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Good evening, everybody. | ||
You are watching America First. | ||
My name is Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
We have a great show for you tonight. | ||
Very excited to be back with you here tonight on Friday. | ||
And it is casual Friday. | ||
It is going to be a relaxed, low-key, chill stream. | ||
Casual stream, you can tell. | ||
You can tell what kind of show this is going to be because I'm not wearing a necktie. | ||
That means it's casual Friday. | ||
And we've got a lot to talk about, lots to get into. | ||
We'll be talking tonight, of course, yet again, and this will be the case for some time, about the coronavirus. | ||
We'll be looking at the latest numbers. | ||
unidentified
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We'll be looking at the relief package. | |
We'll be looking at the latest numbers and the relief package just got passed by the House today and signed by the President. | ||
We'll talk about what that means for you, what that means for the economy. | ||
Our main story tonight is about what's happening in the United States. | ||
We just surpassed 100,000 confirmed cases of the coronavirus in the United States alone. | ||
100,000 in the United States. | ||
And we had in the last 24 hours the largest increase in the number of confirmed coronavirus out of any country in any single day. | ||
And I'll pull up the number in front of me right now on my notes here. | ||
The United States added close to 20,000 new coronavirus cases in just the last 24 hours. | ||
Yesterday we became the number one country, most cases out of any other country, and today we surpassed 100,000 and had The most cases in 24 hours. | ||
So kind of a grim day. | ||
We also reached 1,500 deaths today from coronavirus. | ||
So we'll talk about that and what's happening in the US. | ||
We'll talk about what's happening with hospitals. | ||
You're just beginning to see now the What would be the word? | ||
The overwhelming of the US hospitals, the American health care system as a result of the coronavirus. | ||
And we have been talking about this for some time. | ||
We're due for this now and this will be the story of April. | ||
The shortages that you're going to see of critical medical supplies and health care resources, hospital beds, ventilators, respirators, Personnel all kinds of different things like that. | ||
You're gonna see all of those will face shortages and as a result You'll have to ration care in these hospitals. | ||
And what does that mean? | ||
That means that it will be up to the hospitals to evaluate and decide who will get treated, who will get care, and then consequently who will not get treated and who will not get care. | ||
And they'll have to go by and determine case by case looking at who is sick and who's unwell, who has a high enough probability to survive with treatment to warrant receiving scarce resources. | ||
And this is something very sad and very tragic and not at all fun. | ||
It really is probably going to be the toughest thing when you see a pandemic like this. | ||
The hospitals will be so overwhelmed that it will be up to the healthcare professionals to decide and they will have to do a risk evaluation. | ||
For example, they might look at an old person and say that an old person has a very small chance of recovering. | ||
They have a very small chance of surviving. | ||
And so they will simply not treat them. | ||
They'll give them painkillers. | ||
They'll make it comfortable for them and basically resign them to fate, which is sad. | ||
So we'll talk about the shortages and what's being done about that. | ||
The good news is the President authorized today, or he invoked, the Defense Production Act. | ||
He used that last week. | ||
He put that on the table today. | ||
He is using that to force General Motors and other manufacturers to begin to build this critical medical supplies, things like the ventilators and Other things. | ||
So there is going to be a reaction to that, but it's really going to get rough in the coming weeks. | ||
We've not peaked in terms of our daily new coronavirus cases yet, so if you've been following this show for the past week, the cases in the United States just keep rising dramatically every day. | ||
And not only does the number of cases increase every day, obviously, but the number of new cases The rate at which we are adding new cases is increasing as well. | ||
So of course we have more cases than the day before, but the differential is also bigger too. | ||
So I think yesterday we had 10,000 new cases in 24 hours, and the day before that we had 8,000, and the day before that we had 6,000. | ||
And between today and yesterday we had 20,000 new cases. | ||
And I think it's safe to say that as the testing becomes more available across the country, because again in In the first stages of the testing rollout, it was only widely available in Washington State and New York City. | ||
Now that you're going to see the testing expand across the country and become more available across the country, these numbers are going to increase and the rate at which they're increasing will increase too. | ||
So 20,000 new cases in 24 hours. | ||
Prepare to see a lot of big numbers like this. | ||
And 100,000 cases in the United States, prepare to see that skyrocket over the next few weeks. | ||
Because we look at Italy, for example, and we'll get into this. | ||
You look at the number of cases in Italy, they're at 86,500. | ||
So they have a smaller number of cases than we do. | ||
They have about 20,000 less cases, but they also have a population that's about one-sixth the size. | ||
So if you do the math on that, if we have a similar curve that they do, if we have a similar rate of infected and death rate that they do, then you can expect that our numbers might be six times what theirs are. | ||
Right. | ||
So we'll look at the numbers, we'll talk about the hospital shortages, we'll talk about the relief package that got passed, and a few other things. | ||
And it should be a pretty good show. | ||
I'm excited. | ||
Hey, I'm more excited that it's Friday. | ||
I'm like, thank God it's Friday already. | ||
I've been behind this desk and you know normally I love, and I love doing the show, I love to do it, it's fun, I get to talk to you, I get to do my, get to do my thing, get to do my dance, some dance moves, got some dance moves going on there, some, a little bit of a dance move, a little bit of a Friday, hey it's Friday, a little bit of a Friday dance move for you there, a little subtle dance maneuver. | ||
I like doing the show, but it is just so fatiguing. | ||
It's grueling! | ||
And I'm gonna complain every night about it. | ||
That normally I do the show and it's taxing enough, but at least you have some variety. | ||
At least it's immigration on Monday, and Israel on Tuesday, and war with Iran on Wednesday, you know? | ||
We mix it up. | ||
Even on a slow news day we're mixing it up, but for the past 8 weeks! | ||
It's like 8 weeks we've been talking about this. | ||
Since January 21st, I think was the first show we did about coronavirus. | ||
It's like 10 weeks! | ||
And it's just every night it's the same I'm like okay here we go whiteboard we got pulling up the BNO tracking and I don't know if you guys are tired of it yet but I'm just like out of my mind and then every night I do this I do the corona thing and then I jump on jaded and shallots stream and we play the same games we play warzone and animal crossing and I'm just like losing track of time I feel like I'm in the bubble I feel like I'm under the dome But that's okay. | ||
But I'm tough. | ||
But we're all gonna get through it together. | ||
We'll have to find something to do to maybe switch it up next week. | ||
Some people were saying earlier this week, they were saying, no, no, we like the coronavirus. | ||
Not you like the virus, but you like the news. | ||
We got to do something to change it up because I'm losing my mind over here. | ||
I got to tell you the big problem that I'm realizing now is I'm not going to be able to get a haircut. | ||
They shut down all the essential services and I haven't even checked to see if my barber's open, but I'm not taking the chance. | ||
My barber's Middle Eastern. | ||
I'm not messing with that. | ||
So what am I gonna do? | ||
I decided I'm gonna grow the corona beard. | ||
I'm not gonna shave until this is over and I don't even know if I'll be able to get a haircut until this is over because it's one thing to go to the drive-thru, it's one thing to go to Walmart and you could take some reasonable precautions but you figure you go to your barber and you're up close and personal the whole time and they're literally just On top of you the whole time. | ||
Right? | ||
In close proximity. | ||
Touching your head. | ||
Touching your neck. | ||
You know, they're touching your hair. | ||
And I mean, he doesn't talk much, but I just don't want to take the risk. | ||
And then you're sitting on the chair. | ||
You've got to touch the chair. | ||
You gotta pay in cash, they gotta touch cash, and I just don't know if I'd care to do that right now. | ||
So I'm gonna have a bit of a problem. | ||
I'm gonna have to find a new long hairstyle. | ||
Maybe I'll have to figure out... I looked up the other day, Googled, uh, thick, long hairstyle, because my hair's thick, and it usually looks like shit when it gets long. | ||
So I'm gonna have to figure something out. | ||
What to do with all this? | ||
I'm due for a haircut! | ||
I should have gotten one like this weekend, but that's not gonna be on the table, so... | ||
So we'll figure it out. | ||
So we'll figure it out. | ||
I'm coping. | ||
I'm, you know, I'm figuring it out. | ||
I hope you didn't eat meat today. | ||
Today's a casual Friday. | ||
It's also a Lenten Friday. | ||
And I've been remembering, two weeks ago I think I had like a turkey sandwich. | ||
Oh, you know, and people flipped out at me. | ||
Oh, you had a turkey sandwich. | ||
I forgot. | ||
Okay, the sandwich was going bad. | ||
It had been in the fridge for a week. | ||
I paid six dollars for it. | ||
I think there's an exception if there's like, you know, extenuating circumstances like that. | ||
So I go on the stream on Friday afternoon, two weeks ago, and I say, yeah, I had a turkey sandwich, and people are saying, Nick, Nick, it's Friday, it's a luncheon Friday, and you had a turkey sandwich! | ||
I said, oh, I forgot, I didn't even realize, I woke up, I just, you know, it was the first thing I ate, and I said, so I gotta get better. | ||
So I gotta be more conscientious about that. | ||
So I didn't eat any meat today, hope you're not gonna do that either. | ||
I ate all my, got my fill yesterday with the Taco Bell. | ||
Maybe I'll have to make a stop at 1am or so. | ||
Midnight after Friday expires. | ||
But I hope you're playing by the rules! | ||
Gotta play by the rules. | ||
So, that's what's going on in my neck of the woods. | ||
I've been hanging out, I've been vibing. | ||
Some good news, why I hesitate to say this, I'll just say very briefly and simply, some good news on the website front. | ||
So I know I have been telling you for some time that I've been working on this project. | ||
A website that may be an alternative to streaming on DLive. | ||
It might be a backup. | ||
I haven't really decided the course of where things are going exactly yet. | ||
The project, it keeps expanding in scope, which is a good thing. | ||
And we have a lot of resources for this. | ||
But I will just tell you that I got some very good news today. | ||
I was sort of discouraged about the direction of that project because it's a very ambitious thing. | ||
And you'll find out the nature of that probably sooner rather than later, but I got some very good news about that today. | ||
Some very encouraging signs. | ||
So, I can tell you that the America First movement, once this coronavirus stuff ends, you're gonna see the plan really start to take shape. | ||
And that's very exciting. | ||
Not just the site, but a lot of other things. | ||
I can tell you that I am hard at work behind the scenes making a lot of different things happen and they're all kind of interconnected and that makes it difficult because some elements of the project Well, they're all dependent and contingent on other things, so you have to do one thing before you can do other things, and I can explain more about that later on, but lots of big things are happening behind the scenes. | ||
I've been telling you, infrastructure, networks, the groundwork is being laid, that's all happening. | ||
Rest assured that behind the scenes of all these coronavirus shows, which may seem somewhat boring, at least they are to me, big, big things are happening, and it's all very exciting. | ||
I'm very, very optimistic about what's happening with us, with our movement, with the country. | ||
I mean, everything's really going well. | ||
So, it's gonna be a dark show. | ||
The news isn't exactly great today on where we're at with coronavirus, but I just want to give you a little bit of a heads up, and I can't tell you any more details. | ||
So, if I see any super chats saying, can you tell us more, so is the website gonna have, so is it? | ||
If I hear any more questions about that, I'm gonna get really agitated. | ||
I just wanted to give you a little bit of a white pill and say in a completely ambiguous and opaque and simple way that things are going very well behind the scenes. | ||
And that's all you need to know for now. | ||
So I don't want to hear any, Nick, Nick, Nick, so is it gonna have this and what about this and you should do that and X, Y, and Z. I don't want to hear it. | ||
I don't want to hear it! | ||
I don't want to hear it! | ||
I just want to, you know, give you a little bit of Maybe a little bit of peace of mind or hope or encouragement, but that's all I could do right now. | ||
I probably shouldn't have said anything. | ||
I hate saying things because I hate to like over promise and under deliver. | ||
I hate to say, you know, like we did around Valentine's Day. | ||
unidentified
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I said, we're going to have a streaming site ready in a week. | |
And you know, then it was like, oh no, that's like major, major complications and tech problems and delays and things like that. | ||
So I'd rather just wait until everything's set and then tell you. | ||
But I also just want to say, Things are going well. | ||
Just give you a little, little, little sprinkle there of news. | ||
But we're gonna dive in. | ||
We're gonna get into the, wow, the corona, coronavirus. | ||
I can't wait until the day I don't have to say that anymore. | ||
Coronavirus. | ||
Can we just be done with that? | ||
Can we just have something else happen? | ||
Can something else, can one of you, well, I was gonna say, can one of you guys do something? | ||
Please don't end up on the news, but can we, can we, uh, I don't know, can something else happen? | ||
Can we leave our houses now? | ||
Can I go eat in the dining room of McDonald's again? | ||
Can I go and not have to wash my hands after I handle the bag? | ||
Because I'm just like, hello? | ||
Is there any news? | ||
Nope. | ||
But we're gonna jump in. | ||
We'll look at our numbers here. | ||
The daily routine. | ||
The whiteboard... I'll have to get a new whiteboard. | ||
Well, I'm gonna... The studio's coming along, so... Forget it. | ||
It'll work for now. | ||
The problem with this whiteboard is my markers are getting worse, my eraser is getting worse. | ||
This whiteboard is such a pain in the ass, you have no idea, it's like... I can't even begin to tell you some of the, uh... Just annoying things about handling this whiteboard. | ||
It gets warped. | ||
Because the studio's cold, the material warps, so now it's like, bent, and like... | ||
The eraser doesn't work. | ||
Anyway, it's just a lot. | ||
I'm having a lot of problems as you can tell, but we're going to jump in here. | ||
I will bring down our brightness so you can see, you know, a little bit better. | ||
You can see my handwriting there. | ||
A little more clearly. | ||
We don't have the glare. | ||
So we've got our latest numbers from Breaking News Online. | ||
Latest coronavirus numbers worldwide. | ||
We are up to 586,966 cases. | ||
So we're gonna hit 600,000 tomorrow. | ||
We hit 500,000 yesterday. | ||
We will hit 600,000 tomorrow. | ||
We have 6,966 cases. | ||
So we're going to hit 600,000 tomorrow. | ||
We hit 500,000 yesterday. | ||
We will hit 600,000 tomorrow. | ||
And we very well could be up to 700,000 by the time we return from the weekend on Monday. | ||
To give you an idea of how fast, how quickly this thing is spreading. | ||
And how many people are out there that are sick. | ||
How we're discovering new cases. | ||
is We're gaining 100,000 every other day now, which is pretty spooky. | ||
We're up to 105,000 cases in the United States. | ||
For the first time, we're the first country, according to the official numbers, to confirm more than 100,000 cases, which is not good. | ||
And as I said, we logged close to 20,000 new cases just in the last 24 hours. | ||
And you may remember that yesterday we were behind... I'm sorry, we were number one yesterday. | ||
We had just become number one. | ||
But yesterday we had 85,000, I think, and today it's 105,000. | ||
That's a lot of people. | ||
Italy is up to 86,500 cases. | ||
China up to 81,340. | ||
That's a lot of people. | ||
Italy is up to 86,500 cases. | ||
China up to 81,340. | ||
China, by the way, has slipped into third place, you may have noticed. | ||
For the first time, Italy is now second for cases and China is number three. | ||
Spain is at 65,700. | ||
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Germany at 47,600. | |
France, 33,000. | ||
Iran, 32,300. | ||
Switzerland, 11,700. | ||
The United Kingdom, 11,700. | ||
South Korea, 9,332. | ||
And you can see that it's getting really bad even in these other European countries. | ||
3,000. Iran, 32,300. Switzerland, 11,700. The United Kingdom, 11,700. South Korea, 9,332. | ||
And you could see that it's getting really bad even in these other European countries, Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, all between 5,000 and 10,000. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Canada up to 4,000. | ||
Turkey and Portugal close to 4,000 each. | ||
So this thing is really getting around and this side of the board is getting really bad. | ||
You're seeing, you know, the lowest number here is close to 12,000. | ||
Second lowest is 32,000. | ||
I don't think we would have anticipated that the top seven countries would be looking at more than 30,000 cases. | ||
At least You know, it seems implausible if we go back even a month ago, three weeks ago. | ||
So the numbers are getting really bad again. | ||
The United States is going to be the new epicenter for the virus. | ||
Europe is really bad. | ||
I mean, obviously, each European country will not surpass the United States, but all the European countries together, if you add all these up, it's astronomical on the European continent. | ||
But the United States will be by far the country that's worst off. | ||
The single Worst country for the coronavirus, the most cases. | ||
And as I've been saying, there is maybe a little bit of a silver lining about this high number for U.S. | ||
cases. | ||
And the silver lining is that the testing is happening. | ||
We have now logged. | ||
I'll pull up the latest number here for testing. | ||
The United States has now gotten 626,000 tests confirmed. | ||
Confirmed or, you know, confirmed for positive or negative. | ||
So, we look back at where we were just two or three weeks ago and we had no testing capability to speak of in the United States. | ||
I was telling you two, three weeks ago, we had tested five people per million. | ||
And you compare that with China or Italy or South Korea, and they've got hundreds or thousands of people being tested per million. | ||
And to me, that is really, like, miraculous. | ||
To me, that is a really, really incredible feat that not a lot of people are giving the president credit for, which is interesting, at least as far as the media is concerned. | ||
I've been following this stuff since it started. | ||
And I remember the news reports a week ago or two weeks ago, all they were talking about was the testing. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. | |
And how bad the United States was doing with testing. | ||
How we needed to close the gap. | ||
How we fared compared to South Korea. | ||
How we weren't testing as many people per million as South Korea overall. | ||
How our testing capabilities were lower than the average for South Korea on a daily basis. | ||
Last week we saw 22,000 tests in one day and you know today we're now up to 626,000. | ||
That is a pretty rapid increase and I'll also find for you some of the data on the tests per million per state to give you an idea of where we were two weeks ago. | ||
Two weeks ago as I said the United States was testing five people for every 1 million people. | ||
And Italy was testing 800 people for every 1 million people. | ||
And South Korea was testing, I think, thousands for every 1 million people. | ||
The United States was 5. | ||
That was 2 weeks ago. | ||
We are now testing 5,322 per 1 million in New York. | ||
We're testing 4,383 per 1 million in the state of Washington. | ||
We're testing 4,383 per 1 million in the state of Washington. | ||
We're testing close to 2,000 per 1 million in Massachusetts, close to 1,700 per 1 million in California, 2,000 per 1 million in Minnesota, 2,500 per million in Louisiana, 1,600 per million in Tennessee, 3,200 1,600 per million in Tennessee, 3,200 per million in New Mexico. | ||
The numbers across the country are really, really good. | ||
And as I said, whoops. | ||
As I said, two weeks ago it was five. | ||
And now in every state you've got hundreds, and in a lot of states more than a thousand. | ||
In New York, more than 5,000 tests per million. | ||
And that is really, really incredible when you think about it. | ||
And we have to give the President credit. | ||
I've seen a lot of people attacking the President over the relief package or because he didn't act quickly enough on the coronavirus, but I think you have to give him a lot, a lot, a lot of credit on this because if you look at every aspect of the government's response to this virus, it has been swift, it has been effective, we've mobilized it quickly and competently. | ||
You know, whether you look at the stimulus, which we'll get into, $6.2 trillion stimulus. | ||
That's the biggest stimulus by far in history. | ||
And that is one week after the, I think that was one week ago, right? | ||
The Oval Office statement about social distancing and all of this. | ||
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Right. | |
I mean, you saw states going to shelter in place last Friday. | ||
Maybe I think it was two weeks ago that you had or seven or eight days ago that you had 15 days to stop the spread. | ||
The new guidelines were released. | ||
I think they were released last Monday. | ||
And so we really think about how quickly we ramped up. | ||
From a public health point of view and from a financial point of view in response to the crisis. | ||
In two weeks we got testing available across the country. | ||
Biggest testing capability by far in the world. | ||
More tests than any other country has conducted. | ||
And if you're looking at the economy, biggest stimulus in history, $6.2 trillion, a direct cash payment to working people, a bailout for a lot of these affected industries, which is not a great thing, but it is necessary. | ||
A monetary stimulus, the market's picking back up again. | ||
Who knows if that's actually a recovery, if that's actually, or if that's a bull trap, we don't really know. | ||
But, you know, it seems that investors are reassured at least. | ||
And then even with what we'll talk about with a lot of these shortages in the hospitals, the Defense Production Act has been authorized. | ||
And now they're going to get factories from General Motors and other companies to begin producing ventilators. | ||
Across the board, every aspect of the crisis we have ramped up so quickly and effectively and dramatically, the testing, the money. | ||
It's very admirable. | ||
I think the president deserves a lot of credit for that. | ||
And of course they never talk about it. | ||
Like I said two weeks ago, all they were talking about was the testing capability. | ||
And now that that has been solved a hundred times over, now nobody wants to talk about it. | ||
You actually have to search and scour the internet for resources on How many tests are being conducted? | ||
If this was the Obama administration, they would be, you know, this guy would go down as an angel or a saint or something like that, you know. | ||
600,000 tests in eight days! | ||
The miraculous turnaround! | ||
Six trillion dollars! | ||
He saved us, you know, but because it's Trump, they're giving him sort of this even-handed, reluctantly, begrudgingly praising him. | ||
But, um, so, the numbers are getting very, very bad, but there is a silver lining. | ||
That year, Getting 20,000 confirmed cases, while it's bad, the first step to solving the coronavirus crisis, obviously, at least with this seasonal cycle of it, is of course to test everybody, confirm the people that have it, and then quarantine them. | ||
So, in as bad as it is to see how much the virus is transmitted, we need that information as quickly as possible so that we can treat those people, quarantine them, And so insofar as 20,000 people are being added to the list in 24 hours, in a way that's a good thing because it's a testament to the fact that the testing is being conducted, it is effective, and we're getting those people in hospitals, we're getting them off the streets, they're getting treatment, or they're being quarantined. | ||
So... | ||
Kind of good. | ||
The not-so-good numbers are the deaths, though, I will say. | ||
You add 20,000 new cases in the United States, but the other dramatic increases are in deaths in Italy and in Spain. | ||
In Italy, you're nearing 10,000 deaths. | ||
unidentified
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They're at 9,100. | |
000 deaths they're at 9100 they added 1000 deaths in just the last 24 hours and in spain they're up to 5 000 people dead and they added 773 dead in the last 24 hours so in spain and in italy you're seeing some really really brutal numbers as far as death goes as far as critical condition and people that are dying | ||
and that is really the next stage for the united states which we have to mentally prepare for and prepare for from a logistical and policy standpoint is the death that will happen and this is how it happened in italy First you had the epidemic, right, which is it spread all across the country. | ||
And then the next stage was the shutdown and the reaction. | ||
And then the next phase, I guess you could say, the next element of the crisis will be the shortages with the hospitals and the build-up of dead people. | ||
That seems to be how it evolves. | ||
And obviously all these things are sort of happening concurrently. | ||
It's not to say that it's perfectly chronological-like. | ||
You know, first the disease spreads, and then the government responds, and then people start dying. | ||
It's really more like these things all happen concurrently, but the priority, maybe, or what you need to respond to evolves as time goes on. | ||
You know, for in the United States, as an example, the virus has been spreading for a long time. | ||
It's only been in the last two weeks that we've really gotten a hold on that, and done the testing, and saved the economy, and put everybody on lockdown. | ||
Okay, so that's taken care of. | ||
Everybody's on lockdown. | ||
The testing is under control. | ||
We are self... what is the word? | ||
We're social distancing. | ||
We're self-quarantining. | ||
And now the next part that we're going to have to cope with, the next new challenge, the next phase, will be, okay, our hospitals are overflowing. | ||
We don't have enough beds. | ||
We don't have enough ventilators. | ||
If we don't have enough people to treat them, and then you're going to see the people that are dying, that's going to start to rise. | ||
And it seems to me like that's the last phase. | ||
Once you can figure out how to empower hospitals to treat as many people as possible, and once the disease kind of burns through and you have a little bit of control, that will probably be the end of that first cycle. | ||
Now, we don't know when that is. | ||
I don't mean to say, okay, and then we're good. | ||
I mean, we're not going to be good and we're not going to be out of the woods here for a long time, but that seems to me what a full cycle looks like. | ||
Right? | ||
Which is to say, the spread, the reaction, with the testing and with the isolation and quarantining, the dead and the hospital overwhelmed. | ||
And then as the number of new cases stabilizes, as that tapers off and you have some degree of that curve flattening a little bit, then hospitals are less overwhelmed and it seems like then we've entered a period where we've got it under control. | ||
But that's a ways away. | ||
That's months away. | ||
And April is going to be like a bloodbath. | ||
If you have 100,000 people dead in the United States, you're going to have thousands of people dying. | ||
You're going to have hospitals. | ||
Our health care system is not built To treat hundreds of thousands of people with a severe respiratory virus that has no known treatment and has no known cure or vaccine. | ||
It's just not built for that because people that are sick, they can be sick for a long time and they require a lot of them intensive care. | ||
And they require things like ventilators, which requires the FDA to approve them. | ||
You know, one of the big problems with respirators and ventilators and a lot of the technology that you need or the resources that you need to treat and to prevent these diseases is that they are subject to regulations by the government. | ||
So in order to produce these things, it's not like General Motors can just spin them up on any given day normally. | ||
You need to get approval from a regulatory agency and that's why you can't ramp that up as quickly as you can. | ||
The good thing is the president's cutting a lot of the red tape so maybe that'll happen more quickly than it otherwise would have. | ||
But that seems to be the next phase. | ||
So these are our numbers but we'll dive into some other aspects here as well. | ||
We'll talk about the relief package. | ||
We'll get more into the ventilator problem. | ||
We'll talk first about the relief package and What that means for us. | ||
What does that mean for our neets? | ||
What does that mean for our wagees? | ||
Who's gonna get a check? | ||
Who's gonna get their their Trump bucks? | ||
We'll dive into that. | ||
I'll read you a report on this from the New York Times. | ||
And the latest is that it has been passed into law. | ||
So that means you can start your timer, right? | ||
You can look at your calendar and probably expect a check in three weeks. | ||
So this is from the Times. | ||
It says, quote, President Trump on Friday signed into law the largest economic stimulus package in modern American history, backing a $2 trillion measure designed to respond to the coronavirus pandemic. | ||
Under the law, the government will deliver direct payments and jobless benefits for individuals, money for states, and a huge bailout for businesses battered by the crisis. | ||
Mr. Trump signed the measure in the Oval Office hours after the House approved it by voice vote and less than two days after the Senate unanimously passed it. | ||
The legislation will send direct payments of $1,200 to millions of Americans, including those earning up to $75,000. | ||
and an additional $500 per child. | ||
So if you made, according to your 2018 tax returns, if you made up to $75,000 on those, or rather your tax returns, I guess, from 2019, the income you made in 2018, if you made up to $75,000, the income you made in 2018, if you made up to $75,000, you're going to get a check of $1,200 and $500 And Steve Mnuchin said that that will be paid out within three weeks. | ||
unidentified
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I'm going to go to the next one. | |
Three weeks of the passage of the bill, after the passage of the bill. | ||
So we can expect that by, I don't have my calendar for April up yet, so I guess that would be what, April 17th? | ||
Does that sound right? | ||
By April 17th, hopefully all of us $75,000 and under for 2018, we will have our checks in the mail for $1,200 and $500 per child if you've got a big family. | ||
That seems like a boon. - Yeah. | ||
Do you think I count as a freelancer? | ||
I'll have to look into that. | ||
I got laid off by my boss at America First. | ||
weeks and a four-month and hat enhancement of benefits and for the first time will extend the payments to freelancers and gig workers hmm do you think I count as a gig worker do you think I count as a freelancer I'll have to look into that I got laid off by my boss at America first I have to take less hours at America first enterprise maybe I'll maybe I'll apply for you know unemployment or jobless aid I'm | ||
I mean, I've been affected by the coronavirus in some ways, I guess, right? | ||
I'm a freelancer. | ||
I'm a gig worker. | ||
I work a gig. | ||
This is my gig. | ||
I forgot to put our brightness back to where it needs to be. | ||
Okay, there we go. | ||
I have a pretty sick gig on DLive. | ||
Where's my $600 a week for my jobless benefit? | ||
The measure will also offer $377 billion in federally guaranteed loans to small businesses and establish a $500 billion government lending program for distressed companies reeling from the crisis, including allowing the administration the ability to take equity stakes in airlines that received aid to help compensate taxpayers. | ||
It will also send $100 billion to hospitals on the front lines of the pandemic. | ||
So we finally, finally, finally have gotten this bill passed. | ||
And as we've been talking about for the past few weeks, this is the third phase of the relief if you've been following it closely. | ||
We had phase one a couple weeks ago and phase one was free testing and that was paid sick leave and a few other things. | ||
The second bill was an expansion largely of the first phase. | ||
Phase two was a hundred and some billion dollars and they added on to the first one. | ||
This was phase 3 and phase 3 included that 2.1 I'm sorry 2.2 trillion dollars which includes the direct cash payments, the bailout for the affected industries, the jobless benefits, the extension, the enhancement Right. | ||
And then it also included the $100 billion for hospitals. | ||
That's the fiscal aspect of it. | ||
That's phase three is the fiscal part, the $2.2 trillion as well as $4 trillion in monetary stimulus. | ||
Which will come through the Federal Reserve. | ||
That was a part of it. | ||
So you put the $4 trillion in liquidity from the Federal Reserve together with the $2.2 trillion in fiscal stimulus with this Phase 3 relief package. | ||
And that is the total $6.2 trillion. | ||
This is the major relief that was passed today. | ||
But they're saying that they're working on potentially a fourth and a fifth relief package as well. | ||
And so they're going to do two more bills potentially. | ||
At least that's what's planned right now. | ||
Which could have another check for Americans potentially. | ||
And they're talking about some other measures which might go into place. | ||
So we're going to be at it. | ||
You might think this is the end of the relief saga. | ||
But nope. | ||
In two to three weeks we'll be talking about the same thing. | ||
Our daily number of cases we'll be looking at. | ||
Phase four or five on the relief package. | ||
And I'm sure another news conference and Dr. Fauci and all that. | ||
So the saga goes on, but this is very good. | ||
This relief package, in a lot of ways this relief package is bad and people have been showing me a lot of bad things in the bill. | ||
For example, the bill gives hundreds of millions of dollars for refugee and migrant programs. | ||
It gives $25 million for the Kennedy Center and There's a lot of waste in there. | ||
There's a lot of pork in the bill. | ||
Do you know what pork is? | ||
Pork is when you work out an appropriations bill in the House of Representatives and the way that the two parties are able to come to an agreement or the way that a sponsor of a bill is going to gain support for his bill Is they will put in certain things for the other party or for even members of their own party to get them to vote for it. | ||
So, for example, the Democrats came to the negotiating table and they said, look, you need to save the country right now. | ||
You have your guy in the White House and he is going to succeed insofar as he can pass a major fiscal stimulus. | ||
Well, we don't want to give them a political win unless we get something out of it too. | ||
So what we want is money for the refugees and what we want is money for the Kennedy Center and X, Y, and Z. And that's simply how it works. | ||
And a lot of people are bent out of shape about the fact that it's a huge bailout for Wall Street, which I said that yesterday, and the cash payments are not very good, and there's problems in the bill, that it gives money to things that are bad, and there's extra money for other people. | ||
But, you know, honestly, The priority with a bill like this is speed. | ||
It's not a question of can we make the perfect bill. | ||
Frankly, it's not even so much, can we make a great bill? | ||
It's, can we make an adequate bill? | ||
Can we make a bill as quickly as possible, and what can we get in there as quickly as possible? | ||
Because understand, the economic fallout, at least from the coronavirus, is immediate, and it's hard, and it's hard on working people. | ||
This is a very different crisis than other crises. | ||
You look at how many people filed for unemployment last week. | ||
Go and take a look at what that graph looks like. | ||
3.3 million jobless claims yesterday. | ||
If you look at the graph, it's like... | ||
For 20 years, a flat line, and then it goes up vertically 100 feet. | ||
I mean, that's... There was like an unprecedented record of jobless claims that we haven't seen since the Great Depression, that we haven't seen in a very, very long time. | ||
And the fallout from the coronavirus economically is not even like it was in 2008, where banks and insurance companies and major companies are collapsing in the stock market. | ||
It's sort of like a very complicated financial problem. | ||
It's like people can't pay their bills because they can't work, because the places that they work aren't getting revenue, because everybody's been ordered to stay in their houses. | ||
You know, everybody knows that, but think about the very direct and immediate economic effect of suddenly 3.3 million people aren't getting a paycheck, and suddenly 3.3 million people aren't going to be able to pay their bills in the next three weeks. | ||
And so when you're approaching this problem, this economic problem, and that's what it is when you're looking at it from a fiscal point of view, is this is an economic problem. | ||
When you're looking at that, what you have to do is get the money out as quickly as possible. | ||
And you're talking about cash payments. | ||
For example, the president was talking about doing a payroll tax cut. | ||
And he talked about that for a long time a couple weeks ago until he learned, and we all learned, that the effect of a payroll tax cut would not You would not see the impact of that on the economy for six to eight months. | ||
And we don't have six to eight months to provide relief and stimulus to the economy. | ||
We have a matter of maybe one month. | ||
And so Steve Mnuchin said we could get these checks out in three weeks as long as we pass the bill. | ||
And so Democrats understand that. | ||
They understand the urgency. | ||
They understand the speed that is required. | ||
They're not idiots. | ||
And they know that they could basically, within reason, ask for whatever concession they want. | ||
They can't make it too big or too obnoxious because if they did, then the Republicans would object and it wouldn't be a great look. | ||
But they know that within reason, they could get away with a lot in a $6 trillion bill. | ||
There's a lot that can be covered in a $6 trillion bill. | ||
And the urgency, the pressure on this situation, they know they can ask for things. | ||
And the timing that you had to come together to put together a proposal of cash payments and bailouts and so on, it's a very short window of time. | ||
So a lot of people are looking at this stimulus and they're saying, well, this is not ideal. | ||
This is not perfect. | ||
There's $300 million for this in there. | ||
But to me, that's the wrong way to look at it. | ||
Not like I'm a fan of those things. | ||
I'm not a fan of the unnecessary spending or the voice vote on a $2 trillion bill. | ||
And I don't love... I talked about this yesterday. | ||
I don't love that Wall Street got way too much and the working middle class got way too little. | ||
I'm not in love with the bill. | ||
I don't like the bill. | ||
But I also understand that there are other considerations here. | ||
And it's kind of a miracle that this even happened. | ||
Because you think about how we've been in Congress for years. | ||
And we can't get anything done. | ||
Think about all the government shutdowns. | ||
Think about all the last-minute appropriations bills that have had to have been signed at the 11th hour before the government runs out of money and shuts down. | ||
Think about that, right? | ||
Or even last year they had to move the State of the Union ahead a week because the government was shut down for four weeks. | ||
So when I think about how Congress is, and the nature of politics, and the nature of the game these days with this administration, it's kind of a miracle that we got something as good as we did. | ||
That we got something this far-reaching, this dramatic, with the cash payments. | ||
And again, I'm not saying that that's a great bill and it's terrific and perfect or anything like that, but you have to kind of have a glass half-full approach here, and you kind of have to keep in mind there are a lot of constraints and considerations, maybe chief among them, that the president is not the one that writes the bill. | ||
That's maybe the biggest consideration that you have to keep in mind, which is a lot of people look at the relief and they say, oh, this is the president's relief. | ||
And maybe you know this, maybe you don't. | ||
Some people might consider it common sense. | ||
Some people consider this technical. | ||
But the House of Representatives has the power of the purse. | ||
All appropriations bills have to originate in the House of Representatives. | ||
And Nancy Pelosi controls the House of Representatives. | ||
And then it goes to the Senate and they work out a version of the bill. | ||
And then the President signs it. | ||
So, surely the administration gives guidance on the stimulus, the administration gives guidance on the budget, and on appropriations, and on a lot of different legislative efforts. | ||
But fundamentally, a stimulus package is the responsibility of the Congress. | ||
It legally has to originate in the House, which is a Democrat-controlled organ of the government. | ||
So, with all that in mind, this is, number one, primarily the doing of the Congress. | ||
And the president had a lot of say in that and a lot of push and all that, but the president has said for weeks, we need more than $1,200 and we need a big and dramatic stimulus and so on. | ||
Well that's really the best that he could do is say, well this is what I want and this is what I'm pushing for, and he can push the Republican caucus and he can push the Democrats, but legally that's really all he can do is push. | ||
What is he going to say? | ||
I'm going to veto this $6 trillion stimulus because the cash payment needs to be $300 more, and the Congress would call his bluff. | ||
This is just the way the system works. | ||
And I don't love that that's the case, and I don't love the bill, but I think people need to keep in mind that all things considered, a rapid... You're talking about a timeline of a week and a half that we put together a $6 trillion stimulus with direct cash payments. | ||
All things considered, that is a pretty admirable accomplishment. | ||
So, there are things that I don't like about the bill, there are things that I like about the bill, but overall, I think the biggest priority about this relief package was the expediency, the urgency that we got it through as fast as possible, and it was providing that wide variety of relief. | ||
cash payments some bailouts certainly were necessary of certain industries and the liquidity and for the hospitals a lot of that was necessary all of that was touched on so I think it's a good bill And if we have any problems with that we'll have more bills coming down the pike anyway you know fourth and fifth and this thing's not over anytime soon but with this one it was speed and scope and we accomplished both of those things. | ||
So that's the relief bill we're gonna move on to talk about the shortages though this is maybe a rough patch. | ||
If I have a lot of positive things to say about the testing and the relief, the shortages are going to be the next big problem. | ||
This is from the New York Times. | ||
It says, quote, and I know I've been quoting the New York Times extensively over the past week. | ||
I just paid for a subscription the other week. | ||
I know I resisted it for a long time. | ||
I didn't want to do it because I hate giving the media money. | ||
But it's like $1 a week and we needed it to cover the primaries because the New York Times is offering really good primary coverage and also I figure Like, it's just me paying it. | ||
I know people are going to say, you're giving money to your enemy, you're giving money to the media, but it's like a dollar a month is not going to make or break the New York Times, right? | ||
Or the country, or even me. | ||
It's one dollar a week, you know? | ||
And on principle, I objected for a long time and I said, I'm not going to subscribe. | ||
But then I was like, you know what? | ||
Like, they have a really good coverage of the coronavirus. | ||
Every day they've got a really clean UI. | ||
We've got a really clean Like, uh, updates every day, little paragraph. | ||
And the primary coverage has been good, so I've just been exploiting that, so. | ||
I hope I don't get any conspiracy theorists out there. | ||
I'm sort of anticipating that, who are gonna say, Gee, every source Nick's cited for the past two weeks has been New York Times. | ||
Is he getting paid by Jeff Bezos? | ||
No, it's just convenient I have it bookmarked. | ||
I paid a dollar for it, so I might as well use it, right? | ||
Just want to get that out of the way. | ||
If you're scratching your head wondering, why does he keep citing the New York Times? | ||
But this is the report on the shortages. | ||
It says, quote, officials in nearly 200 U.S. | ||
cities, large and small, report a dire need for face masks, ventilators, and other emergency equipment to respond to the coronavirus outbreak. | ||
The United States Conference of Mayors questioned officials in 213 municipalities and found serious shortages that underscore the scope and severity of the crisis more than 90 percent or 192 cities said that they did not have an adequate supply of face masks for police officers firefighters and emergency workers excuse me in addition 92 percent of cities reported a shortage of test kits in 80 | ||
This is pretty bad. | ||
and 85% did not have a sufficient supply of ventilators available to local health facilities. | ||
So this is pretty bad. | ||
This is like almost every city in this conference of mayors from big cities, small cities. | ||
Almost every city in the country does not have the resources they need. | ||
They don't have the resources in the hospitals and even the municipal governments don't have the resources for their emergency workers, police, firefighters, face masks for other government employees. | ||
It says roughly two-thirds of the cities said they had not received any emergency equipment or supplies from their state. | ||
And of those that did receive state aid, nearly 85% said it was not enough to meet their needs. | ||
In total, the conference tabulated that cities need 28.5 million face masks, 24.4 million other items of personal protection equipment, 7.9 million test kits, and 139,000 ventilators. | ||
And this is sort of the foreshadowing for what we're going to see in the coming weeks. | ||
We looked at the numbers a moment ago with Italy, and there are up to 10,000 people dead. | ||
And just a couple of weeks ago we heard rumors about, or reports rather, about hospitals having to decide who gets care and who doesn't, and elderly basically being left to die, and shortages of hospital beds. | ||
This is what's going to happen in virtually every American city in the coming weeks, and we have to prepare for that. | ||
People think that, well, maybe the worst is over as far as the transmission goes or the testing, but maybe the worst part of the pandemic is just on the horizon, and that's going to be the body count. | ||
That's going to be the overwhelming of the health care resources. | ||
And that's the next big challenge to face. | ||
The good news is today the President took some action that might alleviate that. | ||
This is further on in the same report. | ||
It says, on Friday afternoon, President Trump said that he had directed his administration to use any and all authority available under the Defense Production Act to require General Motors to accept, perform, and prioritize federal contracts for ventilators. | ||
He said quote our negotiations with GM regarding its ability to supply ventilators had been productive but our fight against the virus is too urgent to allow the give-and-take of the contracting process to continue to run its normal course. | ||
GM was wasting time. | ||
Today's action will help ensure the quick production of ventilators that will save American lives. | ||
So the good news is a lot of industries are stepping up. | ||
Tesla said they would start making masks. | ||
I think MyPillow said they were going to start making masks. | ||
A lot of different companies are stepping up in given states. | ||
And now General Motors is being ordered by the government to prioritize their contracts for the masks. | ||
And so it looks like we're on top of this one too. | ||
I have to tell you that Every step of the way it seems almost like we're avoiding the worst case scenario because as the situation develops the president responds and mobilizes as quickly as possible and does everything that we need to do, right? | ||
When it was the testing the president was out there with Google and with Roche and with some laboratory company And they said, we've got a plan. | ||
We've streamlined the testing. | ||
We've figured out automatic testing. | ||
We've figured out a survey. | ||
We're going to build drive-thru testing in Walmart parking lots, right? | ||
Now you have 600,000 tests. | ||
And when the economy crashed, the president got together with the major industries and got together with Congress and said, $6 trillion. | ||
And that's in addition to $200 billion that already was passed in the past couple of weeks. | ||
And then as we see these shortages from this conference of mayors, the president says GM is now going to produce face masks, or rather the ventilators, and other companies are going to produce face masks and respirators and other protective equipment. | ||
So it seems like almost as we see hospital shortages of resources increase, we are going to ramp up production on a similar track. | ||
So on the one hand, you've got this very, very severe challenge, which is going to be literally life and death in April. | ||
But at the same time, it seems like the president is mobilizing every available resource. | ||
And it's really incredible to see. | ||
I have to say, this response has vindicated the fact that this guy's a good president, right? | ||
And I said that the other week. | ||
Maybe lost in all the shuffle is the idea that if we had literally anybody else at the helm, this would be an unmitigated disaster. | ||
And this is a disaster, but it would have been unmitigated if we had Hillary Clinton or, like, literally anybody else at the helm, right? | ||
And if you think about what comes down to the most important function of the president, that's to keep his people safe. | ||
He's the chief law enforcement officer. | ||
He's the head of state, the protector of the country. | ||
Maybe that sounds too paternalistic for some, but that's what he is. | ||
He's the national leader. | ||
And in a time like this, I don't think you could really have a better president. | ||
If he had anybody else, it would have been more people dying. | ||
And think about that. | ||
Your vote for who becomes the president, a lot of people might think, It doesn't matter. | ||
Or, if I don't agree with them on policy, then it doesn't matter who wins, if one's a little bit better than the other. | ||
But think about it this way. | ||
If it was somebody else, many, many, many more people would have died. | ||
Thousands more people would have died. | ||
You might have died. | ||
Your parents might have died. | ||
Your grandparents, right? | ||
If it was somebody else. | ||
And so I see this effort that's been underway and we have to give the guy credit. | ||
Gotta give the White House credit. | ||
It's been miraculous. | ||
And I think it's also a testament to the resilience of our country. | ||
In a lot of ways the virus is showing the vulnerabilities of the country, but in other ways it's showing the resilience of the country. | ||
That we have great industry. | ||
Still, even though we've been de-industrializing for 30 years, you still have enough manufacturing and philanthropy and really bold, entrepreneurial type people who are going to step up and manufacture. | ||
People like Mike Lindell, Elon Musk, General Motors, they have to be forced, but they have the capability to produce this kind of stuff and meet the demand. | ||
And we'll see. | ||
I don't want to be too optimistic just yet because we have yet to be tested on this. | ||
And by tested, I mean we've yet to meet the challenge that's still on the horizon. | ||
We've yet to meet the challenge that's still on the horizon. | ||
It's still coming down the road, but I think that I'm very confident about where we are. | ||
It's still coming down the road. | ||
But I think that I'm very confident about where we are. | ||
Looking at everything that I've been seeing over the past two months, or seeing everything that I've seen in the past few months, and these developments today, I think it just goes to show that this guy is doing everything that we can. | ||
You're not seeing this kind of response in Italy. | ||
You're not seeing this kind of response really virtually in any other country. | ||
I don't think any other country can do anything like this. | ||
So I'm proud. | ||
I'm proud of the president. | ||
I'm proud of the country. | ||
And I'm optimistic about where we're headed. | ||
I'm cautiously optimistic given some of what's happening here. | ||
But that being said, even if we have the optimal response to this, you're still going to have thousands dead. | ||
People have to kind of get prepared for that, maybe mentally or emotionally, that you're going to have some big, big problems in the hospitals, and you're going to have a lot of people dying. | ||
And people are going to see that this is not the flu. | ||
Hopefully, we keep the death count under what it was with H1N1 or under what it is for flu season. | ||
What do they say? | ||
50,000 died during flu season? | ||
Seeing what's happening in Italy, it doesn't seem like we're going to breach 50,000 deaths. | ||
That's where we are now. | ||
Who knows what it's going to look like coming down the line, but I almost feel like, based on what I've been hearing and seeing, that the worst-case scenario has been completely avoided. | ||
That's my intuition, and we'll see how it pans out, but my gut feeling, just based on everything I've been reading and hearing over the past few months and as I've seen the situation evolve, It seems like the worst case scenario that we were talking about three weeks ago has been decidedly averted. | ||
Because three or four weeks ago they were talking about 80% of the population gets the virus and like millions of people die. | ||
And the numbers are getting bad, frankly. | ||
100,000 cases is nothing to sneeze at. | ||
But the number of new cases in Italy appear to be stabilizing a little bit. | ||
And they've got 10,000 dead, which is tragic. | ||
But if our numbers begin to stabilize and we're able to treat a lot of people, then a million seems like it's out of the question at this point. | ||
But who knows? | ||
I mean, we'll have to wait and see how it goes. | ||
But my intuition says that this president, because of his leadership, we might have averted the worst worst case scenario. | ||
Doesn't mean it's not going to be bad, but it doesn't seem to me that it'll be as catastrophic as it may otherwise could have been. | ||
So that's where we're at right now. | ||
We're going to keep an eye on all that. | ||
More of the same. | ||
The name of the game now is ventilators and respirators. | ||
That's what we are looking out for. | ||
And the respirators are, from what I understand, the respirators are the masks. | ||
They are a particular mask that deals with small particles. | ||
They use the respirators for construction. | ||
They use them for There's a medical application for those obviously and the reason that you use the respirator as opposed to a surgical mask or a cloth mask is the respirator seals with your face and you breathe through it and it filters out all particles. | ||
Whereas if you have a face mask you know if you've got particles or droplets rather in the air and you're breathing I guess they find a way around or through | ||
The fabric through that that you know whatever the membrane of that but the respirator blocks it and you need that for medical personnel you need that for firefighters police people that need to do their jobs when they're dealing with sick people and they can't get sick right and then the ventilators are pumping oxygen I mean they're they're essentially breathing for people that cannot breathe once somebody gets in the hospital I just a clarification if you're not following the terminology the ventilator from what I understand | ||
If you have a severe case of the coronavirus and you're struggling to breathe, the ventilator does the work of the breathing for you. | ||
It pumps oxygen into your lungs, it takes out the carbon dioxide, and that's required in severe, severe cases when you have people that are, I mean, from what I hear, even healthy people, the struggle to breathe is really, really intense if you have a severe case of the virus. | ||
And correct me if I'm wrong. | ||
That's how I've been using the words. | ||
I hope I'm getting those right. | ||
Right, that's the respirator. | ||
Right, and that is the vent line. | ||
I'm just going to double check. | ||
I don't look it up, but I'm like 99% sure that's what it is. | ||
So there you go. | ||
That's your terminology. | ||
Those are going to be the two key words as this situation unfolds over the weeks is looking at the ventilators, respirators, masks, and just even surgical masks for the general public and for everybody else. | ||
Hospital beds, things like that. | ||
That's the next phase is now everybody's Getting tested, they're getting confirmed, and then they're getting treated. | ||
They're getting put in hospitals. | ||
Hospitals are filling up. | ||
Resources are being utilized. | ||
And, uh, that'll be the next big challenge. | ||
But, we're gonna move on and take a look at the Super Chats. | ||
We'll see what you guys are saying about all this. | ||
All this stuff. | ||
More of the same! | ||
More of the same. | ||
Let me, uh, let me take a little sip of water here. | ||
My mouth is getting a little dry. | ||
We'll take a little sip and then we'll dive in here. | ||
I see we're having some trouble with the mods again in the live chat, you know. | ||
So, so it goes, right? | ||
Sip? | ||
People are saying in chat, sip? | ||
sip streaming is so ridiculous you know i'm doing this show it's like oh i'm gonna take a sip of water a hundred people in chat sip sip drink department hello hello sip department sip check right like i don't know there's just something uh sib something funny about that i don't know why slurp sip I don't know. | ||
I don't know what compels people to watch the show and then literally just like... Something to that effect, right? | ||
unidentified
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Just like needless, like, commentary. | |
Sip. | ||
Why? | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
I don't understand. | ||
Why? | ||
You know, I'll be doing the show. | ||
I'll like cough. | ||
Everybody in chat. | ||
unidentified
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Cough? | |
Cough department? | ||
Cough, right? | ||
Hydration. | ||
unidentified
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Somebody put some chat hydration. | |
I'm gonna get in for another slip here. | ||
here or another sip. | ||
It's awkward with a show like this because there's nothing else to do. | ||
Normally in literally any other show that exists... | ||
You have, like, guests, or you have graphics, you have a video, a transition, something that you could play, so it's like, okay, you know, I can blow my nose, get a sip of water, take a piss, you know? | ||
Like, you watch some of these radio shows, and it's like five minutes of content, and then three minutes of commercial, and then ten minutes of content, and then five minutes of commercial, and this show, it's just like three hours, and it's just literally me behind the desk, right? | ||
I'm the only dynamic element on the screen. | ||
So... Yeah, Marco Rubio check. | ||
All right, all right. | ||
We're gonna dive into the Super Chats though. | ||
We'll see. | ||
Michael says, capping off the birthday with another great show. | ||
Well, thanks, buddy. | ||
Happy birthday. | ||
Happy birthday. | ||
unidentified
|
Hope you have a good birthday, pal. | |
Seek says, Nick owns at least one Beretta for sure. | ||
I'm not gonna comment on my Arsenal. | ||
I don't know why that's anybody's business. | ||
Justin says, Uncle died today. | ||
Smoking caught up to him. | ||
Big F. Hey, sorry to hear that, man. | ||
unidentified
|
That really sucks. | |
Big F in chat for Justin KG and his uncle. | ||
I am very, very sorry to hear that. | ||
That's not fun, right? | ||
But that's what happens with the smoking, right? | ||
That's why I never smoke, right? | ||
Let that be a lesson. | ||
I know it's not, you know... | ||
That's not like it's not common knowledge, but I see that all the time. | ||
People are out there smoking cigarettes, and I'm thinking, did you not pay attention in grade school when they told you about? | ||
And some people say with cigarettes it'll build up your tea or something. | ||
I mean, I guess that's true, but why don't you just eat cabbage? | ||
Why don't you just do red light therapy or something? | ||
Why do you need to do something that'll destroy your lungs? | ||
But sorry to hear that, my friend, praying for you. | ||
Hope you're doing okay. | ||
Let me know if you need anything. | ||
I know we're connected on Discord there. | ||
Q Boyd. | ||
Justin's a good fellow. | ||
I met him in person. | ||
This guy was so smiley and just such a... | ||
What I love about the Groypers, everybody that I meet from my show is just such a positive energy, and I don't mean to be like, you know... | ||
I'm not one to shout so many compliments, and especially not inauthentic comments or insincere comments, rather, but I met this Justin guy, and I saw him at the National File event, and then he was at the Harry's bar, and, you know, he's just such a cheerful, just like a good energy. he's just such a cheerful, just like a good energy. | ||
You can tell these are good people. | ||
You can tell right away. | ||
And you all know what I'm talking about. | ||
You get a sense just on people's demeanor and by their expression and physiognomy to an extent and how they talk. | ||
And Justin, and I met so many people. | ||
Shallot, Zoomer, Hedge, who else? | ||
Zoomer, Nat, all the different Groyper guys. | ||
Just all really remarkable people. | ||
Nice person. | ||
That's how it goes. | ||
I guess everybody has a day like that. | ||
Sorry to hear that, man. | ||
Hope you're doing okay. | ||
Cuboid says Wuhan virus spread linked to cuboid conjuring. | ||
I don't know. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
The cuboids must not be pleased with the virus because it is seriously challenging them. | ||
It's seriously threatening their precarious hold on world affairs. | ||
Dallas Groyper says, sorry about your uncle, Justin KG. | ||
Prayers up. | ||
Yeah, definitely. | ||
Racist Incels says, great show tonight. | ||
Powerful monologue. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Okay, can our mods like... I don't know what's going on with the mods. | ||
Are the mods being too intense? | ||
Or is the chat being unruly? | ||
I don't understand. | ||
I can't... I don't watch the chat, so I have no idea if the mods are going crazy, if they're over modding, or if the chat is just daring them. | ||
I have no idea, but I just hope the moderators will exercise some good judgment. | ||
I'll have to put some rules. | ||
I'll work on it this weekend. | ||
Maybe I'll draft chat rules. | ||
Some guidelines for the moderators, that way everybody's on the same page. | ||
Because I think the problem is there's a disconnect between what I think is appropriate, what the moderators think is appropriate, and what the chat thinks is appropriate. | ||
Because you have people in the chat that'll be like, oh, I said this one thing and I got a permanent timeout, you know, and I didn't know or... | ||
It's something that the moderator over, you know, maybe they're over enforcing. | ||
So maybe I'll write some rules this weekend for the channel. | ||
I'll put it in that about section and people can read through them and the moderators can read them and familiarize themselves. | ||
And if you do this, you get this penalty. | ||
If you do that, you get that penalty. | ||
And now everybody's on the same page and nobody can complain, right? | ||
That's how it goes, right? | ||
Gumby says, howdy Knickers, howdy. | ||
Bobby says, naked people farting on each other. | ||
Okay. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks for that, Bobby D. This guy, he's given Ninjettes. | ||
Who has, I don't understand who is out there that can afford to send multiple Ninjettes during the coronavirus, in a given, any given week for that matter, but then also be saying, But then also include that, right? | ||
Who has the kind of money where it's like, oh, you know, here's, here's, you know, a few hundred dollars this week during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, but then they're also attaching to the chat, something like that. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini, I guess. | ||
Thanks for that insightful comment. | ||
Well, thank you so much for the Ninjagini, and thanks for the kind words. | ||
Really glad to hear that. | ||
And I'm glad you are a former atheist progressive. | ||
I love to hear when people make those big transitions, you know. | ||
Not to say that I don't appreciate people that are Trump supporters, or right-wing, or maybe former alt-right, or dissident right, but I think there's something to be said about how good the show is, or how good the messaging is, rather, that you can have people that make it all the way from, you know, they don't believe in anything on the show, to they come full circle. | ||
So that's great to hear. | ||
But thanks for the kind words. | ||
Glad you liked the show. | ||
Giants says, did you watch the 2008 Star Wars The Clone Wars show? | ||
No, but I saw the movie. | ||
The movie came out in 2008 and I saw that with my mom in 2008. | ||
My dad took me to Toys R Us at midnight. | ||
They had a big blowout toy sale when that movie came out back in 08. | ||
I remember they had like a midnight and midnight they opened and all the you know all the new toys came out at Toys R Us and we waited in line and we bought a bunch of stuff and Then like that weekend me and my mom saw the movie fond memories But no, I don't think I really watched the TV show too much. | ||
I don't like the CGI animation It just doesn't look right Something about especially like a fighting show. | ||
It just looks stupid to me and Dallas Gropers says you can tell that celebs haven't had their adrenochrome in a few weeks. | ||
LMAO, they all look terrible. | ||
You think that's what it is? | ||
You think QAnon? | ||
QAnon is right. | ||
The adrenochrome supply is tainted and now these celebrities are withering away before our eyes. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I guess that's one explanation, right? | ||
Maybe it's just because they're not wearing makeup, I imagine. | ||
Serena says, when it comes to leading a political movement for young people, you're a strategic genius. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
And I agree. | ||
But I don't know why you have to qualify that by saying, well, when it comes to this, why can't you just say I'm a strategic genius? | ||
I think I'm basically just a strategic genius. | ||
I mean, I'll take it. | ||
I'll take it. | ||
I appreciate the compliment. | ||
But what are you implying? | ||
Are you implying that when it comes to other things, I'm an idiot? | ||
Is that what you're trying to say? | ||
Nah, I'm just kidding. | ||
I'm kidding. | ||
Just kidding. | ||
But thanks. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks for the compliments. | ||
It's true. | ||
It's true. | ||
I am a pretty brilliant guy. | ||
Just trying my best. | ||
Holy Servant says, don't be a cutie pie. | ||
Trump today, lol. | ||
Yeah, I saw that. | ||
Pretty funny. | ||
Satirical Man with the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks a lot, big guy. | ||
Big John says, the real quarantine is the groipers on twitter.com. | ||
Not sure what you mean by that. | ||
SpicyLeaf says, trust the plan! | ||
And it's three Ninjaginis and then a Ninjet! | ||
Wow! | ||
Thank you so much, SpicyLeaf! | ||
Big, big donation happening in chat. | ||
Thanks a lot, man. | ||
SpicyLeaf, I think that's maybe a new guy? | ||
I don't, I, I, vaguely sounds familiar, but I think he might be a new chatter. | ||
Thanks very much. | ||
Thank you very much for the Ninjet, the Ninjagini. | ||
Very much appreciated. | ||
We're having a big week on this show. | ||
Last week, or a couple weeks ago, was like, eh, it was like so-so. | ||
And this week, it's like, sheesh, they want to put me over the edge. | ||
They want me to defeat PewDiePie. | ||
Let's get a check on that, shall we? | ||
Let's just do a double check, see where we are. | ||
It's probably going to happen next week or in two weeks. | ||
At the rate at which we're going, let me see what we're at tonight. | ||
Yeah, looks like we are imminently going to catch PewDiePie, and surely we will overtake him by the end of April. | ||
At the very, very latest. | ||
Seems like maybe much sooner than that. | ||
So, that'll be a big day! | ||
Thanks a lot for everybody helping me get along there in this week. | ||
Embro, Maxi Bro changed his name to Embro. | ||
I don't know if I like that name better. | ||
Maxi Bro is, you know, it sounded maybe feminine because it's Maxi, but Embro is kind of like difficult on the tongue. | ||
Embro. | ||
I don't know if I love that, but anyway, he says pee pee poo poo. | ||
Well, thanks for the diamond. | ||
Pat Mance has ever heard of Otto Skorzeny? | ||
Very interesting read. | ||
No, I haven't, but I will look that up. | ||
Maybe I'll give that a read, I guess. | ||
Oh, yeah, never mind, actually. | ||
Maybe not. | ||
Hicks says, would you like a 9900K CPU on me? | ||
I don't know what that means, but sure, yeah, sure, I'd love one. | ||
My PO box is down below on the about section. | ||
Or you could shoot me an email to discuss it, to talk about it. | ||
I don't really know anything about computer specs. | ||
Is that like a really good component? | ||
I genuinely have no idea. | ||
Let me pull up... I'm not going to waste everybody's time looking at mine, but... I don't even know what kind of... What is that? | ||
A CPU? | ||
I don't know what CPU I have. | ||
Let me... I could pull it up quickly, I guess. | ||
I have an AMD Ryzen 5 1600 six core processor. | ||
Is that a CPU? | ||
Is that like the same thing? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I probably sound like a real dummy. | ||
It's crazy good, they say. | ||
say it's crazy good. | ||
So yeah, I have no idea, but just, I don't know what that means. | ||
Speak English, they say. | ||
Ryzen 5, let's see. | ||
9900K and Nick probably doesn't even have a computer that could utilize it. | ||
What does that mean? | ||
What do you mean I don't have a computer? | ||
What is that supposed to mean? | ||
unidentified
|
Why? | |
What is that like? | ||
What do you need? | ||
Send me, you know what, just shoot me an email. | ||
Explain it to me like I'm an idiot. | ||
Explain it to me like I'm James Alsup, okay? | ||
Explain it to me like I'm a retarded idiot. | ||
And we'll be in touch. | ||
njfuencesblog at gmail.com. | ||
But I appreciate it. | ||
I just have no idea what that means. | ||
But thanks a lot. | ||
Waffle says my mom is in the hospital might have a might have Corona. | ||
Sorry to hear that big guy prayers prayers for semen waffle You know, that's... I don't know. | ||
The name is really dissonant with the message, but I'm sorry to hear that. | ||
Hope she's okay. | ||
Yeah, that's probably right. | ||
unidentified
|
Yep. | |
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Yeah, that's probably right. | ||
Drew Bruce says, You know, honestly, we didn't even really play dodgeball. | ||
We played dodgeball in grade school, like in elementary school, maybe like up to fourth grade. | ||
And then I noticed that we just stopped playing it. | ||
We never played dodgeball in middle school. | ||
I don't believe. | ||
Maybe we did. | ||
We certainly didn't play it ever in high school. | ||
I think we might have played it once or twice in middle school. | ||
And really the only time we played it regularly was in grade school. | ||
They would pass out these foam balls. | ||
These like foam squishy balls. | ||
And I don't know, when I was seven years old, I don't really remember. | ||
I mean, I guess I was pretty good. | ||
I would usually Stay in pretty long. | ||
I was good at dodging. | ||
I wasn't a great thrower, because I was like retarded. | ||
I had no hand-eye coordination. | ||
I mean, I had a good arm. | ||
I had a pretty strong arm when it came to baseball or dodgeball, but I just didn't really have the technique down. | ||
See, you have to understand that when you're somebody like me, you just... | ||
Your brain... I don't know. | ||
Maybe I'm just retarded, but I think it's like my brain is faster than my body at times, or maybe it's just disconnected. | ||
Maybe that's a different way to say it. | ||
Maybe a nice way to say it is that my brain is simply too fast. | ||
Another way to say it is that my brain is completely disconnected from my body. | ||
Because I would just get so hyped up, and then I'd end up just like whipping it into the ground, you know? | ||
I'd get real excited, I'm gonna chuck it really hard, and then I'd just end up, you know, totally fucking up the throw. | ||
When I focused on my technique, you know, and I... and I did the fundamentals then, I had a good arm and I was precise, but... I would just get overexcited and just wanna, you know, whip it, and... I'd just goof it, because I had really bad sort of like, you know... It's not so much hand-eye coordination so much as it is like... | ||
You know, brain-body coordination, so to speak. | ||
More just like a physical intelligence, which I never had. | ||
So, uh, so as far as it went in grade school, I mean, I was probably average, but, um, we never played it in high school, probably because of this, like, politically correct stuff, like, can't play dodgeball because it's, like, dangerous and it leads to bullying, so... We never played anything like dodgeball in high school. | ||
We just did, like, retarded sports. | ||
You know, kind of lame, but yeah, that's my answer. | ||
Waffle says, Docs can't give pain meds for Corona, it may kill. | ||
Yeah, doesn't ibuprofen worsen the virus actually? | ||
Boomer says, thoughts on the French Revolution? | ||
Not good. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, chicken on a raft says, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
St. | |
Basil says, the placebo effect works in both directions. | ||
Not sure what you mean by that. | ||
Juana says chicken on a raft says thoughts on thoughts. | ||
Okay. | ||
Wood Colony says casual Friday check and is there any chance we can hear a funny story from your Model UN days? | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
You know because it's a Ninjagini I'm going to try not to be you know mildly annoyed by that question. | ||
I hate when people just ask me for like you have a funny Tell me a funny story. | ||
I don't know why I hate that so much. | ||
It's one thing if you're asking about something specific, but it's another thing if you're like, tell me, tell me a story. | ||
Tell me, make me laugh. | ||
Make me laugh with a funny story. | ||
I mean, I don't know. | ||
It's so hard for me to just kind of like draw on stories just with free, just kind of like, Freely without any kind of association. | ||
It's one thing if you're having a conversation and somebody offers something up and it's like Oh, you know, it makes me think of something that I can relate to that It's another thing just be like, you know come up with something. | ||
Tell me the your favorite frame in a movie That was the other day. | ||
What's the most beautiful frame in a movie, dude? | ||
I don't know you think I categorize in my head like beautiful movie frames So a funny story from Model UN Well, I can think of a few funny stories. | ||
One time, when I first became a freshman, it was very funny. | ||
This might make some of you guys laugh. | ||
When I was a freshman, and I first started in the program, I got one of the worst assignments that you could get. | ||
They gave me, like, Indonesia in the World Health Organization. | ||
That's, like, the worst. | ||
And that was the World Health Organization. | ||
How many people had even heard of that before the coronavirus? | ||
Probably not many people. | ||
But my freshman year of high school, my second conference, I think, I had to get partnered up with somebody, and we were Indonesia in the World Health Organization. | ||
And I was, like, I'm, like, one of the best delegates here, even as a freshman. | ||
And they gave me this shitty assignment. | ||
And years later, I talked to the upperclassmen. | ||
We were more friendly at that point. | ||
And they said, yeah, we totally just gave you the worst position because you had a Mexican last name and we assumed that you were just some like... We assumed that you were just some Mexican kid who like wasn't gonna take it seriously and whatever. | ||
And I was like, wow. | ||
And the irony to me is so rich because all those people, by the way, have like unfriended me on Facebook and they don't want to talk to me because I'm racist and so on. | ||
And they prided themselves on being like these liberals and whatever. | ||
And here they were. | ||
They saw my name on the roster without meeting me, Nicholas Fuentes, and I'm sure they assumed I was some dark You know, thick black hair, Hispanic kid, you know, maybe some, I don't know, who is gonna show up and be some, you know, whatever. | ||
I have a lot of good stories from those days. | ||
Maybe we'll save that for a gamer stream. | ||
guys in the in the history of the club but um so that was kind of funny to me and there is a little bit of a rich irony i have i have a lot of good stories from those days maybe we'll save that for a gamer stream i feel it's almost like self-indulgent to tell stories from high school do you know what i mean like i don't know Telling stories to you just like that, it just seems... Unless there's a really, really funny story, I just feel like a jerk telling stories. | ||
Maybe I'll save it for a gaming stream when we're just hanging out, you know? | ||
But yeah, I've got some funny stories, some very, very good times from back in the day. | ||
And that's really where I gained a political consciousness, was Model UN. | ||
You guys gotta understand that before... And you gotta think about somebody like me. | ||
Where does somebody like me come from? | ||
Think about me. | ||
Where does somebody like me come from? | ||
Where do you get some guy? | ||
When I started this show I was like 18. | ||
Where do you get this guy who's 18 years old and is doing this show and he's got all these strong opinions and he's pretty good at what he does. | ||
He's kind of like the best at what he does. | ||
Where does a guy like that come from? | ||
You gotta understand that before I was me on America First, before I was Nicholas J. Fuentes on America First, I was Nicholas J. Fuentes, the model UN delegate. | ||
Like, even in high school I had sort of like a... | ||
I had like an infamy in high school and on the Model UN circuit and in speech team and all the different activities I did. | ||
Even back then I had like a reputation as like kind of a menace, kind of like, I don't know. | ||
So, you know, I don't think I was like a nerd per se, but definitely was like a personality that I was very well known. | ||
Everyone in the school knew me. | ||
I was kind of like a minor celebrity. | ||
I remember I would go to like restaurants or stores and people would be like, "Oh my gosh, You're Nick Fuentes, right? | ||
My right hand to God, I swear. | ||
I'm not making this up. | ||
And it wasn't like, oh, it's that guy. | ||
No, it's like, oh my gosh, you're Nick Fuentes. | ||
Hey, it's like cool to meet you. | ||
I swear, because I have like this reputation. | ||
Because you got to imagine, I'm the same person now. | ||
I mean, I'm a little bit more experienced and a little bit wiser and everything. | ||
But I was the same person now that I was in high school. | ||
And I was in a school of maybe 4,000 people, and I was kind of like a local, like, celebrity. | ||
I kind of still am, to an extent. | ||
So you gotta remember that back in the day, when I was going to Model UN, I would go to these conferences, and people would meet me and they'd be like, who the fuck is this guy? | ||
Because I'd give these speeches that were like, blow everybody out of the water, and I would do stuff that nobody else would do, and I remember when I would go into some of these conferences, | ||
Uh, I would, I would literally go, I would walk inside the committee room, these conferences, some of them would last like three or four days, and you'd go into the first session of committee on the first night, and people would literally, I would watch their faces, I would walk into the room, and people's faces would drop, and they would say, aw, shit! | ||
I'm in a committee with Nick Fuentes from Lions Township. | ||
I'm never gonna win, you know? | ||
I swear, I remember there was gossip. | ||
People would be like, oh yeah, Nick's in my committee, so I'm really gonna have a hard time. | ||
So, one guy called me the devil one time. | ||
He was like on the verge of tears. | ||
During a moderated caucus, no less, he called me the devil. | ||
Completely inappropriate. | ||
He completely broke decorum. | ||
We were in the Russian Security Council, and we were all around the roundtable, we were in the Situation Room for the National Security Council, and this one delegate, who I had just been bullying relentlessly, man, I was really... and this guy, I just like... that was the second time I made someone cry in Model UN. | ||
And he was like on the verge of tears and he's like, this guy is like the devil, you know, he's just not playing fair and blah, blah, blah. | ||
And the chair banged the gavel and said, Decorum, I, you know, I raised my placard right away and I said, yeah, point of personal, I think it was a point of order, point of order, you know, this guy's clearly attacking me. | ||
I forget now if it was a point of order or a point of personal privilege or whatever, but the chair was like, yeah, you know, knock it off. | ||
This other time. | ||
I don't want to get too into this story because it's kind of like a long story and the details are kind of unimportant. | ||
But basically the way that it works in Model UN is the objective is you're in a committee, you're in a body, whether that's the General Assembly or the World Health Organization or the Economic and Finance Committee, and the end game of the conference, the goal, is to pass resolutions. | ||
Resolutions are like bills, it's like legislation. | ||
The House of Representatives passes resolutions. | ||
The Senate passes resolutions. | ||
A resolution is like a non-binding promise, basically. | ||
You resolve to do something as a body. | ||
And with a General Assembly, all they can do is pass resolutions. | ||
The Security Council passes directives. | ||
A directive does have the weight of law, like theoretically. | ||
It's enforceable. | ||
A resolution, which is all a General Assembly can pass, just says, we as a body resolve to do this. | ||
And it's like a suggestion. | ||
So the endgame of these committees, the General Assemblies, is passing resolutions. | ||
And the way that you win in Model UN is you sponsor a resolution. | ||
There can only be like three or four sponsors for any resolution. | ||
You write one, you sponsor one, and you get it passed. | ||
That's how you win. | ||
To simplify it. | ||
And I remember I was in this very competitive committee. | ||
It was between me and this one other guy. | ||
I was France. | ||
He was... | ||
Cuba? | ||
I forget what country he was from. | ||
I was France and he was some other country. | ||
I think he was Cuba. | ||
And we had been co-sponsors on the first resolution that passed, and it was a very laborious process. | ||
The first resolution was on, I think, like economic development, and we came to this really grand, it took a long time, it was a super long resolution, we had to negotiate on this, lots of unmoderated caucuses, it took a long time, and we finally passed it. | ||
And it was maybe like the third day of the conference, or the second day, And in my mind, my thought process was this. | ||
If the judge or the chair is deciding who wants to win, well, you see two delegates who have spoken a lot and they did everything and they both sponsored a resolution that passed. | ||
In my mind, we're tied. | ||
I said, so what do we have to do is I have to sponsor the next resolution and get it passed, and he shouldn't. | ||
That way, it's obvious in the mind of the chair who wins and who doesn't. | ||
The guy that sponsored two wins over the guy that sponsored one. | ||
So the second topic was on the environment, and everybody agreed on the environment. | ||
The whole committee, they all agreed on every provision in the resolution. | ||
And so what I did is I wrote something up, and Cuba was a sponsor on it, and it was me and him were sponsors. | ||
So what I did, and I was like, ah, shit, we're both sponsoring the second resolution, the only one that's going to pass. | ||
And I said, you know, if we both pass two resolutions, well then it's a coin flip as to who's going to get the gavel, who's going to win first place. | ||
So what I did is, I brought on board two people from my school to be the other co-sponsors. | ||
I brought on board two of my friends who went to my school. | ||
They were different countries, but they came on board as sponsors. | ||
So we ended up having four sponsors on the bill, and one of them was me, two of them were people from my school, and one of them was my rival, Cuba. | ||
So we pulled him aside in the hall, and if you have a majority of the sponsors, you can kick off other sponsors. | ||
A majority of the sponsors can make decisions about the paper. | ||
So we brought him into the hall right before it passed, and we said, uh, you're off the resolution. | ||
We made up some completely nonsensical reason. | ||
We were like, we just don't think our values align. | ||
We just don't think it's, like, a good look. | ||
Like, we don't want to have you on our resolution. | ||
It's just not gonna work. | ||
And he was arguing and saying, like, that doesn't make any sense. | ||
Like, I agree. | ||
We agree on everything. | ||
Everyone agrees on everything. | ||
We're all going to be sponsors and it's going to pass. | ||
And he was right, but we were like, nah, we just don't think it's going to work. | ||
He can't be on the resolution. | ||
And I swear, he actually cried. | ||
He was like, you know, that's just like not fair. | ||
I know you guys want to win and everything, but that's not right. | ||
You can't do this. | ||
And he went and literally cried to everyone else in the committee and said, like, They kicked me off the resolution and they're being mean. | ||
And all the girls in the committee rallied behind him and they wrote the exact same resolution. | ||
And they were like, we're going to have a resolution that doesn't have him on it. | ||
We're going to have a resolution that doesn't have that guy on it because he's a jerk. | ||
And the chair ended up being like, this is ridiculous, you have to fuse the resolutions together. | ||
And I reluctantly put him back on as a sponsor and we fused the resolutions. | ||
And then I got no award. | ||
Because the chair was like, you're a jerk, and the point of this committee was consensus building, and all you wanted to do was win, so they didn't even give me an award! | ||
I was by far and away the best delegate, they didn't give me an award because I was like, too mean or something. | ||
I remember the first day I came there, this girl came up to me. | ||
I was like leading the conversation in an unmoderated caucus. | ||
I was basically governing the whole committee. | ||
And this girl came up. | ||
She came into the fold. | ||
And she's like, um, you know, you're, you're like, you think you're running everything. | ||
You need to stop bossing everyone around. | ||
And I was like, you need to shut your mouth. | ||
She was representing Afghanistan. | ||
I was like, why don't you shut your mouth? | ||
You're like, not even a country. | ||
You're basically a colony of the United States. | ||
Why don't you go sit over there? | ||
unidentified
|
And everybody was like, Dude, like, that was not cool. | |
That was uncalled for. | ||
And I'm like, sorry, sorry, sorry. | ||
Okay, okay. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's, you know, let's get back to it. | |
Anyway, so you wanted a story. | ||
I don't know if that's funny to you or not. | ||
That's funny to me. | ||
I think a lot of people, these stories just sound like nerd stuff. | ||
It just sounds like lame. | ||
But I got a big kick out of it. | ||
I had a lot of fun. | ||
It was just fun. | ||
It was just fun. | ||
Good times. | ||
If you're into politics, it's a blast. | ||
So there's your Model UN stories. | ||
The glory days. | ||
Glory days! | ||
I look back on that. | ||
Glory days, y'all. | ||
The old days of the competition, back when I was a competitor. | ||
Could you imagine being in high school and, you know, you had to compete with me in Model UN? | ||
You would not fare well, that I can tell you. | ||
Yeah, but that girl. | ||
There was like one other incident like that where I just totally went off on somebody. | ||
That's the thing. | ||
You have to wear a mask, essentially, because if you really show... Look, I mean, let's be real. | ||
If you want to do anything in the world, you have to be kind of like a terrible person. | ||
And I don't mean a terrible person like a bad person, per se. | ||
I just mean you need to be terrible in the proper sense of the word. | ||
You need to be terrifying. | ||
You need to be a terror. | ||
You need to be a terror. | ||
You need to possess the kind of drive and the intensity that scares people. | ||
And that is upfront and rude and coarse sometimes. | ||
That's how you just have to be. | ||
And I know it's like Model UN is like a nerd thing. | ||
But, you know, there are times in high school I would take off the mask and people would say, You're like, you're kind of a dick. | ||
You know, you're a very mean person. | ||
But that's what you have to do, especially in a competition. | ||
You have to do whatever it takes to win. | ||
And sometimes, that was my problem in Model UN, is I was too much of a schemer. | ||
I didn't quite know yet how to kind of be tactful, how to be patient with people. | ||
Because back in the day, if I was impatient, I would just The clause would come out, you know, and you would see kind of a different side. | ||
So, maybe you see that in these super chats sometimes, although to a lesser degree. | ||
So, there were times then when I would just really, you know, go off the goop and I would have to... There was one time when I was partnered up with this guy who was much bigger than me. | ||
We were a double delegation. | ||
We were the United States... No, we were the United Kingdom and the Security Council. | ||
and there is one occasion where this guy was really screwing us over so what we plan to do is we said we should just physically intimidate this guy because my partner he did rugby and he was like a big big like a thick guy Tall. | ||
Thick. | ||
I mean, he was just an absolute unit. | ||
And so me and him, we were a team. | ||
We were a double delegation from the same school, obviously. | ||
And the US delegation was screwing us over. | ||
They were from a rival school. | ||
They were just doing this really underhanded gay shit. | ||
So we conspired and we said, why don't we just physically intimidate this guy? | ||
You're bigger than him. | ||
This guy should not be fucking with us the way he is. | ||
So what we did is I went up to the chair and created a diversion. | ||
I went up to the front of the room and like occupied their attention. | ||
And in the meantime, my partner came just sailing down the aisle. | ||
And just, like, blasted into this guy and sent him right onto the ground. | ||
It was the funniest thing I ever saw. | ||
unidentified
|
And everybody in the front row was like, like, oh, what happened? | |
What happened? | ||
And my friend was like, oh, oops, like, I think I bumped into you, but... | ||
It was so funny because I was literally creating a diversion for the chair and I saw out of the corner of my eye, I saw this guy just plowing through the aisle, coming full speed ahead at this guy. | ||
We ended up getting like third place. | ||
We ended up getting an honorable mention because the chair was gay. | ||
We were so smart, man. | ||
In Model UN, the like legal machinations Like, we're off the charts. | ||
We were so good at it that the chairs didn't even understand how good we were doing. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
Like, maybe if you're in Model U and you get it, maybe if you're not, you don't, but we were playing the game in such a sophisticated way that we literally had to go up to the chair at one point and say, like, I don't think you understand what we're doing. | ||
Like, we're doing this, that, and the other deliberately. | ||
We have, like, this super sophisticated plan to get everything we want and, like, we just did that. | ||
We just achieved that. | ||
And they were like, yeah, whatever. | ||
You know, it's like these stupid college girls, you know, these dumb whores. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, okay, great. | |
Yeah, well, you know, you don't understand what we're doing, you dumb bitch. | ||
You're not even as good at Model UN as me. | ||
I'm 17, you're some stupid roasty in college. | ||
You're literally not even smart enough to understand how good we're doing, and they would give us third place. | ||
That's why I couldn't wait to get out of college, because I was like, I'm tired of having to go to some retarded adult and say, this is how good I am. | ||
When you're in the world, you do things, And if you're good, you succeed, right? | ||
Like, in Model UN, you only win if the judge decides that you did a good job. | ||
And you have to, like, impress people. | ||
And you have to, like, brown nose. | ||
It's not sufficient just to win. | ||
It's more that you have to convince somebody that you're winning. | ||
But if you're in the real world, you can just win. | ||
And you don't have to convince anybody. | ||
If you do good, you just do good. | ||
And I couldn't wait for that when I got out of high school. | ||
I said, just wait when I don't have to impress some whore, when I don't have to impress some, you know, jag off teacher, some academic, you know. | ||
I couldn't wait and now here we are so so anyway we could talk more about that maybe I'll do a casual stream tonight or tomorrow or something because Lots of lots of good memories from back in the day that I'd like to share But I don't think this is the place for it because I got to get through a hundred thousand super chats Uh, let's see. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, Nick always starts the show at 7pm sharp. | ||
Stop implying he is late, it is getting old. | ||
I know, it's so annoying. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini, by the way. | ||
The show starts at 7 o'clock every night. | ||
I'm so sick of all these trolls in chat saying, late, late, late again, med, med, uh, what is it? | ||
Meg Workethic, stop trolling the chat. | ||
I'm on. | ||
Everybody knows the show starts at seven o'clock every night. | ||
It is getting old. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Andrew says, keep up the great work, King. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Ben's Funny Hat says, do you think America will just return to mass migration policies and forget this pandemic happened? | ||
I think that's the most likely outcome. | ||
Yeah, sadly. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini, but Yeah, I would hope that the president would utilize this to shut down immigration indefinitely, but I doubt that's going to happen. | ||
Elrin says, do you think Iran will collapse due to coronavirus? | ||
Yeah, I think a lot of countries might collapse in Iran because of oil, and because of sanctions, and because of corona. | ||
It's like a perfect storm there. | ||
So, they could have very big problems because of the virus. | ||
Nikarnesh says, John Wick mode, yep. | ||
Dev says no Trudeau. | ||
Excuse me. | ||
No Trudeau bucks, but here's a loony anyway. | ||
Well, thanks for the loony Elijah says trust the plan. | ||
Yep trusting the plan Elrin says how did your parents meet? | ||
Hey, well, thank you so much for the ninja at Wow big big Ninja and chat much appreciated. | ||
I think my parents met on a blind date actually Is a story they tell They met on a blind date and um... | ||
I guess my mother actually didn't like my father at first. | ||
My parents are like Seinfeld characters. | ||
I guess, in a way, they have assimilated Seinfeld into their personality, or maybe that's just how they are. | ||
But whenever I ask them, like, when I was a kid, I would always ask, like, when did you guys, like, fall in love? | ||
You know, like, how did your first date go? | ||
Like, blah, blah, blah. | ||
My parents aren't, like, super affectionate. | ||
They're, uh, that's just not, you know, they're in their, um, DNA, I guess they're just I mean don't get me wrong They've been married for like 30 years and you know, they're been through a lot together, but it's just not that kind of a thing You know, I think after you hit the 30-year mark, you're like, okay We're over a lot of the lovey-dovey type stuff, right? | ||
But I always ask about when they met and they're like well we met on a blind date and my mom says that she didn't really She didn't really care for my dad the first time. | ||
I don't know why that was I think There was for some reason I think he was like being rude or something. | ||
He like didn't walk her to the door. | ||
I forget. | ||
He was having an off night, but I think that then after that he like called her back and had another date and they had a great time and they hit it off and he was a gentleman and everything but but the the story that I'm always told is there was a blind date. | ||
I think it was a double date and it was a blind date and it was a double date with my father and his brother and And it didn't go so good and then the next week my father, or I don't know, later on my father called my mother and they had another date and it went much more smoothly is the story that I've heard. | ||
Thanks for being an honest voice in a world of deceivers. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Do you need that for like a security question or something? | ||
Are you trying to like hack into my bank account? | ||
You know, one of those security. | ||
How did your parents first meet? | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
ATL Groyper says, thanks for being an honest voice in a world of deceivers. | ||
We'll donate more after graduating with new job. | ||
Well, thanks a lot for the Ninjagini. | ||
Thanks for the kind words. | ||
And hey, appreciate any, any. | ||
Any lemons you can spare. | ||
Fell Point says, Ever looked into philosophical pragmatism? | ||
Cheers, King. | ||
No, I'm not familiar with that, but I will check that out. | ||
Never heard that term before. | ||
Thanks for the Nijini, though. | ||
I'll look into it. | ||
Ned Kelly says, Cabin Fever is so bad, I downloaded Lego Star Wars. | ||
You know, I don't really like Lego Star Wars, I gotta tell ya. | ||
I mean, it's nostalgic, and I played it a lot as a kid, but it's just not fun anymore. | ||
I'm a grown-ass man and I can't play these games where it's like you just have to go down and you know do the force on every lever and every little thing and it's minikits and you got to collect all the studs and you got to kill all the guys and it's like there's just too much with these platformers going on. | ||
I hate platformers. | ||
I like games where, well, I just don't like games where it's like, oh, there's like a hidden level, there's like a hidden prize, and you spend hours just like searching and... | ||
Puzzles and shit like that. | ||
It's I never liked that. | ||
I want to just get through I like like the Call of Duty campaign You just progress through the thing you kill the guys and then you're done You know like Star Wars should be that way you go through you kill the guys you do the thing Forget the puzzles and oh I got a collective million studs and I got to find this minikit piece And oh if you go behind this corner, there's a hidden area. | ||
I hate that. | ||
It's so tedious and Let's see. | ||
Thani says, I hope my last Ninjagini makes you smile. | ||
I hope my 20 packs of ramen lasts until I get Trump bucks. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Yeah, well, I'm smiling. | ||
But hey, hope you are making it through. | ||
Save your money if you can't afford lemons. | ||
I've never asked you for lemons. | ||
Save your money, especially in this time of need. | ||
But hey, hope you're doing okay. | ||
Hope you get your Trump bucks okay. | ||
Yeet Peterson says, oh, already read that one. | ||
No, seriously, that's what it says. | ||
Anyways, thank you for the Ninjet. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, okay. | |
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I love when people do messages like that. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Dutch Groyper says, your presence is soothing. | ||
Is it really? | ||
Most people do not, do not feel this way. | ||
I can tell you, most people did not feel this way about me, so that's good to hear. | ||
Armenian Groyper says, looking snazzy. | ||
Ah, thank you. | ||
Most people think I'm very intense and erotic and irritable, and I probably am, but I'm glad you find my presence soothing. | ||
Modern Monarchist says, for America First to succeed, all must contribute. | ||
That's true. | ||
Everybody has to do their part, whatever that may be. | ||
Yeet says, what's the over-under on Milo having grids? | ||
Thank God it's Friday. | ||
Well, I agree. | ||
Thank God it's Friday. | ||
I don't, I don't think he has AIDS. | ||
I mean, when I met him in New York, he looked, he looked very healthy, looked very vibrant, and even put on a little bit of weight. | ||
Good for him, you know, he's got a little bit of, you know, I could tell that he's eating well, which is great. | ||
You know, a lot of people are concerned about his financial situation. | ||
I think we know that he's doing okay, you know. | ||
I've been talking about that prosperity, that prosperity metric. | ||
He's gonna be very mad at me that I said that, but No, yeah, he looks healthy to me. | ||
He looks healthy to me, but he's just gotta keep it under control, right? | ||
He's living a very risky lifestyle some might say but you know we we decided on his show when I was on the show back in December that we're like arm's-length allies so we throw a little banter back and forth but it's all it's all in good fun Erlin says and you know I should say Milo has helped a lot behind the scenes you know and this is | ||
You know, something that was controversial back in December when I went out to do a show, and even talking with Milo on Telegram or whatever, people were like, oh, you know, you can't do that! | ||
unidentified
|
He's, he's bad optics, or he's gay, or whatever. | |
And, you know, granted, I don't, you know, don't agree with his lifestyle, and I don't think we agree on everything on politics, and some of the, you know, some of the things he says about groipers I'm not a fan of, but, um, I think there is some overlap on some of the issues and certainly there have been some things behind the scenes that he's been helpful with. | ||
So this is how we have to think. | ||
Allies, Big Tent, and that doesn't mean that everybody's in our faction within the Big Tent, but it means that we want to be a faction that's inside the Big Tent. | ||
Think about that visual, you know. | ||
People are saying, oh, you know, so it's like Milo's not really a part of our faction. | ||
He's his own faction, right? | ||
But we're factions under the big tent. | ||
And you just gotta think on what that means. | ||
That's where a lot of people get confused. | ||
They're like, oh, you're talking to so-and-so? | ||
How's that putting America first? | ||
And it's like, well, not everything about that person is putting America first, but they are not really a part of our thing. | ||
And that's okay. | ||
I don't say that in a mean way, but that's just simply what it is. | ||
You know, Milo said, I don't like a lot of what you say, and you don't like a lot of what I say, so maybe there's like this arm's length, you know, overlap, right? | ||
Arm's length alliance, right? | ||
And a lot of people still don't understand that concept. | ||
And some people deliberately misunderstand it so that they can, you know, undermine me and say, oh, Nick is insincere, Nick is not credible because he talks to somebody that isn't fully on board. | ||
But, you know, that's life, is talking to people that aren't fully on board and working with people that aren't fully on board sometimes. | ||
And especially when you don't have the resources or the strength in numbers that Turning Point USA does, as an example. | ||
You have to, you know, we just have to be resourceful. | ||
So anyway, yeah, that's my reaction to that. | ||
But a little bit of banter. | ||
Erwin says, will the Defense Production Act help? | ||
Yes, it will. | ||
Yeah, if we could get General Motors to start producing ventilators, that'd be a huge boon. | ||
Elijah says, trust the plan-demic. | ||
Trust the plan-demic, I like that. | ||
Jesse says Nick on Groundhog Day with the virus shows. | ||
Yeah, that's... | ||
That's right, it is Groundhog Day every day. | ||
Warren says hair clay works well for thick hair. | ||
I've tried everything for styling my hair. | ||
Nothing works. | ||
I've tried super hold pomade. | ||
I've tried clay. | ||
I've tried gel. | ||
I've tried everything. | ||
What seems to work the best is a blow dryer. | ||
Because my hair is thick, but it also is colicky. | ||
I have colics in my hair. | ||
So what seems to work the best is blow drying it. | ||
And I don't blow dry it. | ||
I towel dry it every, you know, I don't put anything in it. | ||
I don't blow dry it. | ||
But if I have something that I want to look good for, usually I'll blow dry it just to be sure and that helps it keep its shape. | ||
But aside from that, the product doesn't really seem to make a difference. | ||
In fact, it sometimes makes it worse. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
Maybe I have to hire a stylist. | ||
I have to hire a stylist. | ||
I don't know. | ||
So many aspects of this job are just beyond my skill set, you know? | ||
I think about, like, fashion and, like, style and it's like I don't know the first thing about this stuff. | ||
I need to hire somebody to come in and, you know, fix up my wardrobe. | ||
I need somebody to come in and throw all my clothes away and, you know, figure out... I go to Macy's and I have to go to the Macy's stylist to, like, pick out shirts for me. | ||
And, you know, she was very nice but I'm talking to the stylist. | ||
It's like this free service where they help you pick out clothes. | ||
And I thought, this is great. | ||
She's going to help me pick out a stylish outfit, you know, for Groyper Wars. | ||
And literally what we do is just walk around the store and she's like, do you like this? | ||
Do you like this? | ||
Do you like that? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Okay. | ||
Do you like this? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Okay. | ||
We'll try it on. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
I don't need a stylist to do that. | ||
You think I could go around and look at every item and evaluate whether I like it or not. | ||
I mean, she helped me see what fits and, you know, what looks good. | ||
But I'm like, if we're just going to go around deciding on what I like, I could do that. | ||
I could do that very easily. | ||
So, anyway. | ||
Chris Bacon says it was nice meeting you yesterday and thanks for being so sweet to a female fan. | ||
I don't think I've met anybody recently. | ||
Are you the... You're not the guy from Dollar Tree, so I don't think I met you yesterday. | ||
I didn't even leave the house yesterday. | ||
I went to Taco Bell, and it was some old Mexican guy. | ||
So unless that was you, I don't believe we met yesterday. | ||
Thanks for being sweet to a female fan. | ||
What female fan? | ||
Give me a winky face. | ||
What are you talking about, bro? | ||
Thanks for the ninja-ginis, I guess, but you're talking nonsense, buddy. | ||
I was at home all... I was sleeping all day yesterday. | ||
I'm not shaving my head. | ||
Trust the plan folks. | ||
Harley says, go punish Alex Jones mode, shave. | ||
I'm not shaving my head. | ||
Yeet on Boomers says, plan equals trusted. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Trust the plan, folks. | ||
Trust the plan. | ||
McDonald Burger says, Nick, Nick, Nick. | ||
So is the website going to have this? | ||
Okay, yeah, thank you. | ||
Piss Bone says, going to miss the stream due to being Anglo, but paying my dues up to the boss. | ||
Appreciate all you do, big guy. | ||
Well, thanks a lot, buddy. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Holy Servant says, but will the website have Dump Trick Casey stickers? | ||
Probably not. | ||
Reptard says canned bread then bass clarinet jam session. | ||
Yeah, I'm living in Squidville I thought it would be ideal and it's like that montage of you know, he's shopping for the canned bratty's in the dance class the clarinet and Then gradually just getting more and more miserable. | ||
I'm in Squidville and maybe Jaden is like Spongebob and Jake Lloyd is, or no, Patrick Casey is Patrick's star. | ||
I need them to come break me out. | ||
So. | ||
Rept, I just read that. | ||
Delphric says, here's money to get a haircut. | ||
Oh, thank you. | ||
IH says, here's $1 for the next America First studio construction. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
That will go a long way. | ||
Huge Anus says, hip clips were the best Happy Meal toy. | ||
Hip clips? | ||
Let me look that up. | ||
That doesn't ring a bell. | ||
Hip clips. | ||
I don't remember that, actually. | ||
Is that like a 90s thing? | ||
That's what that looks like. | ||
Yeah, that looks like a 90's thing. | ||
Sorry, I was born in 1998, so I don't know what you're talking about, bro. | ||
Apollos is crazy out trying to just magically stop new cases. | ||
Isn't it miraculous? | ||
Italian Palace is besides Chicago. | ||
What's your favorite city you've been to? | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Favorite city I've been to besides Chicago. | ||
You know, I really like Manchester, New Hampshire and I mean, I really like Chicago. | ||
I don't know if any other city compares to me. | ||
I've been all over the globe. | ||
I've been to all over. | ||
I'm not going to list every city I've been to, but I've been to a lot of cities. | ||
And I got to say that, you know, Chicago is by far number one. | ||
But if I had to pick a number two, maybe I would say, yeah, Manchester, New Hampshire was really nice. | ||
And I like Boston. | ||
I really like Boston. | ||
I really like Manchester. | ||
And, uh, yeah, yeah, outside of that, I mean, I really hate D.C. | ||
I hate Miami. | ||
I don't, I mean, L.A. | ||
is actually, I don't mind L.A. | ||
so much. | ||
Phoenix, I'm not like in love with Phoenix. | ||
I guess Phoenix is okay. | ||
I guess I haven't spent enough time in a lot of these cities to really evaluate. | ||
I've been to Phoenix a couple times, been to LA a couple times. | ||
I lived in Boston for a while. | ||
Been to Miami a couple times. | ||
DC, I've been there a lot. | ||
But yeah, probably Boston or Manchester. | ||
I really like New England. | ||
If I were to pick any other place to live, I'd probably pick New England. | ||
So, that's my answer. | ||
Jesse says, our ranch is getting essential worker letters. | ||
unidentified
|
LOL. | |
Hey, well, at least you get to stay employed, right? | ||
And keep making money. | ||
Eliza says, these numbers are coming from the CDC and World Health Organization. | ||
Not buying it. | ||
99% of the people dying in Italy had prior illnesses. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, we love our mods. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Dutch Groy versus Eddie Bravo. | ||
Will Triangle choke Corona into submission? | ||
Eddie Bravo. | ||
How about not says I did the math I will get $8.75 from the stimulus. | ||
Hey, well, it's better than nothing Greek salads is bound to might be my favorite Kanye song. | ||
It's one of his best. | ||
It's definitely up there for me I don't know if I'd say it's my favorite my favorite right now is father stretch my hands Life of Pablo's got to be my favorite album from Kanye I gotta say the more I listen to it the more I like it and it's just very close to my heart so But I don't know, maybe my favorite song of all time might be Runaway. | ||
I gotta say Runaway is probably my favorite. | ||
Power's up there, Black Skinhead is up there, On Sight, Everything I Am. | ||
So I'd have to think about that. | ||
But yeah, yeah, that's a good one. | ||
That's a good song. | ||
Jesse Winfrey says, any wild guess on when the curve is on the ass end? | ||
No, no idea. | ||
Doomer Squidward says, happy for all those wagies out there. | ||
Yeah, really happy for them. | ||
Thanks for the Ninja Genie. | ||
Elected Groipers is getting $4,900 in Trump bucks. | ||
Here's your cut. | ||
Biggest white pill of the lockdown. | ||
No drag queen story time. | ||
$4,900 in Trump bucks? | ||
Yeah, thanks for the ninja guinea, I guess. | ||
Nah, I'm kidding, but I appreciate it. | ||
I guess that's a... yeah. | ||
Here's a big white pill about the economy collapsing and thousands dying. | ||
At least there's no drag queen story time. | ||
Yeah, I guess so. | ||
Timed outs. | ||
Is any guess where the Fed balance sheet will be January 2021? | ||
No idea. | ||
Elijah says UK government downgraded coronavirus reports mortality rates low. | ||
Okay. | ||
William Pepe says 1.2k is you gats? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know what that means. | |
Spicy Alief says $2 Super Chats equals Backbone of America first. | ||
Yeah. | ||
I wouldn't. | ||
I think they're replenishing the toilet paper. | ||
I wouldn't. | ||
Jesse says, honky can't get no TP at the dollar store. | ||
Here's the money I was going to use. | ||
No toilet paper equals apocalypse poopy butt. | ||
Well, thanks for the toilet paper money. | ||
Thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
I think they're replenishing the toilet paper. | ||
I could get it these days a jewel. | ||
Polish American says, mobs need to chill out. | ||
They're spazzing out, man. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't know. | |
I think you're probably just acting up. | ||
Timed Out says mods are doing literally a perfect job. | ||
Yeah, I imagine they are. | ||
OpticsRespector says the loans for small businesses will be huge. | ||
Yeah, that's true. | ||
That'll be really big for the economy. | ||
Aaron says, are anti-war candidates better off being in the Republican, Democratic, or Libertarian Party? | ||
Example, Lincoln Chafee. | ||
Probably the Republican Party, at least under Trump. | ||
The Libertarian Party's a joke. | ||
The Democratic Party's hardly anti-war anymore. | ||
So I think by default, under Trump, the Republican Party's probably the best for anti-war. | ||
Embro says, here's your dollar to pay for the New York Times. | ||
Thanks for the reimbursement there. | ||
Jesse says they won't give that coverage on that gun bill though. | ||
Can Trump executive order in this situation? | ||
Executive order on what? | ||
On guns or on something else? | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Yeah, I think that's the side effect. | ||
to not eat meat on Friday, he says at 10 o'clock. | ||
Yeah, thanks. | ||
Hot dogs, is everyone wearing a MyPillow mask? | ||
We'll fall asleep. | ||
Yeah, I think that's the side effect. | ||
Great chats. | ||
Really great chats tonight. | ||
Pinochet says, imagine Biden handling this crisis. | ||
N1-H1 check? | ||
Yeah, that would be not good. | ||
Fraticelli says, if Clinton were president, I wonder if the media would have downplayed the virus for her re-election. | ||
Probably, but they can only do that to an extent because the reality sets in no matter what. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Elijah says, Trump just signed two new laws to boost 5G security. | ||
Excellent. | ||
That's exactly what we need, especially with regard to China. | ||
Reptard says, Big Stimulungus. | ||
Yup. | ||
Begone Tesseract says, Best part of the day. | ||
Great show as always, King. | ||
Thanks a lot. | ||
Timedout says, Mods are based. | ||
Thank you for saying that. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, Sips. | ||
Totally not. | ||
I love when I... I just have to skip some of these. | ||
You know, eventually... The problem is if I skip some, then people are like, I just won't send a chat then. | ||
But... It's like I have to read... So-and-so says, you know, poo. | ||
Thanks. | ||
So-and-so says, you know, pee. | ||
Oh, thanks. | ||
And it just consumes so much mental and physical energy. | ||
Okay, congratulations on your great chat. | ||
Oh, much better tonight because she's an individualist. | ||
I'll see another. | ||
Oh, okay. | ||
Congratulations on your great chat. | ||
We got a few chats saying Sip. | ||
Colton Gray says, why is Ayn Rand bad at 848? | ||
Oh, much better tonight because she's an individualist. | ||
Optics Respecter says, Nick, breaking the fourth wall is the best part. | ||
What do you mean breaking the fourth wall? | ||
It's a stream. | ||
The fourth wall doesn't exist. | ||
I'm talking to you. | ||
It's not like a fiction show. | ||
I can't break the fourth wall if it's non-fiction, right? | ||
If it's a stream like this. | ||
I'm talking to you. | ||
Especially you, Optics. | ||
I talk to Optics Perspective through the show. | ||
I'm not quite breaking the fourth wall, but I see what you're saying. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, Slipchick? | ||
Dutch Groyper says, sip trick coffee. | ||
Polish American says, there need to be moderators for mods. | ||
Spicy Leaf says, disgusting. | ||
Based Anglo says, have you ever seen One Punch Man? | ||
unidentified
|
No. | |
Aaron says, was the Ron Paul revolution necessary? | ||
No. | ||
No, and the Ron Paul revolution was bastardized anyway. | ||
Ron Paul's campaign turned into Young Americans for Liberty. | ||
And Young Americans for Liberty is terrible. | ||
These guys are the worst. | ||
They're all like, you know, neoliberals. | ||
Ron Paul was based, but YAL is not. | ||
And the libertarian movement that he spawned has gone in a radically different direction. | ||
Ron Paul is like a paleo-libertarian. | ||
These guys are like, you know, Neoliberals. | ||
Delphrix says, Tony Soprano versus Alex Jones, who wins? | ||
Tony Soprano, because he's Italian. | ||
OpticsRespector says, the chat is being unruly, trust me. | ||
Okay, well then, I trust our moderators. | ||
47IQ says, did you see that Pizzagate witch has the cough? | ||
Who? | ||
The witch, or Hillary Clinton, or? | ||
Ramey's a satirical man, is PewDiePie? | ||
Could be. | ||
Who knows? | ||
Osberger, wouldn't that be something though? | ||
Osberger says your take on sex and alcohol last night was spot on. | ||
I'm glad, I'm glad you like that. | ||
And, you know, nobody else talks like that. | ||
I don't understand. | ||
Where are all the anti-alcohol, anti-drugs, anti-sex people? | ||
Gotta have role models like that. | ||
You know, none of those things are cool. | ||
Delphrix says, not only is the show insightful, entertaining, and inspirational, but the chat is super fun. | ||
Hey, well I'm glad. | ||
I'm glad that you're having a good time. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Timedout says, Nick will never understand the dopamine rush of sending Nick lemons. | ||
I'll never send myself a lemon. | ||
That's true. | ||
I'll never see myself perform. | ||
Great tragedy. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Satiricalmanwithaninjet. | ||
Wow! | ||
Thank you so much, man. | ||
This guy's just... | ||
Everybody, let's do a salute in chat for Satirical Man. | ||
Can we get a circle? | ||
Can we get an O and a 7 in chat for Satirical Man? | ||
Salute this man for his contributions this week. | ||
A Big Pear says, who is PewDiePie? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Tucker says, Lemon Party in chat. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Zomer says, I'm 21 and dependent. | ||
Works 2018. | ||
Will I qualify? | ||
I'm not sure. | ||
Embro says, I agree. | ||
MaxiBro is a lot easier to say. | ||
I can change it back in a month. | ||
Oh, only a month? | ||
Perfect. | ||
FartSniffer says, was East Germany based or cringe? | ||
Pretty cringe. | ||
Carpenter says, why is Milo always shitting on Groypers? | ||
I don't know. | ||
You'd have to ask Milo. | ||
BasedAnglo says, are the USPS staff still giving you a hard time? | ||
I haven't been in there in a while, so I gotta go in there and check my P.O. | ||
box. | ||
Delphric says, did Ryan Dawson convince you to try getting your YouTube back, or is it a lost cause? | ||
Yeah, I went on his stream, by the way, and he got more viewers than he's ever had on his stream, and he was really nice to me, and then I find out that he's talking shit behind my back, and then people are posting screenshots where he's saying that I'm a clown, and I'm a racist, and blah blah blah, and I saw all these screenshots, so I'm done with that goof. | ||
That guy literally has autism, his problem. | ||
He can't get out of his own way. | ||
You know, I was ready to bury the hatchet with him. | ||
We got into a fight, you know, maybe like a year ago, and I was ready to make amends, and I came on his stream, which was doing him a big favor. | ||
He made super chats, and he got a lot of live viewers, which he never gets, and I did him a favor, and he did me a favor by giving me some guidance on how to get my channel back, and then he goes around, he's telling people, oh, I'm a racist, and I'm a clown, and whatever, and it's like, you know, I was nice to this guy. | ||
I went on a stream, and I'm rolling my eyes throughout the whole thing. | ||
The guy's an idiot. | ||
The guy just talks, and he has a guest on the show, and all he does is talk, and the stuff that he says is retarded. | ||
He's sending me these comedy videos he does, and I'm like, yeah, dude, that's really funny. | ||
Dude, that's great. | ||
And I'm like, just trying to be polite. | ||
Anyway, so I think he knows his stuff. | ||
He knows a lot about the subject that he talks about, but that's about where it stops and ends with him. | ||
He's not nice. | ||
He's not really a smart guy. | ||
He's not even ideologically sound. | ||
The guy's like a liberal, but he's just politically incorrect. | ||
But he's a left-wing person. | ||
I've been saying this for years about all these guys. | ||
Spencer, Ryan Dawson. | ||
A lot of these characters nobody believes me but they're liberals they just happen to be you know politically incorrect or they happen to be you know aware about racial differences or whatever so so yeah I mean he helped me and I helped him but then he wanted to get nasty so I think we're done with that clown Scorch Titan says it's sad to see how far from grace James has fallen yeah yeah very very tragic and totally avoidable too you know the thing is | ||
With somebody like James, I wanted nothing but to get along with him when we started out and even last summer when we talked. | ||
I am somebody that wants to get along, and I'm somebody that basically, if you just treat me with respect, I'm gonna be friends with you. | ||
And generally, if you follow my advice, you're gonna do well. | ||
Somebody like James Alsup, everything that he went through was totally avoidable. | ||
Everything he went through. | ||
Personal and professional. | ||
A lot of the problems that he had, if he would just have listened to me, he wouldn't be in a lot of the problems that he's in, frankly. | ||
And I don't want to get personal with him, but Maybe he knows what that means. | ||
If he had just listened to me, he'd be fine. | ||
Our big problem when our company split was largely over TRS. | ||
I said, you know, look, we're trying to do this optics thing, and you're spending too much time on TRS. | ||
You don't fulfill your obligations for our show, and you're going on other shows, and it's a show that's not even good optics. | ||
The Daily Showa and Fashion Nation. | ||
What kind of message does that send? | ||
You're going on a show with a guy that does Roman salutes. | ||
Some clown that does Roman salutes at the White Lives Matter rally with the NSM and the KKK. | ||
What kind of message does that send? | ||
And not only is it bad optics, but... | ||
You don't fulfill your obligations for our show, but you're on other shows? | ||
Explain that, right? | ||
But he ghettoized himself. | ||
He wanted to be a big fish in a little pond. | ||
He wanted to be a big fish in the alt-right pond, and now he is. | ||
Now he's a big fish in a very, very small pond. | ||
And I wish it wasn't like that. | ||
I wish that he didn't do that. | ||
I wish that we maybe... I mean, it ultimately ended up being better that we didn't work together. | ||
But we made up even after that. | ||
And then he lost his channel and he went to work for TRS. | ||
And it's like, well, I mean, we can't really work together if that's gonna be the case. | ||
It's nothing personal, but... | ||
And then he goes around attacking me. | ||
And I thought we settled it man-to-man, face-to-face. | ||
He apologized for the things he did. | ||
I apologized for the things I did. | ||
We buried it. | ||
And then he goes online. | ||
What is that? | ||
And goes on these forums and talks shit about me. | ||
And he's on his show making these snarky drive-by remarks. | ||
And who has time for that kind of stuff? | ||
And it's so funny because I have this reputation of like, oh, you know, Nick just fights with everybody and whatever. | ||
That's like never happened. | ||
If anything, I'm cordial and respectful. | ||
That's my default. | ||
And what people do is they push, and they push, and they push, and they do this passive-aggressive stuff, and they subtweet, and they, you know, talk behind my back. | ||
And then I hit them from the front, and then I'm the bad guy, right? | ||
Then I hit them from the front. | ||
And then suddenly it's like, you know, I started it. | ||
So, it is a shame. | ||
Because, you know, here's somebody... James was never an incredible intellect. | ||
He was never a towering intellect. | ||
And he was never really an extremely charismatic person. | ||
But what he had going for him was that he was a good presenter. | ||
He had like a good radio voice. | ||
And when it came to his channel, he worked hard and he made good content. | ||
And he knew the formula. | ||
Right? | ||
unidentified
|
But... | |
At the end of the day, we may be able to utilize somebody like that. | ||
Maybe that person's not going to be the leader or that person's not even going to be whatever. | ||
But, you know, I don't know. | ||
I don't know what his problem was. | ||
He wanted to fit in with the cool crowd or something. | ||
That's the problem with a lot of these people. | ||
At the end of the day, they're not willing to do whatever it takes to win. | ||
They have other priorities. | ||
Their priorities may be, and I'm not talking about James specifically, but just generally about the alt-right, their priorities might be booze or sex, or their priorities might be career, you know, for maybe people in conservative ink, or their priorities might be, you know, social affirmation. | ||
They want people to like them. | ||
And for a long time, in like the dissonant right, if you were not being the most offensive, obnoxious, Like Wignatt, then people would call you a cuck. | ||
And people are more interested in the dopamine from getting retweets about being the edgiest guy in the room than actually moving the ball forward. | ||
And I think that's a classic case of what James Alsup is, something like that, where there was a priority that was other than doing whatever it takes to win. | ||
And that doesn't, you know, doing whatever it takes to win means that you're willing to do whatever it takes. | ||
Put your ego aside. | ||
Put what you want aside. | ||
Put a lot of that aside and just focus on moving the ball forward at any cost. | ||
And he didn't want to do that. | ||
He wanted to be edgy. | ||
I wanted to host Fascination with Jazz Hands McFeels and we're riding shotgun on Fascination and send in some donations and we're gonna have pool parties. | ||
It's like, you know, it's What are we really doing here? | ||
But folks, what are we doing here? | ||
And everybody hated me in the alt-right because when I came on the scene, I said, hey, who's actually interested in finding pragmatic ways to change the zeitgeist? | ||
Who's actually interested in pragmatic ways to change our circumstance? | ||
And I said, this isn't working, and that's stupid, and you don't know what you're doing, and people didn't like that. | ||
Because they wanted their social club, At the expense of progress. | ||
And I came in and basically called them out. | ||
And in defense of their little club, they said, oh, you're a countersignal or you're a whatever. | ||
You're fighting with the movement. | ||
You can't get along with anybody. | ||
You're a bridge burner. | ||
I said, OK, fuck you. | ||
I'll go do my own thing, and I'll show you. | ||
And I'll be in my lane, and you'll be in your lane, and we'll see who makes it to the finish line. | ||
And here we are. | ||
And I don't have an ego about it. | ||
If people come to me and they say, you know, it's not just anybody, I'm not going to take advice from randoms, but people that are not in this and people that should have no reason to take their advice, but if I get advice from a trusted person or somebody who's been in this or somebody who has experience, I take it seriously and I adjust. | ||
And I've been doing that for years and I seriously did for a long time and I still do. | ||
But a lot of these people are incapable of growing. | ||
They can't take criticism. | ||
They're not adaptable. | ||
They're not anti-fragile. | ||
So it is terrible to see people that are talented, or maybe get it a little bit, but they get caught up. | ||
And they get caught up in jealousy, or they get caught up in whatever, but yeah, it's a shame, it's a shame. | ||
We were friends. | ||
I thought we were friends last summer, and then he wants to talk behind my back. | ||
That's not an honorable thing to do. | ||
Wiffle says, here I took this off my mom's engagement ring. | ||
Oh, one dollar? | ||
Thanks. | ||
Oh, the diamond. | ||
The diamond, I get it. | ||
He took the diamond. | ||
But it's, okay, I see. | ||
That's pretty funny. | ||
Jesse says, cause dodgeball is violent, they're trying to make us sissy. | ||
That's true. | ||
It's true. | ||
Which dodgeball was the most fun because it's like, let's just throw balls at each other, you know? | ||
Forget all this, you know, beating around the bush with kickball or football. | ||
Let's just try and hurt each other. | ||
Let me just try and whip this ball at your head. | ||
Right? | ||
And it's just conflict. | ||
And that's good for young men. | ||
That's what was so lame about growing up in this century is everything was so like pussified. | ||
I know that sounds like a boomer thing to say. | ||
But you wouldn't be allowed to roughhouse. | ||
You wouldn't be allowed to play dodgeball. | ||
You're not allowed to just be masculine. | ||
I remember when I was growing up, all my friends and I were into WWE, you know, and And when I told you about amateur wrestling, that was one thing. | ||
But whenever we'd get together, when we were in like 6th or 5th grade, whatever, we'd all, what we would do, the parents would be downstairs or they'd be upstairs, you know, if we were in the basement or in whatever. | ||
and uh we would quietly set up the ring you know we put up the pillows and and you know we would set up the ring and we would do matches and we would wrestle and you know other people jump in and you beat the shit out of each other that's what you do when you're like a kid and i understand the concern because if you're doing like If you do a stone-cold stunner on somebody, you're gonna like break their neck, but to an extent, that's what boys do. | ||
They fight. | ||
They roughhouse. | ||
It's conflict. | ||
But I remember growing up, you know, it'd always be, oh, you can't roughhouse, you can't do that, you can't do this, you can't do whatever, and you can't play dodgeball, and you can't do this, and... | ||
Then they turn you into like this pariah, you know Then you feel like I remember going up in school and feeling like I was this this bad guy because I was just a normal boy You know because I was just sort of you know, whatever Because you had that natural aggression or competitiveness or you? | ||
You know we're a little bit What is the word? | ||
Hyper, you know. | ||
They expect that everybody's gonna sit nicely with their hands in their lap and raise their hand and color inside the lines. | ||
And if you do anything other than that, then you're, oh, you gotta, here's your green slip. | ||
Go to the principal's office. | ||
Here's the, you know, you're in trouble. | ||
You're in big trouble. | ||
You have to step outside, you know. | ||
And they don't reward people that are, you know, maybe learning or... | ||
Innovating in a different way. | ||
Yeah, I remember that. | ||
He says, SmackDown vs. Raw 2007 was the best after school. | ||
Yeah, I remember that. | ||
It was good times, man. | ||
I love that game. | ||
I like 2008 a little better, because in SmackDown Vs. Raw 2007, you can only run in straight lines, is what I remember about that. | ||
In SmackDown Vs. Raw 2008, you can run in circles. | ||
There are just a lot of better features starting in 2008, but I think I played 7, 8, 9, and 10. | ||
I own all the SmackDown Vs. Raw games up until 2010, but I mainly played 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010. | ||
But yeah, that was, I remember going after school to my friend's house and he had this little TV on top of his, he had like one of those, not an armoire, but one of those, like a desk and like shelves and stuff. | ||
He had like a little TV on top of this thing in his bedroom and we would sit there and he'd be on the bed, I'd be on the computer chair and we'd play on this tiny TV playing Smackdown vs. Raw 2007. | ||
Good times, good times back in the day. | ||
And now, and now I'm an atomized, neat, socially distanced, socially isolated gamer. | ||
Delphrix says, listen here, Jack, how do I open PDF? | ||
No malarkey. | ||
Okay, that's kind of stale at this point, but thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jesse says, my dad gave every staff of my school permission to whoop me silly. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
I don't like teachers hitting kids. | ||
I don't think that's appropriate. | ||
Globo Donos is conning versus America First with Nick. | ||
They have no chance. | ||
So true. | ||
TKY says, any esoteric thoughts? | ||
Any esoteric stories on nationalistic thoughts? | ||
No. | ||
Derek says, casual lemon hype Friday. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I don't like when people dream about me. | ||
I find it to be disturbing, frankly. | ||
He says, I had a dream the other night where I took out a guy who was trying to assassinate you. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
I don't like when people dream about me. | ||
I find it to be disturbing, frankly. | ||
I don't know what it is, but the idea that I am in somebody's dream doing something... | ||
I don't like that. | ||
I don't like that you're making me do something in your mind. | ||
Do you know what I mean? | ||
Like that you're in your world. | ||
You're imagining me doing something uncharacteristic. | ||
I don't like that. | ||
I'm me. | ||
I get to decide what I do and I'm in the world. | ||
I'm not in your world. | ||
I don't want to be in your world. | ||
I don't want to be doing whatever weird things you imagine me doing or uncharacteristic things or even normal things. | ||
I don't like it. | ||
I don't like when people, when people dream about me. | ||
I don't like, I don't like hearing that. | ||
I see a lot of that on Twitter. | ||
People say, I had a dream about Nick Fuentes. | ||
Keep me out of your dreams! | ||
I don't belong there, alright? | ||
Stop dreaming. | ||
I don't like being a public figure that, it's almost like you become disassociated from yourself. | ||
There's almost like people take stock, they take ownership of you in a weird way. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
It's like, there's you, and then there's your internet you. | ||
And it's not like I put on a persona, but you know what I mean. | ||
There's like a perception and a reputation and there's like, there's a concept of Nick Fuentes which exists in the public consciousness, which is not me, Nick, in essence. | ||
Nick in reality. | ||
And I don't like that other guy that's floating out there in the public consciousness that I cannot control and that he's out there. | ||
And other people, they think they've got him. | ||
They think they, you know, they think they control him. | ||
I don't like that one bit. | ||
So I'm struggling with that a little bit as, you know, somebody that's rising in popularity or fame or whatever you want to call it. | ||
It's like I'm struggling for that. | ||
You know, and I guess it's in a way you can just ignore that because I, you know, of course, I just do what I do. | ||
I do what I want to do. | ||
But I can see where a lot of celebrities get this sort of rebelliousness. | ||
You can't control me. | ||
I'm not who you think I am because there is that dissonance, that conflict between sort of like yourself and your shadow self that is out there. | ||
That's why I relate to Kanye, actually. | ||
unidentified
|
You know, more fame, I only got wilder, that kind of thing. | |
I know that we're the new slaves. | ||
You nibbas can't control me, right? | ||
unidentified
|
So... | |
that's uh that's how i feel that's how i feel sometimes uh josh says the cereal that runs the world is called juicy o's okay wow so funny bro lord maryland says model un is where the knife was forged it's true and i told my parents this i told them i said they're like you're spending too much time thinking about model un and not enough time on your schoolwork and i told them Presciently I said the skills that I'm learning here are way more important than the skills. | ||
I'm learning in school. | ||
I said a model you got I'm learning about The things I'm interested in I'm learning about relationships I'm learning about like power diamond power dynamics and by relationships. | ||
I don't mean like romantic or sexual relationships. | ||
I mean like relating to people on a team, in a competition, in influence, manipulation, things like that. | ||
I'm harnessing public speaking, whatever. | ||
And I told them what I'm learning here is way, way more important. | ||
These life lessons are, you know, going to shape what I do. | ||
And I don't even know about the show at that point. | ||
But here we are. | ||
But here we are, right? | ||
Wisconsin Groeper says, great content tonight, King. | ||
I just got my taxes back so I decided to share the wealth. | ||
God bless. | ||
Well hey thanks a lot man. | ||
Thanks for the Nijigini. | ||
Smarty says milk is delicious. | ||
You need to have non-homogenized. | ||
Yeah no thank you. | ||
Warren says thank you for everything you do for our country. | ||
Hey thanks buddy. | ||
Thanks for your support man. | ||
Snarf says, fan of your verbal assault on Degeneracy last night. | ||
Interwove it together like a master craftsman. | ||
Wow. | ||
Well, thank you very much. | ||
I'm glad you enjoyed. | ||
Thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Somebody has to say it. | ||
Degeneracy is gross and I hate it. | ||
And it's not cool. | ||
You know, it's, it's honestly just grosses me out. | ||
Even in high school. | ||
Uh, I, I had a really, really good friend in my junior year of high school and we're still friends, but we just don't talk as much. | ||
Um, But we were really good friends, and he got involved with some of my other friends, and they were big potheads, and he started smoking pot. | ||
And every time that they got together, and I would hang out with them, but I would never smoke. | ||
I've never smoked. | ||
But every time that he got together with them, all he wanted to do was smoke. | ||
Oh, when are we gonna go, you know, when are we gonna go smoke? | ||
Are we gonna go outside? | ||
Are we gonna go whatever? | ||
Are we gonna go take a drive? | ||
And it just was so disheartening to see. | ||
I remember being so disappointed because here is somebody who I got along with and we were able to have a good time without that, you know, because he was with kind of a different crew and they drank a lot, but it was just a little different, different dynamic. | ||
And, uh, you know, the idea that that was the only thing that was on their mind and that was the only way that we could have an enjoyable night was if they were going to go and get high. | ||
It was just like, It just was horrible. | ||
You know, I don't know. | ||
For some reason, that just grossed me out. | ||
And I was like, dude, man. | ||
And then I just started to bully. | ||
I think that was kind of what made me decide to bully him. | ||
Because then I was like, you know, fuck you, dude. | ||
You're like, I thought you were cool. | ||
And now you've turned into this pothead. | ||
I felt like Obi-Wan Kenobi, you know. | ||
And so then I started to, you know, then I started to be a real jerk. | ||
But it was deserved, so. | ||
But thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Jaden McNeil says, good morning! | ||
Good morning, Jaden! | ||
Rise and shine, big guy. | ||
He says at 9.30, good morning. | ||
Yeah, glad we reset our sleep schedules the other night, right? | ||
Glad we fixed that. | ||
Jayroxer says, been with you since Lauren Southern Debate. | ||
Wanted to bring you to 100,000 lemons. | ||
Checkpoint reached. | ||
Hey, well thank you so much Jayroxer. | ||
Big thanks for the Ninjet. | ||
We're up to 100,000 again. | ||
Wow. | ||
Big, big week for us, right? | ||
We are gonna take PewDiePie in like any minute, right? | ||
Imminent, imminent overtaking. | ||
of PewDiePie. | ||
But thank you so much for the Ninjet. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
Thanks to everybody for getting me up there. | ||
We're up to six million lemons. | ||
Six million lemons. | ||
That's a lot of lemons. | ||
Let's see. | ||
Jesse says, 100,000 for three nights. | ||
One last round of subs, I guess. | ||
Well, hey, thanks a lot. | ||
Delphrix says, I already read this message, but thanks for the Ninjet, big guy. | ||
Okay, thanks for the Ninjagini. | ||
Dresden says, is Spencer and Allsup under the big tent? | ||
Nope. | ||
Thank you for that. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not really going for the, you know, flamboyant. | ||
I'm not really going for that. | ||
I'm going for something, you know, cool but more conservative. | ||
Something a little bit younger too, you know. | ||
Milo's like, what, 30 or something? | ||
So, I'm also going for something a little bit younger and a little bit more conservative. | ||
So, I'll have to hit up somebody on TikTok maybe. | ||
Dresden says aloe vera gel makes a great natural hair gel. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Big if true. | ||
Archer says, people trying to dox you with $100 superchats at LMAO. | ||
Yeah, right, they're trying to dox with the security questions. | ||
Groyper says, don't shave your head. | ||
Yeah, no worries about that. | ||
BasedGroyper says, $2 trillion divided by 150 million workers is $13,000. | ||
Yeah, well, I mean, they have to bail out other people, too. | ||
You know, they do have to bail out the big industries. | ||
I'm not saying that they shouldn't have, but the balance should have been different. | ||
Delphrix says, my first night superchatting. | ||
Addiction? | ||
I don't know what that means. | ||
You're addicted to super chatting? | ||
Is that what you mean? | ||
Dresden says New England is the little Europe or Anglo town of the U.S. | ||
Yeah, very true. | ||
Shire checks says mods are good boys. | ||
Yep. | ||
Timed out says it's almost like Nick doesn't read chat during the show. | ||
I don't. | ||
I don't think I'm going to move there though, but I do like it. | ||
I don't believe that's true. | ||
to move there though but i do like it dresden says 5g radiation suppresses your immune response and allows opportunistic infections to flourish i don't believe that's true but thanks for the ninjigini dresden says i'm drinking rum and oj but still straight edge oh is that so uh delfric says d live lemon check.com slash something something okay Bastard says my mom would tell us to go outside to roughhouse. | ||
My mom would just tell me not to roughhouse. | ||
I don't want you roughhousing. | ||
She wouldn't let me and my sister roughhouse. | ||
Although we would go at it pretty savagely. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, we couldn't roughhouse. | |
Delphrix says, I had a dream where I was trying to assassinate you. | ||
Okay. | ||
Steven says, have a great weekend under quarantine. | ||
Thanks, you too. | ||
Just a white male says, feels good to be gaming. | ||
Looking sharp on this casual Friday. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Thanks for the ninja-ghini. | ||
You like this? | ||
You like this jacket? | ||
You like this shirt? | ||
Embro says, six million lemons? | ||
It seems like a high number. | ||
Oh no, don't don't say that. | ||
That's anti-semitic. | ||
You're holocaust denying, right? | ||
And some diamonds from Sewer, great, thanks so much. | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
10 after 10 already? | ||
What? | ||
Wow, it comes so fast. | ||
Boo Radley says, hi, well thanks, King. | ||
Can we get salutes for Boo Radley? | ||
I don't know, I didn't see any Ninjettes from Boo Radley, but sure, why not? | ||
Okay, that's our last Super Chat. | ||
That's gonna do it for us on the show tonight. | ||
Remember to follow this channel, subscribe to the channel, sign up for the email list. | ||
NicholasJFuentes.com. | ||
Be sure to sign up. | ||
Remember we are on the air Monday through Friday 7 p.m. | ||
Central, 8 p.m. | ||
Eastern Standard Time. | ||
I'm Nicholas J. Fuentes. | ||
This is America First. | ||
As always, thanks for watching. | ||
Thanks to our Super Chatters, in particular our Top 3. | ||
Jesse Winfrey, thank you so much. | ||
Spicy Leafs, Satirical Man. | ||
There's somebody else that gave a Ninjette in there too, right? | ||
Was it, uh... Jay Roxxer was up there as well. | ||
So... And Erlen, too. | ||
So, big thanks to everybody that superchatted, but a special, special big thanks to our top three. | ||
Thanks to everybody that gave a Ninjette. | ||
Big thanks to Jesse. | ||
He must have been given a lot of those, uh... gifted subs because... | ||
I only saw a few Nijiginis, buddies. | ||
He's up there at number one, so huge, huge shout-out to our cowboy, the America vs. Cowboy, and Spicy Leaf, and Satirical Man. | ||
Big shout-out to our top three, everybody else. | ||
Thanks to everybody that superchatted. | ||
Thanks to everybody that watches the show. | ||
We love all you guys, and huge, huge thank you. | ||
These past three days have been incredible. | ||
The lemon count has been Nothing short of amazing. | ||
And I know it's because probably a lot of you are trying to boost me up. | ||
Boost me up to be number one. | ||
I really appreciate that. | ||
I really do. | ||
So a big thanks for the extra support this week. | ||
And I hope everybody's doing okay. | ||
I hope everybody's safe and sound and healthy. | ||
And I hope everybody is staying away from public places and they're not getting coronavirus. | ||
Hope everybody's saving the money. | ||
Hope everybody's financially okay. | ||
But that's gonna do it for us tonight. | ||
Remember to... I almost started all over again. | ||
unidentified
|
We are... What am I even saying? | |
I gotta lube it back. | ||
I gotta lube it back. | ||
I'll see you on Monday. | ||
There we are. | ||
That's the next part. | ||
unidentified
|
You do this so many times and then you lose it every now and again, right? | |
We'll see you on Monday. | ||
Until then, have a great weekend and have a great rest of your Friday evening. | ||
unidentified
|
Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo! | |
It's going to be only America first. | ||
America first. | ||
The American people will come first once again. | ||
America first! |