Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
Good evening everybody. | ||
You're watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Thursday. | ||
Is today Thursday? | ||
I've lost track. | ||
But we've got a great show for you tonight, and it doesn't matter what day it is, I'm excited to be with you, whatever day it is. | ||
I'm excited to be with you if it's Wednesday, if it's Thursday, I don't even know, it could be the weekend for all I know. | ||
I'm excited to be with you. | ||
And we've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into tonight. | ||
It is Thursday, isn't it? | ||
I seriously... Okay, yeah, it is. | ||
I've been under quarantine so long it's like you don't even know. | ||
You don't even know anymore, you know? | ||
You don't know up, down, left, right. | ||
You're inside. | ||
We're inside. | ||
We have no idea. | ||
It's just the daytime or it's the evening. | ||
I know the time. | ||
I don't know the day. | ||
But it's Thursday. | ||
We have a great show. | ||
We're going to be talking about What do you think? | ||
Can you take a wild guess? | ||
What do you think we're gonna talk about tonight? | ||
unidentified
|
We're gonna get into the coronavirus. | |
This disease that is taking the world by storm. | ||
And we'll be talking about the latest numbers. | ||
Hey, guess what I've got under the desk? | ||
I've got the whiteboard. | ||
We've got all the latest numbers for all the different countries and the world. | ||
And the big development today is that we are now the number one country for confirmed coronavirus cases. | ||
We passed the milestone today. | ||
We are now officially number one. | ||
We have beaten Italy. | ||
We have beaten China. | ||
The United States now has the most coronavirus cases. | ||
More cases than any other country in the world. | ||
So we'll talk about that. | ||
We'll talk about where we are right now. | ||
We'll be talking about the economy today. | ||
Jobless numbers just came out today. | ||
3 million people. | ||
3.3 million. | ||
Record number of jobless claims came out in the jobs report today. | ||
So we'll talk about that and what's happening with the stock market. | ||
We'll talk about, like I said, the numbers. | ||
We'll be looking at the relief package, which is set to pass through the House of Representatives. | ||
I believe tonight. | ||
So we'll be looking at that and then we'll also be talking about Mexico. | ||
There's actually pretty interesting development from Mexico. | ||
I don't know if you have seen this. | ||
Very funny, very ironic stuff. | ||
Only with the coronavirus would we see something like this. | ||
Truly, it must be the end times. | ||
Mexico is now sending protesters to their northern border, our southern border, to stop Americans from going into their country. | ||
Can you believe this? | ||
This is south of Arizona. | ||
You've got all these border checkpoints, and you have a lot of people that will cross the border every day for school or for business or for shopping or whatever. | ||
And so you've got one of these border checkpoints, which is supposed to be closed because of the coronavirus, and I guess there are Americans, there are Arizonans that are still going from America to Mexico. | ||
And so today, because they're so frustrated, they're so fed up with this unchecked movement of people, you had Mexicans going to their northern border with Arizona and impeding the flow of people through these checkpoints. | ||
They stopped and obstructed the checkpoints with signs, wearing masks, saying they did not want the American people to bring the virus to Mexico. | ||
And they're demanding an end to unchecked migration and movement into Mexico. | ||
Truly, we must be living in the end times to see something this upside down, to see something this ironic. | ||
So we'll talk a little bit about that. | ||
You love to see it! | ||
You love to see that. | ||
Isn't that awesome? | ||
And more on that when we talk about it. | ||
It's very funny and it kind of says a lot about globalization and globalism in general. | ||
And I'll talk some about that. | ||
So it should be a pretty exciting, pretty good show. | ||
Well, we are trapped indoors here while you are trapped, my hostage audience here. | ||
I'm holding you hostage with the coronavirus happening. | ||
It's got to be the worst happening ever. | ||
We have been waiting for years for something big to happen, something exciting to cover on the show. | ||
Somebody said on Twitter the other day, we're being mocked. | ||
They said this is the one happening that forces everybody inside and it puts a freeze on all news. | ||
They said we're being mocked. | ||
It's true. | ||
unidentified
|
It's true. | |
The one happening where nothing happens, right? | ||
So, so more on the coronavirus tonight. | ||
Before we dive into that, I want to just give you a little update here with this Biden situation. | ||
Did you see the latest video? | ||
I didn't see it at first. | ||
For some reason, this one, I don't know if it made the rounds as much as the others. | ||
I didn't see it up until somebody sent it to me. | ||
But Joe Biden, I guess he gave an address, maybe it was today or yesterday, talking about the coronavirus. | ||
Have you seen this? | ||
It's a new one. | ||
You know, and we talked about the one the other day or a couple days ago where he said he was talking about if the cure is worse than the disease and he gets totally confused. | ||
And we've seen a lot of these, and I've been talking about it on the show, but this is maybe the worst video of him that I've ever seen as far as the dementia, the confusion, whatever that's all about. | ||
As far as that goes, this is maybe the worst video I've seen. | ||
He's giving some kind of an address about the coronavirus. | ||
He's at this podium. | ||
It's some kind of a live stream, I assume. | ||
He gets done with the speech. | ||
He says, okay, blah blah blah, thank you. | ||
And then he just freezes up, and he just stands there looking at the camera. | ||
for an uncomfortable amount of time his wife comes on she comes into the frame and gives him a hug and kiss and he seems almost like startled by her he's like oh oh hi hi and he hugs and kisses her and she goes off the stage you know she went out there basically to retrieve him to get him because he froze up I don't know what happened I don't think anybody knows what happened | ||
So she goes up there to pull him out because he's obviously doesn't know where he is and he goes and he embraces her they kiss she goes off I am assuming to take him off with her and he doesn't go he gives her a kiss she walks out of the frame and he just stands there still looking at the camera She goes, Joe! | ||
From off camera, Joe! | ||
Gesturing to him, and then he finally leaves. | ||
And it was probably the worst thing I've ever seen. | ||
Because we've been covering that on this show, and I just talked about it yesterday. | ||
Talking about how he's not gonna make it, man. | ||
I mean, the general election is in November. | ||
What is that? | ||
Seven months away? | ||
I think yeah we're at the tail end of March. | ||
That's seven months away and it's only going to get more intense. | ||
Understand with the coronavirus you're doing less campaigning. | ||
It's less stressful because you don't have to do rallies and you don't have to do the door knocking and obviously most of the campaign work has been suspended. | ||
And so it's going to get more intense when it picks up again, obviously, and you have to do more public events. | ||
It'll get way more intense after the convention, when it's the general election, and it's just Biden versus Trump, and it's in full swing, and you have debates, and you have, again, those big rallies again and everything, and you really have to do a big push towards the end. | ||
You know, you remember back in November 2016, I think Donald Trump did four rallies on one day, on election day or maybe the day before. | ||
Four rallies in four different states. | ||
Like, did a morning rally, got on a plane, did an afternoon rally, got on a plane, did an evening rally, got on a plane, nighttime rally. | ||
And that was a schedule that Trump kept for, like, weeks in the lead up to the election. | ||
Not every day did he do four, but, I mean, it was that kind of demanding, high-intensity work. | ||
And if Joe Biden is this bad now, in essentially April, late March, when there's nothing going on, what's it going to look like in November? | ||
And forget even November. | ||
It's this bad now. | ||
He's basically incapacitated now. | ||
So I don't know if you saw that video. | ||
If you just look up Joe Biden, I think I retweeted it. | ||
TrumpWarRoom put it out on Twitter. | ||
Maybe I didn't retweet it because I couldn't find it on the TrumpWarRoom. | ||
I hate when people embed the videos on Twitter because you can never just click onto the original one, you know? | ||
But I saw that today and I was like, wow, this is not good, for the Democrats at least. | ||
And as I said, we literally just talked about it last night, and I don't know if this was yesterday or today, but it was the worst video I've seen yet of him. | ||
I don't know what they're gonna do. | ||
Somebody super chatted yesterday, and I've been hearing whispers about this, that maybe Cuomo, the governor of New York, is gonna run instead, that the Democrats are Grooming him to take over? | ||
Which I don't know how that's going to happen. | ||
I mean, you have this situation where Joe Biden has won a plurality of the delegates so far, but a ton of delegates still haven't even been apportioned because the primaries have been suspended, right? | ||
I mean, they've moved back all the primaries. | ||
Ohio moved back their primary and they're going to do it by ballot. | ||
I think maybe a lot of primaries will do it that way. | ||
So the whole contest has basically been suspended. | ||
You don't have a nominee because nobody's won a majority of the delegates outright yet. | ||
And then of course, if you get to the convention, if Joe Biden becomes a nominee, or maybe he doesn't, then they could always just swap him out with somebody else. | ||
His vice president, or maybe they just pick somebody fresh, like Cuomo. | ||
I don't know what mechanism they would use to make that happen. | ||
I'm assuming that they could just change the rules on a whim. | ||
It's a Democratic Party. | ||
It's a Democratic Party nomination. | ||
I imagine they could just pick whoever they wanted. | ||
I can't imagine how that would go over, though, with Democratic voters. | ||
I mean, I'm sure a lot of them, and maybe most of them, would say, whatever it takes to beat Trump. | ||
Clearly Joe Biden is not well and if it continues to get worse, if it continues to deteriorate, I'm sure that sentiment will only grow. | ||
But then again, how many Democrats will say, not very democratic to do a whole primary like this and 23, 24 candidates run and drop out and you have debates and you have this contest with Buttigieg and Bernie and Biden and Bloomberg. | ||
And then they just pick somebody completely different? | ||
How do you swing that? | ||
I have no idea. | ||
Especially when you have all this talk after 2016 about the sacred ballot box and the democratic process and Donald Trump didn't win the popular vote. | ||
How could they then pick a nominee that nobody even voted on? | ||
It's just... I don't think it could be worse for Democrats. | ||
Ironically, coronavirus is horrible for Democrats because this has caused Trump's approval rating to skyrocket. | ||
It may be, in a way, by catalyzing the recession and giving us an out for that. | ||
In other words, if you were going to have a recession in 2020 anyway, it's better that it was a coronavirus recession, because if we were due for a recession in 2020 without a global pandemic, well then people would simply blame it on the president. | ||
And I think probably they could have made that happen. | ||
I'm sure the Fed or some combination of non-state actors could have crashed the economy before he got elected. | ||
And if that just happened without a big catastrophe, they could have said, that's on Trump, and there goes his economic record, which is, you know, the bulk of what he was campaigning on. | ||
So by catalyzing a recession, it almost like gets that out of the way, and everybody can say, well, you know, it's the pandemic, that's not Trump's fault. | ||
So you have that aspect of it, which I think is plausible. | ||
You've got the virus, which he's handling well. | ||
And then their nominee is just a complete disaster. | ||
So it's hard to imagine how it could be worse. | ||
I was thinking last year that it was like a 50-50 chance. | ||
And that was last year. | ||
Granted, you don't know what the race is going to look like. | ||
You don't know who the nominee is going to be. | ||
You just don't know what the circumstance will look like in a year. | ||
But last year I was saying it's like 50-50. | ||
The most likely nominee is Joe Biden, and if it's Joe Biden, Trump's got like a 50% chance. | ||
He's doing really well, but as good as he's doing, that might not cut it because of demographics, with age and with race. | ||
With age, you're talking about young people that are becoming eligible to vote, and young people vote for Democrats, and the old people are dying off, and the young, or rather the old people are likely to vote Republican. | ||
Then you've got the racial demographic change from immigration, illegal immigration, and even very specific targeted maneuvers like prison release. | ||
You know, all these black people getting released from jail with the First Step Act. | ||
And voter ID laws that are changing in, I think, like states like Kentucky. | ||
They're messing with the rules in Florida. | ||
And then the situation in Puerto Rico is another good example where, you know, a lot of Puerto Rican refugees flee after that hurricane and they came to Florida. | ||
So the demographic advantage factored in. | ||
I said he's like 50-50. | ||
Flip a coin. | ||
But now, I mean, what did the Democrats really have going for them? | ||
It's been pretty brutal. | ||
Anyway, just a little update on that. | ||
I like to throw in a little something that's not corona, just to keep it a little fresh. | ||
I don't know what to do. | ||
I asked you the other day on the show... | ||
Two days ago, I said, do you even like this show? | ||
Are these even good shows? | ||
Do you even, like, enjoy it? | ||
Because it's just the same, the same story every night. | ||
And everybody's like, yeah, it's great. | ||
It's terrific. | ||
It's awesome. | ||
But I know we're all getting fatigued. | ||
As much as you might say that, I'm getting fatigued with this corona stuff. | ||
Maybe you're getting fatigued. | ||
I don't think I'm just self-conscious about it. | ||
I think it's just like, can we get back? | ||
I want to, Get back into the world! | ||
I want to go eat at McDonald's, and I want to go get a cheeseburger at the other place, and I want to go get ice cream again. | ||
I mean, my life isn't too dramatically different, but I want to get back in. | ||
I want things to happen. | ||
I want to talk about non-biological epidemiology stuff. | ||
But whatever. | ||
I'm trying! | ||
I'm trying my best! | ||
I'm trying my best. | ||
But we're gonna dive into the virus. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, just trying to sprinkle in a little bit of other news. | |
This Joe Biden thing. | ||
Endless source of amusement. | ||
And you have to wonder what's so amazing about this is they literally did the same thing they did in 2016. | ||
Right? | ||
Because Donald Trump, in as much as I think he's a brilliant campaigner, he is beatable. | ||
You can defeat him. | ||
And I don't think the formula is extremely complicated. | ||
And it's not like if the Democrats put up a really effective candidate that they couldn't beat Trump. | ||
Like, look in 2016, for example. | ||
Perfect example. | ||
In 2016, Trump won by a technical landslide, right? | ||
A landslide. | ||
The definition of a landslide is if you win with more than 300 electoral votes. | ||
Trump won 306, and then I think you had a couple of Electoral College voters who like do you remember this were after the election? | ||
They said well the electoral college voters can vote some other way He ended up getting 304 because two of them like defected because of political things So in a very technical way, he won by a landslide. | ||
But if you look at just states like Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, he won by a hair. | ||
He won by like a percentage or less in those three states. | ||
And I forget what the math is. | ||
It's been a long time since I looked at the numbers, but you could really boil down to the decision in 2016. | ||
It came down to A handful of counties and like 10,000 voters. | ||
Again, I don't have those exact numbers, but a very small amount of voters, a very small amount of counties basically determined the way it went. | ||
In other words, it was a lot closer than people like to say. | ||
Obviously, Clinton blew them out in the popular vote. | ||
Trump had a landslide with the electoral vote. | ||
But if we look at how the electoral vote is decided with the states and the math behind it, it's like thousands of voters. | ||
In other words, if the Democrats put up a halfway competent candidate, they could have won. | ||
And I think they could have won actually easily. | ||
If they put up a halfway decent, compelling, charismatic candidate, like anybody other than Clinton, I think they would have had a shot at winning in 2016. | ||
And the same would have been true in 2020. | ||
But they literally made the same mistake. | ||
In 2016 they put up the most unlikable, Somebody that wasn't healthy. | ||
Somebody that was dying. | ||
Somebody that was corrupt and evil and just not popular at all. | ||
Somebody that doesn't even do that good with traditional democratic demographics or constituencies. | ||
And in 2020, you'd think after that humiliation, she writes the book, What Happened? | ||
And who did they select then to run in her stead? | ||
Another old, dying, corrupt political elite that really is unlikable. | ||
And you just gotta wonder, what's going on over there? | ||
What's going on at Democratic Party HQ? | ||
What's Tom Perez doing? | ||
What are they thinking over there? | ||
And they, like, begged him to run. | ||
I don't know if you remember, but back in 2019, I think there was a legitimate question as to whether or not he should run, right? | ||
Because Joe Biden, I don't remember him being like enthusiastic about running. | ||
His presence in politics for the past four years was not indicative of somebody who was posturing right or positioning himself for a big presidential run. | ||
I think they basically had to beg him to get in the race and convince him. | ||
I don't know how much of that was political theater or you know that kind of thing and how much of it was legitimate but They track him into the race and he's terrible. | ||
But anyway, we're gonna move on we'll talk about the it's just it's just hilarious to me We're gonna move on and talk about the corona the coronavirus Good stuff. | ||
We're gonna bring out the whiteboard here with the latest numbers That's not the whiteboard this is this is the whiteboard we're gonna bring out the latest numbers here and And we've got new numbers, bigger numbers, and let me adjust our brightness here so it's a little bit easier on the eyes, a little bit easier to read here. | ||
I don't know how much that helps. | ||
And my handwriting's getting progressively worse. | ||
I can feel it. | ||
Again, another thing I'm trying my hardest. | ||
I'm trying to write the words as clearly as possible, but I'm a boy! | ||
I didn't practice good handwriting in school, and I don't write anything anymore with my hands. | ||
I type, so... | ||
So please bear with the handwriting. | ||
Some of these I'm struggling with even on the screen. | ||
I don't know if it's because the screen is small. | ||
Whatever, whatever. | ||
We've got the latest numbers for you here. | ||
We are up to a grand total of 532,933. | ||
of 532,933, 533,000 worldwide cases of coronavirus. | ||
It was in the 400,000s yesterday, right? | ||
And it seems now the trend is every two to four days, there's another 100,000 cases. | ||
And I'll even pull up on my Twitter. | ||
I think I didn't put it on my notes, but I saw this earlier. | ||
Just tracking how these numbers have grown. | ||
So just going by 100,000. | ||
On January 19th, you had 100 cases. | ||
January 19th, 100 cases worldwide of coronavirus. | ||
March 6th is when you had 100,000 cases. | ||
So it took fully, what, a month and a half? | ||
Yeah, six weeks to go from 100 cases to 100,000 cases. | ||
It took 12 days to go from 100,000 to 200,000 cases. | ||
March 6th was 100,000, March 18th was 200,000 cases. | ||
200,000 cases. | ||
March 6th was 100,000. | ||
March 20, or I'm sorry, March 18th was 200,000 cases. | ||
So six weeks to just under two weeks for the next 100,000. | ||
Three days from 200,000 to 300,000. | ||
March 18th was 200,000. | ||
March 21st is 300,000. | ||
March 24th is 400,000. | ||
March 26th is 500,000. | ||
So the amount of time between each of those benchmarks, between each 100,000 new cases, is six weeks. | ||
Just under two weeks, three days, three days, two days. | ||
To give you an idea of how fast it's spreading, or I guess maybe how many cases are out there, maybe how many cases we're discovering is more accurate. | ||
And maybe this number will go up to 600,000 tomorrow. | ||
You know, maybe it'll be 100,000 in one day. | ||
I mean that is what we're looking at next. | ||
And then who knows where it goes from there. | ||
The more that these numbers get reported and confirmed and people get tested, you might be talking about hundreds of thousands per day. | ||
And then it's in the millions. | ||
I mean that is just the trajectory. | ||
And we have to see, I don't want to alarm anybody, we have to see how these curves go because they're different in every country. | ||
But in states like the US and Italy and Spain, they are declaring thousands of new cases every day. | ||
The United States 16,300 cases in the last 24 hours. | ||
To give you an idea. | ||
In Italy, 6,000 cases in the last 24 hours. | ||
In Germany, 6,600 in the last 24 hours. | ||
In Spain, 8,200 in the last 24 hours. | ||
These are the numbers we're working with. | ||
And then you've got thousands and hundreds across the globe. | ||
So, as you can see, the United States is now in the top spot. | ||
Make this a little bit longer so I can reach. | ||
The United States is now 84,675 cases. | ||
We're now number one, as I predicted. | ||
China is at 81,285. | ||
That number doesn't mean anything. | ||
Italy is at 80,539. | ||
as I predicted. | ||
China is at 81,285. | ||
That number doesn't mean anything. | ||
Italy is at 80,539. | ||
They're going to overtake China by tonight, you know, tomorrow, whenever they report the new numbers. | ||
Spain is up to 57,786. | ||
Germany, 44,000. | ||
Iran, 29,400. | ||
France, 29,000. | ||
Switzerland, close to 12,000. | ||
The United Kingdom up to 12,000. | ||
South Korea still staying strong at 9,200. | ||
And you can see how the rest of them work out. | ||
Turkey is now on the list for the first time. | ||
Canada's floating up there. | ||
Portugal's still there. | ||
Turkey is on the list for the first time. | ||
So it is getting bad. | ||
It's getting bad in all these different countries. | ||
It's getting really bad in Europe, particularly Spain, Italy, the United States, obviously. | ||
And, you know, again, In the United States, it's not so much that the disease is being transmitted more, and it's not even so much that that number means that there's more people getting the virus necessarily, even though they are. | ||
It's just that more reports are happening, more people are getting tested, more tests are happening, and more people are getting confirmed. | ||
16,000 people contracted the virus today. | ||
16,000 people got the virus today. | ||
This is a production of the United States. | ||
So you have to have a severe case, you have to get a test, do the test, wait 24 to 36 hours, get confirmed, and then the number gets reported. | ||
That's what these numbers are. | ||
So I know I've said that a lot, but I want to remind you when we're looking at The new cases every day and as we see the numbers get higher, you know, you got to remember what the numbers are. | ||
These are confirmed cases. | ||
This is what we know about. | ||
And when we get new numbers, that's more people that we know about, not new cases that exist. | ||
And if there's sort of a double edged sword to that, on the one hand, it's how it tells us that it's not that the virus is spreading rapidly. | ||
Now, the spread is actually slowing down probably because of the quarantining and the isolation and so on. | ||
But it's the number of people that are testing because the testing is becoming widespread. | ||
That being said, while that is maybe a positive way to look at it, the obvious other side is that this is a fraction of the cases that there are. | ||
There's probably a way higher number of cases all across the world than in the United States in particular because you've got way more people out there that have it than have been tested, that have been quarantined and so on. | ||
Now, and then there's even a flip side to that because, you know, and it's... | ||
It's sort of a nuance and a complex picture because even with something like that, maybe the good news about the virus being more widespread than we know is if we look at the virus and say there's 84,675 cases and in the United States, if that's the number we're going to use, if in the United States there are 1,200 deaths, well, If you do 1,200 over 84,000, you get a certain death rate. | ||
over 84,000, you get a certain death rate. | ||
The death rate is 1.5%. | ||
But if there are way more cases than we know about, then obviously the death rate goes way down. | ||
And it's not what we had been forecasting, right? | ||
Does that make sense? | ||
So in other words, there's maybe a subtle white pill about there being way more cases than are being reported, because if there are way, way more cases, let's say if this number's a million, hypothetically, for example, In other words, if there are roughly 10 times more cases than we know about, then that means the death rate is actually 10 times lower, and it's 0.14%, right? | ||
And I'm using these numbers, these are hypothetical numbers for the sake of argument. | ||
The more cases there are that are non-fatal, the lower the death rate is, and that means that the more people that get this, you could even have millions of people get it, and if the death rate is like 0.1%, then it looks like flu season, right? | ||
Then it does look like those lower casualty counts. | ||
And I don't know, we don't know what the death rate is because we don't know how many people have it. | ||
And we're not going to know how many people have it for a long time. | ||
So a lot of that is still up in the air. | ||
I'm not trying to say it's, you know, you say it's the flu and then people say, oh, you're one of these people saying it's like the flu. | ||
But I'm telling you that if there's way, way more cases that are not being reported and that are mild and not fatal, then that means that the death rate goes down. | ||
And if the mortality rate for the disease is low, then it's not going to be as catastrophic as people anticipated, which is a good thing, which we want that to be the case. | ||
But of course, we have to be safe, because in Italy, the death rate is 10%, okay? | ||
In Italy, the death rate is 10%. | ||
So, there's not really a lot of room to be careless. | ||
So, I also want to temper that by saying, again, you gotta consider, That if the death rate is, you know, 7% or if it's 4% or 2%, we have no idea what it is. | ||
It could be way lower than it's being reported. | ||
It could be way higher than it's being reported. | ||
But we simply don't have enough data right now. | ||
Still, all this time in, we just don't have enough of the information to have a complete picture. | ||
And until we do have a complete picture, until these numbers of new cases stabilize, meaning we've got a handle on probably how many people have it, then we are better safe than sorry with a lot of these precautionary measures, a lot of these responsive measures from the government. | ||
So I just want to give you a nuanced, sort of a complicated or a complex, thorough understanding of the disease. | ||
A lot of people are either on one side or on the other. | ||
Some people are saying this is the end times and then there are some people saying this is just the flu and when are we going to get back to work? | ||
It's It's complicated, right? | ||
epidemiology, this kind of stuff, public health is a very complicated subject, especially when you're talking about a huge country with so many interactions and so many, right? | ||
I mean, you think about something like a highly contagious virus. | ||
You think about all the surfaces you touch, all the hands you shake, and then think about the surfaces and how many people touch those surfaces and just the degrees of separation, how the virus transmits across a country of 350 million people. | ||
It's not so simple when it's something like this to say, well, is it good or is it bad? | ||
Is this going to be something that's not a disaster or is it going to be a disaster? | ||
I will say there was one guy... | ||
In the United Kingdom, I forget his name, it was Neil something? | ||
Neil Ferguson maybe? | ||
I forget the name. | ||
But this doctor in the United Kingdom who initially, he wrote a study that said that millions would die in the United States, worst case scenario. | ||
500,000 would die in the United Kingdom, worst case scenario. | ||
And he actually rewrote his forecast to say that the death count would be dramatically lower. | ||
Because he said exactly that. | ||
He said that if there's way more cases than we knew about, then that means the mortality rate is lower. | ||
And if the mortality rate is lower, then even if all these people get the disease, a much smaller fraction than we anticipated will die. | ||
So that's the flavor today. | ||
That's where we're at today. | ||
But again, we don't we don't have enough data to say that definitively. | ||
So those are the numbers but we're gonna move on and talk a little bit about the relief package and... | ||
The economy and all that good stuff. | ||
We'll talk about Mexico. | ||
That'll be fun. | ||
It'll be fun to take it out on foreigners. | ||
Yeah, yeah! | ||
Yeah, you know, the one thing about this virus, you know, I gotta tell you, the one thing that I don't like about this virus is we don't get to talk enough about Israel and foreigners! | ||
Nah, I'm joking. | ||
We've been able to bash foreigners plenty on the show. | ||
That's a joke, by the way. | ||
I'm only kidding. | ||
Only kidding, moderators. | ||
I'm only kidding, DLive. | ||
Just jokes. | ||
We love everyone, right? | ||
I'm a lover. | ||
But we're going to move on and talk about unemployment. | ||
Then we'll talk about Mexico. | ||
We don't really have to talk about the relief package in great detail. | ||
They're probably going to pass it in the House. | ||
That's all you need to know, okay? | ||
But we'll talk about unemployment, then we'll talk about Mexico. | ||
So this is from the New York Times. | ||
It says, Wall Street has been in rally mode as investors bid up shares of companies that were set to receive support from Washington's $2 trillion coronavirus aid bill. | ||
With the package advancing through the Senate, the gains continued on Thursday. | ||
The S&P 500 climbed about six percent even after the government reported a staggering jump in unemployment claims by workers the three-day rally has lifted the s&p 500 by around 17 percent its best such run since 1933 according to data from howard silverblatt senior indexed analyst for s&p dow jones indices | ||
Most of those gains came on Tuesday when stocks rose 9.4% amid growing hope that the large stimulus package would offer support to an economy crippled by the outbreak and efforts to curtail the spread of the virus. | ||
So, I want you to keep in mind that the stock market rallied 17%. | ||
And why do you think that is? | ||
If you've been watching the stock market since all of this started, it's every day it goes down. | ||
You have a three-day rally where it goes up 17%. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
Why do you think the stock market rallies? | ||
Why do you think investors are buying back in and there's all these stock buybacks and everything? | ||
What do you think the reason for that is, the cause? | ||
It's because this $2.1 trillion relief package completely bailed out Wall Street. | ||
Doesn't that tell you everything you need to know? | ||
And again, I generally resent this idea that what's bad for Wall Street is good for us, right? | ||
And a lot of people take this position that if the stock market is hurting, good, because that means millionaires and boomers and billionaires are suffering. | ||
I don't necessarily take that approach, but it is quite telling that the stock market is crashing through the floor, and then on the news that this bill is going to pass, it just shoots through the roof again, because you know that everybody on Wall Street is getting bailed out. | ||
And the news today is partially about the stock market, but it's also about the jobless, which I'll get into. | ||
It says, but the economic crisis is perhaps the most daunting since World War II, and the latest surge on Wall Street came in the hours after the government reported bleak figures on unemployment claims. | ||
More than 3 million people filed for unemployment benefits last week, according to Labor Department data that gave some of the first hard data on the economic toll of the coronavirus pandemic, which has shut down whole swaths of American life faster than government statistics can keep track. | ||
Thursday's figure of nearly 3.3 million set a grim record. | ||
According to the executive director of IHS Market, he said, quote, a large part of the economy just collapsed. | ||
The worst could be yet to come. | ||
The same person said he expected a similarly large number next Thursday when the Labor Department releases its report on new claims filed this week. | ||
So the most jobless claims in any day in history, 3.3 million, and the stock market goes up 6%. | ||
Go figure. | ||
Why do you think that is? | ||
They bailed out Wall Street. | ||
And another thing about the stimulus package, which you have to think about, and I've been talking to friends and family about this. | ||
People have been asking me about the Trump bucks and who's getting it and so on. | ||
And this is, to me, Symbolic of what is happening to the country or what has been happening to the country for like a hundred years Which is to say that who succeeded who won in this bailout who got the benefits Wall Street got their bailout, right? | ||
In the relief package you get a $50 billion bailout and that's for the airlines. | ||
You get $500 billion in government lending for distressed industries. | ||
You get a $200 billion bailout for all the worst affected industries like hotels, airlines, Boeing, things like that, right? | ||
So they were taken care of. | ||
They got close to a trillion dollars in bailouts and then they get four trillion dollars in liquidity, mind you. | ||
The banks get the liquidity and the banks inject it into the businesses. | ||
So the people at the very top got their bailout. | ||
The stock market, the big corporations, the rich. | ||
And on the other end, there was another bailout. | ||
Unemployment benefits go up $600 extra per week. | ||
Unemployment benefits extended for four months. | ||
Everybody making less than $75,000 gets a free check for $1,200. | ||
So think about who benefited from the bailout. | ||
When all of this economic turmoil happens, and they're saying it's the worst economic disaster since World War II, who gets the payoff? | ||
The very rich and the very poor and who gets screwed? | ||
Everybody in the middle. | ||
Everybody that makes more than $75,000 and doesn't make their money from the stock market or from dividends or anything like that. | ||
Everybody in the middle, they just get a big middle finger, right? | ||
They get a pat on the back. | ||
And actually even better than that, they're the ones paying for the bailout. | ||
So you've got a lot of poor people out there that will continue to get welfare and they'll get more. | ||
They'll get one extra check. | ||
They'll get more extra unemployment. | ||
And you know how a lot of poor people are. | ||
You know how a lot of that works. | ||
Transient. | ||
Going from part-time job to part-time job or going from, you know, unemployment check to unemployment check. | ||
Different forms of gaming the system. | ||
That's how it works. | ||
And this is just yet another bonus for them. | ||
Oh, $600 more per week and four months more unemployment benefits and a check and a $1,200 check. | ||
There's no minimum. | ||
For how much income you had to make as long as you file the tax return in 2018 you get it and then of course the rich get their their trillion dollars in liquidity and they get their their bailout and everybody in the middle Which you could say is the middle class or the upper middle class, certainly the middle class in the cities. | ||
You know, I can tell you what the middle class looks like in the cities where there's a higher cost of living like New York or L.A. or San Francisco or Chicago. | ||
I mean, any major city. | ||
$75,000, $100,000, $150,000 for a family of four or five. | ||
That's middle class. | ||
And they get nothing. | ||
What do you say to those people that might be out of a job or they get a pay cut or something like that? | ||
God forbid one of them gets sick. | ||
And this has been the story of the economy for my entire life. | ||
This has been the story of the economy going back at least for 30, 40 years, probably a lot longer than that, which is that it is a conspiracy With the rich and the poor. | ||
That is what it has been. | ||
It's the rich and the poor working together. | ||
That's what it has been for the longest time. | ||
They're working together to screw over the people in the middle. | ||
And the people in the middle are the real source of the wealth of the country. | ||
These are the people that are voting. | ||
These are the tax base for the country. | ||
These are the people that comprise probably most of the country and they're the ones that are just the cattle. | ||
We're the ones that follow the laws. | ||
We're the ones that pay the taxes and all, you know, the payroll taxes, the federal and state taxes. | ||
We're the ones paying for the upkeep of everything. | ||
We're the ones doing the jobs. | ||
And then you've got people on the bottom that don't play by the rules, and they're in and out, and they're transient, and they're taking... And then you've got people at the top, and it's the same thing, it's just a little different. | ||
Don't play by the rules, skirt the law, they don't pay their taxes, they're in and out, right? | ||
And so there is definitely a component of our political movement, which I would say is like a soft revolution, that has to take class into consideration. | ||
That has to be the angle. | ||
That's what populism means, is the resentment of maybe not even the poor or anything like that, but actually people that are working. | ||
A revolution of the people that are playing by the rules. | ||
Because, and I'm sure this is a popular sentiment across the country, If you watch this show, probably a lot of white people, if you watch this very white thing, if you watch this show you're somebody that plays by the rules, follows the laws, you're considerate, you don't take advantage of the system, and even when you don't get caught or you have an opportunity to break the law or break the rules and you don't get caught, you still play by the rules. | ||
And you act like an orderly member of society, and you pay your dues, and you pay your bills, and you pay your taxes, and you're not a deadbeat, you're not a degenerate, and we're the people that are getting screwed over. | ||
I'm kind of getting sick of it, because this is how I am. | ||
I'm gonna have to pay a lot in taxes from 2019. | ||
I had to pay in taxes for 2018, and I filed the law, and I'm an orderly member of society, and people like us are just getting taken for a ride. | ||
We're getting taken total advantage of. | ||
Because you see, the poor people don't give a shit about the law, and they don't give a shit about following the rules. | ||
Go in any of their neighborhoods, and they don't care about standards. | ||
And I'm not talking about, you know, poor people that are, you know, genuinely poor. | ||
I'm talking about the freeloaders, right? | ||
And we all know, we all know there is a class that is riding on the back of everybody else. | ||
We all know who I'm talking about. | ||
We all know who I'm talking about. | ||
People that break the rules all the time, and they're the ones that are the source of decay and trouble in the urban areas and they pay nothing and they take with both hands and by the way a lot of people do this whataboutism on the left they'll say okay well sure you know there there's a lot of crime going on but what about white collar criminals uh yeah that too The rich too! | ||
Because the rich, by the way, do the same thing. | ||
They pay less in taxes because they can afford accountants and lawyers and financial vehicles to hide their money or, right, tax shelters and things like that. | ||
They make their income through investment or they have offshore bank accounts or whatever. | ||
And they break the law all the time too. | ||
When you're rich you don't have to play by the same rules. | ||
Everybody knows that. | ||
And so we're just the idiots in the middle that are doing our part and, you know, Watching dutifully our government officials scramble to put things together, and we're going to make sacrifices as we always do. | ||
And when is that middle going to rise up? | ||
Sam Francis talked a lot about this subject. | ||
That was what he dedicated his writing career to in the 1990s, was talking about the middle American radical. | ||
That that is going to be the wellspring of the next great political realignment. | ||
He said the middle American radical is not somebody that has a very cohesive or coherent ideology. | ||
It's not really defined by ideology. | ||
It's largely defined by these demographic characteristics. | ||
That they are in the middle class, you know, it's a middle range of income. | ||
It's largely white and it's largely these people that are maybe in the suburbs or rural or something like that and he said that that voting base is the most untapped and they're pissed off and they're riled up and they're getting taken advantage of and that will be the constituency that will be the driver of political change if it's ever going to happen in this country In the 21st century. | ||
And that's, I think, what we have to be thinking about. | ||
And in this coronavirus, it's only the perfect, the most perfect, and the latest example of that dynamic that occurs. | ||
Which is the rich tag-teaming with the poor to fuck over the middle. | ||
To fuck over the middle class. | ||
It happens every time. | ||
And you all know what I'm talking about. | ||
We all know what that means. | ||
And think about something like healthcare. | ||
You know, if you're poor, you get free health care. | ||
Medicaid. | ||
And if you're super rich, well, it doesn't even matter. | ||
And if you're in the middle, you're just paying crazy amounts of money for health care every month. | ||
And you play by the rules. | ||
And it seems like, you know, poor people, no matter what they do, they get taken care of. | ||
Or education's another example. | ||
You may pay a lot of money to get into a private school. | ||
Or you may pay a lot of money in property taxes to go to a good public school. | ||
And then you got people that come here as immigrants or poor people, and how much government money is poured into their schools? | ||
just on account of. | ||
And the rich, of course, are taken care of no matter what. | ||
And so it's like the middle class, it's like we just, it's like we have less disposable income, we have less opportunities, less maneuverability than anybody. | ||
And it shouldn't be like that. | ||
It doesn't feel like a meritocracy to me. | ||
It seems like if you're born into the rich class, then you're set. | ||
And if you're in the poor class, well, because you have no standards and you don't really care about things being the way they are, you don't care about breaking the rules, There's no social stigma assigned to being sort of a drag on the public dole. | ||
Well, then, you know, you have as much freedom as you accept those low standards. | ||
And we're the guys in the middle that are just the idiots. | ||
So I see something like that. | ||
And that, to me, when I look at these unemployment numbers in the stock market and where these benefits are being assigned, don't you kind of notice there's maybe a big kind of huge gap right in the middle? | ||
Where this side is getting the relief and that side's getting the relief. | ||
And what about this category? | ||
Why is that fair? | ||
Why does anybody think that's acceptable? | ||
And we all just take it. | ||
And we all just think, well, that's the norm. | ||
That's just the way the cookie crumbles. | ||
Yeah, I make, you know, whatever. | ||
If you're, you know, in a family of four, you have a professional job or an education. | ||
No, I make $150,000. | ||
I make $100,000, so I don't need it. | ||
I can make sacrifices. | ||
Well, nobody else is making sacrifices. | ||
Why is that okay? | ||
That people make bad decisions at the top, and they face no consequences. | ||
People make bad decisions on the bottom, and they face no consequences. | ||
But we make bad decisions, and we have to budget, and we have to scramble, and we've got to pay fines, and whatever. | ||
It's bullshit! | ||
Shouldn't be like that. | ||
And that's ultimately what it comes down to is who has responsibility in the country. | ||
Because if you're poor and you can't make ends meet, well, you get bailed out. | ||
If you're poor and you don't have health care, right, if you don't have insurance, well, you go to the emergency room. | ||
If you're poor and you can't afford school, well, you know, public school's there for you. | ||
And if you're rich and you're messing up the economy with, you know, subprime mortgages, well, it literally doesn't matter. | ||
You get a golden parachute. | ||
Anyway, that's the unemployment figures. | ||
It's incredible. | ||
Unemployment, record high jobless claims, and the stock market goes up. | ||
Go figure. | ||
It's a gold rush for everybody except for the middle class. | ||
But we're gonna move on and talk a little bit about Mexico. | ||
We'll be talking more about that later on when the job reports come out for next week and as we monitor the stock market. | ||
I've been monitoring the stock market. | ||
I have been, don't get me wrong, I've been rubbing my hands together watching the stock market. | ||
I've been, I've been watching every day. | ||
I've been watching, oh no! | ||
Big red line again! | ||
Ha ha ha! | ||
It's a bloodbath on Wall Street! | ||
That's terrible! | ||
Every day when the number was going down, I'm thinking, I don't know if this is the floor, the volatility index just keeps going up. | ||
I hope it doesn't go any further, right? | ||
And seeing that green line, it's like, oy vey! | ||
I see the green line going back up! | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
Go back down! | ||
Go back down! | ||
So I'm, I'm rooting. | ||
I'm rooting for a little bit more from my, not, you know, not because I'm like a collapsitarian. | ||
Not like I'm some LARPing retard online. | ||
Good, you know, landlords are getting screwed over. | ||
It's like, no, I just want to, you know, get in there. | ||
I want to get in the game, right? | ||
But we're gonna move on and talk a little bit about Mexico. | ||
This story to me is just so funny and this breaks up the monotony a little bit. | ||
This is from the BBC. | ||
And try to contain your laughter here. | ||
It says, quote, Mexican protesters have shut a U.S. | ||
southern border crossing amid fears that untested American travelers will spread the coronavirus. | ||
Residents in Sonora, south of the U.S. | ||
state of Arizona, have promised to block traffic into Mexico for a second day after closing a checkpoint for hours on Wednesday. | ||
They wore face masks and held signs telling Americans to, quote, stay at home. | ||
Mexico has fewer than 500 confirmed coronavirus cases. | ||
Very lucky. | ||
And the U.S., over 65,000. | ||
Well, obviously today it's 84,000. | ||
The border is supposed to be closed to all except essential business, but protesters said there has been little enforcement and no testing by authorities. | ||
Imagine that! | ||
You are telling me that the authorities are not doing their due diligence screening people coming into your country? | ||
You're telling me that the authorities are not enforcing restrictions on the movement of people across the border? | ||
This is outrageous! | ||
Somebody has to put a stop to this! | ||
It says the blockade was led by members of the group Sonorans for Health and Life, who called for medical testing to be done on anyone who crosses from the U.S. | ||
into Mexico. | ||
Jose Luis Hernandez, a group member, told the Arizona Republic, there are no health screenings by the federal government to deal with this pandemic. | ||
That's why we're here in Nogales. | ||
We've taken this action to call on the Mexican President Lopez Obrador to act now. | ||
I hope he acts now. | ||
And we all know the irony, because these people, these Mexicans, and Guatemalans, and Salvadorans, and Hondurans, Nicaraguans, they have been, we all know, pouring into this country for decades. | ||
And they're bringing things far worse than the coronavirus. | ||
Well, they're bringing diseases, but they're also bringing rape, and murder, and drugs, and drug dealers. | ||
And they're bringing poverty, and they're bringing stupidity, and low IQs, and abuse of the system, and multi-family households. | ||
I mean, they're bringing a lot of problems. | ||
And among all those problems, they also happen to be bringing in ancient medieval diseases like the Black Plague and Typhoid and Typhus and all kinds of other things you're seeing in Los Angeles and San Francisco. | ||
Isn't it so rich that that is totally fine, right? | ||
Illegal immigrants pouring through Mexico into our country, or from Mexico into our country, or illegally, that's fine. | ||
Try to put up a wall, and you're racist. | ||
Try to enforce the border, and it's a humanitarian disaster, and you're Hitler, and you're a dictator. | ||
We have a global pandemic, Americans are coming across the border to do business, and because they're not performing the proper screenings, day two you've got people assembled, we're not letting anybody in, and we're demanding action. | ||
Keep them out! | ||
It's a matter of health and life. | ||
Seriously? | ||
And this is a no-brainer. | ||
Obviously. | ||
Obviously this is the case. | ||
But let this be a lesson to anybody who thinks that we are generous or benevolent to these people coming over. | ||
The goodwill that we are showing to non-white people in this country, or that historically we have shown to non-white people in this country, or the generosity, benevolence, or goodwill that we have shown to immigrants from all around the world, it will not be reciprocated in the slightest. | ||
Never expect any level of reciprocity, never expect that to be paid back in kind for the rest of your life, as soon as the tables turn. | ||
And this is a perfect example. | ||
Everybody thinks that this country goes from being majority white to majority non-white, and they think that you won't see a change in attitudes, or they think that everything will stay the same and everybody, all these new Americans, all these new immigrants will adopt the same attitude towards racial and ethnic minorities when we're one of those. | ||
They'll adopt the same attitude about multiracialism and pluralism and tolerance that we had. | ||
Why should we expect that? | ||
The moment the tables turn, the moment that they're in a position where they have a little bit of advantage or power or they're under threat from us, do you think that they're going to match our benevolence, our generosity? | ||
Our willingness to self-sacrifice for the benefit of somebody else? | ||
You don't see it here. | ||
The minute there's a global pandemic, do the Mexicans say, well, the United States has taken in so many of our people. | ||
And so many Mexicans live in the southwest of the United States and all over. | ||
And so many Mexicans get free schooling and free health care and they get welcomed in. | ||
And they get government services in Spanish and they get free metro cards and they get free money. | ||
And they get free food stamps and they get free retirement and free social security. | ||
And because the United States has been so benevolent and put up with us in this time of need, we're going to, or do they say, no, we're going to close up our borders. | ||
And you can't come in. | ||
And if they're not going to do the proper screenings, we're going to protest. - Interesting. | ||
That is the attitude that you can expect from these people internationally and domestically. | ||
That is what we can expect from foreign countries as our country slides into the same condition as every other country. | ||
And that is what you can expect from these people inside this country when the demographic tables turn. | ||
We're going to be in the minority. | ||
And remember this. | ||
Let this be a reminder. | ||
When you think about demographic changes going into the future, think about this response to this global pandemic. | ||
How they turned our people around. | ||
And not like we need Mexico. | ||
Mexico is a totally gross country. | ||
They don't even have clean drinking water. | ||
Please. | ||
As if we need their business. | ||
As if we need whatever is going on in there, right? | ||
It's not even about that. | ||
It's if we need them to produce or do anything for anybody. | ||
They never do anything for anybody. | ||
As far as I'm concerned, the entire Southern Hemisphere. | ||
What has the entire Southern Hemisphere done anything for anybody of value? | ||
We don't need it. | ||
That's not the point. | ||
It's about the principle. | ||
When you have this global pandemic and it's the scourge of the United States, they do not have the slightest hesitation or reluctance to do what's best for their own. | ||
And I don't think that's the worst in the world, by the way. | ||
I'm not saying that, like, they're horribly immoral for doing that. | ||
The point is to demonstrate how stupid it is for us to adopt the opposite approach. | ||
When the chips are down, the Mexicans say, we will protect our people. | ||
And there's not a question mark as to who our people is. | ||
They don't say, oh well, Mexico is a rich tapestry of different cultures and races. | ||
They know what Mexican means. | ||
They know exactly who their people are. | ||
And it's people like Jose Luis Hernandez. | ||
There's not going to be a John Williams counting in their people in Mexico, right? | ||
I'm sure if I moved to Mexico, they wouldn't count me among them. | ||
Maybe they would me because of my last name, but they wouldn't count Patrick Casey or Scott Greer or Jaden McNeil. | ||
They wouldn't count them among their people. | ||
Their people are Hernandez and Rivera and Fuentes and all the rest, right? | ||
That's their people. | ||
And when the chips are down, they protect their people at the expense of everyone else. | ||
And if we have a problem with it, too bad, because the lives and the health of their people is more important than our feelings or our needs. | ||
And that is what we can expect from all of them, and that is what we then should turn to them. | ||
That is the face that we should show to them. | ||
And when all of this subsides in the coming months or the coming years, I think this should be the reminder. | ||
You know, do you remember what it was like during the coronavirus pandemic when the illegal immigration resumes and the immigrants pour in and they try this guilt card on us, right? | ||
The guilt trip and the race card and they say, you're a racist and you get that disgusting loser. | ||
What's that guy's name from Univision? | ||
All these people. | ||
What is his name? | ||
You know who I'm talking about. | ||
The guy's white, anyway, and he gets up there. | ||
You know who I'm talking about. | ||
That journalist. | ||
I forget his name. | ||
All these different people, and they try to say that we're racist and white supremacists and neo-Nazis and white nationalists and so on. | ||
And they try to guilt trip us on the basis of the race card. | ||
I think we have to show them the news report. | ||
Don't you remember? | ||
Well, we're going to have to keep all Mexicans out of our country because we want a clean, healthy country. | ||
Nothing personal. | ||
Nothing personal. | ||
We don't have anything against Mexicans, but we want a clean, Healthy country and your country is not clean or healthy. | ||
Your country is dirty and your country is violent and you don't even control your country. | ||
It's run by drug cartels and you've got medieval diseases because frankly your people don't wash their hands and we're not letting them in because we don't want another pandemic. | ||
How do you think they'd respond to that? | ||
It doesn't matter. | ||
That's the attitude that we have to have for our country. | ||
And I think looking at things like that are so important to wake everybody else up because whites are maybe the stupidest people. | ||
A lot of people think I'm a white supremacist. | ||
We're very, like, high IQ as a people, but when it comes to thinking about our own advantage, we might be the stupidest when it comes to group strategy. | ||
Because so many white people are out there So many white conservatives are so unwilling, even the conservative Republicans, unwilling to say that we should not take immigrants because that would be cruel, you see. | ||
We have to find justifications to turn off the spigot of massive immigration. | ||
We have to find some economic reason, some totally non-personal, right? | ||
We have to find a completely objective and uncontroversial and centrist reason to keep these people out. | ||
They're coming in illegally. | ||
Well, as long as they're not living on the public dole. | ||
We want everyone to come in here and I have sympathy and I'm not racist and so on. | ||
That's the white person mentality. | ||
And look at how that's going to be repaid for us. | ||
Look at the reaction that we get when the tables are turned. | ||
And we have to keep that in mind as a people. | ||
We have to show that. | ||
And I hope everybody sees that. | ||
I hope people are paying attention so that when that conversation comes up about immigration, whites and conservatives and republicans and all America firsters, America firsters I should say of all stripes, because it's not just whites. | ||
Whites happen to be the biggest group. | ||
But it's America Firsters, nationalists of all stripes, will remember the way we were treated. | ||
And before they start with, well, I'm not racist, but we're in favor of immigration, but we want them to come legally. | ||
It's just that you got to think about how they treated us. | ||
And that, to me, is the most compelling argument in favor of America First and nationalism. | ||
It is understanding that putting your people first and nationalism and tribalism is something that every people in the world is unashamed to embrace. | ||
Every other country, every other tribe in the world, it's the default, it's the norm to be tribalist, to be nationalist, to put your people first. | ||
That's the expectation. | ||
In Mexico, in Africa, in China, in the Middle East, in Turkey, they love electing dictators and strongmen that are going to show the world who's boss and thumb their nose at America and the UN and foreign peoples and they want chauvinist leaders and chauvinist media. | ||
That's the norm across the world. | ||
But we embrace it over here, and it's like you're the most evil person in the world. | ||
That's the worst thing that a person can be. | ||
It's morally imperative to not be that way. | ||
And so to me, the most compelling case for America First is to show people, hey, look, every other people in the world... | ||
This is how they are and there's nothing wrong with being like that And if we're not like that, they're gonna put themselves first to the detriment of us in our own country That's what's on the horizon for us and a lot of white people don't like to think about that and even a lot of non-white people Too they get uncomfortable about conversations about race or immigration but for whites in particular think about it this way and I use this example all the time because it is Maybe the most visceral thing that you can think about. | ||
We all know the anti-white agenda. | ||
We all know the anti-white rhetoric that we see in the media every day, all the time. | ||
This story that is told about America that first white people came here and they genocided the Native Americans because they were evil. | ||
And then they enslaved the blacks because they were evil. | ||
And then they were racist to blacks because they were evil. | ||
And then they were racist and homophobic and Islamophobic because they were evil. | ||
And white people can't dance, and they're silly, and they're dying out, and that's a good thing, and they're born racist, and a racist is the worst thing you can be, and racists are Nazis, and we should kill Nazis. | ||
We're all aware of that. | ||
Well, imagine a future when you have children, you have a family, and you know, you're a family as any other family is, maybe you're struggling to get by, whatever, and your kids go to school. | ||
And your school is now majority-minority. | ||
Your kids go to school as white kids. | ||
It's already happened, by the way, in Los Angeles, in New York City, in Chicago. | ||
In a lot of schools this is already the case, but this will be everywhere. | ||
You send your kids to school, and they're in a classroom with 30 kids, and 20 of them are not white, let's say. | ||
Just for the sake of example, your kids go to school, and it might even be less than that. | ||
Maybe there's 10 white kids in their class, 20 non-white kids. | ||
And they open up their history books, and this is what they read. | ||
They read about how the white man killed off the Native Americans. | ||
And you've got, you know, 15 Mexican kids in the class. | ||
And then you read about how the white kids, or the white people I should say, enslaved black people. | ||
And you look around and there's five black kids, and the white kids increasingly are a minority in these classrooms, and that's what's in the media. | ||
And you've got movies about, you know, 12 Years a Slave, and Django Unchained, and Inglourious Bastards. | ||
A white villain and a black, fag, Jew, superhero squad that defeats the Nazi, right? | ||
What are the attitudes going to look like and how the power dynamics change as results when that transition happens? | ||
This is the kind of thing that I've been talking about. | ||
And a lot of people don't like to think about that. | ||
They don't like to think about race. | ||
But when you put it in practical terms like that, I'm telling you a story that you're going to live. | ||
I'm telling you a story about your future. | ||
I'm telling you a story about the future of your children. | ||
Your children will be in a school where they're in a minority. | ||
They will be in a classroom where they're in a minority. | ||
There will be popular mass consumer entertainment and public school curriculum vilifying white people. | ||
And what kind of quality of life will we have in a country like that? | ||
That's the big question. | ||
And you may afford to be able to say, well, I don't care about race now. | ||
What's that going to be like in 20 years? | ||
What's that going to be like in 40 years, or 50 years, or 100 years? | ||
Our ancestors will have to live in this country, you know, indefinitely, right? | ||
I don't have any plans to leave, and I plan on having kids, and I would hope that my kids have kids, and so on. | ||
And so we're looking at a demographic change that goes in 100, 200 years. | ||
This is a permanent change that our people have to live with on this continent, in this land. | ||
That's how we have to think. | ||
And that situation will continue to get worse and continue to deteriorate and our people will continue to be vilified and have an ever shrinking share of the influence and the power and numbers and things like that. | ||
And that's the reality. | ||
Look at what happened in Mexico today. | ||
When they put their people on the border and they said, we're not taking them in because we want to protect the life and health of our people. | ||
Where is that instinct in our country? | ||
That's the question. | ||
But that's what's happening in Mexico. | ||
I guess, you know, I've said my piece on that. | ||
I've said enough on that matter. | ||
I think you get the picture. | ||
And I know I've said that before about the schooling. | ||
If you watch the show, that's nothing new. | ||
I've said that before. | ||
But I think that that is just something that is so relatable to people and it's imminent. | ||
That's the other thing. | ||
If you live in some of these districts, it's already there. | ||
I don't have to tell you. | ||
A lot of people who watch the show have families and kids and they can tell you. | ||
It's happening in my neck of the woods. | ||
It's happening everywhere. | ||
And what is that going to look like? | ||
That is something that if people care about their children, they can imagine that imminent reality and it puts things in perspective. | ||
Where suddenly, political correctness is clashing with the welfare of your family. | ||
And I know that if political correctness clashes with the welfare of my family, I'm going to pick the welfare of my family first. | ||
I think a lot of people are. | ||
And when you put it in perspective like that, it becomes an easy choice. | ||
Because when it's just a matter of, should I be polite or impolite? | ||
Well, people choose polite. | ||
And polite is uncontroversial, politically correct, and so on. | ||
And we don't like to think in these racial terms because of the social programming against thinking in racial terms. | ||
When you put it in perspective about the things that matter most to you, which is your life and the life and well-being of your family, suddenly it becomes very clear how we have to think and what must be done. | ||
And by the way, that's not to say that all non-white people are bad. | ||
That's not to say that all non-white people are out to get us. | ||
That's not to say that, you know, they all hate whitey. | ||
And, you know, I'm not trying to be a doomsday prophet or a fear monger on this kind of thing. | ||
But this is an anxiety that is justifiably. | ||
That's all I'm saying. | ||
There is a legitimate racial anxiety from white people, and there's a legitimate anxiety, you know, broadly from Christians or conservatives or patriots, but really it is a racial thing. | ||
That's an anxiety that exists, and it's real, and it's legitimate. | ||
And there has to be an answer for that, because we are going to live in a multiracial country. | ||
And I've never advocated for, you know, kicking, and people come up to me and they say, are you in favor of ethnic cleansing? | ||
No, I've never said anything like that. | ||
But the point is this. | ||
The demographic situation is kind of set in stone. | ||
Even if we ended immigration tomorrow, which I think we should by the way, but even if we did that, the fertility rates would be such that this demographic transition will happen regardless. | ||
The demographic transition to a majority minority country, or majority non-white country, is baked into the cake. | ||
It's hurtling towards us, and immigration is accelerating that, but it's going to happen regardless. | ||
It seems to be the case, unless there's a radical change in fertility rates. | ||
But we already live in a multiracial country. | ||
It's not totally like that, but meaningfully, is this a homogeneous white country? | ||
Do whites even have cultural or demographic primacy in the country? | ||
No. | ||
60% of the population and rapidly dwindling. | ||
We live in a multiracial country, and if that's the case, everybody needs to feel like they are in harmony with the country. | ||
We have and expend a lot of resources and a lot of thought thinking about and considering how black people feel about racial dynamics and how they're doing, and we put a lot of thought and consideration into how Hispanics are doing and how Asians are doing, and so much consideration into how Jewish people are doing in this country. | ||
And we need to have the same consideration for white people. | ||
And that's all I've said on this show, right? | ||
And that's something to think about. | ||
It's not to say that, well, the only people that belong, or something like that. | ||
It's simply to say that if we are all going to live in this country together, and if the plan is multiracialism, if that's what it's going to be, Well then, our people need to be sure that we're gonna be taken care of too. | ||
And if we can't count on others to take care of us, we have to be able to take care of ourselves. | ||
Because nobody's gonna look out for our people other than our people. | ||
They look out for themselves, and other groups look out for themselves, and we need to look out for ourselves too. | ||
And we'd like harmony, we would like cohesion, but it seems to me like we're just gonna fall into this trap of tribes fighting for their own advantage, for their own self-interest, and if that's the case, That's the truth. | ||
Not politically correct, but that's the truth. | ||
unidentified
|
But we're going to move on, and we're going to talk about our Super Chats. | |
We'll see what you guys are saying. | ||
I could go on about that all night. | ||
We don't really talk about that too much lately because of the coronavirus, but a bit of a return to tradition on some of these subjects. | ||
It's just, you know, and I've never been a radical on that subject or I'm just trying to be practical and realistic and I think that's a common sense way to put it. | ||
We've all got to live together here. | ||
We want a harmonious, cohesive country. | ||
And where do white people fit into that? | ||
Where our anxieties can be assuaged? | ||
I'm getting tired of being the butt of the joke and drawing the short straw as a white man. | ||
My ancestors came here and they built Chicago. | ||
You know? | ||
Well, I mean, some members of my family were more productive than others. | ||
It would be surprising to you which were the productive ones and which weren't. | ||
You know, people would imagine, based on this show, that I'd be talking about the Mexican part, and they were actually quite productive. | ||
And they went to war and all kinds of things. | ||
You know, there were some people that kind of fell off a little bit of my family, but regardless, I have roots in this country going back a hundred years. | ||
And I have roots in this city in particular. | ||
You know the Italians built Chicago, the Irish Mexicans were a big part of the building of Chicago and my ancestors were a part of it and they fought in World War II and Vietnam and a lot of different conflicts. | ||
And they built impressive infrastructure projects, and they were part of things. | ||
They were part of the community, right? | ||
And I'm tired, then, of me feeling like I should have this anxiety, right? | ||
As a white person, I'm sure Anglos feel even worse. | ||
They've been here since the beginning, and we're getting butt out, and if we have any problem with it, then we just get the middle finger. | ||
Then it's like, oh, well, your anxieties are not Not legitimate, not worthy of concern, and we're gonna do nothing about it. | ||
Well, it shouldn't be that way. | ||
Okay, we're gonna move on to our Super Chats. | ||
We'll see. | ||
And we'll see. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
Where are we at in chat? | ||
Dallas Groyper says, was in a group chat with family boomers and someone said, welcome to Venezuela regarding stimulus checks. | ||
These normie cons would really rather have people starve and be unemployed than violate some 80s era BS. | ||
Well thanks for the Ninjaginis. | ||
That is so funny. | ||
And it's so true. | ||
I'm so sick of hearing that. | ||
And isn't that so true though? | ||
Boomers and conservatives in general, they regard everything under the sun that isn't like the worst variety of hyper free market capitalism to be socialism. | ||
You know, we look at legitimate problems in the system. | ||
Legitimate negative externalities of the free market. | ||
That even the most ardent defenders of the free market will concede. | ||
That there are negative externalities. | ||
There are things that the free market cannot do. | ||
Public goods that the free market cannot provide. | ||
There has to be oversight by courts and by the government. | ||
You know, and I'm not talking about ANCAPs obviously, but a lot of free market people even admit that. | ||
But if your brain is on this Boomer or Reagan worship, every problem that we can diagnose in the society and treat with government is Venezuela. | ||
Not quite, right? | ||
Yeah, I've been having so much McDonald's trying to help McDonald's. | ||
I actually haven't had a lot of McDonald's. | ||
I've been trying to stay away from the prepared food because there's a slight risk that you could catch it. | ||
Big Globe says, bro, I've had so much takeout trying to help small biz. | ||
Oh, is that it? | ||
Yeah, I've been having so much McDonald's trying to help McDonald's. | ||
I actually haven't had a lot of McDonald's. | ||
I've been trying to stay away from the prepared food because there's a slight risk that you could catch it. | ||
unidentified
|
But I don't know. | |
I guess it's not that big of a risk, but you don't want to take any chances, right? | ||
I miss it. | ||
I miss the takeout. | ||
I miss just, you know, going out to eat. | ||
My favorite, it was so melancholy. | ||
Right before the big breakout happened in the United States, it was a very nice day. | ||
It was 60 degrees out. | ||
In Chicago. | ||
And I drove out to my favorite burger place. | ||
I was listening to Black Not Democrat on the way there. | ||
I had a delicious double cheeseburger and hand-cut fries. | ||
Burger on the flat-top grill and a Coke. | ||
And I was living the life. | ||
I was sitting outside on a picnic table, watching the cars, having my cheeseburger and fries. | ||
This was before all this chaos happened. | ||
I just want that back. | ||
I probably could have. | ||
I think they're probably still open because it's like just a stand. | ||
It's not even, they don't even have dine-in. | ||
They just have picnic tables outside, so I probably could do that, but the point being is everything is so wrong. | ||
Now I can't go to my favorite pizzeria and get a slice. | ||
I'd have to do takeout. | ||
Okay, so I guess maybe I'm being a little dramatic. | ||
I guess everything's basically still available, but I want everything to be back to normal. | ||
Begone tesseract says what's our actual endgame subjugating the cube? | ||
Um, you know, I don't love to think in terms of endgame because what what is what we're talking about right now is things are so messed up And it's gonna take a long time to fix them. | ||
So I don't honestly know what the endgame looks like, you know my endgame for my lifetime is to have a real America First movement in the country, a legitimate America First movement that has representation. | ||
You know, I'd like to have an America First president that does America First policies like shutting down the border, reshoring factories, reshoring supply chains, ending the foreign wars, moratorium on immigration. | ||
I mean, in my lifetime, I think that is what is achievable. | ||
I think that's what's on the menu. | ||
I would hope that we could be more ambitious than that, a Christian revival, maybe Christian elements in government. | ||
I mean, who knows to what extent we could turn the tables. | ||
I don't really have this mentality of like, well I want this to happen. | ||
To me it's like, I want the most that can happen and we're going to take as many opportunities as we can and exploit them to the fullest and we'll see where we end up. | ||
That's kind of been my mentality. | ||
I'm not a guy that says like, This is my target and I don't know maybe some people think that way I don't know if that's a good way or a bad way to be but I just look at we are going to capitalize on opportunities we have a general sort of people say trust the plan the plan has always been that we have a general idea of the way things might shake out and a general guideline a general strategy and tactic and maybe there are points along the way things you want to get done | ||
There are, you know, stepping stones on that path, but I've never been someone that says, okay, well, I'd like this, and when that happens, I'll be okay. | ||
I think that history is very dynamic, and it's this ceaseless battle, and we're just one phase of an intergenerational battle. | ||
We're going to do our part to exploit opportunities, press the advantage, turn the tide, and then we pass the baton to the next generation. | ||
That's the way of the world, folks. | ||
That's the way life goes. | ||
Life does not stop, you know? | ||
You win the war, and then it's return to history. | ||
unidentified
|
So, that's how I feel. | |
Dallas Groyper says, also, hey from Dallas, King. | ||
Keep up the great work. | ||
Well, hey, thanks, buddy. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Hope everything's going well for you. | ||
It was great to meet you and your family. | ||
Everybody at AFPAC, good to hear from you big guy. | ||
Appreciate the support. | ||
Bobby D says, nothing personal PewDiePie, but there can be only one King of D live. | ||
Well, thank you so much for the Ninjet. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
Bobby D with like two Ninjets, I think, maybe more. | ||
Thank you so much for the Ninjettes. | ||
Really, really appreciate it, big guy. | ||
You're pushing me to the top, man! | ||
We're getting there! | ||
Every day, we're pushing... And it looks like, what are we up to? | ||
99,000 lemons today? | ||
Holy smokes! | ||
Let me pull up the top list. | ||
We are rapidly moving towards PewDiePie. | ||
Sheesh! | ||
Let me take a look at the numbers here. | ||
So I can give you a count, so I can give you an idea of where we are. | ||
So it looks like, I don't know if that's correct or not. | ||
That doesn't seem like the numbers have registered yet. | ||
But it seems like we're going to clinch the top spot very, very soon. | ||
Sooner rather than later. | ||
It doesn't look like the numbers have updated on SocialBlade yet. | ||
But yeah, we are coming for PewDiePie. | ||
Could you imagine overtaking PewDiePie on his streaming site? | ||
We're going to do that. | ||
Nobody else is going to do that. | ||
So that's pretty, pretty exciting. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
I like it a lot. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjet. | ||
Modern Monarchist says an Obi-Wan movie with the same actor is coming. | ||
It's not a movie. | ||
It's going to be a miniseries, but yeah, I'm excited. | ||
Charlie Kirk says America First candidate will win the GOP 2024 primary. | ||
I hope so. | ||
Praise Wang says, Nick is the rightful king of DLive. | ||
It's true. | ||
It's true. | ||
It's time for me to accede to the throne. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Fidel Cashflow says, Hey, I knew you were based, but not Nordic ET based. | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, Which actor most resembles a groyper in films? | ||
Probably, um... Who's the actor that plays Tony Soprano? | ||
What's his name again? | ||
I know his name. | ||
James Gandolfini I think is that that is the quintessential griper and totally fitting of course the griper would be Italian right of course the griper would be a total greaseball I think that is I think that is basically without a doubt the most accurate living representation of a griper and I say that affectionately I say that as a good thing Right? | ||
He's bald. | ||
He's big. | ||
He's hanging out, right? | ||
Intimidating. | ||
He's a fighter. | ||
And he's based. | ||
And he's based in Redpill. | ||
I think that James Gandolfini is definitely... Definitely a... Somebody says Mel Gibson. | ||
Mel Gibson? | ||
No way. | ||
Mel Gibson isn't big enough to be a Groyper. | ||
And I like Mel Gibson. | ||
But, um... You know, he does not have a Groyper physique. | ||
We know that. | ||
Let's see maxi bro says I've updated my d live channel about section, but chat rules some of you should read it I'm your deal. | ||
You're making the rules all of a sudden. | ||
I maybe I'll make some rules I don't know what this guy thinks he's doing here, huh? | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
unidentified
|
Would you convert? | |
and he appreciate the support but this guy's starting to write the rules um i don't know about that i'll take a look at your rules maybe maybe i'll copy some of them modern monarchist says your friends with a sede vicantus would you convert no nope and i my friend is uh sede vicantus but um and i respect his belief i | ||
You know, look, I'm friends with people and I don't understand what this anti-social tendency is to think that because you're really devout or because you're a very strong convert that you just have to give everybody a hard time about your religion 24-7. | ||
He's a Sedevacantist. | ||
I'm just a regular Catholic. | ||
And that's okay. | ||
And we're friends. | ||
And he probably knows more about Catholicism than me. | ||
And he has every right to have his interpretation. | ||
I happen to disagree. | ||
That's okay. | ||
But we can still be friends. | ||
We believe on 90% of the issues, right? | ||
And maybe it's an important issue that we disagree on. | ||
I don't mean to minimize that. | ||
But we're both traditional and we both believe in Basically Catholicism, it's just a matter of the authority and something, you know, which a lot of people would perceive as technical. | ||
So, no, I would not convert. | ||
I happen to believe that St. | ||
David Contest is essentially Protestantism. | ||
And I've heard the gist of the argument, which is that, well, we're not St. | ||
David Contest because, you know, this pope said this, and this bishop said this, and the church has given us the authority. | ||
But you know, it just really doesn't jive with me. | ||
I mean, it doesn't make much sense that you would have the Catholic Church. | ||
I have an empty seat with the Bishop of Rome, and that just doesn't seem right to me. | ||
And the idea that a layman would decide, oh, I'm just not, that's not my Pope! | ||
And Se De Vecontists even disagree on when the real Pope finished off. | ||
And that just goes to show, there's no unity there, and there is no idea of, you know, submitting to the authority of the Church. | ||
I just don't think it's my place to say who's the Pope and who's not the Pope. | ||
I follow the Pope. | ||
and uh... you know i believe that the pope is the successor to the to peter to the bishop of rome right and he has the authority to bind loose right and so if the pope is the leader of the church and that's leader of the church that's the way i see it And I know a lot of people who are way more educated are going to say, well, it's more complicated than that, or whatever. | ||
I think it's actually quite simple. | ||
But again, I'm not an expert on the subject. | ||
I'm not an expert on the theological differences between Sedevacantism and Catholicism, and even the Sedevacantist arguments, but that's just my interpretation. | ||
And I was born and raised Catholic, so... | ||
Modern Monarchist says people say Ryan Gosling is a simp in Drive. | ||
Why? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I haven't seen that movie in a long time, so I can't really say. | ||
Yeah, I haven't seen that movie, and I don't really remember the plot, honestly. | ||
I remember the songs. | ||
I remember the soundtrack. | ||
I remember Night Drive, and I remember, uh, or Night Call is the song. | ||
Was Night Drive in there? | ||
Or Night Call, I think, was the song. | ||
And the human being song, right? | ||
Human bean. | ||
And a real hero and I know the elevator thing and the mask I just remember like scenes, but I don't I don't really remember the plot of the movie I remember I don't want to spoil it. | ||
I was about to spoil it So I'd have to rewatch it Satirical man with a ninja genie and some diamonds. | ||
Thank you so much Jordan Dyers is here as a diamond from JD. | ||
Hey, thank you for the diamond JD much appreciated my brother my brother Yeah, same dude. | ||
He probably does. | ||
I'm sure he's in touch with them. | ||
And I'm the biggest thing happening on the site. | ||
I'm sure he knows. | ||
same dude praise wanks is pewdiepie will know the name nick fuentes he probably does i'm sure he's in touch with them and i'm like the biggest thing happening on the site i'm sure he knows so that's kind of funny to think about pikachu says do you have any hidden talent you've never No, not really. | ||
You know, and I'm sort of sad to say I really put all my eggs in one basket when it comes to like Extemporaneous speaking that's kind of like the thing I'm good at I don't really put much time in anything else I mean, I've got I don't even really have any other hobbies. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm just kind of like I I just do my thing. | |
I do my dance. | ||
I do my thing. | ||
You know, I'm not great at video games. | ||
I was never great at the euphonium. | ||
I don't, like, play any other musical instruments. | ||
I don't really have a ton of hobbies. | ||
It's just, uh, I don't know. | ||
Hidden talents? | ||
I don't really have any. | ||
I don't think. | ||
Let me think. | ||
Yeah, no, I'm not an artist. | ||
I wish I was more talented. | ||
I wish I had more talents. | ||
I wish I was an artist. | ||
I really have a lot of admiration for artists. | ||
You might not expect that from me because conservatives have this reputation as being skeptical of art, but I wish I had a good musical sense or a good visual sense. | ||
I just don't have that artistic gene. | ||
I just don't have that. | ||
I wish I did. | ||
I think about exploring that sometimes, but I feel like I just embarrass myself because that's never been my calling. | ||
That's just never been my aptitude. | ||
Some people, like with public speaking, this is something that I just took to because I was interested in it and I had a gift for it. | ||
That's the way it is for some people of music, and I feel like if you're trying too hard It's like you probably don't got it. | ||
You know if you have to force yourself to do it, and it's really hard. | ||
It's like well You have to have a little bit of that Inspiration a little bit of that you know gift, and I don't think I have that which which is a bit You know it's tough. | ||
It's a bit disappointing, but So no, I don't really have a ton of the talents. | ||
I have you've seen them You know I could play guitar hero pretty good pretty good. | ||
I'm a good driver. | ||
That's you know it's about it I gotta work on that. | ||
I gotta develop some skills. | ||
I gotta become a more well-rounded person. | ||
I'm really not a well-rounded person. | ||
You know, I'm actually a very, very blocky, very triangular person. | ||
I'm very much just like, I'm like an arrow or a line. | ||
I just go in one direction. | ||
There are really no rounds. | ||
There's no rounding. | ||
There's really not even any other dimensions. | ||
There's just like one, there's just kind of like one temperature, one, you know. | ||
I gotta work on that. | ||
My parents always used to tell me, you gotta become a more well-rounded kid. | ||
So maybe I gotta develop some of my other attributes. | ||
But the problem is, here's the problem. | ||
What I'm doing is such a huge undertaking that it's like you have to invest in one thing. | ||
You have to do 10,000 hours to become a master at something. | ||
If you're on that track of becoming the best at what you do, you can't master two things, really. | ||
I mean, maybe you can, I don't know, but I feel like you can only focus on doing one at a time. | ||
If you are going to master multiple things, like, I can't single-handedly, well, not single-handedly, but you know, I can't, you know, lift this America First movement up and do this show and everything that's going on. | ||
And find time to be like a great violinist, or you know what I mean? | ||
Like, my focus every day is in the game. | ||
Even if I'm not, you know, doing something every minute of the day, my focus is on this. | ||
And so that's sort of my challenge, is the question, do I become sort of like mediocre at a bunch of things and really good at one thing, or do I become the best in the world at one thing? | ||
That's always how I thought about it. | ||
Emperor says, what's your favorite Ben 10 alien transformation? | ||
Oh, that's a good question. | ||
I'm gonna have to jog the memory a little bit. | ||
I liked... That's an unexpected question. | ||
I would probably say I liked the technology guy. | ||
What was that guy's name? | ||
Cyber something. | ||
What was his name? | ||
Techno something. | ||
He was pretty cool, and I liked Diamondhead. | ||
Diamondhead was great. | ||
What was the technological guy one? | ||
What was the techno alien? | ||
Technorg? | ||
No, that doesn't sound right. | ||
Was that what it was? | ||
I'm having a weird sense of deja vu right now. | ||
No, that's not right. | ||
It's uh, what's the from the original series, you know? | ||
Somebody in chat help me not gray matter retard gray matter was a little upgrade upgrade. | ||
Yeah upgrade I Liked upgrade and I liked I Diamond that I think those if I'm gonna go of the favorite those would probably be my favorites But I mean there were a lot of good ones. | ||
I liked rip jaw. | ||
Haha rip jaw Was cool the sea creature one, right? | ||
That's what it was Good times good times Jordan Dyer says top five cereals on frosted flakes Cocoa Krispies and Mmm, mini wheats, raisin bran, and then, I don't know, maybe cinnamon toast crunch? | ||
Yeah, okay, we'll go with that. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, what are the most beautiful scenes in film? | ||
The most beautiful scenes in film? | ||
I don't know, dude. | ||
I'm like, I'm not like a film major. | ||
I like movies, but I'm not one of these people. | ||
unidentified
|
It's like that, that, that frame was just delightful. | |
Let me, I'd have to think long and hard. | ||
You have to make me think about every scene in every movie I've seen. | ||
Like, I don't know. | ||
When Anakin and Obi-Wan when their lightsabers clash and the volcano erupts and revenge of the Sith does that count as a beautiful scene I Like when Yoda walks into the room and he forces the royal guards against the wall and they collapse pretty funny Battle of Coruscant I'm coming across as a philistine. | ||
I like a lot of I've seen a lot of good movies But off the top of my head the most the most beautiful scene. | ||
I don't know dude I'd have to think a lot about that. | ||
I can't tell you off the top of my head It's been a long time since I've watched a movie actually day Walker says PewDieWho. | ||
Yeah for real I Take cover, says Nick's mom standing in the doorway. | ||
The show starts soon, Nick. | ||
Five more minutes, ma. | ||
Yeah, that scene has actually happened before, so not far off. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, are Gen X better than Boomer? | ||
What are their trends? | ||
No, they're worse than Boomer because they're poor. | ||
Boomers are as bad as Gen X, but Gen X don't have as much money. | ||
And Gen X have bad culturally. | ||
At least boomers had cool culture. | ||
Gen X culture is like lame. | ||
Serval Groyper says, I can't believe people are trusting the Chinese numbers. | ||
Yeah, I how how could you trust that? | ||
Anglo-Irish says keep it up big guy from a koofing Brit. | ||
In quarantine. | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
Hey, get well soon, buddy. | ||
Alan Akbar says, First Guinea, big guy. | ||
You bring hope of nationalism and true conservatism all the way to Sweden. | ||
My previous account got muted. | ||
Jannies suck. | ||
Well, sorry to hear that. | ||
But thanks for the Ninja Guinea. | ||
Much appreciated. | ||
Glad you are inspired by the show. | ||
Wow, sorry. | ||
Okay, well, thanks for clearing it up really quickly there. | ||
So I guess he does not. | ||
Does not have the virus. | ||
Oh, yeah, like Bane? | ||
Thanks for clearing it up really quickly there. | ||
So I guess he does not. | ||
Does not have the virus. | ||
Yeet says, Mech's guard, the border, the Dark Knight Rises style. | ||
Oh, yeah, like Bane. | ||
Okay, funny, I guess. | ||
Fart Sniffer says, Do white women take off their engagement ring? | ||
Yeah, I don't know. | ||
I don't you know, I don't see a lot of that TB Cooper says how can we help the plan? | ||
Just trust it fart sniffers is before entering PetSmart. | ||
Thanks for breaking the message DB you fucking Brit Anglos could see Bigfoot and be like hmm odd bloke odd bloke Okay, I don't know what that was all about, but it's funny. | ||
I Front says, when the compound is up, I'll be the AF cup bearer. | ||
Okay, very good. | ||
DutchGroyper says, Egg has to save the day one last time. | ||
Oh, what's his name? | ||
What is that guy's name? | ||
Delaney. | ||
What's the first name? | ||
Something Delaney, yeah. | ||
Fearless Leader says, Mexico's credit rating got cut. | ||
Serves them right, yeah. | ||
DutchGroyper says, we aren't here for the show. | ||
We are here for you, King! | ||
Ah, well thank you. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
satirical man with the ninja genie thank you so much this guy this guy who is this who is this man Well, I don't mean, don't answer that. | ||
Don't dox. | ||
No dox. | ||
But I'm just, I'm wondering out loud to myself. | ||
Okay, there you go. | ||
Yeah, really makes you think, doesn't it? | ||
pee pee poo poo okay there you go greek salads is china may have known a month before and israel was making a vaccine before corona was even a thing yeah really makes you think doesn't it thanks for the ninja guinea australian says jimmy took my dodge and shirk i don't know what any of this means timed out says twelve hundred dollars equals ninety five Is that where we're at? | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Rustos is not fatigued by the corona coverage, but I always enjoy the faith values related monologues. | ||
Okay, noted. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Koki says, how bad does it have to get before boomers stop calling it just the flu? | ||
That's in a second one. | ||
I think they will always call it just the flu, even maybe after the fact. | ||
Satirical Man says, your show led me back to Christ. | ||
Big thanks to you, King. | ||
Well, hey, thank you, man. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Thanks for the... Thanks for all the money. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
But I'm glad to hear that. | ||
I'm glad... I'm glad that you are back with dad. | ||
With the big dad, right? | ||
Maxie Bro says, yo, Satirical Man actually sent a message. | ||
Yeah, it's been a while. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Ramey says, just had two boomers pull the Just The Flu on me. | ||
Yeah, they are experts in that one. | ||
Emperor says how does Africa only have like a hundred cases because it is uh, it is summer there Really good comics says yo, it's been a minute. | ||
What did I miss these past few months JK? | ||
Just being a jokester Well, thanks for the ninja genie really good comics. | ||
Yeah, it has been a minute. | ||
Hi. | ||
How you doing? | ||
What do you been up to big guy? | ||
That's funny. | ||
You are, you are a jokester. | ||
I missed your superchats. | ||
We've had a lot of rough ones the past few weeks. | ||
So, it's uh, it's good to see you back in here. | ||
Zuriel says pee pee poo poo. | ||
Okay, thanks. | ||
Montyman says the goofy pointing hand at the end of the stick always makes me laugh. | ||
This guy? | ||
Why does that make you laugh? | ||
Because it's uh... | ||
He's it's point this hand is pointing at the numbers Chicken on a raft has just read you of Maine's emails same old tricks. | ||
Yep American spoon says Biden stream 2,800 live viewers Nick 6,000. | ||
Hmm. | ||
I'm telling you I'm one of the bigger streamers political streamers that there is But you wouldn't know because I've been blacklisted right? | ||
Alan Akbar says who is the new commanding officer Ron? | ||
Ron a virus Commanding officer Ron. | ||
Okay. | ||
Yeah, thank you for that. | ||
Thanks for the ninja genie Satirical man says salute for our fearless leader Nick. | ||
Hey, thank you. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And thanks for the ninja genie Fearless do you see fear in my eyes you look in my eyes. | ||
Do you see fear of the globalist of Charlie Kirk? | ||
They have no idea who they're dealing with They don't know me. | ||
They don't know my genes. | ||
They have no idea what they're dealing with. | ||
What happens when somebody like me just has enough and goes ham on the system? | ||
That's what we're about to see, right? | ||
What happens when somebody who's got it going on and who's so tough just throws himself into the machine? | ||
That's what we're talking about. | ||
So, and I don't mean that to like puff myself up, but I'm saying I am trying to show you the way. | ||
I am trying to get other people, because I can't do it all by myself. | ||
But if I show you that here's what I can do, here's what one man can do, if everybody threw themselves into the machine, and I'm not saying like, you know, put yourself in harm's way, you know, I'm not saying that, but I'm just saying if everybody did their part, We could turn everything around. | ||
Just trying to give hope, right? | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Maxiebro with the Ninjad, thank you so much! | ||
Maxiebro says, I promised this to Chad. | ||
Well hey, I don't know what's going on. | ||
Are these people like profiteers from coronavirus? | ||
I would have thought coronavirus hits and the show takes a dive. | ||
Instead it's like what do you guys like own the drug companies? | ||
What do you own like the mask company? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Coronavirus happens and it's like ninjet ninjet. | ||
Well I appreciate it. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I can only say thank you so many times but thank you very much. | ||
Jesse says I heard they're gonna try and pass gun laws during the chaos. | ||
Yeah we got to be on guard for that because that will happen. | ||
Timed outs is based maxi bro. | ||
Yeah that guy. | ||
I don't know if that's a guy or a girl. | ||
I assume it's a guy But he's he's pretty based big supporter Let's see Alan Akbar says you are closing to six million in total earnings big guy seems like a lot Have you really earned that much? | ||
I don't know. | ||
We'll have to go back and examine the numbers left to go back and look at the line Oh transactions, right we have to make certain we have to verify and We just have to verify. | ||
But yeah, funny, ha ha ha, funny joke. | ||
Funny meme number, dude, hilarious. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Fartsniffer says, 105 IQ boomers, suddenly epidemiologists. | ||
Yeah, everybody's an epidemiologist now, right? | ||
Everybody knows, everybody knows exactly what's gonna happen. | ||
Blankie Moats says, I wondered how do you interpret Taxi Driver's End? | ||
I don't know. | ||
It's tough to say. | ||
Because obviously some say it's a dream sequence that he, I don't want to spoil the ending for people, but you know, some people say that it's a dream sequence. | ||
Some people say that it's real. | ||
Um, I, I don't know. | ||
I mean, it seems implausible that it would be real. | ||
It seems like it's too good of an ending for that to be real. | ||
But I think I've read that it's real. | ||
I read about it recently cause I got back into that movie a little while ago. | ||
When Joker came out I think or prior to and I remember reading that they said it was real but but I don't know it's it's pretty open-ended it's tough to say I never had like a solid I never really thought it out and have like a really concrete interpretation it's it's supposed to be open for interpretation was he just fantasizing you know or was it real I don't know I think it's more valuable to think about it well it could be either Uh, but that's a good question. | ||
I don't have a good answer for that. | ||
Fearless Leader says, the market rally is a bull trap. | ||
Watch out. | ||
I hope so. | ||
Girth Brooks says, almost at six million lemons. | ||
Keep it up, big guy. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Irish Lassie says, poor Nick. | ||
He's so bored with this. | ||
Good job this fight. | ||
Hey, thanks. | ||
Jesse Winfree says, also heard stimulus package does something for illegals. | ||
I didn't read anything like that, but I'd have to go back and read through the bill. | ||
I hope that's the case. | ||
I'm going to be there for when it dumps. | ||
I'm going to be there for the dump. | ||
You know I'm going to be there for the dump. | ||
I'm always there for the dump. | ||
Hey, well, couldn't have said it better myself. | ||
I just turned 30 a while ago, so enjoy my Boomer Bucks. | ||
Love your show and Jesus Christ. | ||
Hey, well, couldn't have said it better myself. | ||
Great to hear it. | ||
Me too. | ||
I think a lot of that is useful, but everything that you need is in Christianity. | ||
Mindfulness. | ||
hope you're enjoying that thanks for the boomer bucks alan akbar says what is your view on eastern philosophy mindfulness daoism is it compatible with christianity i think a lot of that is useful but everything that you need is in christianity mindfulness it's called prayer you know a lot of this eastern stuff is just a shade of christianity it's a little bit of christianity It's just another, you know, it's like an imperfect imitation or a shade of something from Christianity. | ||
A lot of aspects of it, you'd be surprised. | ||
So something like mindfulness, like what do they practice? | ||
Meditation. | ||
Well, what is Christianity calling you to do? | ||
To pray. | ||
It's what it is, right? | ||
I mean, that's what prayer is. | ||
I mean, you can meditate in other ways, but I mean, that's essentially, it's achieving in a lot of ways the same thing. | ||
So I think a lot of that is, you know, maybe beneficial or there's something to it. | ||
But I think that everything you need is in Christianity. | ||
And no, I don't think it's compatible because to have a spirituality outside of Christianity is wrong. | ||
I just, you know, you don't. | ||
You're either Christian or you're not. | ||
I don't believe in this pantheistic, oh, all religions are the same. | ||
No, I mean, to be saved, you need Jesus Christ. | ||
And to have Jesus Christ, you can't believe in, like, you know, Brahma and whatever. | ||
And some of that stuff. | ||
I mean, I'm not an expert on theology, but I think that you just have to be Christian. | ||
What else do you need? | ||
Why do you need anything else? | ||
You get saved. | ||
He put himself on the cross. | ||
He dies for your sins. | ||
He got confession. | ||
He got church. | ||
He got prayer. | ||
There's a lot of stuff in there. | ||
What do you need Taoism for? | ||
Wood colony, you know, I found out today. | ||
I was listening to that song my sweet lord by George Harrison I looked it up. | ||
I never knew this that he was Hindu. | ||
I didn't know that I Assumed I know it says Hare Krishna the song but I I don't know I never put too much thought into that but I looked it up today and it turns out George Harrison was the song was about Some Hindu God. | ||
It was about Krishna. | ||
And I'm like, I'm not fucking listening to this song anymore. | ||
This is trash. | ||
I thought this was about Jesus Christ. | ||
The song is, you know, I want to know you, I want to go with you, I want to see you, you know, all this. | ||
And I'm like, I love that song. | ||
I think it's one of the best songs ever. | ||
And I thought, I'm like, alright, this is good stuff. | ||
And then it's come to find out it's about some other god. | ||
Get this out of here! | ||
I don't want to listen to that. | ||
I don't want to listen to some song about... I mean, maybe I can listen to it and in my mind I'm, you know, dedicating it to my god, but it kind of soils the experience. | ||
That's a bunch of bullshit. | ||
We have one lord and it's not some elephant man. | ||
It's not the elephant man with four arms. | ||
It's uh, it's Jesus Christ died on the cross. | ||
That's that's our Lord. | ||
That's our sweet Lord. | ||
Not some Not some animal man Javier what is this? | ||
Oh have a bad one. | ||
That's Javier. | ||
It's all capital letters So I can't you know punctuation there have a bad one says do you have a take on Thomas Massey based or not? | ||
He's not libertarian, right? | ||
He's kind of cringe, but I don't know enough about him. | ||
Wood Colony says, great show tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, thanks. | |
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
NJ Conservatives says, shout out to the 70 to $75,000 gang. | ||
Getting my bucks. | ||
Yeah, yeah, that's good for you. | ||
you're getting your bucks alan says is degeneracy bad a trad cat and trad catholic a cope for being a total loser and incel okay now i understand why this guy got banned i'm I want this guy banned a second time. | ||
He's coming in here with all these BS questions about Eastern religion and all this. | ||
No, it's not a cult for that. | ||
I hear this all the time from pagans and alt-right people, and it's just simply not true. | ||
I mean, it's not true on the face of it because all these trad Catholics, by the way, and people that are opposed to degeneracy are winners. | ||
You know, a lot of these people are people that are successful, that are talented and, you know, well-off and so on. | ||
Right. | ||
So, it's just simply not true. | ||
If you're going to compare and contrast, for example, in the right wing, the people that embrace degeneracy versus the people that reject it, take a look at the people that embrace degeneracy. | ||
Richard Spencer, JF, Greg Johnson. | ||
Are these, like, really big winners? | ||
Are these really... You know, these are definitely not losers. | ||
You know, being 40 years old and an alcoholic, and, you know, like, abusing your wife, and your marriage collapses, and you marry some Satanist, and you're a total failure, you're a total joke. | ||
Yeah, that's being a winner, right? | ||
Oh, but he has a lot of sex. | ||
That's what a winner does. | ||
versus Tucker Carlson, Patrick Buchanan, Michelle Malkin, right? | ||
I think there's a big difference there. | ||
And I don't think the difference is, well, they're coping because they're incels. | ||
I mean, that is literally Coomer cope. | ||
That is people that are so addicted to their vices, and they're slaves to their vices, and they cannot imagine freedom from their vices. | ||
So they say that, well, anybody that's not a slave to their vices, they're just a loser, right? | ||
If you're not addicted to casual sex, if you're not addicted to flesh, if you're not addicted to drugs or alcohol, then you just must be a loser. | ||
And that is slave cope. | ||
That is cope for being a slave. | ||
To desire, to the devil, to sin. | ||
So, no. | ||
And that's how society used to be. | ||
All these people, by the way, that uphold, like, great heroes, they were not degenerates. | ||
If we're talking about European civilization and the great European empires, these people are not degenerates. | ||
The greatest European... | ||
Jesus Christ, well that's dubious, but you know what I'm saying. | ||
The Christians were not degenerates. | ||
Somebody like Charles Martel was not a degenerate, right? | ||
Cherlamine was not a degenerate. | ||
Certain, certain other people historically were not degenerates. | ||
So no, I don't think, I think if anything it's a cult for the other side to say that. | ||
I don't think having sex is Makes you cool. | ||
You know, maybe that's a controversial opinion, but I've said this before. | ||
Having casual sex does not make you a winner. | ||
It's just gross. | ||
Casual hookups and encounters are easy, and they're debased, and they're wrong. | ||
More than anything, they're wrong. | ||
So, you know, and I've seen it many such cases like this. | ||
I don't think there's anything that is, you know, really impressive about that. | ||
Oh wow, you had sex with a lot of whores. | ||
I think highly of you. | ||
You went out to a bar and you had sex with loose women every night? | ||
Wow, congratulations, right? | ||
What a winner. | ||
So no, I've heard this take before and I think it's a cult for the other side. | ||
It's people that are so, it's the opposite. | ||
The real losers, the real people that are pathetic are people that cannot deal with life. | ||
And so they self-medicate and they cannot be a free person. | ||
They don't have the strength to resist vice. | ||
And so they invert the moral paradigm and say, oh, well, if you're not a slave like me, then you just must not be cool enough. | ||
You're not on drugs, you're not, you don't have kids out of wedlock, you're not a petri dish of STDs. | ||
I guess homosexuals would be the coolest people in the world, right? | ||
Homosexuals who have thousands and thousands of partners, I guess they win the prize for the coolest and according to that standard, right? | ||
Homosexuals who have orgies and thousands of partners and they're a petri dish for AIDS and every STD under the sun and... Right? | ||
I guess they must be the biggest winners in the world and whores, you know, women that are in college that ride the carousel and they, you know, have sex with all kinds of different men. | ||
I guess they're the coolest people in the world. | ||
Those are admirable people. | ||
We should have our society run by fags and whores. | ||
Because according to your standard those are the winners and those are the total winners and those are the success stories and the chast people that have one partner that are monogamous and get married and have children. | ||
Oh hello loser right? | ||
So no I think that's ridiculous. | ||
Superorganism. | ||
And don't let anybody tell you otherwise, by the way. | ||
That is what they use to control you. | ||
Oh, you're an incel. | ||
Oh, you're a loser. | ||
Oh, you're a virgin. | ||
You don't go to parties. | ||
This is the devil. | ||
This is the devil talking. | ||
That is Satan. | ||
That is the devil coming up to you and saying, work for me, right? | ||
You can't listen to that. | ||
You have to remember that what we have to worry about is not being perceived as cool. | ||
Oh, you know, and I get this a lot from the left. | ||
And the alt-right, ironically, they say the same thing. | ||
A lot of left-wing people used to say, even when I was in BU, oh, you don't go to parties, you're a total loser. | ||
And these are miserable, gross people. | ||
These are people that are crying. | ||
These are people that spend their birthdays getting wasted, and they end up in a puddle of their own vomit on the floor the next day. | ||
They have no, you know, meaningful relationships. | ||
They have nothing meaningful in their lives. | ||
I don't care about that perception of what's cool from those people, or from Jewish Whatever. | ||
Jewish media, secular media, I don't care what Hollywood says is cool. | ||
I care what God says is cool. | ||
And, you know, it's as simple as that. | ||
You know, what really dawned on me about religion, what really made the difference to me, is realizing that if God is real, that's all you have to care about, right? | ||
I mean, and that is what really sunk into me. | ||
A lot of people that are not religious don't understand religion because they think that, you know, it's just like a set of rules that you have to follow. | ||
It's just like customs and practices. | ||
If you don't believe in God, you think that a lot of this is just like preference. | ||
You just think that a lot of this is just like, you know, a pleasantry, something that's nice, a formality. | ||
But if you believe in God, it's like, well, God wrote a book. | ||
If God wrote a book, wouldn't you want to read it? | ||
Wouldn't that be the first book you want to read? | ||
If we were created, if our world was created by something, wouldn't we want to read the book that that creator wrote for us? | ||
No, I'd rather read White Shift. | ||
No, no, I would rather read... Why would you want to read anything else? | ||
I mean, you can read other books, but you know what I'm saying. | ||
That's the book you want to read, and that's the book you want to listen to. | ||
And there are other rules out there and other systems and other standards, but hey, God made rules. | ||
God made a church. | ||
God appointed a leader. | ||
Aren't you going to want to listen to all that? | ||
No, no. | ||
Well, that's great and all. | ||
Our Creator and, you know, in His omnipotence and omniscience and His timelessness. | ||
He created that, but no, I think I'd rather watch Fanboy and Chum Chum. | ||
I think I'd rather, I think I'd rather watch, uh, well, what is that show? | ||
Big Mouth or what is that mouth show? | ||
You know what I'm talking about? | ||
No, I think I'd rather listen to what Jay-Z says is cool. | ||
I think I'd rather listen to what Harvey Weinstein, uh, says I should do. | ||
I think he's got it figured out. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I mean, who's that, uh, midget with the beard? | ||
Who's that, who's that guy who's always with the girls and the guns and, uh, what's, and it's, it's, uh, Dan Bilzerian. | ||
No, but Dan Bilzerian's way cooler. | ||
I'm going to follow him and his standards. | ||
It Oh wow, that's really cool. | ||
That'll be so funny when God crushes you. | ||
That'll be hilarious. | ||
Dude, everyone will think you're so cool when, you know, they're not gonna hear your name at the gates and you land in hell and you're on fire forever. | ||
Dude, so cool. | ||
Being on fire is all the rage. | ||
Being on fire forever is all the rage right now. | ||
You can't get in on this. | ||
You're a loser. | ||
Yeah, have fun with that. | ||
That's not a cope. | ||
That's just reality. | ||
That's the way it is. | ||
Anyway, Superorganism says, Big whoop, GDP goes up if my community is dissolved. | ||
Yeah, you said it. | ||
Base dollar says I'm a rule follower because we live in a society. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
But we don't, we're not going to live in a society anymore. | ||
We're going to live in just, you know, anarcho-tyranny. | ||
So, can't follow the rules when it's like that. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Time doubts is 50,000 a year. | ||
Live with parents. | ||
Am I middle class? | ||
LOL. | ||
Um, I don't think so, no. | ||
I don't know if that's what the middle class looks like. | ||
Maybe, well, it probably does for a lot of kids, but It's a generational thing Polish American says you ever see a honky jump a turn style didn't think so Well, you're not wrong about that Dutch groper says and the gamer class I have to support two consoles. | ||
I don't know what that means Alan says I work in McDonald's, but I want to be top third place. | ||
Well, thanks for the ninja genie Uh, okay. | ||
Do you work at McDonald's? | ||
Enviable position. | ||
I tried to work at Taco Bell and I didn't get hired. | ||
Can you believe that? | ||
I applied to work at Taco Bell like four years ago. | ||
I think this was before Charlottesville. | ||
This was like, might have even been before I dropped out of college. | ||
But I applied to work at Taco Bell. | ||
And understand to apply to work at Taco Bell, you literally have to pass a math class. | ||
And I don't mean like a, or I'm sorry, a math test. | ||
And it's like addition. | ||
When you apply for a job at Taco Bell, and I know because I applied years ago, they gave you like a short math test where they said like, if somebody pays with a $3 bill and the, or a $3 bill, if somebody pays with a $5 bill and the total is $4.75, how much change do you give back? | ||
You know, 25 cents, 72 cents. | ||
Questions like this addition and subtraction questions. | ||
I think they were just outright questions. | ||
Like what's 10 plus 2? | ||
I mean it was it was crazy how stupid it was. | ||
And I didn't get the job. | ||
They sent me an email and they said you know we're not gonna hire you. | ||
I legitimately could not find a job for years. | ||
I applied to work at the hardware store. | ||
I applied to work at the local pizzeria. | ||
I applied to work at Taco Bell. | ||
I applied to work at all kinds of... I applied to work at Dunkin Donuts. | ||
Back when I was in high school and graduating high school, I applied to work at so many jobs and I couldn't get hired. | ||
And then eventually UPS, they just take anybody because the turnover is like two weeks. | ||
And they're just looking for bodies to move boxes. | ||
That was the only job that I got hired for. | ||
It was so funny. | ||
When I went to work at UPS, I was like a minute late to the training and I was so stressed out. | ||
I was like, I'm going to be late. | ||
They're not going to hire me. | ||
I don't know if I have... I've never done this before. | ||
I don't know if I have all my stuff together. | ||
And you should have seen the clientele that was there. | ||
I mean, there was one guy who had a fresh tattoo, huge tattoo on his arm, fresh. | ||
And we're walking through the facility and the supervisor's like, you're gonna want to cover that. | ||
It's like we're working with boxes in this huge industrial facility. | ||
He's got a fresh exposed tattoo. | ||
Gonna get infected. | ||
People have do-rags and all this. | ||
A lot of carrying on. | ||
And I'm like, I was worried about being a minute late. | ||
There's a lot of debauchery going on. | ||
Rusto says, the monologues about class have been enlightening. | ||
I'm glad. | ||
Jesse says, found out my dad has me in stocks. | ||
How should I feel? | ||
Well, um, you know, you don't lose any money if you sell, but if you are investing in stocks one month ago, you're not doing good now, no matter what. | ||
Unless you bought, like, you know, medical supply stocks, you know, stuff like that, medicine. | ||
Livewire says, middle class forever screwed, too rich for help, too poor for savings. | ||
Yep. | ||
Fartsniffer says, I can't read that. | ||
Boopers says, fuck Mexico. | ||
Well, let's take it easy a little bit, all right? | ||
For our terms of service. | ||
Well, we'll see. | ||
There hasn't been a limit yet, but I feel like one of these days the dam is gonna burst. | ||
You can't just keep pumping liquidity into the economy and Not pay a price. | ||
Look at how much the currency has been devalued over a 50 year period from the time Nixon fully decoupled us from the gold standard. | ||
It's like incredible how little the value has retained its dollar. | ||
We got decoupled from the gold standard way before that, but in the 70s they said that you couldn't redeem money for gold. | ||
They completely decoupled them. | ||
So, and since then the value of the dollar has collapsed. | ||
So, one day, I don't know when that's going to happen. | ||
I'm sure the dollar will just tank. | ||
I don't know what that's going to look like. | ||
But, you know, these modern monetary theory people say that none of that matters. | ||
We can have zero interest rates and negative interest rates and I don't know, man. | ||
It's very complicated. | ||
I'm not an expert on the subject. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Okay, well, thanks, I guess, for that. | ||
Don't love the Muslim component there, but I guess thanks for the well wishes and for the Ninjagini. | ||
Great show, and in the name of Allah, the beneficent and merciful, I wish you well. | ||
Inshallah, brother. | ||
Okay, well, thanks, I guess, for that. | ||
Don't love the Muslim component there, but I guess thanks for the well wishes and for the Ninjagini. | ||
Maxi Bros. says, Alan Akbar, I unmuted you and I'm kind of regretting you. | ||
I'm regretting it for you, too. | ||
Bass Dollar says, could not have said it better than... | ||
The goodwill will not be reciprocated. | ||
Nobody acts like Americans. | ||
Nobody acts like whites, is what it comes down to. | ||
Nobody wants to say that, but it's true. | ||
Asians don't act like whites. | ||
Africans don't act like whites. | ||
Indians don't act like whites. | ||
American Indians, right? | ||
They just don't. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
ChickenOnAraf says, Mexico border peace is media intimidation. | ||
You think? | ||
Satirical man with a Ninjagini, thanks. | ||
Alan says, can you please say my full username like a man? | ||
No, I'm not gonna do that. | ||
Ben's Funny Hats says, is it productive to debate with liberals on race? | ||
I think so. | ||
Ye says, whites don't have a country to escape to, except Nick. | ||
What do you mean, except Nick? | ||
Milkman says, did you see Destiny call Kyle K. Dead Dad a dumb fuck? | ||
What's Kyle K dead dad? | ||
Kyle Kashuv? | ||
I don't know what that is. | ||
Average Groyper says I'm going to live in South Dakota to escape them. | ||
Well, there's no escape. | ||
You'll find them there, too. | ||
You'll find them everywhere. | ||
Bob Sacamato says white people be like, I have sympathy for others. | ||
Yeah, pretty unique. | ||
Timedout says white people be like, oh well, I'll be okay. | ||
Yeah, right? | ||
Oh well, I'm sure everything will be okay. | ||
Good luck with that. | ||
Yo, BaseDollar with like 10 Ninjaginis, thank you so much, man. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
Much appreciated! | ||
No messages, but just ninjaginis. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Waynster says, hail authoritarian nationalist man of peace Fuentes. | ||
Ah yes, thank you. | ||
Big Rich says, thank you for unmuting me. | ||
Yeah, no problem. | ||
I just don't want anyone else to get their hopes up. | ||
Warren says, my small town high school in Florida was majority minority. | ||
Yeah, it's already like that for a lot of people. | ||
Maybe the majority of people. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini, my friend Warren. | ||
Good guy, good guy. | ||
And yeah, that's Florida, that's California, that's Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, New York, all major cities. | ||
You'd be surprised, it's everywhere. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, when I was young you had that one black kid. | ||
Yep, yeah, me too. | ||
That was like my grade school. | ||
One black kid in my class, one Muslim kid, few Mexicans. | ||
Yeah, that's exactly it. | ||
And I've been saying that for the past few weeks, but that's exactly it. | ||
They have promoted the ugly, the weak, the incompetent, the incapable, and, you know, big shocker that they turn out to be a party that's totally dysfunctional. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Zuri also says, how does a Fuentes end up in Chicago? | ||
Came from Texas. | ||
Uh, Rusto says, this is probably my favorite America First episode. | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
Glad you like it. | ||
Chicken on a Raft says, feds in chat. | ||
God bless our mods. | ||
Yeah, can we get our mods to clean up, clean up the streets there? | ||
The Cook says, 10 out of 10 show tonight, King. | ||
Love to see you go off. | ||
Keep this up and PewDiePie will be toppled tomorrow. | ||
I don't know about tomorrow, but definitely soon. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Satirical Man with the Ninjet. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Thank you so much, man. | ||
Really appreciate it. | ||
I saw you shot me an email. | ||
I'll get back to you tonight or tomorrow. | ||
Or I'll procrastinate. | ||
But soon, but imminently. | ||
Thank you so much for the Ninjet. | ||
Maxi Bros says, satirical and base dollar won't let me be number one tonight. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, they're fighting for that top spot. | |
Polish American says, hey Nick, isn't Chicago a little Warsaw? | ||
I want to visit. | ||
A lot of Polish. | ||
A lot of Polish in Chicago. | ||
Yeah, you're not wrong about that. | ||
Leftist Cuck says, give Nick money so he can continue spreading the good word. | ||
So true. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Maxi Bros is also worth mentioning. | ||
They say they're more American than us, but they leave the moment it gets rough. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
Yeah, so American until it gets a little bit rough and then they're out. | ||
And they have no allegiance. | ||
They don't care. | ||
They're transient. | ||
They're ampersands. | ||
They're in. | ||
They're out. | ||
They're in Mexico in the summer. | ||
They're here in the winter. | ||
You know, or vice versa. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
SP with the Ninjet. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
He says, let's make this 100k. | ||
No Trump bucks for me, but stimulus package will be a windfall for me personally. | ||
Epic show. | ||
Paying some forward to a real one. | ||
Well, thank you so much, man. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Glad you're getting some kind of stimulus, right? | ||
But hey, really appreciate the Ninjettes. | ||
Gavin says, people keep forgetting that you're a handsome genius. | ||
They always do. | ||
They always count me out. | ||
LeftistCock says, Nick, need to bring back the mustache. | ||
Well, I'm bringing back the beard, at least. | ||
HolyServant says, 100k before Super Chats? | ||
Damn, Groyper Nation, yeah. | ||
Pretty incredible. | ||
Thanks for turning your dad out of the show. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm glad. | |
I love to hear that. | ||
to the Sonora portion of the show on his back patio. | ||
The wheels were turning. | ||
I'm glad to hear it. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks for turning your dad out of the show. | ||
I'm glad. | ||
I love to hear that. | ||
I love to hear that a segment starts, because I know for a lot of people to watch this show, it might sound like repetitive or redundant or it's things you already know about, but I like when a segment helps people that aren't fully on board start to see where we're coming So I'm glad to hear that The wheels are turning. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Some of these older folks, that's all it takes is a little push, right? | ||
But thanks. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, you should host PewDiePie. | ||
It's nice to help the little guy. | ||
Yeah, next time he streams, I think I'll give him a host. | ||
Maybe I'll help him build his audience on here a little bit. | ||
Monty Man says, looking good, big man. | ||
Stay healthy. | ||
We need you. | ||
Donating what I can to dethrone the Aryan warrior. | ||
It's time for a new Med. | ||
Time for a Mediterranean reign here, right? | ||
Time for an Italian King. | ||
And I love the Swedish people, and I love PewDiePie, but it's time for an Italian King here on the show. | ||
Sewer Great says, Lemon Dump on PewDiePie. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjaginis. | ||
Fart Smeller says, Please check out Five-ish. | ||
It's so funny. | ||
Okay. | ||
Monty Man says, His streaming site? | ||
More like ours. | ||
Danny DeVito has Groyper Energy, but he's too short. | ||
Uh, Rab... Ribald Raccoon says COVID 19th Amendment. | ||
Ah, yes. | ||
Thanks for the Ningenie. | ||
Wainster says if they say they are American too, they must denounce affirmative action. | ||
Affirmative action. | ||
That's true. | ||
That's a good point. | ||
Monty Man says, Danny DeVito gotta hit the gym and get taller. | ||
Yeah, exactly. | ||
Mr. Happy says, PewDiePie ain't nothing but bitch lasagna. | ||
Alright, alright. | ||
We like, it's a little friendly rivalry. | ||
I love PewDiePie. | ||
I stan PewDiePie. | ||
I'm a huge fan. | ||
I watch his content. | ||
Just a little friendly rivalry, friendly competition. | ||
And it's good for me. | ||
It's good for PewDiePie. | ||
Well, he doesn't stream on here that much, but it's good for DLive, even though they don't talk to me, even though they don't respond to my message. | ||
But it's just a friendly competition. | ||
We love him. | ||
Chicken on a raft says, thou shalt not tempt the mods. | ||
Don't tempt! | ||
People, like, dare the mods to ban them and get mad when they get banned. | ||
fart sniff vs lmao d live jannies wasn't like this on youtube yeah and youtube the live chat was terrible andrew jackson says shout out to my friend keith ripley he has autism okay dutch groiper says where do you get your ideas from from me jesse says do you think pewdiepie is on our side about most stuff uh i don't know i don't think saying that would be helpful for him White Iverson says, Nick radicalized PewDiePie. | ||
I don't know about that. | ||
Polish American says, trying to catch a green light. | ||
I drifted, so proud. | ||
Ah, very good. | ||
Andrew says, what's up bros? | ||
This is Nick Fuentes, brofists. | ||
That's funny. | ||
Chicken on a raft says, the Chad euphonium versus the virgin violin. | ||
I could break a violin with my euphonium. | ||
It's a heavy and solid instrument. | ||
And it took a lot of punches. | ||
Jeff says, are you a shoe guy? | ||
Never seen those size 15 sleds. | ||
What do you mean a shoe guy? | ||
I mean, I wear shoes. | ||
I'm wearing shoes right now. | ||
I'm not like a fashion guy. | ||
I'm not like a fashion, you know, I love buying clothes. | ||
I don't really buy a lot of clothes, and I'm not really trendy or anything, so I wouldn't say that. | ||
Obergruyper says, deja vu flu. | ||
You know? | ||
Kokice says grey matter retard shack. | ||
Yeah, he doesn't even know it's Ben 10. | ||
chicken on a raft says gen x be like i do drugs to see the real world yeah it's it's really sad america first juice is to america's best streamer hey well thanks for the diamond man much appreciated fart sniffer says the joke was white women take off their engagement ring before entering pet smart oh i didn't read it as one chat justin says wagey bucks will help as much as i can salute hey well thanks a lot big guy i appreciate it | ||
Justin KG a good man a good man China virus has big fan. | ||
Keep it up. | ||
God bless you. | ||
God bless USA. | ||
Thank you, man Greek salads is what event canceled with Alex and Sophie mentioned An event with what? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
What event there was supposed to be an event in LA? | ||
With Alex Jones and self and a few other people and it got postponed and a little bit more on that over the summer Maxie bro says I'm a guy by the way, maybe I should make my username my username more masculine sounding Well, because Maxie. | ||
Maxie sounds... I don't know what that is. | ||
Is that like a girl named Maxie? | ||
I don't know, but it says bro, so I don't know. | ||
But good to know. | ||
Mr. Slippery says, what is the America first take on the end of The Sopranos? | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I haven't finished it yet. | ||
I don't want to watch... I have watched every episode except for the last two episodes because I know that if I finish it, There will never be new episodes to watch so I'm Simply deferring it for as long as I should probably just finish it, but that's how I am So, but I kind of know the ending I don't really have a good take on it because I haven't seen the build-up to it yet, though Ola says the pointer is funny because it's the thinking emoji. | ||
Ah, I Bad Karma says thoughts on Michael Savage. | ||
Don't watch him. | ||
Tactical Nukes says Groipers are wholesome and generous. | ||
Trusting the plan, King. | ||
Well, thanks. | ||
Juana says Corona has illegals heading back home. | ||
No money. | ||
LMAO. | ||
Yep. | ||
How many more of these are there? | ||
Toxic Child says what's the worst IRL fan interaction you've had? | ||
Thanks for the Ninja Genie. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Um, I don't really have too many bad IRL fan interactions. | ||
Most of them are pretty normal. | ||
And I don't want to say, because I'd probably offend some people, but... | ||
Maybe I'll tell some of these stories in ten years when people maybe have forgotten? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Kaiser says, three animes to watch. | ||
Black Lagoon, Monster, and Baccano. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
I'll get right on that. | ||
Thank you for the list. | ||
Ober Greupers is loving the show, but I have nothing to say. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
The money will suffice. | ||
Taco Pizzas says, thoughts on all the landlord bashing? | ||
Seems gay. | ||
It's totally gay. | ||
A lot of these people are just juvenile LARPers with no skin in the game. | ||
You know? | ||
There are some landlords that are bad, but a lot of landlords are just people that want to make a little extra money for their family or to get out of the rat race. | ||
And all this stuff about, oh, Wall Street's going down! | ||
unidentified
|
Ha ha ha! | |
That's good! | ||
And, oh, landlords are getting screwed? | ||
Take that! | ||
Like, I'm not a Bolshevik. | ||
I'm not a communist. | ||
I'm not an anarchist. | ||
And I'm also not somebody that wants to see the American people suffer horribly. | ||
You know, good people. | ||
Because, you know, the people that are screwing us over are not like your landlord that got a rental property to make a little money on the side. | ||
It's billionaires who are doing fine no matter what. | ||
So all this stuff about, you know, it's literally Wignat stuff. | ||
And Wignat, where do you think that comes from? | ||
It's Wigger. | ||
And I am very much against that kind of behavior of like, oh yeah, just like, be a degenerate, take unemployment, and fuck landlords and people that work. | ||
And, you know, we ironically talk about wages, but I'm very much against that kind of stuff. | ||
I think it's just beneath us. | ||
Uh, Virgin Nick, uh, Virgin Nick Chad Jaden says, big thank you for all the epic shows, much love. | ||
Oh yeah, thanks a lot. | ||
Obergroiper says, our society is currently run by whores and fags. | ||
Yeah, tell me about it. | ||
Alan says, just a question, big guy. | ||
Relax. | ||
Okay. | ||
OpticsRespector says, being on fire forever is unironically the rage right now. | ||
Unironically, it is. | ||
Unironically, that is what people want to be. | ||
Colton says, why is Ayn Rand bad? | ||
I read The Fountainhead and I liked it, because she's like this Jewish libertarian woman. | ||
Not that there's anything wrong with being Jewish, but she's like this totally secular, like, revolutionary capitalist, and it's just not... | ||
Look, it's 10 o'clock. | ||
You should have asked this earlier, alright? | ||
I could have went into this, but I'm fatigued. | ||
I'm tired. | ||
I've been going now for two and a half hours. | ||
It's 10 o'clock. | ||
She's a radical individualist who just does not understand. | ||
Society You know individualism is not that's not a good ideology. | ||
I'll just I'm oversimplifying here, but it's 10 o'clock. | ||
I'm tired Thanks for the ninja guinea come back and ask tomorrow with the diamond and come back and ask you know at 8 o'clock Some of these people they wait until like 950 to say so what do you think about the French Revolution? | ||
You know 9 958 So what are your thoughts on the National Assembly during the French Revolution? | ||
What are you know? | ||
Huh! | ||
Polish American says, Jesus is cool and epic. | ||
The devil is a counterfeit. | ||
Jesus is the true alpha male. | ||
Never want to leave him. | ||
Exactly right. | ||
Yeet says, in the mere universe, Nick is a manager at Taco Bell. | ||
Yeah, possibly. | ||
Satirical Man with a Ninjagini, thanks a lot. | ||
WD says, I wonder who got the job over you? | ||
Hmm. | ||
I know the guy who got the job over me. | ||
I went to high school with him. | ||
He was a nice guy, though. | ||
He was my friend. | ||
And he was friendly to me when I drove through there, so. | ||
I'm sure a lot of people would like to see me working at Taco Bell. | ||
A lot of my fucking neighbors would like to see that. | ||
Heh. | ||
But, uh, no, I don't work at Taco Bell. | ||
What do you work at Taco Bell? | ||
I get my sushi cupped! | ||
Alright. | ||
Uh, Huncho Jack with an Injigini, thanks. | ||
Zuriel says, Texas Fuentes. | ||
Yeah, yeah, they did come from Texas. | ||
Racist incels says, thoughts on alto saxophones. | ||
Cringe. | ||
Oh, thanks for the tip. | ||
Well, hey, thanks for the Nijigini! | ||
That's our last Super Chat. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay! | |
Alright, alright! | ||
That's gonna be our last one. | ||
Thanks for the tip. | ||
Zuri L says, America first is inevitable. | ||
Stay safe from the virus, Nick. | ||
Shout out to my boy, Violet Hunter. | ||
Well, hey, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
That's our last super chat. | ||
Okay. | ||
All right. | ||
All right. | ||
That's going to be our last one. | ||
Look, love the energy. | ||
Love the super chats. | ||
Loving the support. | ||
Loving the donations. | ||
But it's like, I got a breath. | ||
And it's like weeks, you know, every night, three hours, no break. | ||
unidentified
|
Just, this guy says, this guy says, thanks for the Ninjagini. | |
Thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
Thanks for the diamond. | ||
Thanks for this Thank you. | ||
Yep. | ||
I agree. | ||
So true Food water atmosphere It's just like Behind the green screen wall, you can see blood from my hands scraping against the wall, my fingernails. | ||
You'll find a lot of DNA on these walls. | ||
You'll have to send a geneticist to look at the walls and see the chemical samples. | ||
Was there? | ||
That's a pretty- I don't know if anyone's gonna get that reference. | ||
This desk! | ||
There's blood on this desk! | ||
That's like Jocko Willink. | ||
I take a picture of my desk after the show. | ||
Black and white filter. | ||
Aftermath! | ||
You know, I take a picture of myself. | ||
I'm sweating. | ||
I've got grease on my face. | ||
There's sweat on the desk. | ||
My ass is sweating. | ||
Aftermath! | ||
I take a picture of my computer chair. | ||
There's an indentation from my ass. | ||
Aftermath! | ||
Get after it! | ||
Just do it! | ||
You ever see Jocko Willink's Twitter account? | ||
This guy's such a chadrule. | ||
unidentified
|
Every day, he posts, I'm in the gym! | |
5am! | ||
And he posts a picture of, like, his disgusting, sweaty gym. | ||
He posts a picture of, like, sweat all over the bench and, like, you know, calluses on his hands. | ||
Aftermath! | ||
In a black and white filter. | ||
That's me. | ||
That's me on this show. | ||
That's me. | ||
I am doing that with mental sports. | ||
That's a physical sport. | ||
This is my mental sport. | ||
Same intensity. | ||
Same effort. | ||
Same toughness. | ||
But I'm on my mental game. | ||
I'm on my genius game here. | ||
Aftermath! | ||
I finish the show and I collapse. | ||
Aftermath. | ||
unidentified
|
All right. | |
But that's our show. | ||
That's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Remember, remember to follow and subscribe. | ||
Be sure to follow and subscribe to the channel. | ||
Check out my website, nicholasjfuentes.com. | ||
Sign up for my email list. | ||
Be sure to do it. | ||
Remember, we are on the air Monday through Friday, 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
Is the chest opening? | ||
There it is. | ||
This is America First. | ||
Thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters. | ||
Big thanks to our Top 3. | ||
Satirical Man, Maxi Bro, Bass Dollar. | ||
Alan was trying for it too. | ||
He tried. | ||
And there are some others. | ||
But big thanks to our Top 3. | ||
Huge thanks to these guys every night. | ||
They're in the Top 3. | ||
Huge thanks for all the support this week. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
I can't believe it. | ||
And I appreciate it. | ||
So, big thank you to those guys. | ||
Thanks to everybody that's super chatted, everybody that's been keeping it going. | ||
It's been incredible this week. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love you, and I will see you tomorrow. | ||
Until then, have a great rest of your evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo. | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. |