. | ||
You know, they talk about socialism. | ||
The problem with socialism is the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. | ||
The problem with socialism is these political cronies give each other favors and they don't care about the people. | ||
I don't know. | ||
That description fits what's happening here perfectly well, doesn't it? | ||
It's like in socialism, the state directs the financial and economic elites, and you've got the masses. | ||
And here, it's the financial and economic elites that dictate the state, and you've got the masses. | ||
What I mean, it's fundamentally like... it's six of one, half a dozen of the other. | ||
It's either Jeff Bezos and the Koch brothers and Bloomberg and Soros creating slave plantations through government, or it's Joseph Stalin and Hugo Chavez creating slave plantations by going after the Kulaks. | ||
I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm not saying that they're equal. | ||
I mean, this is probably better in some ways, and maybe the other is better in other ways. | ||
Maybe communism is better in other ways. | ||
Say what you will about Stalinism, it was socialism in one country. | ||
You know, Stalin's policy was socialism in one country. | ||
And that means nobody's getting out, but nobody's getting in either. | ||
And it will remain Russia. | ||
So it might be a very poor and bloody and lots of people dead Russia, but it's still gonna be Russia. | ||
So, and I don't know. | ||
I don't know if that's a trade-off we want to make. | ||
We don't have to make these trade-offs. | ||
We can have the best of both worlds. | ||
We can have one country and markets. | ||
But, you know, we have to have a country. | ||
So, this stuff is just inexcusable. | ||
The people that write this stuff, the people that vote for it and fund it, they should be named. | ||
They should be shamed. | ||
They should pay a price. | ||
You know, whether that means getting voted out of office or whatever, but this is not okay. | ||
So that's the bill. | ||
Hopefully it doesn't go anywhere. | ||
I don't think it will. | ||
I think this is a small minority of Republicans, but I mean, you know, this is going to be our future. | ||
When Nevada and all these states turn blue, this is what we're going to get. | ||
These kind of crony deals that are going to be corporate giveaways, corporate welfare, mass immigration. | ||
It's going to be like this on steroids when the Democrats get in control forever because of the demographic change. | ||
I don't think this bill is going to pass anytime soon. | ||
I don't think it will, but we're going to get this and worse in the future. | ||
But that is, on that note, on that positive note, that's the immigration bill. | ||
We're going to move on. | ||
We're going to move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
I just...uh...you know...Bloomberg...Bloomberg's...the Bloomer has me feeling a particular way about the rich. | ||
He's got me feeling a certain way about the capitalist class. | ||
I keep hearing that phrase, mostly because I keep saying it, and it's just, like, standing out in my head, like, yep, that is the problem. | ||
It is the people that wield the firms. | ||
It is the people that wield capital that are largely the problem. | ||
And something must be done. | ||
We need a new Caesar to take power away from the financial centers and redirect it for the national interest. | ||
This is something that must be done. | ||
Okay, but we'll look at our Super Chats. | ||
Let's see. | ||
JHN says, Oh, is he doing that? | ||
That's terrific to hear. | ||
I did see she got banned on Twitter and Instagram. | ||
I have to do the obligatory, I don't agree with her getting banned. | ||
But, yeah, press S to spit on Kathy Zhu. | ||
Disgusting, gross human being. | ||
Psycho bitch is uh, you know something that I would call her. | ||
So I saw she got banned on Twitter and Instagram I don't believe anybody should be banned if they're not doing anything illegal, but You know, she kind of she kind of got what she deserved. | ||
What do you get? | ||
Ashley Rae Goldenberg says what do you get when you cross? | ||
a she's persistent a persistent Jewish journalist with a A Chinese psycho bitch who won't leave her alone. | ||
You get what you deserve. | ||
Andrew Jackson says, any Carl Jung writings you'd recommend? | ||
Thanks. | ||
I love when people ask this question. | ||
It's like, I have an author. | ||
Help me find the books. | ||
Dude, just look up Carl Jung. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He didn't write like a million books. | ||
Like, just find the greatest hits and read those. | ||
I read Modern Man in Search of a Soul by Carl Jung. | ||
And I have Man and His Symbols, and I think I might have one other book by Carl Jung. | ||
People are like little babies. | ||
I tell you an author, what books should I read? | ||
unidentified
|
Can't you figure that out for yourself? | |
It would be one thing if it was a really prolific author who's written tons of high-profile books. | ||
or something, but it's like, if you have an author, can't you just find something that's to your liking or to your taste and select it? | ||
I don't know why I have to hold your hand every step of the way. | ||
Frappuccino says, hey, mister, hey. | ||
Giants says, I saw you on Hunter Avalon Instagram today, epic. | ||
And what you're referring to is the fact that he was live streaming and I joined the live stream and left a comment. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, very very epic. | ||
Oh, it's just commenting live stream. | ||
This is epic It's like the Wojak redded face, you know lay watching hunter Avalon's watching Hunter Avalon's live stream. | ||
Nick Fuentes leaves a comment. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh my gosh, Nick Fuentes left a comment. | |
This is epic. | ||
Oh my gosh, this is epic. | ||
Whoa. | ||
No offense. | ||
No offense. | ||
But really, you're acting like I was on the stream. | ||
Like I was on camera debating with him. | ||
I saw you comment on that stream. | ||
unidentified
|
Holy smokes! | |
EnterTheWu says, ever heard of Pastor Peter Peters? | ||
He's based. | ||
No, I've never heard of him. | ||
Yes it is. | ||
Today is a good day. | ||
Says 25,000 followers on DLive. | ||
Kathy, you kicked off Twitter and Instagram. | ||
Today is a good day for America First. | ||
Yes, it is. | ||
Today is a good day. | ||
Livewire says, I hate those who constantly bitch about Trump. | ||
Here we go. | ||
He's shifting the window. | ||
Sorry he isn't Rockwell, too. | ||
Which I assume you're referring to George Lincoln Rockwell. | ||
Is that correct? | ||
Can I get an optics check on that? | ||
Can I get a Wignad check on that? | ||
unidentified
|
Hello, Fed check? | |
Feds be like, I hate when people bitch about Trump. | ||
Sorry he's not George Lincoln Rockwell too. | ||
Yeah, because that is definitely someone we aspire to be like, right? | ||
We aspire to be like some costumed Nazi, some costumed freak. | ||
unidentified
|
No, no, no, Nick. | |
No, Nick. | ||
Commander Rockwell was honorable. | ||
Okay, no. | ||
Yeah, that's not this show. | ||
That is not what we are about. | ||
unidentified
|
Literal costumed, literal costumed Nazi. | |
No. | ||
No. | ||
Sorry is not. | ||
Oh, yeah, like, yeah, we would want that. | ||
We would want Trump to brandish a swastika arm patch. | ||
That would be preferable. | ||
No. | ||
Wrong. | ||
Disavow. | ||
unidentified
|
What is wrong with people? | |
I love how it's like, that would be aspirational, and what Trump is doing is good enough, right? | ||
That is what is implicit in this comment. | ||
is being like a failed costume neo-nazi would be aspirational, but merely being the president, that is good enough, right? | ||
Sorry he's not. | ||
Why? | ||
Because if he were GLR2, what would he be doing? | ||
Going around with, uh, what, Nazi flags and having a Nazi compound and, like, grooming homosexuals into the Nazi movement and, You know, being like a fringe loser who does nothing and wins nothing and succeeds at nothing and, you know, isn't even Christian or anything like that. | ||
Yeah, yeah, no. | ||
Instead, we only have the president who is America first and conservative and all that. | ||
I just... | ||
Who is putting up superchats like this? | ||
I have to imagine it must be like Israel or Mossad so they can say, oh, gotcha! | ||
No, disavow. | ||
We are not costumed neo-Nazis. | ||
We are not fringe freaks and losers. | ||
We are in favor of America. | ||
We are in favor of God. | ||
We are not in favor of foreign and fringe ideologies. | ||
I'm a Christian. | ||
I'm an American patriot. | ||
I am normal. | ||
We are normal. | ||
We don't need to be abnormal. | ||
We do not need to brandish foreign symbols and things that are obviously... | ||
Astroturfed by federal agents. | ||
We do not, we do not participate in that. | ||
So, we're gonna move on. | ||
I don't know what that was all about. | ||
Some, some genius. | ||
AZ Fan says, Zhu crew wrecked. | ||
What a dumb bitch. | ||
unidentified
|
LOL. | |
Yeah, she is. | ||
Definition of a dumb bitch. | ||
AnimeFeetInspector says, I can't believe Kathy, she was dead. | ||
Press S. Well, she's dead online. | ||
Arrow says, just let me die in a war. | ||
Okay, disavow. | ||
Goodguy says, Kathy didn't wash her hands. | ||
Yup. | ||
Frappuccino says hope you're doing alright from yesterday. | ||
I'm not. | ||
I got the vertigo just came on actually way earlier. | ||
I was watching the clock. | ||
I started to experience and it's ongoing serious vertigo at 8 o'clock. | ||
I checked the clock and it was 8 o'clock when it set on and I'm experiencing it as I speak right now. | ||
So I don't know what's going on. | ||
It must be... I don't know what it could possibly be. | ||
I was thinking the other day maybe it's like an oxygen thing. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I read online, though, that anxiety and stress does not cause vertigo, because some people are saying, oh, it's stress, it's anxiety. | ||
Some people suggested that. | ||
It's actually impossible for those things to cause it. | ||
They only exacerbate it. | ||
So what the hell is it? | ||
So what the hell? | ||
I think it must be something to do with talking, because the first time it came on, I was doing this interview and I was talking a lot. | ||
And then I got it on my show a couple weeks ago and I got it yesterday and today. | ||
So could it be oxygen flow? | ||
I mean that's the only thing I could think of with talking. | ||
Maybe it's hydration? | ||
It could be hydration and maybe it's posture. | ||
Honestly, I have no idea. | ||
Everybody's come to me with their own theory. | ||
I have like 12 different theories I've heard. | ||
It's a vitamin deficiency, it's dehydration, it's this, it's that, so I'm just gonna wait it out. | ||
I've gotten it before, you know, and it kind of comes and goes. | ||
Yeah, I actually talked to the guy that runs Church Militant. | ||
braps in hebrew that dude turtle says you're the best king thanks for all that you do hey thanks buddy polish american says check out church militant interviewed malkin large audience and they follow your instagram yeah i actually talked to the guy that runs church militant uh what's his name well i don't want to say him by name i'm I don't want to like cause problems for him But one of the guys at Church Militant reached out to me the other day. | ||
So yeah, they're pretty cool That do turtle says I hope the black cube 5g wave vertigo attack stop It could be that honestly, you never know. | ||
That's what they did in Cuba. | ||
They did those like sonic attacks Who knows? | ||
Maybe they maybe Charlie Kirk Okay, it's time to bring in the heavy guns. | ||
Time to bring in the sonic blaster. | ||
Time to bring in the 5G radiation tower. | ||
Give them the orb of confusion. | ||
Just outside the studio, just outside the penthouse, there is a guy with a yamaka holding the orb of confusion and it's flicked on. | ||
unidentified
|
That's how I'm feeling. | |
The orb of confusion is on. | ||
But I'm literally such a genius. | ||
I'm literally such a tough genius that you literally can do nothing to stop me except for give me a million dollars. | ||
That is not an invitation to kill me. | ||
unidentified
|
You can bribe me, that's the only thing. | |
Uh, you know, every time I say that I'm like, well, uh, let's pump the brakes there. | ||
I'm like daring them to murder me. | ||
You can do nothing to stop me! | ||
And they're like, oh, like we'll just kill you. | ||
Ah, well, there is one thing, now that I think about it, there is one thing you could do to stop me. | ||
You could give me a briefcase full of cash. | ||
It doesn't even have to be a million, five hundred thousand, you know, we can negotiate. | ||
Um... | ||
So that's a joke. | ||
I'm definitely kidding. | ||
If one of these agents came to my door with a gun in my face and a briefcase full of cash, I would take the bullet! | ||
That's a joke. | ||
But it is true. | ||
It is true. | ||
The show is resilient. | ||
Literally nothing... I was just thinking about that the other day. | ||
America First literally is unstoppable because I'm unstoppable. | ||
Hello? | ||
Not to say that I'm the movement, okay? | ||
Not to say that I am the movement or anything like that. | ||
But it is to say that as long as I am around and not receiving a million dollars from Israel, I will be pushing America first. | ||
And as long as I'm pushing America first, there will be America first. | ||
It literally doesn't. | ||
Ban my YouTube. | ||
Zoomerclips is going to give me the Zoomerclips flu. | ||
They're using 5G towers to disrupt my brainwaves. | ||
They can try every trick in the book. | ||
You can't stop me. | ||
I'm a genius. | ||
I'm tough as hell. | ||
I have bigger balls than all of them put together. | ||
This is my desk, dammit! | ||
This is the America First desk! | ||
I sit behind the desk. | ||
I wield the America First platform. | ||
You cannot stop me. | ||
You cannot stop me with your 5G tricks. | ||
Your black cube magic. | ||
Maybe that's what it is. | ||
Maybe they're conjuring. | ||
Maybe... Maybe Benny Johnson is receiving the teachings. | ||
He's receiving Kabbalah. | ||
You know, he is sitting before... He is placing his hands on a different orb. | ||
You know, the tesseract is rotating. | ||
Benny Johnson is levitating. | ||
He is accessing higher dimensions, higher levels. | ||
And he is calling for warfare. | ||
It doesn't work. | ||
I'm protected. | ||
I've got... Do I have it? | ||
Can I get it? | ||
Can I get my cross? | ||
I've got my cross. | ||
I've got my chain. | ||
I'm protected. | ||
You can't... Your black cube magic doesn't work. | ||
I'm protected. | ||
Arrows says, I wonder if Sam Hyde's book is any good? | ||
Great super chat on this very serious news show. | ||
Arrow says, I wonder if Sam Hyde's book is any good. | ||
The bombing the government book. | ||
I actually have that book. | ||
Okay, well that doesn't sound... | ||
That's not a winning soundbite. | ||
That's not a winning audio clip. | ||
Well, his satirical comedy book, I possess. | ||
And it's good. | ||
It's good. | ||
I've read some of it. | ||
Plo Koon says, the Nazis fed Jewish people to the bear at Buchenwald, LMAO. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Zoomer Catholic says, do you prefer pickles or no pickles on a Big Mac? | ||
Pickles, dude. | ||
I love, I love the sliced pickle on my Big Mac. | ||
I'm a big, okay, a lot of, okay, well, I like, if I say, is that weird to be self-conscious to say you like pickles? | ||
Because it's like you say you like pickles and people are like, but yeah, always been a big, always been a big fan. | ||
I like the sour condiments. | ||
Okay, I'm a big pickle respecter. | ||
What I did, I'm like, I've got issues. | ||
When I was a kid, I would always order everything plain. | ||
When I would go to McDonald's, I would order a plain hamburger, nothing on it, just the patty. | ||
And then eventually I graduated to ketchup, and then it was just the plain burger with ketchup, and then it was pickles. | ||
And for years, for most of my life, I only ate at McDonald's a hamburger with just ketchup and pickles and nothing else. | ||
unidentified
|
So. | |
And those are my favorites. | ||
Extra ketchup and the pickle. | ||
Okay, let's see. | ||
Cloakoon says, 60% of millennials don't know the bear's name. | ||
I don't know what that means, still. | ||
NJConservative says, best part of the Cathy Hsu stuff is not caring. | ||
Yeah, can't relate. | ||
Big Globe says, you think your college tour will be like Caitlyn Bennett's? | ||
Excuse me. | ||
I don't know, actually. | ||
I don't know what to expect. | ||
No, I did not hear about that. | ||
That's pretty funny though. | ||
Have you heard about Dudley Square in Boston? | ||
POC's got the city to rename it Nubian Square. | ||
No, I did not hear about that. | ||
That's pretty funny, though. | ||
Hoboken says, Lankford is terrible. | ||
Second amnesty bill with his fingerprints supports refugees. | ||
Anti-white education. | ||
Yeah, he's the worst. | ||
Practical on Twitter says, I've never been. | ||
telegram for pornography you know i don't like to do the mass reporting i'm never been even with my enemies i don't really engage in that uh except for them outstanding circumstances so Warrior says, did Ben Shapiro actually mean to defend you? | ||
No. | ||
That was a totally perfunctory face-saving maneuver. | ||
It was so that if people said, oh, you didn't defend Nick, he could say, no, look, I did. | ||
But he didn't mean it. | ||
He contributed to the pile-on. | ||
He knows full well. | ||
He has been deliberately attempting to brand me as alt-right for years. | ||
For years! | ||
Ben Shapiro has made a concerted effort to get me blacklisted, to get me branded as alt-right, white nationalist. | ||
And he knows full well the outcome of that. | ||
That's why he does it. | ||
Why do you think he does a speech calling me alt-right, WN, all this stuff? | ||
It's because he knows that if I get branded that way, I will be deplatformed. | ||
So you can't do that and then say, oh, I don't agree with it. | ||
That was a perfunctory face-saving maneuver. | ||
Robert says, R.I.P. | ||
mustache. | ||
Hello, baby butt department. | ||
Okay, weird. | ||
Bad Faith Poster says, hey Nick, check it out, Nutsack Monday. | ||
Ah, really good comics check. | ||
Joe the Boomer says, Joe the Boomer be like, I'm gonna pull my gun out. | ||
Yeah, that is what he says. | ||
That is what he is like. | ||
Uh you know the first time I met Joe the Boomer I think it was maybe five minutes between meeting him for the first time and then him uh brandishing his AK-47 so that's that's Joe the Boomer and also a handgun I think we were in Joker and he uh Well, it was after. | ||
I'll say it was after we went to the screening of Joker that he brandished the handgun. | ||
I said, you should put that away. | ||
Yeah, that is classic Joe the Boomer. | ||
Be like, I am going to pull my gun out right now. | ||
Anon says, hello 13 year old Pete Buttigieg impersonator. | ||
Okay, really? | ||
Because I shaved my mustache? | ||
Vale says, have you seen clips from Window of Life? | ||
He will not divide us energy. | ||
Yeah, I have seen that. | ||
Yeah, I'm not, but thanks. | ||
Yes, clean shaven. | ||
Dude, I'm on nofap forever. | ||
I'm on never... I don't know why it's kind of vulgar, but I'm on the... There are no... None of that is happening, alright? | ||
Javin, let's see, Eros says, have you done no fap? | ||
Dude, I'm on no fap forever. | ||
I'm on never, it's kind of vulgar, but I'm on the, there are no, none of that is happening, all right? | ||
We are Catholic. | ||
We are never, we are never going to spill the seed unless it is with a wife. | ||
And it is in the proper baby-making setup. | ||
The proper baby-making formula. | ||
So, you're asking me about that? | ||
You are like a little baby. | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
So, I don't want to get too personal or into detail. | ||
I don't want to get too graphic or vulgar. | ||
But, uh, hello, Catholic check? | ||
Cool blues to see and chat for Christ. | ||
How's the vertigo King? | ||
So bad. | ||
It's not not good I'm just gonna go lay on the floor after the show. | ||
That's the only thing that helps laying on the floor I Lay on the floor and it I don't know it just helps which leads me to believe that it's posture based wage he says as a kid you ever get yelled at by a friend's dad scary and I don't think so. | ||
I was always very bashful as a child around adults and in other people's homes. | ||
My parents raised me to be very aware of manners and please and thank you and being polite and all that. | ||
Some people just don't grow up with manners. | ||
Some people grow up and they just don't ever get that taught to them, I guess. | ||
But my parents were always like, you know, you call them this. | ||
I mean, they weren't like totally strict, but it was it was I mean, as much as my parents aren't like traditionalist or hardcore, like political, they are very traditional compared to the modern day, like | ||
They've been married for 30 years, and, you know, my mom stayed home to raise me and my sister, and my dad worked, and, you know, all things considered, even if they're not, like, political traditionalists or traditional Latin mass Catholics, I mean, compared to most people, I would say it was a very traditional upbringing. | ||
You know, and I think that's largely because it was an ethnic upbringing. | ||
I do attribute that to the fact that my parents are ethnic as opposed to Protestant and white. | ||
You know, like Anglo. | ||
I really do believe that. | ||
I think a Catholic and like white ethnic upbringing is just different. | ||
I think that's like the last bastion of tradition. | ||
A lot of it is. | ||
You know, there's some of that elsewhere, but I really do believe that is, you know, because my parents came from the neighborhood. | ||
So things were just done differently. | ||
That's what they say. | ||
So, no, I never, I don't think I ever got yelled at by a friend's dad. | ||
Time Doubts says, have you thought... | ||
You're really funny. | ||
Yeah, I agree. | ||
Nah, there's only three holes in the wall, okay? | ||
In this wall. | ||
It's really more like two, but one is like a double. | ||
says Chad clean shaven looks better than the mustache yeah I agree optics respecters is a new hole in the wall for each debate no there's only three holes in the wall okay AF in this wall AF philosophers and they're all like one it's like you know kind of it's really more like two but one is like a double it's like a double yeah AF AF Philosopher's is too much mustache counter-signaling. | ||
Yeah, big agree. | ||
Everybody, whenever I grow the mustache, it's the same NPC take. | ||
Oh, that's a porn stache. | ||
Oh, you got the pedo stache. | ||
You know, it's total NPC behavior. | ||
It's like, do you watch a lot of, like, pornography where they have a 70s mustache, you know? | ||
You hear that from young people and it's clearly like you saw that on TV like you saw that online and that is the program's built-in response when somebody has a mustache that's just simply what you say. | ||
Oh nice nice porn you look like a 70s porn star. | ||
Oh really? | ||
Do you watch a lot of pornography from the 1970s? | ||
Is that you watch a lot of 1970s pornography with men with mutton and this reminds you of that? | ||
Or is that something that you heard on television and that is just simply what you're supposed to say when somebody grows a mustache? | ||
So that is a classic conventional NPC response and yet people always, oh, it's a mutton, it's a little facial hair. | ||
It's not, people always got to give you the retard take on it. | ||
Okay. | ||
OpticsRespector, I just read that. | ||
Samson says, do you ever think about growing that old mustache back out again? | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeastwood says, what came first, chicken or the raft? | ||
Poopcoin says, did you see Ford versus Ferrari? | ||
Thoughts? | ||
No, I didn't see that. | ||
JoeTheBoomer says, JoeTheBoomberg here ready to steal Nick's call-in. | ||
He's gonna buy his way. | ||
That is what he does. | ||
JoeTheBoomer stealing the show, buying his way into it. | ||
There is something to be said. | ||
Joe the Boomer spent $20 already on Super Chat buy-ins. | ||
USS Liberty says, Bloomer check? | ||
I'm getting there. | ||
Dr. Pepper says, JFK, RFK, and Nixon threaten to end the CIA. | ||
Hmm, ah, that's a groundbreaking theory. | ||
Minnesota Groyper says, take the Joker pill. | ||
I've done it. | ||
Really good comics. | ||
Says people are picking their favorite RGC t-shirt design after the show and after supper on Twitter. | ||
Fishy time. | ||
Okay, well thanks from the Ninjaginis. | ||
I'll have to pull that up. | ||
I need to vote. | ||
I want my Really Good Comics t-shirt. | ||
Let me pull it up. | ||
RGC. | ||
Let me take a look. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
I don't know. | ||
I will have to take a look at this once the room stops spinning. | ||
I can't really see them clearly, so... I can't really see them, so... I'll have to look at this later, but I've pulled it up, so I'm ready to vote. | ||
Florida man says, what do we do if or when Democrats get a one-party state? | ||
We'll figure it out. | ||
Millennial welders will persist. | ||
millennial welder says white pill dems will have a diverse godless coalition yep coser says mustache nationalism is our future nick blowing my brains out all over the penthouse windows Retards be like, haha, m-m-mug nationalism! | ||
unidentified
|
Hey Nick! | |
M-mug nationalism! | ||
Hahaha! | ||
Hey Nick! | ||
Are we necktie nationalism now? | ||
Hahaha! | ||
We, hey Nick, are we jacket nationalism? | ||
Making me laugh. | ||
Nick, Nick, are we microphone nationalism now? | ||
No, you're an idiot. | ||
No, you're not funny. | ||
You are a bitch. | ||
Shut up. | ||
unidentified
|
Shut your mouth. | |
Shut up! | ||
Stop super chatting this show. | ||
Mustache nationalism. | ||
unidentified
|
More like... Not gonna say that. | |
Not gonna say that. | ||
No. | ||
unidentified
|
Nope. | |
No, that's not... that is not fresh. | ||
That's not funny. | ||
Are we mustache nationalism now? | ||
I took the thing you're talking about and I said nationalism. | ||
No, you're a bonehead. | ||
Bonehead nationalism. | ||
Bozo nationalism. | ||
That was a little harsh, but I mean all of it. | ||
Yeah, we know what that's about. | ||
I mean, look, I kind of like strip malls. | ||
I mean all of it. | ||
Bruzzy says, NC election board sent out pamphlets in English and Spanish reminding you don't need an ID to vote. | ||
Yeah, we know what that's about. | ||
Jack Pancake says, do you think strip malls are rotting out America? | ||
I kind of like, I mean, look, I kind of like strip malls. | ||
They're kind of like very convenient. | ||
I mean, there are people that are like new urbanism. | ||
I think that we should take New York City and make it more like an old town in a European city. | ||
We should make this more like a rustic European village. | ||
unidentified
|
Like, sounds practical. | |
Right? | ||
You see these accounts on Twitter. | ||
And don't get me wrong, I get it. | ||
It is better. | ||
I think it is probably better for your soul and it is objectively better to live in like a more organic city, you know, than this like modern urban planning. | ||
I get all of it. | ||
I understand the arguments. | ||
unidentified
|
Great idea! | |
Let's just knock down... well, I can't say that. | ||
Let's just demolish all the buildings in New York City and instead we'll have like a medieval village with cobblestone roads and townhouses. | ||
Yeah, that sounds like a great idea. | ||
Yeah, let's do that. | ||
And it's the same with strip malls. | ||
Yeah, great idea. | ||
Let's destroy all the strip malls and shopping malls and instead we'll build up European villages. | ||
No, I know what you're saying. | ||
That's not to say that there are no improvements to be made, but I just wonder what people think is going to happen. | ||
America is the way it is because of the automobile. | ||
Europe is the way it is because Europe is ancient. | ||
America is not. | ||
America has been developed in the last two centuries. | ||
And in a lot of places the last century or half century. | ||
If you look at like the West, very new. | ||
And that's been built with modern transportation in mind, the rail and automobile in particular. | ||
And that's why our society scaled to the automobile, to the road, to you know mass ownership of automobiles as opposed to walking or horse or things like that. | ||
And how do you change that? | ||
It's a car society. | ||
It's a cultural thing. | ||
It's a development thing. | ||
It's a regulatory and an economic thing. | ||
And I don't know. | ||
We could probably make things better. | ||
Look, I'm not an expert on this new urbanism trend. | ||
I think it's probably a good direction to go in, but I just don't know, like, what practical things you could really do meaningfully to start going in another direction. | ||
I'm sure a hundred nerds are gonna jump on me and say, oh, you don't know what we could do? | ||
Well, we could, you know, change the zoning regulation. | ||
Look, I'm not an... | ||
I'm not an expert on zoning regulations and development and new urbanism. | ||
I'm sure there are improvements we could undertake, but it always makes me laugh when people are like, look at these degenerate cities and then look at a European cathedral. | ||
Okay, what do you propose? | ||
What do you propose? | ||
I like driving to a strip mall and getting a taco. | ||
I like that. | ||
Maybe that's... | ||
Look, we're living in this globalist hellhole. | ||
Might as well reap the... Where there are benefits, might as well reap them. | ||
It's not obviously balanced. | ||
The balance sheet, costs versus benefits, but hey. | ||
Cheap taco at a strip mall, five minute drive, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
We might as well. | |
Might as well enjoy the fruits. | ||
There are not many. | ||
They are not worth it. | ||
But might as well enjoy them, right? | ||
Let's see. | ||
Jaden McNeil says, fuck journalists. | ||
Big agree. | ||
Hoboken says, Nick is a good boy. | ||
Eat shit, Will Sommers. | ||
Agree. | ||
Yeah, Will Sommers is balding and ugly. | ||
And, you know, that is unfortunate for him. | ||
That is what they hate more than anything is that I am a handsome, virile, full head of hair, alpha male, six foot nine, totally jacked, totally cut, giant, huge, like steroid monster, perfect genetics, perfect facial structure, And, um, you know, and they are sad, troll-looking people. | ||
Will Somers, you are ugly. | ||
Nothing will ever change the fact that you are ugly, and you are balding, and you are a coward, you are weak. | ||
So, you know, you could say whatever you want, okay? | ||
You could write for the Daily Beast, more like Daily Faggot, and, uh, that's why you work there, because you're an ugly bitch, ugly troll, and you write about people like me, so... | ||
They will never understand that it is really just a matter of willpower. | ||
Anyway, anyway, so there. | ||
There you go, Will. | ||
Yeet, if you're watching. | ||
Yeet says, cabbage lowers estrogen in the blood, coleslaw gang. | ||
Yeah, coleslaw check. | ||
Big red pill. | ||
Minnesota, groy versus people obsessed over the Somali thing, but Asians and Latinos are up 51%. | ||
It's 75% of Minnesota from 2000 to 2010. | ||
Yeah, that's the story across the interior. | ||
A lot of Asian immigration, Increasingly. | ||
Lots of Hispanic too, but predominantly Asian in a lot of these states. | ||
Yeah, I don't really listen to what Owen Benjamin has to say or countering. | ||
Owen said about you on Dave Smith's podcast, episode 519. | ||
Yeah, I don't really listen to what Owen Benjamin has to say or countering. | ||
The guy just makes up lies, and he's a faggot anyway. | ||
And he's Jewish, too. | ||
Not that that matters. | ||
Boatschools has Swiss cheese, roasted mushroom, and caramelized onions. | ||
Funny check. | ||
Pattern Noticers says, Have you been watching the Window of Life stream? | ||
I've seen what it is, but I haven't been watching it. | ||
Boatschools says, Migrants send most of their money back to family. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Saltz says, Fan of Pink Floyd? | ||
If not, give them a listen, King. | ||
Oh, Pink Floyd? | ||
Never heard of him. | ||
Wow, yeah, great recommendation. | ||
Wayne Sturtz says, one of few steady jobs a person can have. | ||
$20 minimum wage for farmhands. | ||
$20 minimum wage for farmhands. | ||
Cost a lot less in the long run. | ||
Yep. | ||
Samson says, I lost five pounds last week. | ||
Have you seen them? | ||
Ari says, libertarianism is unworkable in practice. | ||
This is groundbreaking stuff. | ||
You guys are really breaking the conditioning here. | ||
Pink Floyd. | ||
Libertarianism not working. | ||
Wow. | ||
Poop coins. | ||
His nick uses any pronoun. | ||
Chat. | ||
He named them. | ||
That's funny. | ||
I don't know if that's true, but if so, that's funny. | ||
Thanks for saying that. | ||
I don't know if that's true, but if so, that's funny. | ||
Adam says, Yeah, that's what I do. | ||
World Mile says, third position gang Okay, we don't need to call it that. | ||
And we don't need to say, gang is the same thing as nationalism. | ||
Oh, we're third position gang now! | ||
No, you're cringe gang. | ||
You're cringe nationalism. | ||
Cringe droiper. | ||
The Big Stag says, do you support Stalin's laws for homosexuals? | ||
I'm not familiar with Stalin's laws. | ||
Badgers has thoughts on working for the 2020 census. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Boat School says, gold for Nick on Instagram, edit thanks for the four likes. | ||
Live Wire says, come on Nick, you know I was shitting on Wignats. | ||
The sorry was sarcastic, dude. | ||
Okay, well I can't really tell. | ||
Vlad Groyper says, Chad, what is this, Chad's detox your minds. | ||
No TV, use flip phones. | ||
I love this, you know, this, commanding everybody else, you need to do this, why don't you worry about yourself? | ||
Chad's Detox Your Mind. | ||
Hello, my fellow Chad's. | ||
You know, looking at the television. | ||
He's just like me. | ||
Detox your minds. | ||
Use flip phones. | ||
I always hate that kind of thing where it's people saying, hey everybody, you need to do this, you need to detox, you need to do X, Y, and Z. Why don't you worry about yourself, you know? | ||
Everybody's so concerned with everybody else's business. | ||
I'll tell you what I think, I'll tell you what I like, what I think is good. | ||
I'll give you advice, because you're watching my show, which means you're asking for it. | ||
But these people, ah, what do you need to do? | ||
Why don't you worry about yourself? | ||
But yeah, I mean, look, it's good advice. | ||
Don't watch television, that stuff is cancer, but I just hate this call to action. | ||
Chads! | ||
Well, who are you? | ||
Who are you? | ||
What are you doing? | ||
Yeet says, I'm pretty sure that guy meant Norman Rockwell. | ||
Oh yeah, funny, funny. | ||
Livewire says, and I'm Catholic to boot. | ||
You read into it wrong. | ||
Okay, well don't cry. | ||
Save the West is looking like a Zoomer again. | ||
That's what I like to hear. | ||
Levy says, Vertigo is caused by an ear infection. | ||
It's caused by a lot of things. | ||
Thank you for your advice. | ||
Thank you for that, uh, you know, WebMD. | ||
Thank you, WebMD. | ||
Wanna says, Lovey Nick, please refrain from the swears. | ||
No. | ||
Lofi says, Lovey Nick, keep it up with the swears. | ||
Yes. | ||
Polish American says, heard of Robbie George from Princeton University? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
WD says, are your allergies acting up? | ||
That may trigger it. | ||
That's possible. | ||
TakeCover says, have you seen an actual doctor? | ||
Not in a long time. | ||
Elijah says, wear a Magneto helmet to stop the 5G vertigo. | ||
Maybe that's my origin story, right? | ||
Maybe that's my origin story. | ||
I wear the helmet. | ||
Nobody knew who I was until I put on the helmet and it protects He started to get vertigo. | ||
You know, there's some... I don't know what the origin would be for the vertigo. | ||
We'd have to diagnose it first. | ||
He got all these... this eccentric genius. | ||
He was doing well, but then he fell terribly ill and he had to become a cybernetic man. | ||
He had to wear an all-metal costume to protect himself. | ||
And that is when he was born, you know? | ||
That is when he was reborn as... | ||
The Namer. | ||
unidentified
|
The Namer. | |
The Iron Namer. | ||
And he goes out and he names them. | ||
No, joking. | ||
That's irony. | ||
That is sarcasm. | ||
unidentified
|
Magneto helmet. | |
Yeah, wear the helmet. | ||
I'd start levitating. | ||
Yeah, we could do that. | ||
Hot Dog says, Nick is the movement. | ||
The movement will decide your fate. | ||
unidentified
|
I am the movement. | |
No, kidding. | ||
No, kidding. | ||
You guys are great. | ||
Billy Rossi says, America first aka you are unstoppable. | ||
Great job. | ||
Thanks. | ||
So true. | ||
Crooked Knuckles says the coronavirus is bat soup crazy. | ||
Funny. | ||
Jaded says I'm pickle Nick. | ||
Oh, I turned myself into a pickle. | ||
I wish I was a pickle sometimes. | ||
Seems like it'd be much more simple. | ||
Did you see that video I retweeted on Twitter recently where the guy got the pickle Rick mod for Grand Theft Auto? | ||
I'm going to retweet that right now. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to retweet that again. | |
Just on account I'm going to go back, I'm going to find the Pickle Rick video, just because it's funny. | ||
And I'm going to give it another retweet if I can find it. | ||
Did that guy delete it? | ||
There it is, yep. | ||
I turned myself into a pickle, Patrick Casey. | ||
I'm Pickle Nick. | ||
Patrick Hasey be like, Hey Nick! | ||
I turned myself into a pickle! | ||
unidentified
|
I'm Pickle Rick! | |
Nick! | ||
Nick! | ||
Burp! | ||
I turned myself into a pickle! | ||
I'm Pickle Rick, Patrick. | ||
Pickle Patrick. | ||
That would be funny. | ||
That would be funny. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey Nick! | |
Patrick Hasey is a pickle. | ||
Now that would be funny. | ||
Okay, thumb sticks, a shout out to Big Pickle Respector, Nick Flint says, thank you. | ||
Abby Shapiro says, FMK, Abby Shapiro, Warren or Lady Maga? | ||
Don't make me choose. | ||
Waffles says, can't wait to get in the military and fight for Israel. | ||
Yeah, sounds great. | ||
Jude says, how spicy is Kathy's used telegram? | ||
Asking for a friend. | ||
I don't know, I don't follow her anymore. | ||
Optic Respector says, vertigo could be an inner ear infection. | ||
Oh, thank you doctor. | ||
Bob Sakamoto says, would you not smash your wife outside of procreation? | ||
I follow Catholic sexual morality, which says that you must. | ||
That's not what that means. | ||
It doesn't mean that you cannot have sex. | ||
If you're not trying to have a baby. | ||
It just means that your sex must be directed towards procreative ends. | ||
And I don't want to get too graphic. | ||
This is not a sex ed show, but it just means that the acts are restricted for what you can do. | ||
And yeah, as far as following God's law, that's something you're going to want to do. | ||
Duncan says seed... Okay, I'm not going to read that. | ||
Polish Americans says my dad ruled with an iron fist and belt. | ||
Ouch! | ||
Yeah, my dad didn't really... He was not physical. | ||
But he, you know... Well, he wasn't like a hard-ass on me, but we did fight. | ||
We did fight a lot in high school and like middle school. | ||
I mean, there's definitely like, you know, that classic adolescent power struggle. | ||
But I don't believe my father was too strict. | ||
I was just a very, you know... I'm a... | ||
Look, the person that I am is makes me a little out there. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like I do America first. | ||
Nobody who is a very well behaved conventional person could do America first. | ||
Nobody could make America first if they weren't a little bit out there off the wall. | ||
So I think that there was sort of like a natural antagonism just because of my temperament, my nature, which is very, um, What would you say? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't even know. | |
I don't even know what you would call it. | ||
Neurotic, maybe, what's the word I'm thinking of? | ||
High maintenance, that kind of thing, you know, so. | ||
I was always a troublemaker. | ||
I've always been a troublemaker, so. | ||
But no, I don't think my father was particularly intense. | ||
Billy says... Okay, I'm not gonna read... Oh, he's telling me a... I thought he was saying something vulgar. | ||
He's telling me about a maneuver for vertigo. | ||
Yes, I know. | ||
People be like, Google's vertigo. | ||
Oh, Nick, it's this. | ||
Oh, thank you so much, you know? | ||
I get vertigo on set and I tell people about it and then everybody's on the case. | ||
Google's vertigo... Vertigo causes. | ||
unidentified
|
Nick, I just found it. | |
Oh, thank you. | ||
Thank you so much! | ||
Wow! | ||
I didn't know that you could type in Google to find answers to my questions. | ||
Wow, thank you! | ||
Thank you. | ||
I don't have access to that. | ||
I didn't think of that, so... I know. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
You're well-intentioned. | ||
You're well-meaning. | ||
But yeah, no, believe me, I've read all about it. | ||
I read about the potential causes and, you know, treatments and all that. | ||
unidentified
|
It's just, you know, I guess I gotta see a doctor. | |
Jace's vertigo equals stiff neck, which presses on the cerebellum. | ||
unidentified
|
Hmm. | |
Is that? | ||
Maybe that's possible. | ||
Eros is what secrets are not being told about Jesus. | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
Siege says, I know it isn't easy standing firm against the world. | ||
unidentified
|
St. | |
Thomas, more example. | ||
Thanks for what you do. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
It isn't easy, but you know, it's what I do. | ||
Sultan says, what came first, the simp or the thought? | ||
Simp. | ||
Armenian Groyper says, we can't afford to lose you. | ||
Please go to a doctor. | ||
I'm not going to die. | ||
Yeet says, oh, it's a pedo stash? | ||
Were you griped as a kid? | ||
Yeah, there we go. | ||
Polish American says, retard Nick is my favorite Nick. | ||
Yeah, funny, funny. | ||
Green Cedar says, 70s porn stash? | ||
No, more like Indian whisker. | ||
JK. | ||
Siege says, 32 and have been an odinist. | ||
Since my teen skinhead days, watching you has brought me to the church. | ||
Hey, well, I'm glad to hear that. | ||
That had a happy ending. | ||
I was about to go off, but I'm glad to hear that. | ||
That's really great to hear, that you were a cringe pagan and then you came to the church. | ||
Hey, look, that's good. | ||
That's what we want for people. | ||
We want people to have a meaningful relationship with God, the real God, you know, Jesus Christ and his Father. | ||
That is what we want. | ||
You know, it's not, I don't like to think of it as like a, you know, contest or a even a political thing or a team sport. | ||
It's, we want people to get in touch with their creator. | ||
We want people to build a meaningful and real relationship with the real living God. | ||
That's what it's about. | ||
So, you know, a lot of people, like, it's a very, it's still a polarizing thing to this day. | ||
You know, this guy, this guy, Jesus Christ, went up on the cross 2,000 years ago and people are still fighting about it. | ||
And that's what he said. | ||
He said, I am going to divide your household. | ||
I have come to divide. | ||
came to bring a sword and I will split everything, you know, and that's, that is to this day, that is the case. | ||
And which side are you going to be on? | ||
Are you going to be with the devil? | ||
Are you going to be with the Satan and evil? | ||
Are you going to turn away? | ||
Are you going to be with God? | ||
Just like, you know, if, if there is a God and if it is the God of the Bible, well, we should figure out, we should get in touch with him. | ||
We should figure out what he wants, his rules, and we should follow them. | ||
I mean, I think that's only logical, right? | ||
Zappy says, Shapiro after the ban, they get ruled by people like me. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Texan Groyper says, how do I get around the character limit? | ||
I don't want the Ninjaginis to get out of order. | ||
There is no way to get around it for now. | ||
Donnie says, I only like new urbanism. | ||
The suburbs are cringe. | ||
Speak for yourself. | ||
I love the suburbs. | ||
I love driving in the suburbs. | ||
I love driving and I love driving around the suburbs, cruising around late at night. | ||
Shmooting around great great fond memories from the suburbs, you know reminiscing It's like utopia. | ||
It's like heaven on earth. | ||
It really is in the suburbs in a lot of ways and So yeah, I'd speak for yourself not I mean and it would be maybe if I grew up in a different environment I probably feel differently but That's my experience. | ||
That is a very good analogy, but... but almost the opposite, because I'm like the real product that cares about quality and cares about the product and the brand and they are the ones that are corporatizing it and expanding it and, you know, raping it, basically perverting it, so... | ||
But I like the idea of being Ray Kroc. | ||
That movie made me go out and buy more McDonald's. | ||
Good job. | ||
You plugged in the variables to the template. | ||
Yeah, for real. | ||
I got a haircut like last week and it's already growing back. | ||
Royal Goy says, I won't eat bugs, live in pot, or eat the taco neck. | ||
Yeah, that's a pretty cringe meme. | ||
People in all caps, I won't eat... When people do all caps, it is like communicating weakness. | ||
When people do this, like, I'm being really loud, it is almost always betraying insecurities. | ||
You know, it takes somebody that's very confident to be funny in a way that is subtle and quiet or A punchline that is not obvious, but you know that somebody is, like, trying really hard and feeling very, you know, insecure about their joke, that they're gonna say, you know, in all capital letters, I won't eat the bugs or eat the taco, Nick! | ||
And, you know, they're trying to mask the fact that they're not confident in what they're saying by being loud. | ||
And I don't know if I'm articulating that the best way. | ||
If you possess understanding, you'll know what I'm getting at. | ||
Because I'm not doing a great job of articulating it because I am mentally fatigued right now. | ||
But I've seen this a lot. | ||
There's like this certain kind of person that will deliver a joke in a very loud and in a very specific way that is like... | ||
unidentified
|
Please laugh! | |
Please laugh! | ||
Please clap for me! | ||
I don't want people to think I'm not funny, you know? | ||
Something like that. | ||
As I was approaching that, I don't know if I'm quite hitting the nail on the head, but I see tweets like this all the time where it's in all capital letters and it's like, oh, you just are not, you do not get it. | ||
You do not understand. | ||
You do not possess understanding. | ||
You don't get it. | ||
Some will get it, some will not. | ||
Some will not get it and they'll be mad at me. | ||
Oh, Nick says you have to understand, but there's nothing to... Oh, you just don't get it. | ||
But you just don't get it, you know? | ||
So... I won't eat bugs, live in the pot, or eat the taco, Nick. | ||
What have you been trying to do with that one? | ||
Are you trying to be funny? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Didn't work. | ||
Not New Engine. | ||
Am I being mean today? | ||
Am I being particularly nasty? | ||
Maybe it's because I'm not feeling well. | ||
Not New Engine. | ||
My arms are folded and I'm disagreeable. | ||
Not New Engine says that 20% is coming out tonight, huh? | ||
What's 20%? | ||
What does that mean? | ||
20% what? | ||
Delcos is trying to start an America First student chapter in my area. | ||
Okay, well, you know, I think that's Jaden's thing, so I don't think they're, like, franchising it out. | ||
You really shouldn't do that without talking to Jaden. | ||
Zvibas is looking handsome today and as sharp as ever. | ||
Well, thanks a lot. | ||
Banjur says Census Bureau hiring thousands pays like 20 an hour. | ||
Yeah, do it, dude. | ||
Do it. | ||
Why not? | ||
Royal Goy says, wonder if Libs be, like, named when Nick is said. | ||
Maybe. | ||
Have you named the Nick? | ||
Silicon Groyper says, as a closeted Groyper working at a major paused tech company, is there any way to help the movement? | ||
I don't think so, honestly. | ||
Those things are so large and bureaucratic. | ||
I doubt there's really much you can do. | ||
Legati says, Oreos and peanut butter. | ||
Okay. | ||
Doomer Squidward says, tithe. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Migorian says, what doodads should I get on my first wristwatch? | ||
What does that even mean? | ||
Boat School says, tried to make a Reddit joke. | ||
Not enough characters. | ||
Green Cedar says, Stalin recriminalized gay sex. | ||
Five years hard labor. | ||
I don't know if I'd go that far. | ||
But I would definitely say that we should ban it from the public square for sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Sure. | |
Livewire says, fair enough, text fails to convey inflection. | ||
Also, garlic, sour pickle gang. | ||
Okay, nice. | ||
Big Stag says, ever play Destroy All Humans on PS2? | ||
No, my mom wouldn't let me get it because it was too violent when I was a kid. | ||
Not anymore. | ||
I can have whatever game I want now. | ||
I don't have a bedtime anymore. | ||
I can eat whatever I want for dinner. | ||
Joe the Boomer says, Yeah, that actually is where you can see it. | ||
Green Cedar says, I just didn't know about that. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, we'll see. | |
I'll read that. | ||
Optics Respecter says reparations for WebMD posting. | ||
Thank you. | ||
He says AFPAC is first Friday in Lent. | ||
Fish fry check. | ||
Oh, I don't think we're doing a fish fry. | ||
I just didn't know about that. | ||
Well, we'll see. | ||
Jacob says, what do you think about climate change? | ||
This is my lib friend's main issue, and the numbers seem to add up. | ||
I think it's bullshit, and I think it's a pretext for globalism. | ||
So what do you mean the numbers add up? | ||
What are you, a scientist? | ||
What numbers? | ||
The numbers that globalist scientists cooked up? | ||
Yeah, wrong. | ||
The climate change agenda, all it is is a pretext to unify global government, global commerce. | ||
It is one of these unifying things that dissolves national borders. | ||
That is all that that is about. | ||
In the same way that the Cold War, like, think about it this way. | ||
So much of what has been built up, which is globalist, over the past 70 years was done so because of the Cold War. | ||
And it made sense to, on some level, subjugate the national interest behind the interest of the alliance, right? | ||
Of NATO and of the West, because the Soviet Union was a global existential threat to America, under this frame, right? | ||
Inside of this frame. | ||
It made sense, from that perspective, this is the narrative, that we had to subordinate the national interest to the interest of free countries, the West, NATO, against the Soviet Union. | ||
Because the Soviet Union was this global, imminent, existential threat to all of us. | ||
We had a shared interest in defeating it. | ||
When the Cold War ended, well, what is the natural reaction then? | ||
To reassert the national interest. | ||
That is the natural, should have been the natural consequence. | ||
The threat is gone. | ||
That unifying threat pretext is no longer there. | ||
It is time to build America again. | ||
So then what did they do? | ||
They proposed climate change, which is another crusade which will force us to subordinate the national interest to the interests of humanity. | ||
Subordinate the interests of our people, our economy, our wealth, All the rest because there's a greater struggle that we all share in and it's going to affect all of us because if it was pollution, that would not be the case. | ||
If they were talking about pollution, well, we would just have to clean up our country. | ||
And what India does and what China does is, you know, their business. | ||
If we clean up our country and we have a clean country, well, then what difference does it make, right? | ||
Whether we take showers and eat meat and whatever, we're going to take care of us. | ||
But if it's global, if the effect is global and universal, if what happens in America and what's happening everywhere else affects everybody else altogether, well then that is going to demand the subordination of our interests. | ||
That will demand the subordination of what we want to the greater good. | ||
And so that's why they're talking about eating crickets and so on. | ||
We can eat meat, but we can't eat meat and have it be sustainable for the climate and the growing middle class and all that. | ||
You know, why do they say we have to stop eating meat? | ||
Because meat requires so many resources and it creates greenhouse gases and greenhouse gases causes climate change and climate change affects all of us and blah blah blah. | ||
unidentified
|
So, no, wrong. | |
I'm an environmentalist, but I don't believe in climate change. | ||
That is a false, nonsensical, globalist crusade. | ||
It is a pretext for these transnational people to subordinate the interests of our country to their profit, to their interests. | ||
So, no. | ||
The numbers don't add up. | ||
Wagey says, Michelle Malkin, extremely based mommy. | ||
Yeah, factual. | ||
Livewire says, cigars, based, cringe, or neutral? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Why? | ||
Why a question like this? | ||
I do not have a hot take on cigars. | ||
I do not smoke them. | ||
If you smoke them, then that's fine. | ||
WD says, laying on the floor to relieve the spinning? | ||
Based? | ||
Yeah, I guess I'm just kind of eccentric like that. | ||
I guess I'm just kind of like a strange, quirky, eccentric genius who nobody understands. | ||
Sort of like an inaccessible, misanthropic, hermit character. | ||
I guess I'm just sort of like this tortured, but You know, but possesses irrepressible will. | ||
You know, it's just, I guess that's just who I am, you know? | ||
Wagee Rage says, lemons in chat now. | ||
Yep. | ||
Based says, understanding possessors rise up. | ||
Dr. Phil says, raised Protestant. | ||
How can I learn more about Catholicism? | ||
Here we go again. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Maybe like, you know, look into the internet. | ||
I think that would be a good place to start. | ||
How do I learn more about Catholicism? | ||
Beats me. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
You're expecting me to know how you could look into more information for something? | ||
How would I know that? | ||
What do I look like? | ||
What do I look like? | ||
A robot? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Go to your local library and consult books? | ||
Maybe that's... I don't know. | ||
Maybe that. | ||
Maybe you could like open up a computer, maybe that's something you could do. | ||
Why do people ask you, how can I learn more about Catholicism? | ||
Why would anybody ever have any reason to say that to another person in the age of the internet? | ||
Would you ever say, how can I learn more about, it would be one thing if it was something super specialized, like how can I learn a skill, but it's like... | ||
How do I learn more about McDonald's? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I have no idea. | ||
No idea. | ||
There's no way of knowing. | ||
There's no way of figuring it out. | ||
Bode School says, Vertigo is so bad you should file for disability. | ||
Yeah, good idea. | ||
Bet This says, money. | ||
Okay. | ||
Paleo Conservatives says, which interviews do you do in person versus over Skype? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
Wagee Rage is if you walk at night in black, hope you get run over. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
Jude says, so lab code data right on race but not on climate? | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Bad Faith Poster says, yeah, funny. | ||
Loving the meta super chats, by the way. | ||
unidentified
|
I love it when people do this. | |
So one thing is true but another thing is not? | ||
Uh, yeah. | ||
Yes, correct. | ||
Because one thing is entirely knowable and one thing is entirely not knowable. | ||
One thing is based on speculation. | ||
It's based on models. | ||
It's based on computer models that have been proven to be wrong. | ||
IPCC, International Panel on Climate Change, does these. | ||
I mean, they've done more than a hundred climate models and most of them are wrong. | ||
And most of their predictions and projections are wrong. | ||
So yes, the data is wrong. | ||
And moreover, even if you have the data, then you have to assess causation and variables. | ||
So you could say we're measuring the temperature, but also you could think, what kind? | ||
What temperature are you measuring? | ||
Are you measuring the ocean temperature? | ||
Surface temperature? | ||
You know, there's a lot of ways you can measure it. | ||
Where are you measuring it? | ||
Whatever. | ||
And then, well, what's causing the change in temperature? | ||
Because then that's a ton of variables too. | ||
Is it the solar cycle? | ||
Is it the distance from the sun to the earth? | ||
Which varies. | ||
Is it Is it greenhouse gases? | ||
Is it, you know, there are a variety of factors for why the global climate might change. | ||
But the idea that like, oh, it's simple and straightforward. | ||
I'm just a Joe Schmo. | ||
A scientist tells me up arrow for temperature. | ||
unidentified
|
Up arrow. | |
Up arrow for factories. | ||
Say no more. | ||
Take away my rights. | ||
Rape me. | ||
Take away my house. | ||
My property is now the property of the EPA. | ||
The government is controlled by the UN now, and that's okay. | ||
I'll eat snails for the rest of my life. | ||
Say no more. | ||
Oh, well, a guy with a lab coat got on television and said, look at this graph, and that is temperature, and this graph is factories. | ||
That's climate change for ya. | ||
No more hamburgers. | ||
No more meat. | ||
No more showers. | ||
No more private property. | ||
No more families. | ||
No more reproduction. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, well, yeah, that's what it takes. | |
Anything to be a good steward of the planet. | ||
Dummy. | ||
As compared to IQ tests, which... There's so much empirical evidence. | ||
It's a great predictor for future success. | ||
And, you know, in any case, when we talk about IQ, it's totally heritable. | ||
It's totally genetic. | ||
When there's... There are environmental factors, but we have basically boiled down the variables, so... | ||
Dumb, dumb statement. | ||
You're very, I don't know what you're doing. | ||
Jude, usually you're okay, but that, that was not a smart thing to say. | ||
Bad faith poster, I just read that. | ||
Dresden says, compare the Have a Mel to the chapter of Matthew and you'll know where the Aryan race soul resides. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Armenian Groyper says, ever watched The Truth Factory on YouTube? | ||
No. | ||
Spurts says, scared about Chinese economy crash due to C-virus. | ||
Not really. | ||
I'm not really scared. | ||
I'm not scared about it. | ||
LiveWire says, asked him because I wanted an excuse to send more lemons, but Nick, if the source is right, once is perfect. | ||
Yeah, great points, but thanks for the lemons. | ||
Professor Eric says, if you need Nick to tell you if what you like is based or not, you're a loser. | ||
At Cigar Question, well, let's take it easy on our other Super Chatters. | ||
Only I can insult my Super Chatters. | ||
Okay, well that's our last one. | ||
That's going to do it for us tonight. | ||
I'm tired the room is spinning I feel like bad but that's gonna do it for us on the show time we made it there was like more than two hours anyway so that's just a testament to the fact that I am tough mentally physically tough you would have no idea that the room is spinning around me that I feel like I'm on a tilt the world because I've been so cogent In my responses. | ||
But that's going to do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Remember to follow me on DLive. | ||
Click the follow button right up here somewhere. | ||
Click the follow button. | ||
Remember to sign up for my email list. | ||
Go to nicholasjfuences.com and it's right there on the front page. | ||
Just type your email in, sign up. | ||
It's the only thing I cannot be banned from, including my platform, which will be announced this week. | ||
More on that later, so be sure you're tuning in this week for the announcement on that. | ||
Remember we are on the air Monday through Friday 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
As always, this is America First. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our superchatters. | ||
Thanks to our top three contributors tonight. | ||
BigMoneyWagey, who didn't even put any comments in, but he's still the biggest. | ||
Thank you so much, BigMoneyWagey. | ||
TimedOut and ReallyGoodComics, our three biggest superchatters. | ||
And thanks to everybody who superchatted tonight. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you. | ||
And I will see you tomorrow at 8 o'clock for the Democratic debate. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | ||
unidentified
|
It's going to be only America first. | |
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. |